Friday, July 31, 2009

Why We Don't Have Addiction-Free Cold Pills

Methland, Lobbying, and Why We Don't Have an Addiction-Free Decongestant

Category: Drugs
Posted on: July 30, 2009 9:48 AM, by Mike

I just finished reading Methland by Nick Reding. While the book focuses on the relationship between methamphetamines and the socioeconomic disintegration of rural areas*, this section about the interplay between lobbying and the failure to develop and produce an amphetamine that has decongestant activity but doesn't raise heart rate or possess addictive side effects was truly shocking (italics mine):

Mirror imaging is a process whereby a chemical's molecular structure is reversed, moving, for example, electrons from the bottom of a certain ring to the top, and vice versa. Pseudoephedrine, ephedrine, and methamphetamine are already near mirror images of one another. To make meth from ephedrine, it is necessary to remove a single oxygen atom from the outer electron ring. Thus ephedrine and methamphetamine not only look the same under a mass spectrometer, but both dilate the alveoli in the lungs and shrink blood vessels in the nose-hence ephedrine's use as a decongestant while raising blood pressure and releasing adrenaline. The key difference is that meth, unlike ephedrine, prompts wide-scale releases of the neurotransmitters dopamine and epinephrine..... More..........

http://scienceblogs.com/mikethemadbiologist/2009/07/methland_lobbying_and_why_we_d.php

Public hearing set for prescription law in Jefferson County


ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
HILLSBORO — Jefferson County council members want to hear what the public has
to say before moving ahead with a proposal to require prescriptions for some
cold and allergy medications that can be used to make meth.

A public hearing has been scheduled for 7 p.m. Aug. 18 at the County Council
chambers.

County Executive Chuck Banks proposed the idea of requiring a prescription for
products containing pseudoephedrine, such as Claritin D or Sudafed, shortly
after Washington, Mo., City Council members approved the measure there earlier
this month.

Banks said he wants to ensure that everyone who can write a prescription,
including nurse practitioners, is covered by the bill and wants to learn
whether some forms of pseudoephedrine products should be excluded from the bill
if they cannot be converted into meth.

"We are not trying to keep anyone from getting medication, we're trying to
restrict meth cookers from getting access to the ingredient they need," Banks
said.

Washington council members did not make exceptions for pseudoephedrine products
in its ordinance — the first of its kind in the nation. Franklin County Sgt.
Jason Grellner said exceptions serve as loopholes and all pseudoephedrine
products can be turned into meth.

Several organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union and the
Consumer Healthcare Products Association, have contacted Washington city
officials urging them to repeal the ordinance. Council members will vote Monday
on whether to do so.

Meanwhile, momentum seems to be building in surrounding cities such as Union,
St. Clair and Sullivan, where officials have begun considering similar
ordinances.

Banks said that should Jefferson County approve such an ordinance, he wants it
to be something surrounding counties can use.

"Even if we don't pass the ordinance, at least we will have brought the issue
back to the forefront," Banks said.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Oklahoma : Meth lab busts sky-rocket in 2008.

More evidence that invasive I.D. and Sign programs failing:

Meth lab busts sky-rocket in 2008.



Benton County,Arkansas- It's only the first week of March, but already this year, the Benton County,Arkansas Sheriff's Office has shut down ten meth labs. That's more than all of 2007.

It's an alarming statistic for Benton County,Arkansas-ten meth lab busts in just a two month time frame.

Deputy Doug Gay said, "I don't think there's a law enforcement agency in the midwestern U.S. that would dispute that. That that's the drug of choice and it's the one that's given us, really, the most problems."

Arkansas and states like Missouri and Oklahoma have adopted laws in recent years to make the sale of products used to make methamphetimine, like ephredrine, harder to buy in large quantities. Investigators say meth production didn't subside for long.

Deputy Gay said, "Where there's a will, there's a way. There's that supply and demand issue going on. As long as you have demand, somebody's going to figure out a way to supply it."

Anyone who buys ephredrine has to provide picture ID and signature. That puts them in a database or network for retailers to keep track of who's buying how much, and how often they're buying it. Manufacturers have found a new twist to circumvent the law-they have their meth users buy those raw materials for them. The users spread out to multiple retailers, purchase the maximum amount of ephredrine allowed by law just often enough to stay under the radar.

Deputy Gay said, "...it can grow exponentially for one manufacturer."

Washington and Benton counties,Arkansas are 2 of only 4 counties in the state with a Gulf Coast High Drug Trafficking Area designation-a designation with some federal backing to it. The program will do whatever it takes to knock meth out of Northwest Arkansas.

The Bentonville,Arkansas Police Department has made several large marijuana busts in the last month, but say meth is still the most dangerous drug they're dealing with in the region.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Stop a Cold in Just 12 Hours


Wednesday, July 29, 2009


Mugs of tea, a bottle of ibuprofen, and a truckload of tissues won't get you through every case of the sniffles. Too often, the common cold turns into something more serious, zeroing in on your personal weak point to become a sinus infection, a sore throat, a nonstop cough, an attack of bronchitis, or an ear infection. And if you're prone to a particular complication -- thanks, perhaps, to an anatomical quirk (such as sinus obstructions), an underlying medical problem (early asthma, for example), or a history of a particular illness (childhood ear infections) -- your odds of getting sicker, faster, can skyrocket.

But complications aren't inevitable, new research shows. "With the right strategies, you can cut your risk significantly," says Gailen D. Marshall, Ph.D., M.D., director of the division of clinical immunology and allergy at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson................

Pharmacist Faces Drug Charges Pharmaceutical Processing

Oklahoma Board of Health Member And Pharmacist Faces Drug Charges
Pharmaceutical Processing
According to the indictment, Evans sold the drugs "with full knowledge that
60 to 70 percent of pseudoephedrine sales were diverted to the manufacture
of ...


Governor wants indicted board member Haskell L. Evans Jr. to resign
NewsOK.com
Prosecutors said investigators found "Evans marked up his pseudoephedrine
products more than 600 percent above the standard retail sales price, yet
remained ...
<http://newsok.com/governor-wants-indicted-board-member-haskell-l.-evans-jr.-to-resign/article/3388804

Sunday, July 26, 2009

NPR: Small Town's Struggle In 'Methland'

All Things Considered, July 8, 2009

· The small town of Oelwein, Iowa, is home to 13 churches, a refurbished Main Street and a new library with free high-speed Internet.

It is also home to Roland Jarvis, a former meatpacking worker who burned his house down in 2001. Jarvis, who had a methamphetamine lab inside, was hallucinating that he saw black helicopters hovering overhead and, in a panic, dumped chemicals down the drain. The home went up in flames, and Jarvis was burned so badly that he begged the police to shoot him.

Meth in America: Nick Reding, NPR Interview

Wednesday, July 15, 2009 at 11:00 AM EDT
Meth in America

Listen to this show
Wednesday, July 15, 2009 at 11:00 AM EDT
Meth in America


0714methlandwebby



Journalist Nick Reding (Methland: The Death and Life of an American Small Town.)grew up in one Midwest: steady, sturdy, a little bit storybook.

He went back and found another. High as a kite on crank – on methamphetamines – and a living wreck.

He honed in on little Olwein, Iowa, lifted the covers, and found a terrible mess: meth, addiction, depravity. And beneath those, roots of despair grounded in a globalized economy gone wrong. Communities – in Olwein and far beyond – left desperately adrift. He’s brought us the story in a book called “Methland.”

Up next, On Point: Nick Reding and “Methland.”

You can join the conversation. Tell us what you think — here on this page, on Twitter, and on Facebook.

-Tom Ashbrook

Family wages 4-year legal fight over undisclosed meth lab

By Christine Byers
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
Sunday, Oct. 12 2008
Ed Bloor couldn’t explain his sudden outbreak of skin rashes, insomnia and mood
swings until he had a chance conversation with a cashier at a lumber yard.

Her words dashed Ed Bloor’s plans for a siding business in the home he had just
bought at the base of Mount St. Helens in Washington. And his wife’s dreams of
starting a day-care center there.

