About Us | Submit an Ad/Contact Us | Subscribe | Commercial Printing
Fog 41°5 Day Forecast
Home : News : Local News : Top Stories
No Surge Seen in Pseudoephedrine Purchases in Area
By Ed Pruneau, Missourian Managing Editor
10/23/2009
email this storyEmail to a friendpost a commentPost a Commentprinter friendlyPrinter-friendly
After the city of Washington passed a law three months ago requiring prescriptions to buy pseudoephedrine-based cold and allergy pills, sales were expected to drop dramatically.

They did.

Conversely, authorities expected a surge in sales in other nearby cities that hadn't adopted the new restriction.
That has not happened, according to statistics compiled by the Franklin County Narcotics Enforcement Unit.

In the 90 days prior to July 7 - when Washington's anti-meth ordinance took effect - five pharmacies in the city sold 4,346 boxes of medicine containing pseudoephedrine.

In the 90 days after the law, sales dropped to 310 boxes, an almost 93 percent decrease.

The number of sales at pharmacies in four other area towns - Union, Eureka, Owensville and Sullivan - was 6,392 boxes from April through July. After the law took effect, sales in those stores actually dropped 1.4 percent to 6,308.

Detective Sgt. Jason Grellner, task force commander, said those numbers mean that people from outside the area are no longer coming here to "smurf" pseudoephedrine pills because it's not worth their time.

Smurfing is the practice of buying pills at multiple pharmacies in order to get around state and federal laws that limit the amounts people may legally purchase.

"Now, with Washington and Union pharmacies off limits, it's easier to go smurfing in St. Louis or Jefferson counties where there are multiple outlets," Grellner said.

He said the task force plans to monitor Union's pharmacies 30 days before and after the effective date of the ordinance. Union passed its prescription ordinance Monday, Oct. 12.

"This is phenomenal," Grellner remarked. "It's like a pebble in a lake. The Washington experience is having an effect on smurfing throughout the entire area."

"When you see no sharp increase in the surrounding areas, it's proof that the vast majority of these pills were going to meth labs," Grellner said.

"It's all about the money," Grellner said. "We knew all along that the biggest percentage of pseudoephedrine sold was being smurfed for meth labs but we never had the numbers to prove it. Now we do."

"The people who truly need it are getting it. That shows in the Washington numbers," he said.

"If these numbers hold true for Union as well, the pharmaceutical industry stands to lose close to 90 percent of its profits. Now we know why they are willing to spend over $800,000 for a statewide electronic monitoring system."

The industry has proposed such a system at a time when support is building for a statewide prescription-only law.

Law enforcement groups lobbied for that law in the last legislative session, but it was bottled up in committee and never made it to the House or Senate floors for a vote.

Current state and federal laws limit the amount of pseudoephedrine a person may buy in a 30-day period and they must sign a pharmacy log and show I.D. when they make the purchase.

There was a brief decline in meth labs after those laws took effect, followed by a steady return to the old numbers.

Proponents of an electronic monitoring system claim that will make it easier to track people who are violating the law.

But that has not deterred smurfing in other states which have electronic systems, according to Grellner, because of the high prices being paid for pseudoephedrine on the black market.

"Some people will look at these figures and say that people are buying other over-the-counter medicines without pseudoephedrine," Grellner said. "But we found that not to be true.

"I've talked to all the pharmacists and they noticed the steep decrease in sales and they're happy about it. But they have not noticed a sharp increase in other over-the-counter medicines. They're seeing some, but that's due to the time of the year," Grellner said.

The task force commander noted that prior to 1976, pseudoephedrine was a prescription-only drug. Then, the FDA bowed to pressure from the pharmaceutical industry to make it an over-the-counter medicine despite warnings from the Drug Enforcement Administration about the dangers of methamphetamine.

Initially, people could buy unlimited amounts of pseudoephedrine, Grellner said, and 100-count bottles of the drug were available.

The first victory in the fight against pseudoephedrine was a restriction to require packaging in so-called "blister packs," Grellner said.

It was 1996, 20 years after the prescription requirement was dropped, when the state started seeing an alarming growth of clandestine meth labs that law enforcement began its long fight against methamphetamine, he noted.

The drug task force is pushing for all cities in Franklin County to pass prescription-only laws.

"It works," Grellner exclaimed.

Washington and Union are the first municipalities in the nation to pass the anti-meth ordinances. Jefferson County is considering a similar law.

The state of Oregon is the only state in the nation with a prescription law and it saw a huge decrease in meth labs after the law was adopted.


©Washington Missouri 2009

Submit your comment now
Comment Title:
Submit your comments on the article in the space below:
Your Name:
Your City & State:  
Your Email Address: (required)
What's This?
In order to verify you are not a spam-bot you will need to use the image above.
The addition of the flashing numbers above =
By submitting your comment, you acknowledge that you have read and accept the Terms and Conditions of this site.
Reader Comments
Added: Wednesday October 28, 2009 at 11:13 PM EST
My Opinion
It's a ridiculous, useless ordinance. It punishes the many for the sins of a few. The "Self Righteous" applaud it, the people who use it for the intended purpose suffer for it and the people who abuse it will find another way around it.
Comrade Bob
Added: Tuesday October 27, 2009 at 07:18 PM EST
LOL whatever
"Man I was gonna make me some meth today, but I drove down to Wal-Greens and found out I cant get my pills here no more. They said I would have to drive all the way down to eureka to buy me some sudafed. So I just said screw it, I aint gonna make it no more." - Druggie
Druggie, Washington
Added: Monday October 26, 2009 at 09:06 PM EST
It works
To whom it may concern (Michael Banks and Angry citizen)...
At least people have been trying to put a stop to druggies. This law may have some flaws, but just about every law does when it is first put into effect! Sure, some people are to lazy or they can't afford a $100 at the Doctors for a $7 box of sudafed, but at least this law has good intentions. They are trying to put a stop to meth and save people, and all you can do is sit and criticize? Next time, why don't you try to do something to help put a stop to drug abuse, rather than sitting on your ass and complaining? Props to you for being a 'law-abiding' citizen, but how about you try to be part of the solution rather than the problem? It will get you farther and earn you some more respect in the long run.
Katie Witthaus, Washington
Added: Sunday October 25, 2009 at 09:23 AM EST
Thank you
...to you and your family for giving so much of your valuable time to this issue. It is so important to collect and share numbers like this as we educate Missourians about this simple but effective ordinance. Let's hope Jefferson City is watching carefully so the entire state can follow suit!
Julie, Washington, MO
View All 7 Comments »

email this storyEmail to a friendpost a commentPost a Commentprinter friendlyPrinter-friendlyTop

Today's Most Read
Death Notices for Thursday, Nov. 19 (893)
Councilmen, Mayor Spar Over Handling of Apartment Plan (308)
Police Agencies Continue Debit Card Fraud Probe (214)
Power Plant Officials Discuss Landfill Proposal (195)
Missourian Criticized Over Coverage of Apartment Plan (186)
 
Site Map

Local News
Home
Top Stories
Washington
Union
St. Clair
Pacific
Warren County Record

More News
Sports
Business
Death News, Obituaries
Legal Notices
My Mo Youth
Senior LifeTimes
Franklin County Hall of Honor

Photo Galleries
News
Sports
Artistic
Photos by You

Features, People
Feature Stories
Weddings, Births, Engagements
Missourian In Education

Opinion
Editorials
Letters to the Editor
Online Extras
Email Updates
This Week's Events
Links to Community Web Sites
Local Church Directory
Weather
Fun and Games

Advertising
Classifieds
Yellow Pages
Shop Our Ads
Classified Line Ad Submissions
Garage Sale Ad Submissions

About Us
Who We Are
How to Advertise
Subscription Information
Missourian Vendors
Commercial Printing
Contact Us


For general questions about the website, write to webmaster@emissourian.com
Copyright © 2008 The Missourian Publishing Company. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 1995 - 2009 Townnews.com All Rights Reserved.