Detective Chris Comeaux with the St. Tammany Parish Police Department called NPLEx or National Precursor Log Exchange, a must when it comes to tracking down meth labs.
Comeaux was in
He got his start with NPLEx when
How big a help was NPLEx? Comeaux said you just have to look at the numbers to see the impact.
“At the time we implemented NPLEx, our meth labs were on the rise. We were starting to do about 5 or 6 a week, averaging anywhere from 20 to 50 labs a year. It has since declined. We’re actually now, in 2014, we’ve done about 5 labs,” explained Comeaux.
The old way of tracking meth purchases involved a lot of footwork for officers.
“Prior to NPLEx what law enforcement had to do was go pharmacy to pharmacy to gather the research and then go through paper logs which seems to be endless,” said the detective.
With NPLEx, the computerized system connects pharmacy with pharmacy to prevent smurfers from going around town buying up pseudoephedrine, the main ingredient in meth. Law enforcement can use the system right at their desks to find out who’s purchasing the drug and which pharmacies are selling the most product. He said each officer can customize searches to assist in their investigation.
He said it works and it can work even better for
The West Virginia Retailers Association, the National Association of Drug Investigators, the West Virginia Sheriff’s Association and the West Virginia Municipal League sponsored Tuesday’s seminar. There have already been similar workshops in