Tuesday, January 21, 2005
Contact: Spence Jackson, (573)751-1378
Blunt Announces Support of Legislation to Fight Meth Production
JEFFERSON CITY - Honoring a campaign pledge he made last September, Missouri Governor Matt Blunt today announced that he has secured bipartisan support in the Missouri General Assembly of legislation that will halt the supply source of methamphetamine labs.
The bill being drafted at Blunt’s request will help hinder meth cookers’ access to ingredients used to make the deadly drug by:
- Making products containing pseudoephederin and combination products containing ephedrine schedule V controlled substances
- Requiring those drugs to be kept behind a pharmacy counter and sold only by pharmacists or pharmaceutical technicians
- Requiring individuals wishing to purchase those products to show a photo identification card and to sign a written log
- Limiting the quantity of pseudoephederine and combination ephedrine/pseudoephederine products individuals can buy per month to 9 grams (3 normal sized boxes of cold tablets)
- Requiring pharmacies to maintain purchase logs and make them available for inspection to law enforcement officers
Blunt's proposal is modeled after a law that took effect in Oklahoma last April.
Since the inception of that law, meth incidents in the state have declined by 80 percent. For the last several years, Missouri has been one of the top meth producing states in the nation.
In 2003, Missouri had 2,860 meth incidents, 1,600 more than California, the second highest state that year, accounting for nearly 20 percent of the meth incidents in the country. Last year, the Missouri Highway Patrol conducted more than 19,000 meth investigations.
