[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 151 (2005), Part 15] [Senate] [Pages 20267-20268] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]THE SCOURGE OF METHAMPHETAMINE Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I take a few moments to comment on one aspect of the Commerce-Justice-Science appropriations bill. In doing so, I want to thank my colleagues on both sides of the aisle for their bipartisan cooperation in getting this bill done, which I believe we can do by tonight. The funding in this bill is critical to the functioning of our Government, and I expect it will pass with strong bipartisan support. Before we cast a lot more votes, I do want to call everybody's attention to one particular aspect of this bill that has ramifications throughout each of our States that people are becoming more and more aware of but deserves a lot more attention, and this is the methamphetamine crisis that is raging all across this country. As a physician, as well as a legislator, I am troubled by this growing meth crisis. As we travel across our States and look at the devastation that is caused by this particular drug and the making and manufacturing of this drug, we do need to act. In the last 10 years, meth has become America's No. 1 drug problem--before marijuana, cocaine, heroin, and any other drug. In Tennessee, we have been particularly hard hit. In 2004, Tennessee ranked No. 2, tied with Iowa and behind Missouri, in the number of methamphetamine lab seizures. A good friend of mine, Sandy Mattice, who is a U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee, describes meth as ``the worst stuff that we have seen.'' And it has led to some of the worst, most disturbing cases of violence and abuse we have ever seen. Last month, as I was traveling across Tennessee, I heard again and again from people from all walks of life about the devastating impact meth is having on the people of our State. I heard the stories about meth destroying individuals' lives and families' lives, how mothers and fathers who are addicts abuse their children or each other during the highs as well as the withdrawals from meth. We have heard again how addicts steal from their own parents or even their own children because they are so desperate for money to buy meth. One Tennessee case was so horrific that it made national news and ultimately changed Tennessee law. In June of last year, authorities found 3-year-old Haley Spicer at her father's mobile home in Campbell County. Haley had been burned with cigarettes and scalded with hot water in a bathtub. The fumes in her meth-addicted father's meth lab were so toxic that Haley's eyelids had even melted shut. Haley had to undergo a number of surgeries to open her eyes. She faces a lot more in terms of surgeries and operations to rebuild and reconstruct her nose and repair her ear. Haley's father, Tommy Joe Owens, has been convicted on three counts of aggravated child abuse and one count of neglect. Owens, who claims to have never hurt his daughter, faces up to 60 years on each count at a sentencing hearing next month. His live-in girlfriend Charlotte Claiborne pleaded no contest to the same charges and will likely be sentenced to 20 years. Haley's case was so disturbing that it led to swift and aggressive legislative action back in Tennessee. This August, the State legislature passed Haley's Law which drastically toughens the child abuse penalties. This was [[Page 20268]] an important victory for the youngest victims of meth, but it addresses the problem after the fact, after meth has led to the violence. It is time for all of us to address what we can do to prevent this meth abuse. Haley's father should be in jail for a long time, but we have to do more. Local law enforcement is crying out for our help. Meth is highly addictive, and it is highly destructive as a substance. Users experience a powerful boost, described as more powerful than any other drug, three times the intensity of cocaine. The high lasts for longer, up to 8 hours. Users take hit after hit on sleepless binges that can last up to 2 and sometimes even 3 weeks. Once sucked in, many users find it impossible to climb out. Take, for example, Lynn Noland, also of Tennessee. Lynn did not plan on becoming an addict, nor for that matter did she plan on becoming what she did, a drug dealer. It started 4 years ago when Lynn was a 36- year-old marketing executive and she tried her first hit. One hit became an addiction and she quit her well-paying job and started trading meth ingredients to support her habit. She would disguise herself as a farmer, put on overalls and put on a ball cap and stop by the co-op to be able to purchase ingredients undetected in an unsuspecting way. Another dangerous aspect of meth is it can be cooked anywhere with store-bought ingredients. So it is very mobile. It is easy to make and it is hard to detect where it is made. Lynn started cooking the drug herself in caves, as she describes it, and in little sheds. ``I could not live without meth,'' she said. ``I could not lift my head off the pillow to brush my teeth without it.'' Eventually, Lynn was arrested. She lost custody of her children and ended up in a halfway house. Lynn was lucky. She was able to kick her habit. Most addicts need repeated episodes of rehabilitation. Many never succeed and many never