Pubdate: Wed, 01 Sep 2010 Source: Madison Courier, The (IN) Copyright: 2010 The Madison Courier Contact: http://www.madisoncourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3648 Author: Travis Sturgill, Courier Staff Writer STATE UNVEILS NEW WEAPON IN METH WARS Website Will Track Sales Of Ingredients A new Web-based tool in the fight against methamphetamine will allow retailers to put in data about pseudoephedrine purchases and will give people an opportunity to file anonymous tips about suspected methamphetamine activity in their communities. The tool, which was unveiled Tuesday by the Indiana State Police, is called the Indiana Methamphetamine Investigation System. It will give any state law enforcement agency the ability to assess, process, record and analyze the submitted information to support its investigation and prosecution of methamphetamine offenders throughout the state, police said. Pseudoephedrine is commonly found in cold medicine and is considered a precursor in the manufacture of methamphetamine. State police 1st Sgt. Niki Crawford, commander of the Methamphetamine Suppression Section, said the only information required to submit a tip on possible methamphetamine activity is the location where it is occurring. "We need to know what county it is, we need to know what location it is so we can do an appropriate follow-up," she said. "They don't have to leave their name, they don't have to leave their phone number unless they want to. And we will follow-up on each one of these tips." Crawford said the program was designed as an enforcement and efficiency tool for police, rather than as a tool to prevent the existence of methamphetamine labs. "We do expect to seize more labs," she said. "But we're still going to raise the efficiency of the law enforcement officers that are investigating these cases. We're going to raise the efficiency of the retailers that are selling the product (pseudoephedrine) and the customer that's purchasing the product. It's a one-stop shop for meth investigative information for law enforcement." The program will also target smurf groups, Crawford said. Smurfs are a person or a group of people who go from store to store purchasing the maximum amount of pseudoephedrine allowed by law in a single sale. Restricting pseudoephedrine purchases in Indiana began in 2005. The new program allows for a quicker analysis of the information received from retailers. Crawford said buying pseudoephedrine is not illegal until multiple purchases are made from different retail outlets in a short amount of time. "We've got people out there that are purchasing pseudoephedrine in suspicious patterns," she said. "The really cool thing about this program is that it looks for those patterns and it connects those people as smurf groups." Crawford said information about people who purchase products containing pseudoephedrine for its intended use will be kept in a part of the database that cannot be accessed by law enforcement. "For the legitimate purchaser . . . their information will be protected," she said. State laws already prevent the amount of pseudoephedrine a person can purchase in a seven-day period. According to police, smurfs use fake IDs to make multiple purchases and will sometimes trade a box of a pseudoephedrine product for methamphetamine. Retailers are required to document all pseudoephedrine and ephedrine purchases. Retailer participation in the IMIS is voluntary and there is no cost as long as they have Internet access. Crawford said Walmart, Target, CVS and other retailers were already involved in the program. Crawford said the program will help law enforcement officers identify suspects quicker. In the past, she said, officers had to retrieve sales information from each store and collate the information to identify suspects after searching each paper log by hand, a process that could take two to three shifts. "Now . . . in a matter of minutes, they can see what their purchases are, in a matter of a few more minutes they can see who their smurf groups are," she said. Crawford said that while demonstrating the benefits of retailer cooperation to an undercover officer, a smurf group of five people was identified within an hour. "It's an incredible tool for law enforcement," she said. The IMIS system was provided free to Indiana by the Tennessee Meth Task Force, which has been using the system since 2004, Crawford said. Indiana is the twelfth state to begin using the program. According to an ISP press release, in 1991 the first documented methamphetamine lab was found in Indiana. Since 1995, the release said, more than 8,913 methamphetamine labs have been shut down, with more than 2,400 of them shut down in 2008 and 2009. "Remember," Crawford said in the release, "we all have a vested interest in the success of this system. . ." The website is at www.in.gov/meth. Information about methamphetamine lab cleanup, drug endangered children, methamphetamine laws and information for retailers, is also available on the website. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D