SESSION OF 1999
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON
SUBSTITUTE FOR HOUSE BILL NO. 2469
As Amended by Senate Committee of the Whole
Brief(1)
Sub. for H.B. 2469 establishes the manufacture of
methamphetamines as an aggravating factor permitting departure
by the sentencing judge of not to exceed twice the maximum
presumptive sentence and enacts a new Kansas Chemical Control
Act establishing certain reporting and other requirements for
chemical distributors and retailers. It also would establish
procedures for the voluntary reporting of suspicious purchases of
nonprescription drugs by retailers to the Kansas Bureau of
Investigation (KBI). The bill creates a new crime of unlawful
endangerment and a crime of possession of certain drugs with the
intent to use these as a precursor to any illegal substance. The
bill permits the use of silencers by police officer tactical units
regarding drug crimes and makes other changes.
Major features of the bill are as follows.
Methamphetamine Manufacturing--
Enhanced Penalty for Departure
A violation of the prohibition against the manufacture of a
controlled substance (K.S.A. 65-4159) for the first offense and for
a second or subsequent violation would be subject to an upward
departure if it involved the manufacture of methamphetamines.
New Crimes Created--Possession of Certain
Drugs; Unlawful Endangerment
The bill creates a new crime which makes it illegal to possess
ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, or phenylpropanolamine or their salts
with the intent to use the product as a precursor to any illegal
substance. Further, it will be illegal to market, sell, distribute,
advertise, or label any drug product containing these chemicals for
stimulation, mental alertness, weight loss, appetite control,
energy, or other purpose not federally approved. The penalty for
a violation is a drug severity level 1 felony.
The bill creates the new crime of unlawful endangerment
which includes the following provisions:
- Anyone who, while engaging in the production or protection
of the controlled substance, and who sets up, builds, erects,
or uses any device or weapon which causes or is intended to
cause damage or injury to another. This provision is punishable as a level 8 nonperson felony.
- Anyone who, while engaged in the activities specified above
and which causes physical injury. This provision constitutes
a severity level 7 person felony.
- Anyone who, while engaged in the activities above and which
causes serious physical injury. This provision is a severity
level 5 person felony.
Anhydrous Ammonia
The chemical anhydrous ammonia to be used for the illegal
production of a controlled substance is added to the list of
prohibited substances and items. A violation would be a drug
severity level 4 felony.
Use of Silencers
An additional exception to this crime which prohibits the use
of silencers would allow for the use of silencers by law enforcement officers with a tactical unit which receives specialized
training regarding drug crimes.
Hazardous Materials--Evidence Distribution
Amendments to K.S.A. 22-2512 would allow for the destruction or disposition of hazardous materials, with the approval of the
appropriate court. Representatives of such hazardous materials
accompanied by photographs, videotapes, laboratory analysis
reports, or other verification means will be admissible as evidence
in any proceeding, hearing, or trial.
Forfeited Property
The House Committee of the Whole amended the bill to
provide that any property forfeited under the Act will be sold to
the highest bidder for cash. Moneys from the sale will go to the
cleanup account in the Chemical Control Fund to be used only for
cleanup costs.
Multi-Jurisdictional Law Enforcement
Any county which borders another state may enter into
agreement with the other state's contiguous county to form a
multi-jurisdictional law enforcement group for the enforcement of
drug and controlled substances laws. The other state's law
enforcement officers will have the same powers and immunities
as Kansas law enforcement officers in these instances.
The Kansas Chemical Control Act
- The purpose of the Act is to prevent the illegal diversion of
precursor chemicals by creating a system which will provide
information on the distribution of regulated chemicals while
protecting legitimate uses.
- Regulated chemicals are defined as chemicals used to
manufacture a controlled substance or other chemical in
violation of the Controlled Substances Act. The list of
regulated chemicals is included. An exception to the list
which includes ephedrine are products containing ephedra
marketed as dietary supplements under federal law.
- Exceptions to the Act include those persons who lawfully
transport, administer, or dispense regulated chemicals. Such
an exemption would apply to truck drivers, warehousemen,
physicians, dentists, veterinarians, and pharmacists in the
lawful course of business.
- The Secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and
Environment (KDHE) is authorized to adopt rules and regulations to carry out the provisions of the Act.
- A regulated distributor or retailer would be required to report
to the KBI the following suspicious transactions:
- any regulated transaction involving an extraordinary
quantity of a listed chemical, uncommon method of
payment or delivery, or other suspicious circumstance that
could indicate a violation of the Act;
- any regulated transaction with a person whose description
has been furnished by the KBI; and
- any unusual or excessive loss or disappearance of a
regulated chemical under the control of the retailer or
distributor; an in-transit loss report is the responsibility of
the distributor.
