Pubdate: Wed, 24 Mar 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: Susan Kelleher and Liz Kowalczyk, The Orange County Register ILLEGAL PRESCRIPTION-DRUG `RIVER' FLOWS FROM MEXICO High demand, low cost and scattered law enforcement have created an underground river of prescription drugs that flows across the border from Mexico into U.S. medicine cabinets, the pockets of people practicing do-it-yourself medicine and the illegal pharmacies frequented by recent immigrants. "It's not like cocaine," said Sachi Hamai, who heads a Los Angeles task force that has raided 148 backroom pharmacies and clinics since September. "It's not like there's one big kingpin in Colombia. There are lots of drugs in Mexico. It's easy access. Anyone could go over there." At least nine agencies - local police, the state medical board and Customs - have jurisdiction to investigate and refer cases of prescription-drug smuggling for prosecution. But some efforts are not coordinated. `Trying to close the loop' "We're trying to close the loop between local agencies, our agency and U.S. Customs," said Jud Bohrer, head of criminal investigations for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in San Diego. Bohrer - whose agency is involved in a grand-jury probe of an Orange County, Calif., family linked with illegal pharmaceutical sales in the 1990s - said there has been a concerted effort to improve contacts between agents working on the case, and that there may be permanent changes in the way cases are coordinated in the future. Pharmaceutical-drug investigations involving addictive drugs get the most attention. Lower-level drugs such as heart medications or penicillin attract attention mainly when they are sold to customers or injected in backroom clinic-pharmacies by people who are not doctors. Helen Curran of Laguna Woods, Calif., said she was concerned that some prescription-drug-smuggling laws could make criminals of people who choose treatments not available in the United States. Those include cancer patients seeking alternative treatments and immigrants who want to use familiar brands made in Mexico. Curran began taking laetrile for melanoma 21 years ago, when people smuggled it across the border into the U.S. by tying it around their waist or hiding it in bread or containers. Her late husband, she said, learned how to inject the drug and would administer it to her at home. Now, Curran, who considers herself cured of cancer, orders it hassle-free, direct from a mail-order distributor in Mexico. In Orange County, police recall fewer than a dozen people who have been prosecuted for selling prescription drugs without a license in the past 10 years, according to a survey of a dozen police departments. Most said they have not had prosecutions because no one reported them. And unlike Los Angeles, where emergency-room personnel became alarmed at the number of drug reactions they were seeing, none of the large hospitals in Orange County say they have seen similar problems. 4 members of same family Of the cases that have been prosecuted in Orange County since 1990, four involved members of the same family, including patriarch Manuel Javier King, 70, who has been arrested three times in three cities on pharmaceutical-related misdemeanors. Illegally imported drugs from Mexico have been linked to clinics that treated three Orange County children who later died. Selene Segura Rios, 18 months, died Feb. 22, just two hours after she was given an injection at Los Hermanos gift shop in Tustin. The cause of her death is not known, pending toxicology studies. An allegedly unlicensed doctor at a Santa Ana clinic treated 13-month-old Christopher Martinez last April, just days before the boy died. Miguel Angel Morales, 15, died Dec. 31, 1997, a day after being injected with prescription medicine purchased from Nashelies, a Santa Ana, Calif., gift and novelty store. Walter Allen, head of the Orange County office of the state Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement, said his agency tends to focus on health-care providers who use their prescription-writing authority to traffic in addictive drugs. "Pharmaceuticals are probably the most abused drug in the country because it's readily available through prescription sources," Allen said. But the agency rarely gets involved with investigations of someone trafficking in penicillin and similar drugs. From last October through January, U.S. Customs Service officials seized pharmaceuticals ranging from the date-rape drug Rohypnol to antibiotics to steroids from 107 people crossing California's five border checkpoints. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mike Lasater, head of the border-crimes division in San Diego, said the 42 attorneys in his office prosecute about 3,000 cases a year, half of them narcotics felonies. Prescription-drug cases, he said, are usually handled administratively by U.S. Customs, which can levy fines, issue citations and seize property. Federal sentencing guidelines make it clear that Congress perceives addictive drugs to be a far greater threat to public safety than antibiotics, steroids and heart medication. Federal guidelines Lasater said a person with no prior criminal history would get up to six months in prison for smuggling more than 40,000 units of penicillin under federal sentencing guidelines. "The same person caught with 20 pounds of cocaine, which is fairly routine here . . . if that person has no prior criminal history, they're looking at a 10- year mandatory minimum," Lasater said. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady