Cold Meds: A Rural Drug Epidemic?
There’s a drug epidemic
in the country’s heartland, and the raw ingredient fueling it isn’t poppies from
Afghanistan, or coca from Colombia.
It’s cold medicine from the corner store.
The ingredient is called pseudoephedrine and it’s found in dozens of
over-the-counter cold medicines. It’s being used to make methamphetamine, a drug
considered as addictive as heroin or crack cocaine at a fraction of the price.
60 Minutes Wednesday goes to Missouri, a state with the dubious distinction of
being No. 1 in meth labs. As Correspondent Vicki Mabrey reports, it's where
America’s war on drugs has become a war on one drug alone.
It's 9 p.m. in Franklin
County, Mo. Det. Cpl. Jake Grellner and his narcotics squad are tracking two
suspects thought to be hiding in a house.
The two suspects have served time in the past for making methamphetamine. The
raid recovers a small amount of suspected meth – paraphernalia -- and hundreds
of pills, believed to be cold medicine containing pseudoephedrine.
"This is just another day at the office for us, I’m afraid," says Grellner.
The suspects can’t be charged until the materials are analyzed in a lab, but
they’re sent back to prison for violating parole on their prior meth
convictions.
How big a problem is meth in Missouri?
"Huge. Every narcotics officer, every department, every police department that I
know of is dealing in some way, shape or form with methamphetamine," says
Grellner.
"There’s no time to do marijuana. There’s no time to do cocaine, heroin, all
those other drugs. Methamphetamine is so prevalent. One of the local police
chiefs said in a recent interview that you’re more likely to find
methamphetamine in someone’s pocket than chewing gum."
About 80 percent of methamphetamine is mass-produced in so-called superlabs in
California and Mexico. But it has become so easy to make that small
do-it-yourself labs are popping up by the thousands. That’s because, as Grellner
showed 60 Minutes Wednesday, the main ingredients used in meth are available
almost everywhere.
What do you need to manufacture meth?
"You have to start with cold tablets. You can’t start anywhere else. You start
out with your cold tablets, and then what you’re gonna need is a coffee grinder
or a spice grinder and grind that up into a fine powder. Then you start mixing
in some of the chemical solvents like acetone, or Heet, which is methanol,
Coleman fuel, something along those lines. Maybe even isopropyl alcohol," says
Grellner.
"You’re not seeing them wearing white lab coats, and there’s not some guy
looking over their shoulder making sure that their purification level is OK."
Grellner says you can put an entire meth lab into "a 48-quart cooler or a tote,
a truck box on the back of a pickup truck and just haul it around with you."
"That’s the thing about meth labs, is this is the first time in the country’s
history that you have the ability to feed your own addiction," says Grellner.
"You can manufacture what you need."
It's called "cooking," and once you start cooking meth — and smoking, snorting,
injecting or eating it — the craving for it grows. It floods the brain with the
pleasure-inducing hormone dopamine, causing a high that lasts up to 12 hours,
and often leading to violent behavior. And when you crash, you crave more.
"Methamphetamine suddenly becomes this thing in their life that they can’t do
without," says Grellner. "They can do without the hamster and the dog and the
cat and the kids and the wife and the cars and the house and the job. But they
can’t do without meth, and they live each day to get enough stuff, to
manufacture the next batch, so they can get high again. … It's that addictive,
that bad."
Selena McDowell, 31, was married with three children when she got hooked on meth.
Within five years, she’d lost her job, her husband and her home.
"I lost everything. In a blink of an eye, it was gone," says McDowell. "And I
don’t even know how I did it."
McDowell and the kids were living in the car when they moved in with a man who
knew how to make the drug himself. "After that, it was uncontrollable. I
couldn’t control it; there was nobody that could control it," she says. "And I
tried. No matter how hard I tried to control it, it wasn’t gonna happen."
At home, she was surrounded by containers of flammable ether, ammonia, starter
fluid and thousands of cold pills, cooking meth every day. In 2002, she was
arrested, and her children were taken away.
"You were mixing these incredibly dangerous chemicals at home, with three
children," says Mabrey. "They were breathing those fumes."
"They were upstairs," says McDowell. "They weren't around the fumes."
"But you were still endangering your children," says Mabrey.
"Well, yeah. One move with that tank could have blown up my whole house and me
and my children sky high," says McDowell.
In 2003, Missouri had more meth labs than any state in America, so the
legislature passed a law to limit the amount of pseudoephedrine cold tablets
consumers can buy at one time.
But there are still so many people buying so many pills that officers like Sgt.
Tom Murley, of the St. Louis County Police Department, are actually assigned to
watch people shop.
"What they’re doing is, they’re going to the different stores and they’re buying
the legal amount of pills," says Murley, who is following a pill shopper. "But
they’re circumventing the law by going to store to store to store."
The suspect is later arrested, but police say many of the pill shoppers who get
away are headed into the rural areas nearby. That’s where Sgt. Tommy Wright and
his task force take over. They set a national record by busting 313 mom-and-pop
labs last year.