- Initial reports to the KBI will be oral at the earliest opportunity; written reports must be filed within 15 days of the
occurrence.
- Exceptions to the reporting requirement include pharmacists,
practitioners, lawful sales involving regulated chemicals in
over-the-counter transactions, and a retailer who sells or
distributes nonprescription medicines with less than 3 grams
of base ingredient as follows:
- blister packs of not more than two dosage units per blister;
- liquid cold or cough medicines;
- liquid cold or cough gel capsules; and
- nasal drops or sprays.
- Violations of the Act are punishable by a fine of up to
$25,000. For continuing violations, every day the violation
continues will be a separate violation. The Secretary of KDHE
or the Director of the Division of Environment may impose the
penalty. A person who violates the Act will also be liable for
detection and investigation costs, costs of cleanup, and for
damages or injury to natural resources. In addition, a civil
action in the county where the violation allegedly occurred
may be brought. Any moneys collected under these provisions will be deposited in a new fund entitled the Chemical
Control Fund. Provisions regarding the Fund are contained in
the bill.
- The Secretary of KDHE is authorized to contract with a
hazardous waste contractor regarding the investigation and
cleanup of chemical materials.
- KDHE would be authorized to enter onto the premises of an
alleged illegal drug manufacturing site at reasonable times to
take remedial and other actions.
- Other responsibilities and duties of the Secretary are outlined
in the bill. The bill also creates joint and several liability for
cleanup costs, among the following:
- a person operating an alleged illegal drug manufacturing
site;
- an owner of an alleged illegal drug manufacturing site;
- an owner of such a site who had actual knowledge of the
illegal operations and who failed to notify the appropriate
authorities;
- a person who may have caused or contributed to the illegal
operation;
- a person who unlawfully hinders or delays entry to,
investigation of, or cleanup action at a site.
- Exceptions to liability involving cleanup include the following:
- a unit of state or local government that acquired ownership
or control of a site as a result of tax delinquency, abandonment, exercise of eminent domain, forfeiture, purchase, or
condemnation;
- an owner or operator who acquired the site after the
creation of the illegal operation and who did not know of
the damages;
- a person not otherwise responsible who acquired a site by
inheritance or bequest;
- local governments that take action in response to an
emergency created by chemicals at a site owned by
another person; and
- manufacturers, distributors, and retailers registered with
the Board of Pharmacy who act without knowledge of or
intent to furnish supplies to an illegal drug manufacturing
site.
- All regulated chemicals which have been or are intended to be
involved in the described illegal activities are deemed to be
contraband and may be seized and forfeited to the state.
The Senate Committee amended the bill to delete illegal drug
manufacturing penalty enhancements and provide instead
departure for methamphetamine manufacturing, to add the retailer
voluntarily reporting to allow KDHE to enter onto alleged illegal
drug manufacturing sites and to make a technical change regarding an exception from the Chemical Control Act for licensed
producers.
The Senate Committee of the Whole amended the bill to
delete the authorization for use of silencers; to delete ammunition
and components thereof from saving of samples of hazardous
materials that may otherwise be destroyed which would otherwise
be considered evidence; and to strike the word "potential" when
referring to an illegal drug manufacturing site dealing with site
investigation and cleanup.
Background
The Attorney General, who requested the bill, testified in
support of the bill. An Assistant Attorney General explained
provisions of the bill for the Committee. Letters of support for the
measure were submitted on behalf of the Kansas Peace Officers
Association, the Douglas County Sheriff, and the Kansas Association of Chiefs of Police. The State Representative from Cherokee
County testified in favor of the measure. He cited specific
problems in his area as a result of methamphetamine laboratories.
The representative from KDHE expressed support for the measure
as a means to create a chemical monitoring program for precursor
chemicals used in the illegal manufacture of methamphetamines.
Opposition to certain provisions of the bill was expressed by
conferees from the Non-Prescription Drug Manufacturers Association and the Dietary Supplement Coalition. A letter from the Bayer
Corporation echoed these concerns. Written material was
provided by the Executive Director of the Kansas Sentencing
Commission.
The revised fiscal note for H.B. 2469 as it passed the House
Committee estimated the following:
- Six added employees for KDHE with an annual operations
cost of $90,300 plus estimated cleanup costs as high as
$1,086,000 annually.
- Prison impact of between 111 and 426 added admissions for
a prison capacity cost of between $28.6 million to $161.1
million plus additional Department of Corrections operating
costs of between $14.3 million and $32.3 million.
There has not been a revised fiscal note prepared to reflect
changes made by the Senate Committee.
1. *Supplemental notes are prepared by the Legislative Research
Department and do not express legislative intent. The supplemental
note and fiscal note for this bill may be accessed on the Internet at
http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/bill_search.html