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Editorial: Making Meth Laws Tougher
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n580/a11.html
Newshawk: chip
Pubdate: Mon, 12 Apr 2004
Source: Gadsden Times, The (AL)
Copyright: 2004 The Gadsden Times
Contact: news@gadsdentimestoday.com
Website: http://www.gadsdentimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1203
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm
(Methamphetamine)
MAKING METH LAWS TOUGHER
New Bill Would Address Ingredients and Cleanups
A three-bill package before the Alabama Legislature alters the
state's laws regarding methamphetamine, an easily-manufactured
drug that continues to be a growing epidemic in the northeast
corner of the state.
Law enforcement officers will welcome anything to help in the
fight against this dangerous drug. In recent years Northeast
Alabama has witnessed brutal crimes linked to methamphetamine and
at least one deadly fire that involved the drug. Despite the
fact that law enforcement efforts seem to be yielding arrests and
uncovering labs on a weekly basis, there continue to be labs to
find and alleged meth-makers to arrest.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. Lowell Barron, D-Fyffe, would
rewrite Alabama's relatively new drug manufacturing law to make
possession of a single ingredient used in making methamphetamine
illegal if the person planned to use it to produce the drug.
Under the current law, it is illegal to possess two or more
ingredients.
It would also make it a crime to knowingly sell or furnish the
ingredients used to make methamphetamine and would provide that
when a person is convicted of running a methamphetamine lab, they
must pay for the cost of testing and cleaning up the lab.
The cleanup factor of the bill may be the most welcome element of
the package. According to Mike O'Dell, district attorney for
DeKalb and Cherokee counties, the labs leave toxins that can cost
between $6,000 and $20,000 to clean up. He cited one case in
which the cleanup cost $80,000 - more than the house where the lab
had been found was worth.
With 400 meth labs found in the northeastern part of the state
last year alone, cleanup costs are a serious consideration.
Right now, federal funds are used to pay for those cleanups.
Saving federal funds may not be the state's top concern, but
ultimately we all know where those federal funds come from - from
taxpayers' pockets.
It would be far better to see the people who profited or planned
to profit from making methamphetamine pay for cleaning up their
own mess.
In addition to doing that, passing these bills will give law
enforcement officers and prosecutors additional weapons to use in
fighting those involved with the manufacture of methamphetamine.
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