The cashier told him he was living in a former methamphetamine lab.

“It became the house from hell,” Eva Bloor said.

That was the beginning of a four-year legal fight that started with the Bloors’
being kicked out of their home. It ended with an unprecedented verdict in the
couple’s favor — the first time, experts said, a home seller was held liable
for neglecting to admit a home had been a meth lab.

Police reports show drug agents busted the home for meth and marijuana in
January 2002. They found meth-making supplies stored in a hot tub and arrested
the tenants. Court records show the landlords put the three-bedroom house up
for sale two years later, but checked “No” on a disclosure form asking if the
home had ever been used as a meth lab.

The Bloors bought it for $149,000 in late 2004 when they moved to Washington
state from southwestern Missouri. They fell in love with the three-bedroom home
on a two-acre lot bordering an evergreen forest. And, for the first three
months, Ed found an oasis in the outdoor hot tub, where he relaxed and watched
deer graze in his backyard.

Until that conversation with the cashier, he didn’t know the hot tub’s porous
fiberglass had absorbed toxic chemicals, leaving him soaking in a virtual meth
soup.

Eva Bloor, who has a nursing background, called the health department.

It was the first the agency had heard of the bust, despite a Washington law
requiring that health officials be immediately told of meth labs so the sites
can be condemned and cleaned.

(Missouri and Illinois do not require police to notify the health department.)

Even though the raid had taken place two years earlier, health officials
decided the risk was too great to let the Bloors stay. The department declared
the home and its contents contaminated and kicked the family out.

The Bloors lost photos taken over 30 years, along with family heirlooms.

“We were left with just the clothes on our backs,” Eva Bloor said. The house
went into foreclosure, and the couple sued the sellers, the real estate agent
and the county.

In 2006, a judge ordered the county, the home sellers and their real estate
agency to pay the Bloors $94,000. The home sellers had to take the house back
and pay off the Bloors’ mortgage. The real estate agent and agency were ordered
to pay $10,000 for a consumer protection violation. An appeals court upheld the
judgment this year. The real estate agent’s license could be suspended.

By 2007, doctors diagnosed Ed Bloor, 54, with kidney cancer and removed one
kidney. The couple blamed the meth exposure, but doctors could not say meth had
caused the health problems.

In early 2007, the Bloors moved back to Missouri. They said they couldn’t
qualify for a home loan because the foreclosure in Washington had ruined their
credit rating.

They now rent a house in Springfield, Mo. The only pictures they have of their
children were taken in the last four years.
Although frustrated about their credit scores, they don’t fault Washington
health officials for forcing them out of the home. They believe former meth
labs aren’t safe places to live.

And they are shocked that Missouri — the state with the most meth lab busts —
does not require police to notify health departments when a lab is found.

“Nothing is overkill when you are dealing with people’s health,” Eva Bloor
said. “People don’t realize how many homes have been used for this. There are
thousands out there.”

cbyers@post-dispatch.com | 636-500-4106

Meth Homes: NY Times, Homes With Criminal Past

July 14, 2009
Illnesses Afflict Homes With a Criminal Past
By SHAILA DEWAN and ROBBIE BROWN

WINCHESTER, Tenn. — The spacious home where the newly wed Rhonda and Jason Holt began their family in 2005 was plagued by mysterious illnesses. The Holts’ three babies were ghostlike and listless, with breathing problems that called for respirators, repeated trips to the emergency room and, for the middle child, Anna, the heaviest dose of steroids a toddler can take.

Ms. Holt, a nurse, developed migraines. She and her husband, a factory worker, had kidney ailments.

It was not until February, more than five years after they moved in, that the couple discovered the root of their troubles: their house, across the road from a cornfield in this town some 70 miles south of Nashville, was contaminated with high levels of methamphetamine left by the previous occupant, who had been dragged from the attic by the police.

The Holts’ next realization was almost as devastating: it was up to them to spend the $30,000 or more that cleanup would require.

With meth lab seizures on the rise nationally for the first time since 2003, similar cases are playing out in several states, drawing attention to the problem of meth contamination, which can permeate drywall, carpets, insulation and air ducts, causing respiratory ailments and other health problems.

Federal data on meth lab seizures suggest that there are tens of thousands of contaminated residences in the United States. The victims include low-income elderly people whose homes are surreptitiously used by relatives or in-laws to make meth, and landlords whose tenants leave them with a toxic mess.

Some states have tried to fix the problem by requiring cleanup and, at the time of sale, disclosure of the house’s history. But the high cost of cleaning — $5,000 to $100,000, depending on the size of the home, the stringency of the requirements and the degree of contamination — has left hundreds of properties vacant and quarantined, particularly in Western and Southern states afflicted with meth use.

“The meth lab home problem is only going to grow,” said Dawn Turner, who started a Web site, www.methlabhomes.com, after her son lost thousands of dollars when he bought a foreclosed home in Sweetwater, Tenn., that turned out to be contaminated. Because less is known about the history of foreclosed houses, Ms. Turner said, “as foreclosures rise, so will the number of new meth lab home owners.”

Meth contamination can bring financial ruin to families like that of Francisca Rodriguez. The family dog began having seizures nine days after the Rodriguezes moved into their home in Grapevine, Tex., near Dallas, and their 6-year-old son developed a breathing problem similar to asthma, said Ms. Rodriguez, 35, a stay-at-home mother of three.

After learning from neighbors that the three-bedroom ranch-style home had been a known “drug house,” the family had it tested. The air ducts had meth levels more than 100 times higher than the most commonly cited limit beyond which cleanup is typically required.

The former owner had marked “no” on a disclosure form asking whether the house had ever been a meth lab, Ms. Rodriguez said. But because he is now in prison for meth possession, among other things, the Rodriguezes decided there was nothing to gain by suing him. They moved out, throwing away most of their possessions because they could not be cleaned, and are letting the house go into foreclosure.

“It makes you crazy,” Ms. Rodriguez said. “Our credit is ruined, we won’t be able to buy another house, somebody exposed my kids to meth, and my dog died.”

Federal statistics show that the number of clandestine meth labs discovered in the United States rose by 14 percent last year, to 6,783, and has continued to increase, in part because of a crackdown on meth manufacturers in Mexico and in part because of the spread of a new, easier meth-making method known as “shake and bake.”

There are no national standards governing meth contamination. Congress ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to publish cleanup guidelines by the end of 2008, but the agency is still reviewing a draft version. Without standards, professional cleaners say, it is easy to bungle a job that often requires gutting and repeated washing.

About 20 states have passed laws requiring meth contamination cleanup, and they use widely varied standards. Virtually all the laws hold the property owner financially responsible; Colorado appears to be the only state that allots federal grant money to help innocent property owners faced with unexpected cleanup jobs.

In other states, like Georgia, landlords and other real estate owners have fought a proposed cleanup law.

After the Holts bought their house here, Tennessee passed such a law. But since 2005, only 81 of 303 homes placed under a resulting quarantine have been cleaned, according to the state, which has one of the few registries tracking meth lab addresses. The law applies only if the police find a working meth lab at the house, and Jerry Hood, a lawyer and cleanup contractor hired by the Holts for the decontamination work, said many houses in the county had escaped the legislation.

The health effects of meth contamination are frequently difficult to prove, and research is scant. But John W. Martyny, a meth expert at the National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver, said living in a former meth lab made children more likely to develop learning disabilities and caused long-term respiratory and skin problems.

Even brief exposure can have severe effects, Dr. Martyny said. A 2007 study by the Denver center found that more than 70 percent of law enforcement officials who had inspected meth labs subsequently reported health problems.

To Ms. Holt’s horror, inspectors found high concentrations of meth on her kitchen countertops, where she sterilized bottles, prepared baby food and doled out snacks.

“We had no idea that we were starting a family in a meth house,” she said. “We bought a house that eventually was going to sentence our family to death.”