survive. They die of severe burns from lab explosions. Some commit suicide. Some are killed by a spouse who is also addicted. Meth leads to depression; it leads to psychosis; it leads to skin infections; it leads to high blood pressure; it leads to hepatitis C; it leads to kidney damage; it leads to severe tooth decay, to name a few. The list goes on. The greatest health risk of meth is the impact it has on the brain. It rewires the brain. Methamphetamine produces a huge rush of a chemical called dopamine in the brain, and that results in a huge surge, a euphoria that results from this increase in dopamine transmission. Over time, however, this excess of dopamine destroys the transmission, the neurological linkage system, within the brain, and users experience an inability to have emotions or pleasure without more amphetamine coming into the system all the time. Eventually, in a pattern similar to Parkinson's disease, there are no terminals there-- they are destroyed--which can release dopamine and users experience prolonged and often permanent depression. Thus, the personal cost is staggering. The cost to the community at large is staggering. An estimated 12 million Americans have tried methamphetamine. It is estimated that about 1.5 million people are regular users. In many areas of the country, the medical costs for county jails have doubled because of meth. Last month, a colleague of mine at Vanderbilt, Dr. Jeffrey Guy, who is director of Vanderbilt Medical Center's burn unit, which is in Nashville, told Newsweek: I do not know if we will have a burn unit 5 to 10 years from now if Vanderbilt continues to take on the large burden of $5 million to $10 million per year in uncompensated care for patients burned in meth lab explosions. Doctors estimate that treating burn victims exceeds about $10,000 a day per patient, most of whom do not have health insurance. Meth abuse often leads to violent crimes, including domestic violence, assaults, robberies, and burglaries. Local law enforcement is finding itself overwhelmed. Most rural police departments do not have the resources to deal with all of the problems brought forward by meth to deal with the lab explosions, the expensive toxic waste cleanup required when one goes in and removes these labs. Each pound of methamphetamine leaves behind 5 to 6 pounds of this toxic waste, and the cleanup involves dangerous exposure to our law enforcement officers engaged in removal of these labs. A very effective way to stop the meth crisis is to restrict the ingredients that make up meth and to restrict it all across the country in all 50 States. Jerry Estes, a district attorney general in Tennessee, has seen a dramatic reduction in meth lab seizures since our State, Tennessee, passed the bill restricting access to cold medicines that serve as the ingredients for the manufacture of meth. North Carolina, however, has not adopted similar legislation. As a result, what has been found, at least in southeast Tennessee, is that people will simply cross the border to buy those ingredients and bring them back home. Thus, we need a uniform policy across this country. Jerry tells me the single greatest impact we could have on reducing meth abuse is requiring all 50 States to restrict access to pseudoephedrine. That is what the Combat Meth Act does. It requires States to restrict access to all cold medicines containing meth precursors so that meth producers simply cannot shop and cruise from State to State. In closing, I thank Senators Talent and Feinstein for taking the lead on this issue and for their hard work in getting the Combat Meth Act adopted as part of the appropriations process. The Combat Meth Act is a critical first step to defeating this ongoing crisis. I urge my colleagues to follow this issue very closely because this is not going to be the end of it. This is the No. 1 drug problem facing the people of our States today. We will be talking about it a lot more in the coming days and weeks. Meth is destroying individuals, it is destroying families, and it is destroying communities. We cannot tolerate that. America needs to put a stop to this growing health and moral crisis. I yield the floor. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from North Dakota. Mr. DORGAN. The majority leader, my colleague from Tennessee, speaks of methamphetamine. It is an enormous problem in this country, especially in rural States. I certainly appreciate the comments he has made today. It is something on which we must provide enormous focus. It is destroying lives. It is one of the most highly addictive drugs we know. You can cook methamphetamine virtually anywhere--an abandoned farmhouse. You can buy the products from which you make methamphetamine, in many States, across the counter. This is a deadly drug causing havoc for so many people. If you talk to law enforcement people about dealing with methamphetamine, they will tell you that when they arrest someone involved in methamphetamine, they don't quite know what they are going to get. These are people who can become the most enormously violent people in the world, or they can be passive. You don't quite know what you are going to find, what you are going to get. It contributes to substantial crime and destroys lives. I appreciate the comments of my colleague, the majority leader. ____________________