Pubdate: Tue, 12 Jul 2005
Source: Des Moines Register (IA)
http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=3D/20050712/NEWS/5071= 
2002
Copyright: 2005 The Des Moines Register.
Contact:  http://desmoinesregister.com/index.html
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123
Author: Lee Rood
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

STATE: DROP IN METH SEIZURES SHOWS THAT TOUGH LAW WORKS

State officials say Iowa's new law restricting most pseudoephedrine 
sales to pharmacies is working wonders: The number of methamphetamine 
lab seizures declined more than 75 percent in June, the first full 
month after the law took effect, compared to the same period last year.

"I'm very satisfied that they're starting to drop, as we hoped they 
would, " said Ken Carter, chief of Iowa's narcotics bureau. "We're 
already starting to free up resources so that we can go after the 80 
percent of meth that is imported in the state."

However, Carter and other Iowa law-enforcement leaders fear Congress 
will adopt more lenient pseudoephedrine restrictions under an amended 
federal proposal that would override state laws. The Senate's 
Judiciary Committee is scheduled to debate changes to the federal 
Combat Meth Act as early as Thursday.

"I want to see something in writing that permits us to keep our 
current law, so it cannot be weakened in any way," Carter said.

Hoping to cut access to a main ingredient in the manufacture of meth, 
the Iowa Legislature this year required consumers to show 
identification and have their names entered into a log before making 
purchases of products containing pseudoephedrine. The law also limits 
the amount of pseudoephedrine that a person can purchase in a month 
and confines sales of all but the lowest-dose liquid pseudoephedrine 
products to pharmacies.

Earlier this year, U.S. Sens. Tom Harkin and Charles Grassley said 
they supported the federal proposal restricting pseudoephedrine as a 
means to curtail the spread nationwide of the toxic, makeshift labs 
that have endangered scores of children and taxed law-enforcement 
resources. Meth is now the nation's No. 1 drug problem affecting law 
enforcement agencies, according to several recent surveys.

However, the federal bill became more controversial after it was 
amended to pre-empt state laws - in large part to appease concerns of 
drug companies and retailers. Grassley, a ranking Republican on the 
judiciary committee, and U.S. Rep. Tom Latham, who was appointed 
recently to a congressional task force on rural meth issues, have 
since said they would oppose any federal proposal that would 
supersede state law.

"If states want to have tougher laws, they should have that right," 
Latham, a Republican, said on Monday.

Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, Polk County Attorney John Sarcone 
and national law-enforcement groups have complained that the federal 
bill allows wider sales of pseudoephedrine products than is currently 
allowed under the Iowa law. That would open the door for more 
meth-making, they said.

Representatives from Harkin's office, meanwhile, say they want to 
assure the Combat Meth Act is as strong as Iowa's law. Passing a 
federal law, they said, would ensure that meth-makers could not 
travel from state to state, buying or stealing multiple boxes of the 
decongestant where laws are most permissive.

However, Beth Stein, a Harkin staffer, also said U.S. Sens. Dianne 
Feinstein, a Democrat from California, and Jim Talent, a Republican 
from Missouri, have insisted that the federal legislation supersede state laws.

"The main sponsors have already bought off on the concept of 
pre-emption," Stein said.

Miller and Sarcone have fought back in recent days, writing letters 
to Harkin and Grassley to discourage them from supporting anything 
less than what is on the books in Iowa.

Sarcone, who pressured state legislators this year to pass stringent 
pseudoephedrine controls, said he opposes legislation that would 
limit states' ability to address their own meth-related problems.

"We know what works, and we shouldn't have to settle for something 
less," he said. "The human toll of this drug has just been 
tremendous. I don't know how long we have to continue before everyone wakes up."