When the family left the house, moving in with Mr. Holt’s parents, their health problems largely subsided. The children no longer needed medication to breathe. The migraines and the kidney ailments vanished.

But the heartaches continued. Ms. Holt has been working two jobs to earn money to pay for her house’s remediation, which has proceeded in fits and starts with donations from church fund-raisers and local businesses. And Anna, 2, had a relapse and had to return briefly to the hospital.

“We don’t know what it’s going to be in the future,” Ms. Holt said, standing in the barren, unfinished structure that was once her dream home and reflecting on her children. “This meth contamination is all their immune systems have ever known.”

Methcheck: "Limited Effect" Commisioner, KY State Police

Methcheck: "It seems to have limited effect on reducing the number of clandestine meth labs in Kentucky, the purpose for which it was funded."

Rodney W. Brewer, Commissioner, Kentucky State Police


source document:

[PDF]
KENTUCKY STATE POLICE
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View
Jun 29, 2009 ... June 2008 through May 2009, the MethCheck system blocked 18000 sales of ... Please do not hesitate to contact Major Joe Williams, ...
www.oregondec.org/CASB484/KentuckyStatePolice.pdf

This is the html version of the file http://www.oregondec.org/CASB484/KentuckyStatePolice.pdf.

Google automatically generates html versions of documents as we crawl the web.

Page 1
KENTUCKY STATE POLICE
Steven
l.
Beshear
919 Versail les Road
J.
Michael Brown
Governor
Frankfort, Kentu cky 4060 1
Secretary
www.kentu ckystatepoli ce.org
Rodney Brewer
Comm issioner
June 29, 2009
Kent
A.
Shaw
Assistant Chief
California Office of the Attorney General Department of Justice
Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement
Dear Assistant Chief Shaw:
In the late 1990's the Commonwealth of Kentucky began to experience an increase
of illegal clandestine methamphetamine labs throughout the state. The numbers
steadily increased until peaking in 2004/2005. In June 2005, a Kentucky statute
required that pseudoephedrine (PSE), a prime ingredient in illegally produced
methamphetamine, be sold only from licensed pharmacies and that each sale must
require a photo identification card from the purchaser and be recorded in a log
subject to inspection by law enforcement. The "pharmacy log" statute had the
immediate effect of substantially reducing clandestine meth labs in the state.
Kentucky clan lab numbers went from 589 in 2005 to 328 in 2006, a decrease of
44%.
Throughout 2006 and the first half of calendar year 2007 the numbers of clan labs
reported on a monthly basis continued to show a decrease from the previous year's
monthly totals; i.e. January 2007 totals were less than January 2006, and January
2006 totals were less than January 2005, etc. This trend continued until the
second half of 2007, when the monthly totals began to increase. However, the
2007 year-end total was 302 clan labs.
The monthly increase in clan lab numbers continued into calendar year 2008. On
June 1, 2008, in an effort to further reduce clandestine lab production, a new
Kentucky statute required the pharmacy logs to be reported on a centralized
database prescribed by state government. This computerized system, known as
MethCheck, is also accessible to law enforcement. In its first year of operation,
June 2008 through May 2009, the MethCheck system blocked 18,000 sales of
KentuckyUnbridledSpirit.com
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D
Page 2
Clandestine Lab Information
June 29, 2009
Page 2
PSE. However, the MethCheck system apparently had little impact on the numbers
of clandestine labs in our state. Kentucky's number for calendar year 2008 was
428, up from 302 in 2007, an increase of 41%.
So far this year, January 2009 through May 2009, Kentucky responded to 210
clandestine labs. If this trend continues throughout the remainder of the year, our
state's responses will at least equal the numbers of the 2008 totals.
This twelve month observation period of the computerized monitoring system
indicates that while it blocked some sales of PSE , it seems to have little effect on
reducing the numbers of clan labs in Kentucky, the purpose for which it was
funded. Additional time will confirm whether it will perform its intended function.
In order to assist in comprehension of these statistics, I have attached some chart
and graph information related to Kentucky's clan lab responses. Please do not
hesitate to contact Major Joe Williams, the KSP Commander of our Special
Enforcement Troop, at 502.695.6321 if you need additional information or
assistance.
RWB:JMW
Attachments

Methamphetamine Use Estimated to Cost the U.S. About $23 Billion In 2005

News Release

OFFICE OF MEDIA RELATIONS
703-413-1100 x5117
and 310-451-6913
media@rand.org

FOR RELEASE
Wednesday
February 4, 2009

Methamphetamine Use Estimated to Cost the U.S. About $23 Billion In 2005

The economic cost of methamphetamine use in the United States reached $23.4 billion in 2005, including the burden of addiction, premature death, drug treatment and many other aspects of the drug, according to a new RAND Corporation study.

The RAND study is the first effort to construct a comprehensive national assessment of the costs of the methamphetamine problem in the United States.

"Our findings show that the economic burden of methamphetamine abuse is substantial," said Nancy Nicosia, the study's lead author and an economist at RAND, a nonprofit research organization.

Although methamphetamine causes some unique harms, the study finds that many of the primary issues that account for the burden of methamphetamine use are similar to those identified in economic assessments of other illicit drugs.

Given the uncertainty in estimating the costs of methamphetamine use, researchers created a range of estimates. The lowest estimate for the cost of methamphetamine use in 2005 was $16.2 billion, while $48.3 billion was the highest estimate. Researchers' best estimate of the overall economic burden of methamphetamine use is $23.4 billion

The study was sponsored by the Meth Project Foundation, a nonprofit group dedicated to reducing first-time methamphetamine use. Additional support was provided by the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

"We commissioned this study to provide decision makers with the best possible estimate of the financial burden that methamphetamine use places on the American public," said Tom Siebel, founder and chairman of the Meth Project. "This is the first comprehensive economic impact study ever to be conducted with the rigor of a traditional cost of illness study, applied specifically to methamphetamine. It provides a conservative estimate of the total cost of meth, and it reinforces the need to invest in serious prevention programs that work."

The RAND analysis found that nearly two-thirds of the economic costs caused by methamphetamine use resulted from the burden of addiction and an estimated 900 premature deaths among users in 2005. The burden of addiction was measured by quantifying the impact of the lower quality of life experienced by those addicted to the drug.

Crime and criminal justice expenses account for the second-largest category of economic costs, according to researchers. These costs include the burden of arresting and incarcerating drug offenders, as well as the costs of additional non-drug crimes caused by methamphetamine use, such as thefts committed to support a drug habit.

Other costs that significantly contribute to the RAND estimate include lost productivity, the expense of removing children from their parents' homes because of methamphetamine use and spending for drug treatment.

One new category of cost captured in the analysis is the expense associated with the production of methamphetamine. Producing methamphetamine requires toxic chemicals that can result in fire, explosions and other events. The resulting costs include the injuries suffered by emergency personnel and other victims, and efforts to clean up the hazardous waste generated by the production process.

Researchers caution that their estimates are in some cases based on an emerging understanding of methamphetamine's role in these harms and should be further refined as understanding of these issues matures. The RAND report also identifies costs that cannot yet be adequately quantified.

"Estimates of the economic costs of illicit drug use can highlight the consequences of illegal drug use on our society and focus attention on the primary drivers of those costs," Nicosia said. "But more work is needed to identify areas where interventions to reduce these harms could prove most effective."

Methamphetamine is a highly addictive substance that can be taken orally, injected, snorted or smoked. While national surveys suggest that methamphetamine use is far from common, there is evidence that the harms of methamphetamine may be concentrated in certain regions. One indicator of the problem locally is treatment admissions. Methamphetamine was the primary drug of abuse in 59 percent of the treatment admissions in Hawaii in 2004 and accounted for 38 percent of such admissions in Arizona in 2004.

The report, "The Economic Costs of Methamphetamine Use in the United States - 2005," is available at www.rand.org. Other authors of the report are Rosalie Liccardo Pacula, Beau Kilmer, Russell Lundberg and James Chiesa.

