Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2008
Source: Staten Island Advance (NY)
Copyright: 2008 Advance Publication Inc.
Contact:  http://www.silive.com/advance/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/646
Author: Phil Helsel
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

FIGHTING A COLD JUST GOT HARDER

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- If the roller-coaster  temperatures of January 
have left your throat  constricted and nose running, be prepared to 
show a  photo ID and sign your name at the pharmacy.

Although law-enforcement sources here say that  methamphetamine is 
not very popular in the city, a  relatively new federal law designed 
to prevent the sale  of formerly over-the-counter cold and allergy 
medicines  -- including Sudafed, Claritin-D, and Aleve Cold &  Sinus 
- -- to would-be drug cooks have created headaches  for local customers.

And the thing is, the Combat Methamphetamine Epidemic  Act of 2005 
has a loophole big enough to drive a truck  through.

The law, which took effect in September of 2006, means  that ordinary 
cold and allergy sufferers must present a  valid photo ID, give their 
name and address, and are  limited to about a month's worth of 
medicine every 30  days.

Most transactions are recorded in paper binders that  must be 
hand-checked by clerks and so far appear to be  rarely inspected by 
the federal Drug Enforcement  Administration (DEA), according to a 
survey of several  area pharmacies.

And because there is no computer database tracking  sales in 
different stores, to buy in bulk you can  always just "smurf it," a 
DEA spokeswoman admitted.

"That has happened, it's called 'smurfing,' where  people go from 
store to store," spokeswoman Erin  Mulvey, of the DEA's New York 
Field Division, said. "I  would say (the law) is a first step."

The federal law was passed to curb what was widely  labeled a "meth 
epidemic" in the Midwest and Western  states, because the drugs 
contained in the  now-restricted medicines are key ingredients in the 
highly addictive stimulant. And meth labs, nine of  which were found 
in Manhattan and Long Island last year  during a large-scale DEA 
investigation dubbed  "Operation Red Fusion," have a nasty habit of 
exploding  because of the toxic and flammable chemicals they  produce.

The ingredient targeted by the law is pseudoephedrine,  which gives 
cold and allergy medicines their  time-release property -- but is 
also a key ingredient  in crystal meth.

Pharmacists on Staten Island say that theft and  mass-purchases of 
the cold and allergy medicines were  rare even before the federal law 
shoved the drugs  behind the counter, and police and the DEA say that 
most of the crystal meth that finds its way into the  city is from 
rural areas, like upstate, rather than  cooked here.

"I remember three years ago when I used to find empty  boxes; they 
would open them up and take the pills,"  said Matt Schwam, 20, of New 
Springville, who is a  clerk at the pharmacy at the Hylan Boulevard 
ShopRite  in New Dorp. "Not really (often), but you'd always see  the 
people who look suspicious in that aisle."

ShopRite, as well as larger stores like Rite Aid and  CVS use the 
computerized registers to automatically  keep track of how often a 
customer has tried to buy  certain types of cold medicine. The 
federal law allows  9 grams of pseudoephedrine, equivalent to a 
30-tablet  box of 24-hour Claritin D, per month.

At other stores, like the smaller Hylan Medicine  Cabinet down the 
road in Donagan Hills, clerks record  names, addresses, and amounts 
of the drug purchased in  a paper binder. Whether a pharmacy uses a 
computer  system or old-fashioned paper, there is no database  that 
keeps track of who is buying how much cold and  allergy medicine from 
each store within a month.

"They get annoyed, because a lot of times they don't  have an ID or 
they're just running in real quick," said  a pharmacist at the Rite 
Aid, also on Hylan Boulevard  in Donagan Hills, who wouldn't give her 
name. "And then  we can't sell it. It's the law."

The first time the new law led to an arrest was on  March 30, 2007, 
when William Fousse of Ontario, N.Y.,  was arrested by Rochester DEA 
agents for allegedly  buying 406 Bronkaid caplets -- containing a 
total of  over 29 grams of pseudoephedrine -- over a month's  time.

Rousse was never implicated in manufacturing meth,  however, 
according to prosecutors quoted by local  media. The 36-year-old 
claimed the medicine was to cure  hangovers, and he pleaded guilty to 
a misdemeanor in  June and was sentenced to a year of probation.

A report by the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health  Services 
Administration that studied meth use rates  between 2002 and 2005 
found that only an estimated 1.4  million people, or 0.6 percent of 
the population, over  the age of 12 reported using meth within the 
last year.  All of New York state, along with New Jersey, 
Massachusetts, Connecticut and Maryland, ranked at the  bottom of the 
list with only about 0.1 percent of the  population having used the 
drug; Wyoming, Nevada and  Montana had the highest rate of use.

The amount of the drug seized and meth labs busted in  all of New 
York state have been decreasing since the  law was passed, a trend 
the DEA's Mulvey said is due to  the new law as well as anti-meth 
operations like the  one that shuttered the nine in the city and Long 
Island  last year.

The number of meth labs reported in the state fell from  53 in 2004 
to just 12 last year, and the amount of the  drug seized by the DEA 
dropped from 14 kilograms -- or  about 31 pounds -- in 2004 to just 
about 3 1/2  kilograms, or almost 8 pounds, last year.

Even if no centralized system exists to track how many  pharmacies a 
person visits, a drug-store industry group  said that it is having a 
deterrent effect on home-grown  meth: Although the drug is easily 
produced in countries  that have no such restrictions on cold 
medicines, like  Mexico and Canada.

"I think the intent of the paper logbook is to let  customers know 
thet their information is being  recorded, that there is some 
record," said Kevin  Nicholson, vice president of pharmacy 
regulatory  affairs for the National Association of Chain 
Drug  Stores. "It's a good law and it's working; the numbers  have decreased."

If showing an ID and filling out a form is too much of  a hassle, 
Nicholson suggests buying cold medicines that  have been reformulated 
to remove the pseudoephedrine in  order to stay on the shelves -- but 
it won't last as  long.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom