29 September 2009

Something to keep in mind during cold and flu season...

CLINTON When Sally Harpold bought cold medicine for her family back in March, she never dreamed that four months later she would end up in handcuffs...

Harpold is a grandmother of triplets who bought one box of Zyrtec-D cold medicine for her husband at a Rockville pharmacy. Less than seven days later, she bought a box of Mucinex-D cold medicine for her adult daughter at a Clinton pharmacy, thereby purchasing 3.6 grams total of pseudoephedrine in a week’s time...

Those two purchases put her in violation of Indiana law 35-48-4-14.7, which restricts the sale of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine, or PSE, products to no more than 3.0 grams within any seven-day period...

When the police came knocking at the door of Harpold’s Parke County residence on July 30, she was arrested on a Vermillion County warrant for a class-C misdemeanor, which carries a sentence of up to 60 days in jail and up to a $500 fine. But through a deferral program offered by Vermillion County Prosecutor Nina Alexander, the charge could be wiped from Harpold’s record by mid-September [this story was dated Sept 3]...

While the law was written with the intent of stopping people from purchasing large quantities of drugs to make methamphetamine, the law does not say the purchase must be made with the intent to make meth...

Just as with any law, the public has the responsibility to know what is legal and what is not, and ignorance of the law is no excuse, the prosecutor said...

Harpold, who is employed at the Rockville Correctional Facility for women, feels her reputation has been damaged by the arrest, and that she has been wrongly labeled as someone who makes meth.

Her police mug shot ran on the front page of her local newspaper, she wrote, in a letter to the Tribune-Star, “with an article entitled, ‘17 Arrested in Drug Sweep.’”

The morning she was arrested, Harpold and her husband were awakened by police officers banging on the front door of their home at Midway along U.S. 36. She was allowed to get dressed, and was then taken in handcuffs to the Clinton Police Department, where she was questioned about her cold medicine purchases. She was later booked into jail, and her husband had to pay $300 bail to get her released.

3 comments:

  1. Yet another example of government gone wild.

    The government needs to punish those manufacturing meth, not those purchasing some of the materials to make it. And the district attorney is an absolute moron for continuing to prosecute when the facts of the case became known.

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  2. California has a similar law. It irks me to no end that those of us who have no intention of manufacturing illicit drugs (the VAST majority) have to take the lumps for those who would (the TINIEST minority). The idea that the government is keeping us safe in this regard is disgusting to me.

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  3. I always thought the real intent of this law was to curtail the sale of Ephedrine, a cheap over the counter asthma drug that is restricted by the same law.

    ReplyDelete

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