Sec. 14.7. (a) This section does not apply to the following:
(1) Ephedrine or pseudoephedrine dispensed pursuant to a prescription. Nothing in this section prohibits a person who is denied the sale of a nonprescription product containing pseudoephedrine or ephedrine from obtaining pseudoephedrine or ephedrine pursuant to a prescription.
(2) The sale of a drug containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine to a licensed health care provider, pharmacist, retail distributor, wholesaler, manufacturer, or an agent of any of these persons if the sale occurs in the regular course of lawful business activities. However, a retail distributor, wholesaler, or manufacturer is required to report a suspicious order to the state police department in accordance with subsection (g).
(3) The sale of a drug containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine by a person who does not sell exclusively to walk-in customers for the personal use of the walk-in customers. However, if the person described in this subdivision is a retail distributor, wholesaler, or manufacturer, the person is required to report a suspicious order to the state police department in accordance with subsection (g).
(b) The following definitions apply throughout this section:
(1) "Constant video monitoring" means the surveillance by an automated camera that:
(A) records at least one (1) photograph or digital image every ten (10) seconds;
(B) retains a photograph or digital image for at least seventy-two (72) hours;
(C) has sufficient resolution and magnification to permit the identification of a person in the area under surveillance; and
(D) stores a recorded photograph or digital image at a location that is immediately accessible to a law enforcement officer.
(2) "Convenience package" means a package that contains a drug having as an active ingredient not more than sixty (60) milligrams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, or both.
(3) "Ephedrine" means pure or adulterated ephedrine.
(4) "Pharmacy or NPLEx retailer" means:
(A) a pharmacy, as defined in IC 25-26-13-2;
(B) a retailer containing a pharmacy, as defined in IC 25-26-13-2; or
(C) a retailer that electronically submits the required information to the National Precursor Log Exchange (NPLEx).
(5) "Pseudoephedrine" means pure or adulterated pseudoephedrine.
(6) "Retailer" means a grocery store, general merchandise store, or other similar establishment. The term does not include a pharmacy or NPLEx retailer.
(7) "Suspicious order" means a sale or transfer of a drug containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine if the sale or transfer:
(A) is a sale or transfer that the retail distributor, wholesaler, or manufacturer is required to report to the United States Drug Enforcement Administration;
(B) appears suspicious to the retail distributor, wholesaler, or manufacturer in light of the recommendations contained in Appendix A of the report to the United States attorney general by the suspicious orders task force under the federal Comprehensive Methamphetamine Control Act of 1996; or
(C) is for cash or a money order in a total amount of at least two hundred dollars ($200).
(8) "Unusual theft" means the theft or unexplained disappearance from a particular pharmacy or NPLEx retailer of drugs containing ten (10) grams or more of ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, or both in a twenty-four (24) hour period.
(c) A drug containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine may be sold only by a pharmacy or NPLEx retailer.
(d) A pharmacy or NPLEx retailer may sell a drug that contains the active ingredient of ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, or both only if the pharmacy or NPLEx retailer complies with the following conditions:
(1) The pharmacy or NPLEx retailer does not sell the drug to a person less than eighteen (18) years of age.
(2) The pharmacy or NPLEx retailer does not sell drugs containing more than:
(A) three and six-tenths (3.6) grams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, or both, to one (1) individual on one (1) day;
(B) seven and two-tenths (7.2) grams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, or both, to one (1) individual in a thirty (30) day period; or
(C) sixty-one and two-tenths (61.2) grams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, or both, to one (1) individual in a three hundred sixty-five (365) day period.
(3) Except as provided in subsection (f), before the sale occurs the pharmacist or the pharmacy technician (as defined by IC 25-26-19-2) has determined that the purchaser has a relationship on record with the pharmacy, in compliance with rules adopted by the board under IC 25-26-13-4. If it has been determined that the purchaser does not have a relationship on record with the pharmacy, the pharmacist shall make a professional determination as to whether there is a legitimate medical or pharmaceutical need for ephedrine or pseudoephedrine before selling ephedrine or pseudoephedrine to an individual. The pharmacist's professional determination must comply with the rules adopted under IC 25-26-13-4 and may include the following:
(A) Prior medication filling history of the individual.