"If they see us at all coming, they’re just gonna run," says Wright, who's on
the trail of about 4,000 pseudoephedrine pills stolen from a local Walgreens.
His team is acting on a tip. "I can smell it. I can smell it! Get your masks on!
Vent it!"
Wright's men find a suspected meth lab in the house; combustible chemicals are
everywhere. There’s also a bag of powder. They think it’s ground-up cold
tablets, possibly some of the stolen Walgreens batch.
How dangerous is Wright's job?
"It's extremely dangerous. I mean, just due to the sheer unpredictability of
these people," says Wright. "We’ve had incidents where we’ve surrounded a house,
and they barricade the doors and set the house on fire. With themselves and
their families in it."
What would make his job easier? "Ultimately, if we could start limiting
pseudoephedrine a little more," says Wright. "You know, you take that ingredient
out, make it more difficult to get, much like Oklahoma’s done, and our job is
cut in half."
Last April, Oklahoma passed the nation’s toughest law regulating the sale of
pseudoephedrine cold pills. But it took the deaths of three state troopers to
make it happen.
Linda Green’s husband, Trooper Nik Green, was the third officer killed. Fourteen
months ago, he went to investigate a suspicious car by the roadside. "The man
had a weapon, which is common," says Green. "He overpowered my husband in the
struggle and shot him twice in the head."
With Green lobbying hard, the Oklahoma legislature reclassified pseudoephedrine
as what the DEA calls "Schedule 5." That means tablets are only available from
pharmacists. Buyers have to show ID, sign a register, and soon, will be
monitored in a statewide database.
"If I ever had any way that I felt like I could possibly help to protect the
next wife of a law enforcement officer or their children, I felt like this was
it," says Green.
Since the law passed, Oklahoma says meth lab seizures are down about 60 percent.
And that has inspired Grellner to help write a similar bill for Missouri.
"Who wants to be No. 1? Because if you don’t pass this legislation, you’re going
to be No. 1," says Grellner. "After this year, it'll be up for grabs. Who wants
it, 'cause we don't want it anymore."
So when Grellner isn’t enforcing the law, he’s lobbying to change it. And he
says the whole country should follow suit.
Now, 37 other states, and the federal government, are considering tougher laws
to regulate pseudoephedrine.
"We've got people driving as far away as Chicago and Indiana to buy cold tablets
and bring them back into Missouri right now," says Grellner. "And that problem
is only gonna get worse for those states if we go to Schedule Five and they
don’t."
Some retailers are voluntarily taking tablets off the shelves, and Pfizer, which
makes Sudafed, just announced a new formula that can’t be used to make meth. But
it’ll continue to manufacture the old formula, too.
Some drug company lobbyists support limiting sales of pseudoephedrine, but they
oppose Schedule Five legislation, which they argue would make it too hard for
legitimate consumers to buy cold medicine.
"You're gonna go see the pharmacist and you’re gonna show identification, and
you’re gonna sign a log, and you’re gonna get your Sudafed," says Grellner.
"That’s inconvenient," says Mabrey. "I wanna run in the store. I wanna get my
cold medicine and I wanna go home and get back in bed."
"Right. And if I let you do that, your neighbor’s house blows up and kills your
children and burns down your house. Which is more inconvenient," asks Grellner.
He adds that the law he wants to pass won't inconvenience people who really have
colds: "Under the Missouri state legislation that we’re proposing, each man,
woman and child in the state of Missouri will be able to buy, throughout the
year, 36 boxes of cold tablets. You’re gonna be able to get three a month.
When’s the last time you bought 36 boxes of cold tablets in one year? Meth
addicts do. Meth lab people do. They’ll buy 36 boxes a day!"
Back at the suspected meth lab in Jefferson County, an informant tells Sgt.
Wright there may be thousands more cold tablets in a nearby motel.
That’s exactly what they find along with a suspect who admits stealing the whole
batch of 4,000 pills from Walgreens.
In less than one day, Wright has confiscated enough cold pills to make about
$40,000 in finished methamphetamine. But just hours after he puts his last
suspect in jail, his first suspects of the day are already getting out. By law,
they can be held for only 20 hours. Building a case against them will take
months.
With rehab and counseling, Selena McDowell says she’s winning her fight to stay
clean. She has two of her three kids back, and a job as a nurse’s aide. But she
knows the lure of methamphetamine is never more than a day away.
What does she think about regulating the sale of pseudoephedrine? "I think it
will be harder for people to get it," says McDowell. "But they'll still get it."
"They're going to find a way around this, aren't they," Mabrey asks Grellner.
"No, it's a recipe," says Grellner. "Can you make chocolate chip cookies without
chocolate chips? You can’t make methamphetamine without pseudoephedrine
hydrochloride. And if it ends up that three days from now, they start using
marshmallows to make meth, then I guess we’ll have to do something about
marshmallows."
And what's Grellner going to do when all of these meth labs are closed? "I think
I'll take a vacation," he says.