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08:03 PM EDT on Saturday, August 21, 2004
WICHITA, Kans. — It may fall a shade shy of catching thieves red-handed,
but for farmers fed up with methamphetamine cooks filching their
fertilizer, staining them pink will do just fine.
Assuming you can discourage thieves you cannot easily catch, a new
product called GloTell — which is added to tanks of anhydrous ammonia —
will not only besmirch the hands of those who touch the fertilizer, but
leaves its mark on anyone who snorts or shoots the end product.
GloTell is already proving to be a handy deterrent, but there were
details to be worked out between its birth as a farmer's brainstorm and
finished product.
The additive had to withstand the cold, corrosive nature of anhydrous
ammonia. It had to be safe for the environment, safe for crops and even
safe around children.
And in the two years it took to develop GloTell, researchers at the
University of Southern Illinois Carbondale found it did much more than
just stain thieves pink.
The visible stain, even if washed off, was still detectable by
ultraviolet light 24 to 72 hours later. As an added benefit, the
additive helped farmers detect any tank leaks, said Truitt Clements,
spokesman for Illinois-based GloTell Distributors LLC.
Best of all, the treated anhydrous ammonia rendered any meth it was used
to make extremely difficult to dry and turned it an unbleachable pink,
he said.
"Most people that are drug users, they like a clean-looking drug if they
are going to ... put it in their body," Clements said. "We know the
end-product is not pretty at all."
Snort it, and it turns the nose fluorescent pink. Inject it, and the
telltale pink shows up at the injection site, he said.
During product testing, GloTell was added to anhydrous ammonia tanks at
farms that had been having problems with meth thefts in Illinois,
Kentucky and Indiana, Clements said. Within a week, the thefts stopped.
On Tuesday, GloTell was unveiled at the Illinois State Fair.
Next month, Virginia-based Royster-Clark Inc. will begin selling it at
nearly 250 of its outlets around the nation under an exclusive
distribution agreement with GloTell, said Lori Ann Peters, a spokeswoman
for Royster-Clark.
"The meth problem is not a problem that affects only families of people
addicted, it plagues entire communities," Peters said.
The meth problem is especially bad in rural states like Kansas, which
ranks among the top five meth-producing states in the nation, said Kyle
Smith, spokesman for the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.
"Meth is our Number One problem — and has been for several years now,"
he said.
In 2003, there were 649 meth labs were seized in Kansas, compared to
four labs seized in 1994, according to KBI statistics.
Anhydrous ammonia is especially dangerous to use in meth production - it
can burn lungs, cause explosions and chemical burns, he said. Meth
makers will likely turn to other meth production methods if GloTell use
becomes widespread.
"Even if it pushes them to use a different methodology, that is good.
... It has to be demonstrated to me first. I hope it works, but we have
to see," Smith said.
Clements said the additive will likely add about $9 per ton to the cost
of anhydrous ammonia, which now costs about $240 a ton.
To deal with the problem of meth thefts, some states have passed laws
requiring locks on anhydrous ammonia tanks — with limited success.
Iowa State University has also been working on an additive that would
make anhydrous ammonia unusable for meth production, Wegmeyer said. That
product may debut next year, she said.
"All farmers want to do is go out and produce their crops and raise
their families and do the best job they can," Clements said. "A lot of
times they are fighting druggies and putting up fences and locks. They
just want to go back to the production of agriculture."
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