The RAND Drug Policy Research Center is a joint project of RAND Health and the RAND Safety and Justice program within RAND Infrastructure, Safety, and Environment. The goal of the RAND Drug Policy Research Center is to provide a firm, empirical foundation upon which sound drug policies can be built.

Missouri: 2008 Statewide Meth Lab Incidents: 1487

http://www.mshp.dps.missouri.gov/MSHPWeb/SAC/state_maps_query.html

This link will take you to a Missouri State Wide Query Search Form. It will allow you to download a county by county .pdf map and totals.

Click Here.

Click "SUBMIT" bottom at bottom of query form.

Compelling Evidence: Pharmacy Logs Not Working

Meth labs flourishing due to loophole
Wednesday, July 15, 2009 | 7:04 PM


SACRAMENTO, CA (KGO) -- After years of decline the number of methamphetamine labs in California is on the rise again. Meth producers are taking advantage of a loophole in a 2005 federal law and now state officials are hoping to close it.
In the Sierra Foothills meth labs are flourishing.

"We still have a lot of methamphetamine on the street," Jackie Long told ABC7. Long is with the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement. He says the problem is that the main ingredient in some cold and allergy medicines is also the main ingredient used to make meth. It is called "pseudoephedrine."

In 2005 Congress tried to shut down meth labs by requiring pharmacists to keep pseudoephedrine behind the counter and limit customers to only one package a day. Despite the law, drug enforcement officers say meth manufacturers are still getting plenty of pseudoephedrine.

"This is what they bought all in one day," Long explained displaying some pills.

They call it "smurfing" when meth makers pay other people to buy pseudoephedrine for them.

"They go store after store after store. So, we'll follow these people to 20 different stores in one day. All they do is go in and buy one box and come out," Long explained.

Catching "smurfers" is like finding a needle in a hay-stack. Every time a package of pseudoephedrine is purchased, a customer has to show their ID and their name is recorded in a log at the pharmacy. The problem is the pharmacies do not share the information, so they have no way of knowing if a customer has already bought their daily limit somewhere else.

To catch someone who is buying too much, police have to compare logs from different pharmacies looking for suspects. That can mean pouring through thousands of pages.

"A lot of pharmacists mean well, but the log... they're allowing people to fill out the logs. And, these people, we're finding the names of people we know don't exist," Long said.

It is not just happening in rural California. Last year, narcotics investigators busted three people in East Palo Alto for smurfing. Investigators say the three were part of a ring that bought nearly 2,000 boxes of pseudoephedrine over a three-month period.

Kent Shaw says, "Pseudoephedrine is the Achilles heel of this issue."

Shaw is Assistant Chief of the California Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement. He says the only way to stop meth production in California is to make pseudoephedrine available only with a prescription. The state of Oregon has already done this. Now, legislation proposed in California might do the same.

Shaw says, "If you effectively control pseudoephedrine, you effectively control the domestic meth production issue."

Oregon credits the law with dramatically reducing the number of meth labs. In 2003, Oregon shut down 473 meth labs. Last year, they discovered just 21. There were 374 in California.

But, not everyone is convinced the Oregon law will work in California.

Drug makers and chain stores make a lot of money selling pseudoephedrine and they do not like the idea of requiring a prescription. The Consumer Health Care Products Association launched a campaign against it. The group claims prescriptions would raise Medicaid prices and flood emergency rooms.

"The reality is, the prices of pseudoephedrine in Oregon did not increase at all and they still remain that way today," said Shaw. "In fact, pseudoephedrine products are less expensive in Oregon than they are in California."

The National Association of Chain Drug Stores would not talk on camera, but has proposed an alternative. It suggests pharmacies share information. They say, "It will help provide law enforcement tools they need for easier access to information and streamlining record-keeping requirements for pharmacies."

The Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement says a central database of pharmacy logs could help, but it means they will need officers to go through them. The department is currently facing a $20 million budget gap. Long says cutting off the supply of pseudoephedrine is the only way to cut into the demand.

"We're not depriving customers of care. We're depriving people involved in the manufacture of methamphetamine, a compound that is poisoning our communities," he said.

On an unrelated note, Attorney General Eric Holder announced on Wednesday that California will get almost $9 million dollars in stimulus money to fight Mexican drug cartels. $800,000 of that money will pay for an automated system that tracks drug traffickers in the Bay Area.

Written and produced by Ken Miguel

What is smurfing?



Smurfing: “To increase domestic methamphetamine production, individuals and criminal groups are… making numerous small-quantity pseudoephedrine and ephedrine product purchases from multiple retail outlets, a diversion method known as ’smurfing.’”
–2009 NDIC National Drug Threat Assessment

SMURFING explodes in California

Pseudoephedrine smurfinga has become increasingly organized and widespread in California, particularly since 2007, fueling an increase in the number of large-scale methamphetamine laboratories in the state.1 Among the increased number of large-scale laboratories are those operated by Mexican criminal groups that have relocated to California from Mexico since 2007. Mexican criminal groups and some independent operators are increasingly acquiring bulk quantities of pseudoephedrine through smurfing. Despite strong efforts by law enforcement to curtail smurfing, there is no indication that this practice will decline in the near term. In fact, pseudoephedrine acquired through smurfing in California in 2009 was sent in bulk to methamphetamine producers in Mexico, an indication that some criminal groups in Mexico still find it easier to acquire pseudoephedrine through smurfing in California than from other sources.


Pseudoephedrine smurfing increased significantly in California in 2008 and early 2009. The incidence of individuals and criminal groups organizing pseudoephedrine smurfing operations that supply pseudoephedrine to California-based methamphetamine producers has increased throughout California. These smurfing operations began to gain prominence in late 2007, when pseudoephedrine availability and methamphetamine production decreased in Mexico. (See text box.) For instance, in October 2007, a Fresno County investigation revealed that a couple had been conducting daily precursor chemical smurfing operations, soliciting homeless individuals to travel from store to store to purchase pseudoephedrine. In exchange, the couple paid each person approximately $30 and sometimes gave the individuals alcohol. Evidence seized from the couple's vehicle included packages of pseudoephedrine, pharmacy listings torn from an area telephone directory, and several cellular telephones. (See Figure 1.) Similar smurfing operations increased in 2008 and have continued at high levels in 2009. In fact, law enforcement officials in 21 large California cities report that pseudoephedrine smurfing increased in their areas in 2008 and 2009. (See Figure 2.)

Figure 1. Smurfing Evidence Seized From a Vehicle in 2007
Photo of packages of pseudoephedrine, pharmacy listings torn from a telephone directory, and cellular telephones.



Source: Fresno Meth Task Force.

What a meth dump site looks like

This waste was left alongside the road in a commercial orchard in Merced County in 2008. Among the waste were approximately 10,000 empty pseudoephedrine blister packs.

Mo. Meth Labs Still Rampant Despite Tougher Rules

Mo. still rife with small meth labs despite new restrictions on buying ingredients for drug

By JIM SALTER
The Associated Press
By JIM SALTER Associated Press Writer
ST. LOUIS June 3, 2009 (AP)

ST. LOUIS

Authorities continue to find more meth labs and dump sites in Missouri than in any other state — by far — despite a new state law that has made it tougher to buy key ingredients.

Missouri State Highway Patrol Capt. Tim Hull said Wednesday that 462 lab busts and discoveries of meth-processing dump sites were reported in the state for the first three months of 2009, according to an internal report. That was up from 426 in the first quarter of 2008.

No other state was even close, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Mississippi had the second-highest number of meth incidents, with 146 in the January-through-March period. Michigan was third with 136.

Missouri has led the nation in meth lab incidents every year since 2001, but because they mostly involve very small-scale operations the state is far from the leader in terms of quantities seized. In 2007, for instance, there was nearly 50 times more meth seized in California than in Missouri, even though authorities in Missouri found more than four times as many meth labs and dump sites as their counterparts in California.

Missouri law enforcement may be more aggressive in rooting out meth labs because they have become a more significant political issue after years of headlines proclaiming the state the nation's "meth capital."

