Candy-Flavored Meth Targets New Users
First published by cbs.com, May 2, 2007By Jon Gambrell
From lollipops to high-sugar sodas, law enforcement officials say
they've found meth cut with a variety of candies, drinks and other
materials over the years. Officials say the "designer meth" can smooth
the chemically rough ingestion of the drug, making it easier for
first-time users to try.
"It's really a bitter substance ... so if you're going to try to
make it more consumable for the masses, then you're going to want to
try to take that edge off whichever way you can," said Chris Harrison,
chief illicit laboratory chemist at the Arkansas lab.
"The drug cartels operate just like any other corporation would —
if they want to increase their market share, then they're going to have
to change something about it. This is just an evolution. They've
saturated the heavy users, now they are moving onto some other people,"
he said.
The latest meth cut, known as "Strawberry Quick," uses powdered
drink mix to give the drug a pink coloring. The sweetness of the powder
can make meth more palatable and partially masks its harsh chemical
taste.
The new cut has been the focus of several law enforcement bulletins
in western states. While there have been several reported cases of
police finding the cut in Arkansas, it is "not widespread," said
William Bryant, assistant special agent in charge of the Drug
Enforcement Agency's Little Rock district office.
"It's a different spin, like a marketing thing," Bryant said.
That marketing has taken a variety of forms for methamphetamine,
found in powder and in a crystalized form similar to broken glass. Its
low boiling point allows for it to easily be smoked or injected as a
liquid into the bloodstream.
Because of its chemical properties, meth easily mixes into any
water-based liquid. Caffeinated, high-sugar energy drinks and sodas
often litter areas where meth cookers manufacture the drug, sometimes
used as a chaser to the stimulant, Harrison said.
Outside of drinks, police also have seen meth mixed with a variety
of candy, cola and chocolate flavors. Cutting it with something else
also may help cutting down the burning sensation some have when
snorting powdered meth, Harrison said. When snorted, he said meth can
destroy a person's septum.
"You have some hard-core users that are prepared for the burn that
methamphetamine will have," Harrison said. "Snorting it is supposed to
be really hard on the nostrils."
Some meth cookers also have dyed meth different colors using a
process similar to that used to make rock candy, though Harrison said
it didn't help cover the taste.
"Strawberry Quick" came to prominence in January, after the Nevada
Department of Public Safety issued a bulletin describing the type of
meth there, said Steve Robertson, a Washington-based spokesman for the
DEA. In the time since, Robertson says DEA agents have heard reports of
flavored meth appearing in Missouri, Texas, Washington state and
Wisconsin — though he stressed it was not a nationwide phenomenon.
"Traffickers are out there and are trying to sell it to customers,
whether they are young customers or older, brand-new customers by
changing the color or the taste or just giving it a less-intimidating
name, they are trying to make it seem less dangerous and lure this new
customer base," Robertson said. "If someone was completely terrified of
trying it, it might diminish the threat."
The reports of flavored meth come as the DEA and local police
department keep increased pressure on the drug's manufacturers. In
2005, the Arkansas Legislature required those purchasing
over-the-counter medications that can be used to cook meth show
identification and that the drugs be stored in a secure location. This
year, the Legislature approved creating an electronic database to
monitor sales of the medications.
Bryant says those crackdowns contributed the number of found
methamphetamine labs in Arkansas dropping from 1,206 in 2004 to 446
last year. In the first quarter of this year, he said there have been
only 56 labs found.
However, Harrison cautioned as the number of discovered labs has
dropped, the amount of methamphetamine being seized by police has
increased steadily. He said that could be coming from operations not
being found by police, as well as meth coming into the state from the
west coast and Mexico.
Rick Gallagher, assistant director of the state Crime Laboratory, said the drug remains one of the most abused in the state.
"It might vary from place to place like alcohol and marijuana, but
you'd hear the word 'methamphetamine' a whole lot," Gallagher said.