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PENRY CALLS ON FEDS FOR METH SHUTDOWN

February 20, 2006

PENRY CALLS ON FEDS TO SHUTDOWN 'MEXICAN METH SUPERHIGHWAY' 
 
Grand Junction, CO — State Representative Josh Penry will 
introduce a resolution in the Colorado House of 
Representatives this week calling on the President of the 
United States and the Secretary of State to engage their 
counterparts in the Mexican government in order to develop 
a plan to slow the massive inflow of Methamphetamine into 
the United States from Mexico. 
 
The resolution calls on the White House and Congress to use 
all reasonable means to pressure the Mexican government 
into partnering in an effort to stem the illegal flow of 
Meth. 
 
The United States Drug Enforcement Agency estimates that 
80% of the methamphetamine comes from Mexican drug cartels, 
who are acquiring the chemicals to produce Meth by 
diverting surplus imports from Asia and Europe. 
A recent analysis by the Mesa County Meth Task Force, a 
broad-based partnership formed to stem the exploding impact 
of Meth-use on the Western Slope community, showed that 
approximately 90% of the Meth in Mesa County is 
trafficked from Mexico. 
 
Said Penry, "The numbers are startling and they don't lie: 
even if Colorado successfully shuts down every homegrown 
Meth lab, we will have made only an infinitesimally small 
dent in the availability of this destructive drug. If 
the United States is going to make any headway against 
Meth, we've got to shut-down the Mexican Meth superhighway. 
And for that to happen, we need the highest levels of our 
federal government to bring their collective 
weight to bear on our friends to the South." 
 
Alarmingly, there has been a steady increase in 
pseudoephedrine imports to Mexico in recent years. 
Pseudoephedrine is the precursor drug used to make 
methamphetamine. In 1999, Mexico imported 51 tons, 
increasing the next year to 66 tons, and most recently, in 
2004, customs records show Mexico imported 224 tons of 
pseudoephedrine. It is estimated Mexico's legitimate demand 
for pseudoephedrine is about 100 tons per year. Penry’s 
resolution calls on top-ranking federal officials to 
pressure the Mexican government, and foreign governments 
that are home to the original production of 
pseudoephedrine, to drastically reduce pseudoephedrine 
shipments to Mexico. 
 
The porous U.S-Mexican border makes the shipment of Meth 
into American cities all too easy, Penry said. He said 
securing the border is a central component of the Meth 
solution as well, which Penry's resolution also calls 
for. 
 
Concluded Penry, “Methamphetamine is devastating our 
country one community at a time. It is a national security 
issue of the first order that deserves the full engagement 
of the White House, the Congress and all levels of our 
government." 
 
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