"You have to look at it two ways," Hull said. "Is the problem here that much worse, or is the concerted effort of Missouri law enforcement that much greater as far as finding it and seeking out where meth is being manufactured?"

Still, the labs remain a big concern. The toxic mix of chemicals causes serious health problems and death. Meth lab fires are common.

And every time the state seems to be making progress, the meth-makers find ways around the roadblocks.

Meth busts declined in Missouri after a 2005 law required products containing pseudoephedrine or ephedrine to be placed behind pharmacy counters, limited the amount that could be purchased and required buyers to show photo identification.

So rather than buy large quantities at one spot, meth-makers began "pill shopping" in multiple cities or towns — a practice known as "smurfing."

Last August, another new Missouri law restricted availability of pseudoephedrine and ephedrine even further — allowing it to be sold only in pharmacies. It helped for a while, officials said, but the numbers have gradually crept back up.

Some law enforcement agencies and the Missouri Narcotics Officers Association want state lawmakers to make pseudoephedrine a Schedule 3 controlled substance, which would require a prescription to purchase it. Meth fighters also want an online system that would immediately track purchases of the meth precursors and red flag those making multiple purchases in a short period of time.

Lawmakers have authorized the electronic monitoring system, but haven't funded it.

"At this time, we don't have a real-time solution to the problem to apprehend these people as they go from store to store to store," said Lt. Dave Marshak of the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department.

In some cases, pharmacists are taking matters into their own hands. Richard Logan operates L&S Discount Pharmacy in the southeast Missouri town of Charleston. Also a reserve deputy sheriff in Scott and Mississippi counties, he sometimes wears his badge and sheriff's department vest to work. And he no longer sells pseudoephedrine, except to people he knows.

But Logan said smurfing isn't the only problem. Meth manufacturers have found a faster way to make the drug, the so-called "shake-and-bake" method.

Typically, making a batch of meth could take all night. The new method involves chemicals that are shaken in a 2-liter bottle.

"Now, they can make a whole batch in about 30 minutes," Logan said.

Number of meth labs seized in Southeast Missouri on track to double over 2008

Wednesday, June 3, 2009
By Bridget DiCosmo ~ Southeast Missourian

Law enforcement agencies say they are seeing a spike in methamphetamine production in Southeast Missouri so far this year, despite tighter restrictions on the purchase of cold medications containing pseudoephedrine.

As of Monday, the Southeast Missouri Drug Task Force had just over 40 meth lab seizures, close to the total reported in all of 2008, said task force director Kevin Glaser.

"We could conceivably see a double in 2009," Glaser said.

Current Missouri law, in effect since 2005, restricts the purchase of medicines containing pseudoephedrine to no more than 9 grams every 30 days and requires that buyers sign a paper log identifying themselves and the amount sold to them. Cold medicines with pseudoephedrine, such as Claritin D or Sudafed, are now stored behind the counter in pharmacies, and those restrictions helped control the meth problem for a few years.

"That helped initially quite a bit," Glaser said.

Now, "smurfing" -- going from pharmacy to pharmacy buying the total allowed quantity of pseudoephedrine at each store until enough is collected to produce meth -- is causing the numbers of meth lab incidents to skyrocket again.

"All across Missouri we're seeing those numbers creep up," Glaser said.

The paper log system doesn't provide sufficient "checks and balances," he said.

The prevalence of "shake and bake" or "one-pot" meth making has worsened the situation by providing for easier manufacturing, said Richard Logan, a pharmacist at L&S Pharmacy in Charleston, Mo., and reserve deputy with Scott and Mississippi County sheriff's departments.

While the pseudoephedrine legislation has had positive effects on the meth problem in Missouri, smurfing has not been completely addressed.

"It seems to be as bad as it was in the early '90s," Logan said. "It's just gotten really ugly."

Logan said toward the end of last summer, his employees reported so many suspicious buys of pseudoephedrine-based products that he would come in to work wearing his badge and sheriff's department vest and speak with customers about their purchases.

Last year, Missouri legislators authorized a statewide electronic monitoring system for pseudoephedrine-based drugs, but funding for the software program has yet to be made available.

Lawmakers said they were working on creating a "real-time" monitoring system like the one in Oklahoma.

Such a monitoring program, Glaser said, would be more effective in tracking sales and prohibiting someone from making a purchase of pseudoephedrine-based drugs even if they'd bought the maximum legal allotment minutes earlier at another drugstore.

"We've tried to work very aggressively to find money to fund it," said Ron Fitzwater, chief executive officer of the Missouri Pharmacy Association.

Fitzwater said pharmacists understand the need to address the meth problem and think the legislation will be effective in combating it.

Under a bill sponsored this year by Sen. Jason Crowell, R-Cape Girardeau, a prescription would be required for pseudoephedrine-based drugs. The last action on that bill was a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in February.

bdicosmo@semissourian.com

388-3635

Pertinent Address:

Cape Girardeau, MO 63701

Some Missouri towns taking aim at meth labs by requiring prescriptions for cold meds

Published: 7/17/2009 | Updated: 7/24/2009

By RODNEY HART

Quincy Herald-Whig Staff Writer

In the face of a never-ending methamphetamine lab problem, some local Missouri governments are requiring consumers to obtain prescriptions to buy certain cold and allergy medications.

The city of Washington became the first in the country to require a prescription for purchases of over-the-counter medications that contain pseudoephedrine, meth's main ingredient. Jefferson County, which has long led the state in meth labs, is planning similar legislation.

"I think it's a very good idea," says Capt. Tim Forney, head of the Northeast Missouri Drug Task Force. "But I'd like to see a nationwide effort. It would probably push it out of that community, but the people buying pills, they'd just go somewhere else."

Forney says his officers continue to find meth labs. There have been 462 meth labs seized in Missouri this year as of June 1, including 10 in Marion County and seven in Ralls County, according to Missouri State Highway Patrol statistics. There were 19 in Marion County all of last year and 23 in Ralls County. More than 1,400 meth labs were seized in the state last year.

Getting a federal law passed requiring a prescription is admittedly a longshot. Even Forney agrees it would make getting medicine for a simple cold a hassle.

"I can see the opposition to it. If I had a cold, I wouldn't want to have to go see a doctor," Forney said.

Drug companies which make pseudoephedrine have powerful government lobbies, as well.

Tony Rothert, legal director for the ACLU of Eastern Missouri, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that his group has asked Washington to repeal the ordinance and is considering legal action if it doesn't.

"It sets a dangerous precedent," he said. "Here it's just allergies, but next time it could be something more, like birth control."

Rothert thinks the ordinance conflicts with state and federal law, which consider pseudoephedrine products, such as Sudafed and Claritin D, safe enough to use without a prescription. Because of that, Rothert said, the ordinance would not pass legal muster.

Declaring pseudoephedrine a controlled substance, making it illegal to possess without a prescription, is a move only state and federal governments can make.

Oregon is the only state with such a law. It took effect in July 2006, and police ended that year with 63 meth labs busts. Two years later, they had only 18.

Other states like California and Missouri have taken notice. Missouri requires people buying more than nine grams of products with pseudoephedrine to sign for the pills, which are locked in a cabinet at drug stores.

Map: States Lacking Meth Lab Clean-up Laws

Are you living in a former meth lab?

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

Jason Dowdell and Michelle DiLorenzo thought the three-bedroom ranch along a quiet, winding Jefferson County road would be the perfect place to start their life together.

They envisioned a nursery in one bedroom. Toys in the backyard. Perennials in the planters.

But all that was put on hold two years later when they learned the home was contaminated with enough methamphetamine residue to be condemned in more than a dozen states.

Under Missouri law, they were supposed to be told before they bought it that it was once a meth factory. But they weren't — a common failure in Missouri and Illinois, the heart of America's meth labs.



"There are so many other houses like this out there," said DiLorenzo, 24. "Why aren't they doing anything about it?"

A Post-Dispatch investigation found that both states have failed to protect residents from moving into former meth labs that can lower property values, and, some experts believe, make people sick.

