Pubdate: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 Source: Quad-City Times (IA) Copyright: 2010 Quad-City Times Contact: http://www.qctimes.com/app/pages/contact/new/?contact=letters Website: http://www.qctimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/857 Author: Anthony Watt MEDICAL MARIJUANA CREEPING ACROSS STATE LINES Pot and meth are on the minds of the law enforcement agencies tasked with fighting illegal drugs. Chris Endress, director of the Quad Cities Metropolitan Enforcement Group, returned Friday from a week-long conference in Washington, D.C., where various agencies discussed drug-related issues facing law enforcement. Top on the list was medical marijuana, Mr. Endress said. High-quality cannabis now legal in some states is making its way into states where it is illegal, including Illinois. "We've seized hundreds of pounds of medical marijuana that's coming from California," Mr. Endress said. In 2009, about half of the Quad-Cities MEG busts were marijuana, and much of that was high-grade medicinal cannabis, he said. It is traveling along Interstate 80, but can also show up via delivery services and by other methods, Mr. Endress said. States where the drug is legal are having trouble regulating its production, so much of what is being grown is finding its way onto the black market, he said. In some cases, foreign drug cartels are infiltrating the medical marijuana field to sell their product, some of which has been found to contain very high levels of pesticides, some of which are not legal in the U.S., he said. Officials at the conference were of the opinion that the best way to deal with the issue is to find out what part of marijuana is helpful, separate it and make it into a prescription medicine. "Extract it, put it into an inhaler, pain patch or pill," he said. That way it would have to adhere to Federal Food and Drug Administration standards, Mr. Endress said. The conference also discussed various approaches to limiting pseudoephedrine, a key ingredient in methamphetamine, Mr. Endress said. The two main trends are for states to restrict sales more stringently, or to use computerized tracking to trace the amounts of pseudoephedrine sold and where it is going, he said. Mr. Endress said that the former reduces the number of meth labs authorities encounter. The latter helps authorities find meth labs, but also means there could be more meth labs to find, increasing the dangers police and the public face as well as the cost of fighting meth production. Several countries, including Mexico, have banned pseudoephedrine in the last year, Mr. Endress said. The practice has forced drug cartels to make a less potent version which is not selling well. Participants in the conference, which was hosted by the National Narcotic Officers' Associations' Coalition, also went to Capitol Hill to discuss issues and funding with legislators. Mr. Endress said the Obama administration's proposed budget includes a $30 million cut to one of the avenues through which narcotics enforcement receives funding. The QC MEG receives $100,000 of that money and uses it to help pay for overtime, fuel and drug purchases, Mr. Endress said. That money also helps agencies across the country work together to tie their local drug enforcement together into national cases, Mr. Endress said. Delegates from the conference also said they were happy to see other drug-fighting money untouched and hoped they stay that way, Mr. Endress said. Locally, MEG pays for four agents with that money. He said conference participants wanted to let legislators know the federal money was well-spent. From 2006 to 2009, the 21 Illinois MEG's and Task Forces have made 11,373 drug arrests -- 10,043 of them felonies, Mr. Endress said. Almost 3,000 firearms and $460 million in illegal narcotics have also been seized. Legislators were supportive of continued funding for anti-narcotics operations, Mr. Endress said. But many knew little of the issues medical marijuana is creating for law enforcement. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake