Log in to WRAL.com with one click using your favorite social network:
OR
Log in using your WRAL.com account:



Wrong email/password combination.

Forgot password?

Register with WRAL.com using your favorite social network:
OR
Register for a WRAL.com account using our web form.

1:18 p.m. • 5-21-13

Weather Forecast for Raleigh

  • Today: Thunderstorm.
    • Hi: 82° F
  • Wed: Thunderstorm.
    • Hi: 84° F
  • Thu: Thunderstorm.
    • Hi: 80° F

Other Locations

> 7 Day Forecast

Doppler Image
@NCCapitol
Sheriff wants tougher punishments for meth labs
print friendly

House OKs tougher penalties for meth production

Published: 2013-02-20 14:37:00
Updated: 2013-02-20 16:47:32

The House voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to enact stiffer penalties for people who cook up batches of methamphetamine.

House Bill 29 passed by a 116-1 vote and was sent to the Senate.

Under the bill, anyone previously convicted of manufacturing or possessing meth would be barred from obtaining any product that contains pseudoephedrine. The chemical, which is common in cold medications, is the primary ingredient used to make meth.

The legislation also calls for longer prison sentences for people convicted of making meth if a child, disabled person or elderly person lives in the house where the drug was being made.

"We're fighting one of the most insidious drug issues in this state," said bill sponsor Rep. Craig Horn, R-Union. "Every county in this state has a meth problem."

State Bureau of Investigation agents cleaned up 460 meth labs across North Carolina last year, up from 344 the preceding year and 235 in 2010. More than 70 labs have been located so far this year, according to the state Department of Justice.

Rep. John Faircloth, R-Guilford, another bill sponsor, said the drug is difficult to combat because it is so addictive and so easy to make.

"Go to the drugstore, stop in the aisle at the local Walmart, pick up a few things, step back to the back of the building and mix them in a bottle and either a bomb goes off or another group of people is using drugs," Faircloth said.

Attorney General Roy Cooper applauded the bill, noting that the "one-pot method" of cooking meth is widespread and requires only a small amount of pseudoephedrine and a plastic bottle.

"Meth labs of any size can be especially dangerous for kids and other vulnerable people. Too often, our agents find innocent children and seniors living in homes where meth is being made,” Cooper said in a statement.

Statewide, 120 children were removed from homes last year where meth was being manufactured, up from 82 in 2011, according to the Department of Justice. So far this year, 14 children have been found living around meth labs.

When anyone is removed from a meth lab home, their clothing and other belongings usually have to be destroyed because of the hazardous fumes given off during the cooking process.

Rep. Michael Speciale, R-Craven, cast the lone vote against the bill, saying he thought punishing anyone who previously possessed meth for having cold medicine goes too far.

“What if somebody really has cleaned up their life, and years later, they go get some cold medicine and suddenly they’re in jail?” Speciale said. “If it had been just (penalties for) manufacture, I might have voted for it.”

Tax credit for working poor to expire

The House also voted 80-36 to give final approval to a bill that allows the state earned-income tax credit expire at the end of 2013 and updates North Carolina tax codes to match changes in the federal code.

Rep. Mickey Michaux, D-Durham, acknowledged the bill's passage was "a fait accompli," but he still argued vehemently against the bill, saying it would hurt the working poor.

"All I'm asking is that you let those poor people who get this little bit of money keep the little bit of money and not go out on the poverty lines," Michaux said.

Rep. Garland Pierce, D-Scotland, called the end of the EITC "another nail in the coffin of poor people."

Defeating the bill also would cost taxpayers who take deductions for student loan interest, mortgage insurance and other items, said Rep. Paul Stam, R-Wake.

House Majority Leader Edgar Starnes noted that Democrats approved the expiration of the EITC when they controlled the legislature in 2007. It was supposed to end last year, but lawmakers extended it for one year.

"For too long, we've used our tax code to implement social policy as opposed to using the tax code to promote economic growth,"  said Starnes, R-Caldwell.

Rep. Julia Howard, R-Davie, said 30 percent of the claims for the EITC are fraudulent.

"Anyone who wants to extend the fraudulent earned-income tax program ... is free to do so" by filing a separate bill, Howard said.

Read More Posts from this Blog

36 Comments


WRAL.com welcomes your comments on this story. All comments are moderated prior to publication based on our posting guidelines. Please review them prior to posting and if your message is not approved.

This blog post is closed for comments.


page 1 | 2
<prev    next>
sort order: oldest first | newest first

As a member of the Air FOrce he was talking about me. I dont vote for liberals anyway. vinylcarwraps23

As a veteran of the Army he wasnt talking about me. But you can keep being the kind of victim he did mention

now lets make tougher penalities for corrupt politicans............

Ban sudafed,that kills people.Ban prescription drugs,that kills people.Ban everything the medical and insurance and government has said was good for you for that kills you. Uhavenoclu February 20, 2013 7:27 p.m. Report abuse

Too much water can kill you. Uh oh......

All taken out of context. No one belives, well the logical ones of us dont, that Romney was talking about the eldery, handicapped, veterans and the like.

As a member of the Air FOrce he was talking about me. I dont vote for liberals anyway.

Mental illness and NO JOBS. RadioDJ

Laser like focus on curtailing your rights, I mean jobs, yah thats it laser like focus on jobs is what I meant

Probably the same way Romney came up with his claim that 47% of the American public are moochers.

You didnt build that

All taken out of context. No one belives, well the logical ones of us dont, that Romney was talking about the eldery, handicapped, veterans and the like. He was talking about the deadbeats who game the system, but to you bleeding hearts they are all the same. Doesnt bother you that your tax money goes to support people who can do for themselves but just flat out refuse to do so?

All this trouble is well worth it since restricting access to an over the counter drug has solved the meth problem. Oh wait! It didn't.

This is just another volley in the war on people. Raising taxes on the poor and stiffening penalties for meth production. How exactly does that encourage someone NOT to cook meth?

How about taking all this time and money spent on beating a dead horse and focus it on pulling people out of poverty. Spend it on creating jobs. If we're gonna blow cash on something useless let's at least make sure the money is going to the poor.

Law makers already know that making penalties tougher have no effect on crime. They pass legislation like this to make a public spectacle that is supposed to show that they are touch on crime. Guess what? 30 years of touch on crime hasn't made a single difference. Overall crime has been dropping at a constant rate for 30 years. Laws like this never make a difference, except to annoy law-abiding citizens.

Demand better!

I wonder how REp Howard came up with her 30% figure for fraud in the EITC. Probably the same way Romney came up with his claim that 47% of the American public are moochers. It just sounds good. If the 30% is correct, some one or some agency must have done some studies on it. Why didn't they prosecute the offenders? Of course, it's always easier to cut a program if you can come up with high numbers of abusers. Whether they are right or not.

The Meth scourge is just another reason why the adequate staffing of the NC SBI lab, and field agents is so important to the people of North Carolina.

This is just a waste of resources, it would be better to add officers and repeal the Justice Reinvestment Act.

lets not be ridicules, just because people do drugs or are violent towards other people does NOT make them mentally ill. Turn off npr and pick up a book from time to time.

Ban sudafed,that kills people.Ban prescription drugs,that kills people.Ban everything the medical and insurance and government has said was good for you for that kills you.

cool. now take it easy on accused pot growers.

As our right wing friends are so fond of reminding everyone, drugs don't kill people, people kill themselves. We don't need to be putting folks in jail, we should be working on the cause of the problem. Mental illness and NO JOBS.

Asinine. Another classic politician-look-busy-like-we're-doing-something law. Won't change a thing...for every tweeker that gets locked up there's another to take his place cookin' away.

complete waste of time and tax dollars locking these people up... more laws don't and will not stop the drug users so therefore will be a market for it... the answer and only answer is legalization. Legalize it, tax it, regulate it... period.

The proper solution would be to advocate for the legalization of what we now term as, "illegal" in relationship to chemicals that folks could put into their OWN bodies to change their reality. When will we ever come to the realization that we already have LOST the "war on drugs?"

Why only seek longer sentences for those cooking meth around children and elderly? Why not longer sentences period?

Meth is the most dangerous drug out there and those who produce, sell and use should be locked up. I am sure that my tax dollar is housing and feeding these criminals as well as their kids through welfare. The rural communities need to stop bothering the Latino community and address this meth problem. People associated with this drug are dying everyday .

It's sad to say but it's the human condition. datenobunaga2

That is terrible about your neighbors, but if its true what you are saying about doctors being afraid to write scrips, Obamacare is probably going to make things worse

"Under the bill, anyone previously convicted of manufacturing or possessing meth would be barred from obtaining any product that contains pseudoephedrine" - why wasn't this already the case anyway?! Especially since you have to show ID to buy the stuff! busyb97

But not too vote, ironic isn't it? The people we voted for make you show ID to buy cold meds but not to vote for them. Im starting to see why there is a lot of opposition to voter ID laws

MOre laws more laws its ALWAYS worked to stop drugs. LOL poor people.

The sad part is that doctors are becoming afraid to even prescribe cough medicines that contain codeine, now if we are required to get a prescription for OTC it will be nearly impossible. Both my elderly neighbors and mother both got the flu with a severe cough that kept them up at night. The elderly neighbors were not given any cough medicine and told to deal with it basically while my mom had to beg and then scream to get hers and she had pneumonia on top of it all. It's silly. Regulations don't stop anything. Where there is a demand, there will always be someone willing to supply it, it is only hurting the law abiding citizens and this applies to many other topics and debates as well such as gun control, prostitution. It's sad to say but it's the human condition.

It always makes me feel like criminal when I have to buy them for allergies. Maybe that's my dark side?

I'd like to see how the lobby money for the pseudoephedrine companies was spread around the legislature for this little wrist slap of a law.

So the law that makes me jump through hoops to by cold or allergy meds didn't slow this problem down?? surprise surprise.

"Under the bill, anyone previously convicted of manufacturing or possessing meth would be barred from obtaining any product that contains pseudoephedrine" - why wasn't this already the case anyway?! Especially since you have to show ID to buy the stuff!

page 1 | 2
<prev    next>
sort order: oldest first | newest first

Political Video Picks

 
  • Capitol Bureau Chief Laura Leslie and investigative reporter Mark Binker break down the North Carolina Senate's budget proposal.

  • The Senate budget subcommittee on health and human services gives a presentation on May 20, 2013.

  • North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper and a number of local law enforcement officials from across the state on Monday criticized…

  • Some teachers say the proposed Senate budget, which includes no pay raise for teachers and other changes to education funding, is…

  • Lawmakers called it a step toward a more expansive biometric system that would use identifiers such as fingerprints to keep track of…

  • Attorney General Roy Cooper and other law enforcement officials speak out against the Senate's budget proposal to move the SBI under…