The newspaper found:

— Toxic residue from meth labs has lingered in area homes for as long as four years after busts.

— Home sellers and landlords routinely violate Missouri's law requiring residents be told before moving into former meth labs. Illinois has yet to adopt such a law.

— Residents have nowhere to easily find out whether a home was ever a meth lab, unlike in other states that publish lists of addresses and flag property records.

One out of every five of the country's more than 100,000 meth labs has been found in Missouri and Illinois, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. Police have found remnants of meth-making equipment and toxic byproducts inside homes, apartments and hotels, as well as dumped along roadways, in yards and cars.

But once officers box up the evidence, the homes are left virtually untouched.

A LINGERING PROBLEM

For the past 10 years, national health experts say they have linked exposure to meth residue to adverse health effects.

The research hasn't convinced Missouri or Illinois legislators to require that former meth labs be cleaned. But it has convinced 18 states to require that homes be decontaminated before people can move back in.

In 13 of those states, the requirements are so strict that homes remain condemned until testing shows barely a trace of meth. The acceptable level is the equivalent of spreading no more than one sugar packet of meth residue across 23 football fields.

The Post-Dispatch tested five homes police busted for meth and where new families are living.

They ranged from a recently rehabbed one-story in north St. Louis County to a split-level anchoring a cul-de-sac in O'Fallon, Mo. Months and, in some cases, years had passed since meth labs in the homes were busted, according to police reports. The tests revealed residue levels in all five homes high enough to be condemned in 13 of the 18 states.

"If five of five homes came back positive, imagine if you tested 100 homes," said Dowdell, whose home was tested. "And then imagine how many times those homes have been sold and resold."

Cleanup companies along with national and local health experts say it's common for meth labs that haven't been cleaned to test positive for residue — no matter how long after police busts.

"It doesn't just go away over time," said Michael Frakes, who co-owns Chicago Crime Scene Cleanup LLC, a company the newspaper commissioned to collect samples.

The newspaper's findings shocked the residents, who said they did not know they were living in former meth labs until they were contacted by the Post-Dispatch.

Luke and Amy Probst's home yielded the highest levels. The fully rehabbed two-bedroom home along a tree-lined street in Belleville has a new kitchen, carpeting, paint — and average levels of meth contamination 140 times those allowed in 13 states. Amy Probst was furious.

"If I would have known these test results, we would have never bought the house,"・she said.

Contamination levels were the worst in the Probsts' basement, where Luke Probst, a St. Clair County sheriff's deputy, spends most of his time.

"What if someone with kids had moved in here and made the basement a play area?" Amy Probst asked.

NO WAY TO KNOW

Illinois has never required home sellers or landlords to tell new residents of a property's history as a meth lab. A proposal to do so stalled in the state Legislature this year.

Missouri passed its law in 2001.

Former state Rep. Dennis Bonner of Kansas City said he proposed the law because a family told him they had moved into a home and started suffering from allergies. They learned it was a former meth lab only after it tested positive for residue.

"Meth labs put all types of chemicals in a house. That's why, when you see police in them, they're in hazmat suits," said Bonner, who left the Legislature in 2002. "Imagine buying a house and not knowing what it had in it."

But Missouri's law carries no criminal penalties, and few have paid attention.

The Post-Dispatch interviewed more than 30 Missouri families living in former meth labs. Only three said they had found out before moving in — and one of them was told by future neighbors, not the home seller.

The law also requires landlords to tell new tenants if a home or apartment was ever busted for meth. But there is no form landlords are required to provide renters.

Home sellers commonly fill out a disclosure form, which asks about the presence of meth labs next to questions about mold and radon. But it's not required in all sales.

That includes homes sold in foreclosure, because banks have no way to know a home's history.

Home buyers can hire home inspectors, but most lack training to spot the signs of former meth labs or know how to test for contamination.

The only option left for home buyers or renters is to file a civil lawsuit and prove a seller or landlord knew, but didn't tell.

Area lawyers say lawsuits could be costly and hard to prove.

So far, legal experts can point to only one successful lawsuit — in Washington state — where a judge found that home sellers failed to tell buyers about a former meth lab.

Recognizing weaknesses in disclosure laws, several states, including Oregon and Tennessee, require that meth lab reports and cleanup certifications be attached to property deeds. As a result, standard title searches reveal a home's meth lab history even if a seller lies.

NOWHERE TO LOOK

In Missouri and Illinois potential home buyers can't easily find information about former meth labs.

The DEA's website lists only labs busted since 2006. And the Post-Dispatch found that half of all homes busted in Illinois are missing from the list.

Dozens of states have made comprehensive and independent databases of meth lab addresses available online. But not Missouri and Illinois.

In Illinois, police report about three-fourths of busts to state health officials, who said they couldn't afford to post the list online. Residents must file a public records request to get the list.

In Missouri, police don't report lab busts directly to state health officials — but do fill out DEA reports that are funneled through the Missouri Highway Patrol. However, the highway patrol doesn't post the addresses online and won't release them to the public.

In September, the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department became the first and only Missouri police agency to post addresses of meth busts online. But the list goes back only to January 2007.

"I would be too cumbersome to go all the way back,"・said Sheriff Oliver "Glenn" Boyer.

Comprehensive databases are key in states without cleanup laws, said Sherry Green, executive director of the National Alliance for Model State Drug Laws. The congressionally funded group promotes effective state drug policies. Green said states should not rely on the honesty of sellers or landlords alone.

"There is financial motive on the part of certain individuals to lie," Green said.

Another option for Missouri and Illinois homeowners: Ask the police.

But although police in Jefferson, St. Charles and St. Louis counties released reports of meth lab busts to the newspaper, the Illinois State Police would not.

The agency said a state law requiring the release of public records applied to police reports involving meth labs only if the suspects named in the reports agreed to it.

That infuriated the Probsts, who can't get a police report of the July 2005 bust at their home. All they know is that one took place about a year before they moved in, because it is listed on the Illinois database.

"It's ridiculous," said Amy Probst, a lawyer. "I'm so mad right now and the lawyer in me is asking, 'OK, who do I sue?' But there's nothing we can do, and we did nothing wrong."

NOWHERE TO TURN

DiLorenzo cried at the news that her home was contaminated. Her live-in boyfriend, Dowdell, bowed his head and wrapped his arms around her on the front porch of what was supposed to be their dream home.

They cannot afford to hire professional cleaners, or sell their home at a loss.

Doctors can't say for sure that the meth residue in their home is causing DiLorenzo's headaches, wheezing and nausea, but the couple won't take a chance with loved ones. Their younger siblings are no longer allowed to stay the night.

"My headaches get so bad sometimes that I throw up," DiLorenzo said. "That never happened before I moved in here."

They tried to plant perennials in the front yard earlier this summer, but stopped when they unearthed needles, foils, funnels and bottles of fuel additives. Jefferson County detectives confirmed the materials were once part of a meth lab.

The couple also have stopped investing in home improvement projects. They worry how their home's toxic history will affect their bottom line because they must disclose it to future buyers. Real estate appraisers can't say how much it will lower a property's value, only that it will.

DiLorenzo and Dowdell wondered whether anyone else has unknowingly bought a home with a meth lab in its past.

They didn't have to look far.

DiLorenzo recently checked the federal database to see if a house with a "For Sale" sign along her street was listed.

It was.

"Hmm," DiLorenzo said, as she looked down the street. "I wonder who is going to tell them."

The "For Sale" sign came down in May.

A young couple moved in.

The couple told the Post-Dispatch that they hadn't been informed. The home sellers and their real estate agent didn't return a reporter's phone call.

The couple, embarrassed at their fate, asked not to be named in this story.

It's their first house, but it wasn't their first choice. They said they passed on another house because of mold, fearing it might harm their disabled toddler.

Now the child's toys sit in their new front yard.

The Post-Dispatch interviewed more than 50 families living in former meth labs throughout the St. Louis area. Here are some of their stories.


