Pubdate: Thu, 15 May 2008 Source: Birmingham News, The (AL) Copyright: 2008 The Birmingham News Contact: http://al.com/birminghamnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/45 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) THE NUMBER OF METH LAB BUSTS WAS GOING DOWN, UNTIL ONE-POT COOKING FOR METHAMPHETAMINE CAME TO ALABAMA The numbers were headed in the right direction: In 2004, law officers shut down 404 methamphetamine labs as the scourge was sweeping across parts of Alabama, especially in rural areas. The next year, the Legislature passed a state law that made it harder to buy the main ingredients in meth. In 2005, there were 276 meth lab busts in the state, dropping to 193 in 2006 and 127 in 2007, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Clearly, the new law was having an effect, as were enforcement efforts. That law required retailers to put over-the-counter products with pseudoephedrine and ephedrine behind the counter, and made buyers show a photo ID and sign a log. But this year, the numbers to date reflect a worsening trend instead of continued decreases in the number of lab busts. Law enforcement officials blame the problem on a meth recipe new to Alabama: a simpler, "one-pot" cooking method that takes fewer ingredients and can be mostly completed in a two-liter plastic soft drink bottle, authorities say. Talladega County drug agents have found 70 of the "one-pot" or "shake and bake" meth labs since October, compared with 45 meth labs found in all of 2007; a drug task force in DeKalb County has found 26 labs this year, compared with 38 in all of 2007; the drug task force for Calhoun and Cleburne counties has found more meth labs, including one-pot labs, in the first three months of this year than during all of 2007, authorities say. "It's like somebody turned on a spigot," said Jason Murray, commander of the Talladega County Drug Task Force. Law enforcement officials consider meth to be the No. 1 drug threat in the state, and it's easy to see why. Meth is highly addictive, cheap and easily made in makeshift labs with readily available ingredients. In a way, the recent rise in the number of one-pot labs is a product of the 2005 state law's success. Meth cooks are resorting to the one-pot method, at least in part, because it's harder to get larger quantities needed for bigger labs, according to Matt Germanowski, a supervisor in the DEA's Birmingham office. The 2005 law limited sales to six grams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine products in one month per person. That amount is lower than what many states with similar laws allow, but month in, month out, that's still adds up to a lot of decongestant and cold medicine. The Legislature may need to consider setting an even lower limit on the amount of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine a person can buy legally each month. Even as the number of mom-and-pop meth labs busted has been dropping until this year, law enforcement faces another problem: A more pure form of the drug known as "ice" is being brought into Alabama mainly by Mexican drug traffickers, according to the DEA. While Germanowski said enforcement efforts have reduced the supply of imported meth, it remains a big problem in some places in Alabama. In DeKalb County, for example, about 16,000 of the 26,000 grams of meth seized last year were ice. Law enforcement officials can redouble their efforts to limit the supply of meth, but the real challenge is limiting the public demand. Until that changes for the better - and a recent ad campaign aimed at scaring teens away from meth should help - there will always be statistics showing too many meth lab busts. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin