More addictive than crack: police

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IT'S cheap to make and the profits can be huge. Crystal methamphetamine is similar to cocaine and ecstasy, but it packs a more potent punch. On Winnipeg streets, a "point" of methamphetamine -- a tenth of a gram -- is $20. It has a reputation as a "biker white trash" drug, but users come from all walks of life. Police say it's more addictive than crack cocaine, as it produces a more intense, more lasting high. Also known as speed, uppers, meth, copilots, crank, crystal meth, fire, chalk and ice, it's a powerful stimulant that causes the heart to race, increases blood pressure and boosts the body's metabolism. People taking methamphetamine often become talkative, feel anxious and may experience a sense of exhilaration or euphoria. The powerful stimulant, which has been showing up in recent years as part of the club scene, also produces dangerous side effects -- anxiety, psychosis, paranoia, depression and violence. Methamphetamine raises blood pressure and can cause dangerous irregular heartbeats, chest pain, shortness of breath, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. It can also increase body temperature to fatal levels, particularly during overdoses. As well, some users can suffer brain hemorrhages that cause permanent paralysis, speech loss or death. Methamphetamine -- which can be smoked, snorted, injected or swallowed -- also causes malnutrition and memory loss and it can damage the heart, lungs and liver. It produces a high that lasts up to 12 hours, unlike crack's 20 minutes. In Canada, possession of methamphetamine is a criminal offence with a maximum jail term of three years. Traffickers face up to 10 years. The profit margin for methamphetamine traffickers is huge; one meth tablet, which sells for $10, costs as little as eight cents to make. The main ingredient in the drug is ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, which comes from over-the-counter cold and allergy pills or cough medicine. While the base materials are easy to get, cooking them into methamphetamine can be dangerous. The process can produce a deadly toxic gas similar to mustard gas used against troops in the First World War. To date, only two labs have been found and shut down by police in Manitoba.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 07/10/2002 (8459 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

IT’S cheap to make and the profits can be huge.

Crystal methamphetamine is similar to cocaine and ecstasy, but it packs a more potent punch.

On Winnipeg streets, a “point” of methamphetamine — a tenth of a gram — is $20. It has a reputation as a “biker white trash” drug, but users come from all walks of life.

Police say it’s more addictive than crack cocaine, as it produces a more intense, more lasting high.

Also known as speed, uppers, meth, copilots, crank, crystal meth, fire, chalk and ice, it’s a powerful stimulant that causes the heart to race, increases blood pressure and boosts the body’s metabolism.

People taking methamphetamine often become talkative, feel anxious and may experience a sense of exhilaration or euphoria.

The powerful stimulant, which has been showing up in recent years as part of the club scene, also produces dangerous side effects — anxiety, psychosis, paranoia, depression and violence. Methamphetamine raises blood pressure and can cause dangerous irregular heartbeats, chest pain, shortness of breath, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. It can also increase body temperature to fatal levels, particularly during overdoses.

As well, some users can suffer brain hemorrhages that cause permanent paralysis, speech loss or death.

Methamphetamine — which can be smoked, snorted, injected or swallowed — also causes malnutrition and memory loss and it can damage the heart, lungs and liver.

It produces a high that lasts up to 12 hours, unlike crack’s 20 minutes.

In Canada, possession of methamphetamine is a criminal offence with a maximum jail term of three years. Traffickers face up to 10 years.

The profit margin for methamphetamine traffickers is huge; one meth tablet, which sells for $10, costs as little as eight cents to make.

The main ingredient in the drug is ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, which comes from over-the-counter cold and allergy pills or cough medicine.

While the base materials are easy to get, cooking them into methamphetamine can be dangerous. The process can produce a deadly toxic gas similar to mustard gas used against troops in the First World War.

To date, only two labs have been found and shut down by police in Manitoba.

bruce.owen@freepress.mb.ca
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