Anthony Monaghan | St. Louis

Since moving into his Dogtown apartment two years ago, Monaghan, 44, said he has visited his doctor several times because of shortness of breath and cardiac problems.

He learned through the Post-Dispatch that the property was the site of a meth lab bust.

"We're like guinea pigs here," he said. "I'm not sure if the landlord had it cleaned up or not. All I know is I'm on medications I've never been on before in my life, and I've got these symptoms, and nobody knows why."

Christine Steief | Belleville

Steief thought an apartment across the street from a Belleville school would be a safe place for her and her 5-year-old son, James. About six months after she moved in, neighbors told her police once busted a meth lab there.

She said she and her son have been sick since January 2006 when they moved in, but she blames it on common colds. She worries more about her safety because it is a ground-floor apartment.

"I used to leave my windows open in the summer, but I don't do that anymore," she said. "People on meth aren't safe people, and I don't know if they'll come back here someday."

Bobby Forsythe | Granite City

Forsythe, 53, said he didn't know why his eyes and nose burned every time he walked into a vacant mobile home he had bought and wanted to restore. Then neighbors told him the former owner cooked meth there.

After he moved in last year, the meth addict's brother showed up, demanding his personal effects. Another day, a strange woman walked into the home and looked around in a daze. He told her to leave.

He continues to remodel the home but knows he can't erase its history as a meth lab.

"It can never be perfect again."

The Heckenbergs | Granite City

Despite a family history of asthma, Amee Heckenberg thought she'd be the exception.

But at age 27, six months after she and her husband moved into a mobile home in 2006, she was diagnosed with the respiratory disorder. She had to use an inhaler six times a day.

She learned later from neighbors that the home was a former meth lab.

The family has since moved out, and local officials condemned the home — for electrical problems.

Robert FRANDSEN | Eureka

Frandsen said he couldn't pass up a three-bedroom ranch listed for $154,400 in a wooded subdivision where other houses typically sold for $200,000. Just weeks after he moved in, neighbors told him it had been a drug house. The newspaper then told him this summer that meth was made there.

Frandsen, 77, said his health is fine, but he worries how the stigma may affect his home's value.

Dan Harrison | St. John

A year after Harrison bought his home, he called 911 to report his motorcycle stolen. Officers soon swarmed around his home, and one asked him how long he had been sober.

Soon, police realized he was not the same man once busted there for making meth. And Harrison realized he was living in a former meth lab.

He told the Post-Dispatch that he'd been laid off and feared he'd one day lose the house in foreclosure. He doubted a new owner would be told the home's history.

"I wouldn't have bought this house if I knew it was a meth lab," he said. "But I guess it's going to happen to someone else now."

The Mathises | AFFTON

Leah, 23, and Sarah Mathis, 21, were told before moving into an apartment nearly two years ago that it had been a meth lab. Owners of the busy complex even told them they cleaned it.

The sisters aren't sure how well it was cleaned, but they said they felt safe enough to move in.

"We haven't had any health problems, and if something was going to happen, it would have happened by now," Leah Mathis told a reporter. "Right?"

Vernon Whillock | Festus

Whillock said he rented a Festus home to a longtime friend who he did not know was addicted to meth.

Police busted the friend in 2004, and Whillock was stuck with a house he felt was unsafe to rent to someone else. He's turned it into a paint shop.

"I'm worried about the health factors. I mean, that stuff could be in the plumbing for all I know," he said. "Who knows what he did?"


cbyers@post-dispatch.com | 636-937-6249

Cold medicine only by prescription?

ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

Jefferson County police knew whom they were looking for: A computer program had flagged two men for buying illegal amounts of a cold and allergy medicine used to make methamphetamine.

Months of tips and chasing led nowhere, until police broke down a door Thursday at a home in Crystal City and found the two by chance.



The two meth cooks were using a toxic mix of chemicals to make the drug, endangering a 5-year-old in the home. As the two men lay on the floor in handcuffs, police asked the child's pregnant mother to put his shoes on so he could go outside. Once outdoors, the boy squirmed in his Spider-Man shoes

"Hey, officer, there's something in my shoe," he said.

He took off his shoe and held it upside down. A tightly packed piece of foil no bigger than a pen cap fell out. Detective Jim Vargas found meth residue on the burned foil.

"It makes me feel good that at least we were able to get here and get him out," Vargas said. "We've been chasing these people for a long time."

The moment illustrates why police believe a drastic measure making its way through the Missouri Legislature to make some over-the-counter products available only by prescription is needed to curb the meth epidemic in the Midwest.

Opponents say Missouri should spend more than $1 million to equip the state's pharmacies with software to track purchases of meth's main ingredient, pseudoephedrine.

But that software - already in use in several pharmacies in Jefferson County - didn't stop the 5-year-old's addicted family members from making meth

Federal and state laws set monthly limits on the amount of pseudoephedrine products that can be legally purchased. Those limits are equivalent to two 15-dose boxes of 24-hour Claritin D or six boxes of 24-dose Sudafed.

Like most meth cooks, the child's grandfather and family friends find ways around the laws. They buy illegal amounts, but shop at pharmacies that don't track pill purchases at other stores. They use fake IDs or old addresses. And they pay other people to buy their pills.

"It's like we're chasing ghosts," Vargas said


And the phantom activity is flourishing in the struggling economy.

Missouri and Illinois saw a resurgence in meth lab busts last year, due in part to people buying legal amounts of pills and selling the $7 boxes for as much as $60, said Cpl. Scott Poe, commander of the Jefferson County Drug Taskforce.

"Pill shopping has become a source of subsidizing income for people who would otherwise not normally get involved in meth, because it is so profitable," Poe said. Among the excuses police hear from those selling pills is the need to pay back child support, utility bills and other expenses for the recently unemployed. "The only way to eradicate this problem is prescription status," said Poe

GOING TOO FAR?

Opponents of the prescription-only plan, including the Missouri Retailers Association, say it would be unfair to inconvenience consumers for the actions of a few and require doctor visits for colds or allergies. The state should give the software program a chance, said Dave Overfelt, the group's president


"The consumer will have to spend more time, money and effort, and crime won't go down," Overfelt said. "I don't believe that just because you pass the prescription law, the meth problem is going away. They're going to find ways around the prescription law."

So far, Oregon is the only state to adopt a prescription policy. Police there say pill shoppers, or smurfers, can't skirt the law because it takes a lot of pseudoephedrine to make meth, and the smurfers can't convince enough people to get prescriptions


Other states believe in the software Missouri is proposing. Oklahoma's version links pharmacies in a computer database, calculates consumers' pseudoephedrine purchases and alerts sales clerks if someone is about to exceed the limit. Still, the system has flaws.

In 2007 - the first full year Oklahoma had the program - meth lab busts totaled 148. The number rose to 213 in 2008, said Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics spokesman Mark Woodward.

"One reason we're seeing labs increase is because people are using multiple IDs at the counter, with different information," Woodward said.


Oklahoma legislators plan to track pill purchases through birth dates. But Woodward said the state might consider the prescription approach if meth cases became "unmanageable."

"We think it's a drastic measure," he added.

Some Missouri pharmacies already use the software.

In Jefferson County, which has long led the state in meth lab busts, Vargas and his fellow narcotics officers say the software helps track pseudoephedrine sales at three of the county's 25 or so pharmacies. Those that do not have the software keep paper sales logs or give police lists of pseudoephedrine buys, when officers find the time to pick them up.

But, as Vargas and the rest of Jefferson County's "meth cowboys" have found, the software takes them only so far. The addresses on drivers licenses are valid only about a third of the time. That means detectives spend hours trying to locate pill shoppers.

And the chase isn't fun.

"So far we've driven 45 miles and spent two hours looking for this guy," Vargas said of one pill shopper. "And this is only one guy. That address will be on his license until it expires in 2012, and it's not even valid."

In January, police found about 20 meth labs in Jefferson County.

