Each time laws make methamphetamine manufacture difficult or impossible, domestic cooks or drug cartels find ways to circumvent the laws so they can continue to provide meth addicts with the drugs they seek.
Time after time, legislators make their best attempts to curb methamphetamine abuse by trying to legislate away the problem. But time after time, the business of making and selling methamphetamine just changes shape to keep up with the changes.
This pattern started back in 2004 when domestic methamphetamine production ran rampant across the US, especially the West and Midwest. As there were no restrictions on buying pseudoephedrine-containing cold medication, meth cooks could just stock up on the precursor chemicals they needed and make meth in quantity. State by state, laws were passed to restrict the sale of cold medication like Sudafed. The number of domestic methamphetamine labs discovered began to plummet as these laws were passed.
To compensate, as described by the Department of Justics, Mexican drug traffickers began to establish Superlabs in Mexico and Central California, meth labs capable of ten pounds per short production cycle, sometimes even a hundred pounds. This compares to the few ounces most domestic meth cooks make in each batch.
The next step belonged to the Mexican government. They made it harder to get big batches of pseudoephedrine from China or other Asian countries, as reported by the New York Times in February of 2012. Mexican methamphetamine makers began to struggle with supply and resorted to using other, inferior, precursor chemicals. The meth they began shipping into the US was less satisfactory.
Which of course opened the door of opportunity for domestic meth cooks again. They began to work out ways to adapt to the restrictions placed on cold medication purchases.
First, someone developed a more efficient method of utilizing the pseudoephedrine that could be obtained. The new production method was called “Shake and Bake” because it involved adding the toxic precursor chemicals to a two-liter soda bottle and shaking them up, then letting the chemical reaction take place in the bottle until meth was formed. The bottle was then discarded, sometimes on the roadside, leaving a toxic mess for anyone who might find it. The New York Times reported on one case in which a child found a bottle in a bag of discarded garbage, which then blew up in his face, blinding him in one eye.
Second, so they could get the cold medication they needed, meth cooks recruited their customers to form bands of traveling buyers who would make road trips to go from drugstore to drugstore, each person buying the legal limit of cold medication.
Once again, legislators detected this trend and tried to legislate the problem away. As noted by the National Meth Center, Mississippi make pseuoephedrine-containing cold medication a prescription-only product and Alabama implemented a tracking system that would detect how many packages of cold medication any individual bought, anywhere in the state. As these laws were passed, neighboring state expressed their concerns that this would force buyers in their directions. This new trend began to show up in increased cold medication sales in some nearby states.
“It’s simply not possible to legislate away this problem,” stated Derry Hallmark, Director of Admission at Narconon Arrowhead. Narconon Arrowhead is a non-profit long-term drug and alcohol rehabilitation program located in Oklahoma. “As laws change, so do the patterns of manufacture and consumption. It’s essential to attack the demand for this and other drugs by providing effective drug rehabilitation and prevention services to as many people as possible.”
For more than a decade, Narconon Arrowhead has offered effective drug rehabilitation services those who had become addiction to alcohol or any drug. Drug prevention classes have been delivered to schoolchildren, civic groups and clubs across Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas and Arkansas. One schoolchild, one recovered addict at a time, Narconon Arrowhead has helped cut down the demand for methamphetamine and other drugs.
“We must continue to curtail production ability at home and across the border through legislation and law enforcement,” added Mr. Hallmark. “But only by attacking the problem from both ends can we reduce the number of people impacted by drug abuse and addiction.”
Narconon Arrowhead will continue to salvage lives and restore families through their successful rehab center. As a result of this holistic, drug-free program, seven out of ten graduates go on to live clean and sober lives. For more information on Narconon Arrowhead, call 1-800-468-6933 today.
References:
http://www.nationalmethcenter.org/STATES-MS.html
http://www.nationalmethcenter.org/STATES-AL.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/16/opinion/16bovett.html
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics/methamphetamines/index.html
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2007/11/30/us/20071202_LAND_FEATURE.html?ref=methamphetamines
http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/02/03/10307672-cross-border-methamphetamine-trade-booms-amid-mexicos-war-on-drugs
http://www.justice.gov/ndic/pubs38/38661/meth.htm
New Methamphetamine Laws May Be Best Efforts to Curb Drug Abuse but Drug Addicts Will Always Find a Way



