subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Sat, Nov 21 2009 

Published: September 05, 2009 11:00 pm    print this story   email this story  

Tribune-Star editorial: Meth laws need a little tweaking

The Tribune-Star

The continuing epidemic of methamphetamine addiction, manufacture and sales is one of the most negative forces in our extended community. No one but people addicted to meth (and people making money off addicts) is against strict enforcement of meth laws. No one wants to make the job of fighting the illegal industry any tougher.

However, what happened to Sally Harpold is a sign that some of the laws, and their enforcement, need some tweaking.

A Parke County grandmother and employee of the Rockville Correctional Facility, Harpold was awakened early one morning in July by pounding on her door. She and her husband looked out and saw a phalanx of police cars. Their first thought was that something terrible had happened to a loved one. Instead, the officers had come for Sally.

Four months before, with H1N1 and other viruses spreading misery, Harpold had made the kind of “error” any of us can imagine making: In one week’s time in March, she bought a box of Zyrtec-D cold medicine in Rockville for her daughter and a box of Mucinex-D, which helps break up congestion, in Clinton for her husband. Both contain pseudoephedrine, a useful cold remedy, but also a key ingredient for cooking meth.

Harpold had no idea the two medicines had put her .6 gram over the state limit for seven-day purchases of such drugs. Like many of us, she thought the feedback was instant; if you were over some legal limit, the pharmacist was alerted and you couldn’t buy the medicine.

She thought wrong. In late July, she was arrested, handcuffed, driven to jail in Clinton, booked and photographed. As she chronicled in a letter to news media, her mug shot ended up on the front page of her local newspaper in a story about a successful drug sweep.

Harpold’s husband, Ted, paid $300 to get her out of jail. To fulfill the requirements of a deferral agreement — the best the Vermillion County Prosecutor could offer so Harpold’s previously unsullied record could be wiped clean — she had to pay another $218.

Harpold is angry about every bit of this, and she continues to publicly complain. Various law-and-order officials involved have been sympathetic, to a point, but Vermillion Prosecutor Nina Alexander reiterated the bottom line. Ignorance of the law is no excuse, Alexander told Tribune-Star reporter Lisa Trigg: “I’m simply enforcing the law as it was written.”

Of over-the-counter medicines like Zyrtec and Mucinex, Alexander said, “If you take these products, you ought to know what’s in them.”

Perhaps state lawmakers, police and pharmacists can help.

Instead of a sign that warns customers only of a “Meth Watch” in a pharmacy, how about an easy-to-read table that provides the number of grams of offending ingredients in each box of the monitored medicines, along with Indiana’s 3.0 limit? Most boxes provide per pill measurements, requiring some math that’s not all that simple in a flu-addled brain.

It’s too late for Harpold, but can’t police and prosecutors be given some latitude to use their experience and common sense to look closely at any future suspects like her? With no criminal record, no physical appearance of meth involvement and a believable explanation, didn’t she deserve another assessment to see if that one week in March was unique or part of a pattern? Is a dismissal never in order?

One thing that could (and should) be done for Harpold: Strapped for funds though counties and the state may be, someone needs to give her $518 a.s.a.p. — and present the check in a ceremony that will be appropriately covered by her local news media.

print this story   email this story  



Terre Haute Progress Retail health medical manufacturing education

Terre Haute



autoconx
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Terre Haute

Terre Haute News Morning Headlines

Terre Haute ClickLocal

Terre Haute Tribune-Star Newspaper Dial-A-Pro

Terre Haute Tribune-Star Newspaper Live in the Clubs

Terre Haute News on Twitter

Today's Featured Jobs

Part time Nurses
Part-Time
Nurses All Shifts
Good work
environment and
supportive staff.
Apply in person at:<
...>MORE

Caregivers
Hiring for Caregivers
Full & Part Time
Terre Haute, Brazil,
Rockville, Clinton &
Cayuga. area
...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Featured Autos

93 Chevy G20
93 Chevy G20
Cargo Van, Runs
Good, $650 obo Call
(812)514-9785

...>MORE

95 Toyota
1995 Toyota Cam-
ry, $2350 obo 6 cly,
Green 150k mi.
(317)242-8111
...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Featured Homes

West
nice 2 or 3 bdrm
West, shed, Call
(812)533-0635
...>MORE

Cose to Campus
hickman building
Quiet brick 4plex
Close to campus
2bdrm, 6 rm, clean,
appl’s, w/d, AC,
$5
...>MORE

See all ads

Today's Cool Stuff

Drum set
oak rolltop desk,
$300 obo
243-0157

...>MORE

2 yr old horses
2 - 2yr old horses,
buckskin, red/white
paint, 466-2922 or
249-7045

...>MORE

See all ads


 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index