Okla. – This is the new formula for methamphetamine: a two-liter soda
bottle, a few handfuls of cold pills and some noxious chemicals. Shake
the bottle and the volatile reaction produces one of the world's most
addictive drugs.
and hundreds of pills. The process gave off foul odors, sometimes
sparked explosions and was so hard to conceal that dealers often
"cooked" their drugs in rural areas.
drug users are making their own meth in small batches using a faster,
cheaper and much simpler method with ingredients that can be carried in
a knapsack and mixed on the run. The "shake-and-bake" approach has
become popular because it requires a relatively small number of pills
of the decongestant pseudoephedrine — an amount easily obtained under
even the toughest anti-meth laws that have been adopted across the
nation to restrict large purchases of some cold medication.
somewhere said 'Wait this requires a lot less pseudoephedrine, and I
can fly under the radar,'" said Mark Woodward, spokesman for the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Control.
agents found that the new method is rapidly spreading across the
nation's midsection and is contributing to a spike in the number of
meth cases after years of declining arrests.
new formula does away with the clutter of typical meth labs, and it can
turn the back seat of a car or a bathroom stall into a makeshift drug
factory. Some addicts have even made the drug while driving.
the new formula, batches of meth are much smaller but just as dangerous
as the old system, which sometimes produces powerful explosions,
touches off intense fires and releases drug ingredients that must be
handled as toxic waste.
of Drug and Crime Control. "You're not dealing with rocket scientists
here anyway. If they get unlucky at all, it can have a very devastating
reaction."
meth recipe is dangerous, but in this one, if you don't shake it just
right, you can build up too much pressure, and the container can pop,"
Woodward said.
labs, "it was usually on a stove in a back room or garage and people
would just run, but when these things pop, you see more extreme burns
because they are holding it. There are more fires and more burns
because of the close proximity, whether it's on a couch or driving down
the road."
left is a crystalline powder that users smoke, snort or inject. They
often discard the bottle, which now contains a poisonous brown and
white sludge. Dozens of reports describe toxic bottles strewn along
highways and rural roads in states with the worst meth problems.
do-it-yourself method creates just enough meth for a few hits, allowing
users to make their own doses instead of buying mass-produced drugs
from a dealer.
much that everybody's making their own dope," said Kevin Williams,
sheriff of Marion County, Ala., about 80 miles west of Birmingham. "It
can be your next-door neighbor doing it. It can be one of your family
members living downstairs in the basement."
typical meth lab would normally take days to generate a full-size batch
of meth, which would require a heat source and dozens, maybe hundreds,
of boxes of cold pills.
method uses far less pseudoephedrine, small-time users are able to make
the drug in spite of a federal law that bars customers from buying more
than 9 grams — roughly 300 pills — a month.
federal government and dozens of states adopted restrictions on
pseudoephedrine in 2005, and the number of lab busts fell dramatically.
The total number of clandestine meth lab incidents reported to the Drug Enforcement Administration fell from almost 17,400 in 2003 to just 7,347 in 2006.
authorities blame the shake-and-bake method for renewing meth activity.
The AP review of 14 states found:
• At least 10 states reported increases in meth lab seizures or meth-related arrests from 2007 to 2008.
• The Mississippi State Crime Lab participated in 457 meth incidents through May 31, up from 122 for the same period a year ago — a nearly 275 percent increase.
• Several states, such as Oklahoma and Tennessee,
are on pace this year to double the number of labs busted in 2008. The
director of Tennessee's meth task force said the pace of lab busts in
his state is projected to be about 1,300 for 2009, compared with 815
for all of 2008.
sales, so meth cooks circumvent state laws by pill shopping in multiple
cities and states — a practice known as "smurfing" that allows them to
stay under restrictions placed on sales.
Traci Fruit, a special agent with the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, said law enforcement officials
are becoming increasingly frustrated because there's no way to tell who
is buying what "unless we go from store to store ourselves and pull up
the records."
Historically, rural states like Oklahoma, Missouri and Kansas have been hotbeds for meth use because an important ingredient in the traditional method, anhydrous ammonia,
was easily available from tanks on farms where it's used as a
fertilizer. But the new formula does not need anhydrous ammonia and
instead uses ammonium nitrate, a compound easily found in instant cold packs that can be purchased at any drug store.
Data from the Justice Department
and the DEA data suggest the method could only be in its early stages,
and "shake-and-bake" labs have recently been discovered as far north as
Indiana and as far east as West Virginia.
States surveyed by the AP also included: Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Florida, Tennessee, Kansas, Missouri, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, New Mexico, Arizona and California.
While many law enforcement agencies
are just learning how to spot the new labs, other states are rushing to
close loopholes in laws limiting the sale of meth ingredients.
after Oklahoma's — forces buyers to show identification and makes
stores keep a log of cold medicine sales. But the problem in
Mississippi is lack of technology to instantly log purchases in a
central database.
process," said Albritton, a former police detective and narcotics
officer. "The day after we pass a law, they are going to look for ways
to circumvent that."