At the height of Oregon's meth problem, police found about 40 meth labs a month. That changed in 2006 when state legislators voted 90-9 to make pseudoephedrine a prescription drug, as it was before 1976.

In 2007, the first full year of the policy, police seized 18 labs. They found 21 labs total in 2008, most of them near the state's borders with unregulated states.

STATE AND FEDERAL EFFORTS

Thanks to his state's success, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., plans to propose the prescription approach at the federal level this spring.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., said she would consider it.

"Claire has a long history of fighting meth going back to her days as Jackson County prosecutor," said spokeswoman Maria Speiser. "She's looking forward to reviewing Wyden's bill to give her input and support."

Sen. Christopher "Kit" Bond, R-Mo., could not be reached for comment.

Meanwhile, Wyden is gathering endorsements from various groups in his state, including the pharmacists association that originally balked at the idea.

Oregon State Pharmacists Association President Ken Wells said pharmacists had feared consumer backlash. But once the policy took effect, Wells said, there wasn't one.

Consumers learned that pharmacists could call in prescriptions for them. Some saw insurance pick up their allergy and cold medicines. Others appreciated no longer having to provide personal identification at the counter, Wells said.

Some Missouri legislators aren't waiting for the federal government to act. The Missouri House's Crime Committee voted last week in favor of a bill to make the drug prescription-only and sent the bill to the House Rules Committee. A similar plan in the Senate ignited some spirited debate last month but has not progressed.

The bill's sponsor, state Rep. Scott Lipke, R-Jackson, said electronic tracking was too costly and didn't have a big enough impact.

"Do we once again take an incremental approach to this problem, knowing we'll have to put it at prescription status eventually? Then we'll be out the money we spent on the software when other states in the country have done it and haven't seen a huge impact," Lipke said. "Oregon basically wiped it off the face of their state."

This year, a Rand study put the cost of the nation's meth epidemic at $23.4 billion. That includes $905 million for foster care and $4 billion for police work and criminal justice costs.

The Missouri Division of Family Services took custody of the 5-year-old boy removed from the meth lab Thursday in Crystal City, along with his 7-year-old brother, who was at school during the raid.

Within hours, Vargas and the rest of the officers began the hunt for the next smurfer on the list.

They jumped into their cars, headed for the suspect's last known address.

And the chase continues.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Rest of the State Should Follow Washington's Lead


To The Editor: The freedoms that our Constitution afford us are what make this country great. But we don't have the freedom to cook meth and burn down the apartment building we live in or poison the house we rent. We don't have the right to put our children and neighbors at risk because of our addiction.

We know that cooking meth poses an extreme danger to the health and safety of our citizens, and we know that the only way to stop meth labs is to eliminate the one required ingredient, pseudoephedrine. We must recognize that pseudoephedrine is an effective drug for the treatment of cold symptoms, and should not be removed from the market.

Currently, pseudoephedrine can be purchased without a prescription at any pharmacy and meth-cookers commonly recruit multiple friends to purchase the pseudoephedrine from multiple sources, collect the pills, and cook it into meth.

The process is more than dangerous to the cooker, it is explosive, and creates poisonous byproducts that remain long after the cooker is gone.

In Jefferson County, our EMS personnel have responded to many, many fires caused by methcookers. This places them in extreme danger as they fight the fire, and risk the explosions and the exposure to the contaminants.

Many folks have lost their homes because their neighbor was a methcooker and moving a family into a residence where meth was cooked could be catastrophic.

The answer to the addiction is unsolved, but the answer to the meth-lab is addressable. By requiring a prescription, only sick people get access to the drug. In Oregon, the only state to pass the necessary legislation, the results have been dramatic.

So why hasn't Missouri passed this? Minority Whip State Rep. Jeff Roorda has sponsored the legislation, and every Jefferson County legislator has supported it, but they are in the minority, and the majority took it out of the last crime bill.

As elected officials, it is our sworn duty to protect the public health. As regional leaders, it is our duty to lead. The city of Washington, in Franklin County, has demonstrated its willingness to lead.

The ordinance they passed makes pseudoephedrine a prescription-only medication. It puts one piece of the regional armor in place in the battle against meth. It is now up to the rest of the region to follow that lead and pass similar ordinances that will form a united front against meth labs.

Together we can make a difference. I ask that every city and every county in the St. Louis region stand with Washington and stop meth now.

8 Drugs your doctor won’t take (and neither should you!)

8 drugs doctors wouldn’t take

If your physician would skip these medicines, maybe you should, too

By Morgan Lord

June 22, 2008

With 3,480 pages of fine print, the Physicians’ Desk Reference (a.k.a. PDR) is not a quick read. That’s because it contains every iota of information on more than 4,000 prescription medications. Heck, the PDR is medication — a humongous sleeping pill.

Doctors count on this compendium to help them make smart prescribing decisions — in other words, to choose drugs that will solve their patients’ medical problems without creating new ones. Unfortunately, it seems some doctors rarely pull the PDR off the shelf. Or if they do crack it open, they don’t stay versed on emerging research that may suddenly make a once-trusted treatment one to avoid. Worst case: You swallow something that has no business being inside your body.

Of course, plenty of M.D.’s do know which prescription and over-the-counter drugs are duds, dangers, or both. So we asked them, “Which medications would you skip?” Their list is your second opinion. If you’re on any of these meds, talk to your doctor. Maybe he or she will finally open that big red book with all the dust on it.



Pseudoephedrine

Forget that this decongestant can be turned into methamphetamine. People with heart disease or hypertension should watch out for any legitimate drug that contains pseudoephedrine. See, pseudoephedrine doesn’t just constrict the blood vessels in your nose and sinuses; it can also raise blood pressure and heart rate, setting the stage for vascular catastrophe. Over the years, pseudoephedrine has been linked to heart attacks and strokes. “Pseudoephedrine can also worsen symptoms of benign prostate disease and glaucoma,” says Dr. Rodgers. Your new strategy: Other OTC oral nasal decongestants can contain phenylephrine, which has a safety profile similar to pseudoephedrine’s. A 2007 review didn’t find enough evidence that phenylephrine was effective. Our advice: Avoid meds altogether and clear your nasal passages with a neti pot, the strangely named system that allows you to flush your sinuses with saline. University of Wisconsin researchers found that people who used a neti pot felt their congestion and head pain improve by as much as 57 percent. Granted, the flushing sensation is odd at first, but give it a chance. Dr. Roizen did: “I do it every day after I brush my teeth,” he say

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Washington Missouri Most Pharmacists Agree With New AntiMeth Law

Washington Missouri Most Pharmacists Agree With New AntiMeth Law
Most Washington pharmacists are in favor of a new city ordinance
restricting the purchase of medicines containing pseudoephedrine, but say
it's too early to ...
<http://www.emissourian.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=20345050&BRD=1409&PAG=461&dept_id=56219&rfi=8>

Washington, Mo., considers repeal of anti-meth ordinance

Washington, Mo., considers repeal of anti-meth ordinance
FOX2now.com - St. Louis,MO,USA
(AP) — A decision by the Washington City Council on whether to repeal a
law requiring pseudoephedrine to be sold by prescription only will have to
wait. ...
<http://www.fox2now.com/news/sns-ap-mo--fightingmeth-mo,0,1847794.story>

MO town requires prescription to get Sudafed, other cold medicines

MO town requires prescription to get Sudafed, other cold medicines
Kansas City Star
... which passed an ordinance requiring a doctor's prescription if anyone
wanted to buy medicine containing pseudoephedrine, which is a key meth
ingredient. ...
<http://blogs.kansascity.com/crime_scene/2009/07/update-mo-town-requires-prescription-to-get-sudafed-other-cold-medicines.html>

Washington, Mo., took a significant step toward combating meth

Washington, Mo., took a significant step toward combating meth
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Pseudoephedrine, an effective treatment for cold symptoms, should not be
removed from the market. Currently, pseudoephedrine can be purchased
without a ...
<http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/editorialcommentary/story/26F651D704DFBC1D862575F9008271F5?OpenDocument>