(B) Consulting with the individual.
(C) Other tools that provide professional reassurance to the pharmacist that a legitimate medical or pharmaceutical need for ephedrine or pseudoephedrine exists.
A pharmacist who in good faith does not sell ephedrine or pseudoephedrine to an individual under this subdivision is immune from civil liability unless the refusal to sell constitutes gross negligence or intentional, wanton, or willful misconduct.
(4) The pharmacy or NPLEx retailer requires:
(A) the purchaser to produce a valid government issued photo identification card showing the date of birth of the person;
(B) the purchaser to sign a written or electronic log attesting to the validity of the information; and
(C) the clerk who is conducting the transaction to initial or electronically record the clerk's identification on the log.
Records from the completion of a log must be retained for at least two (2) years. A law enforcement officer has the right to inspect and copy a log or the records from the completion of a log in accordance with state and federal law. A pharmacy or NPLEx retailer may not sell or release a log or the records from the completion of a log for a commercial purpose. The Indiana criminal justice institute may obtain information concerning a log or the records from the completion of a log from a law enforcement officer if the information may not be used to identify a specific individual and is used only for statistical purposes. A pharmacy or NPLEx retailer that in good faith releases information maintained under this subsection is immune from civil liability unless the release constitutes gross negligence or intentional, wanton, or willful misconduct.
(5) The pharmacy or NPLEx retailer maintains a record of information for each sale of a nonprescription product containing pseudoephedrine or ephedrine. Required information includes:
(A) the name and address of each purchaser;
(B) the type of identification presented;
(C) the governmental entity that issued the identification;
(D) the identification number; and
(E) the ephedrine or pseudoephedrine product purchased, including the number of grams the product contains and the date and time of the transaction.
(6) A pharmacy or NPLEx retailer shall, except as provided in subdivision (7), before completing a sale of an over-the-counter product containing pseudoephedrine or ephedrine, electronically submit the required information to the National Precursor Log Exchange (NPLEx), if the NPLEx system is available to pharmacies or NPLEx retailers in the state without a charge for accessing the system. The pharmacy or NPLEx retailer may not complete the sale if the system generates a stop sale alert, including a stop sale alert for a person convicted of a drug related felony reported under IC 33-24-6-3.
(7) If a pharmacy or NPLEx retailer selling an over-the-counter product containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine experiences mechanical or electronic failure of the electronic sales tracking system and is unable to comply with the electronic sales tracking requirement, the pharmacy or NPLEx retailer shall maintain a written log or an alternative electronic record keeping mechanism until the pharmacy or NPLEx retailer is able to comply with the electronic sales tracking requirement.
(8) The pharmacy or NPLEx retailer stores the drug behind a counter in an area inaccessible to a customer or in a locked display case that makes the drug unavailable to a customer without the assistance of an employee.
(e) A person may not purchase drugs containing more than:
(1) three and six-tenths (3.6) grams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, or both, on one (1) day;
(2) seven and two-tenths (7.2) grams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, or both, in a thirty (30) day period; or
(3) sixty-one and two-tenths (61.2) grams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, or both, in a three hundred sixty-five (365) day period.
These limits apply to the total amount of base ephedrine and pseudoephedrine contained in the products and not to the overall weight of the products.
(f) If a purchaser does not have a relationship on record with the pharmacy, as determined by rules adopted by the board under IC 25-26-13-4, or the pharmacist has made a professional determination that there is not a legitimate medical or pharmaceutical need for ephedrine or pseudoephedrine under subsection (d), the purchaser may, at the pharmacist's discretion, purchase only the following:
(1) A product that has been determined under section 14.3 of this chapter to be an extraction resistant or a conversion resistant form of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine.
(2) A product that contains not more than:
(A) a total of seven hundred twenty (720) milligrams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine per package; and
(B) thirty (30) milligrams of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine per tablet.
The pharmacist may not sell more than one (1) package of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine to a purchaser under this subdivision per day.
However, if the pharmacist believes that the ephedrine or pseudoephedrine purchase will be used to manufacture methamphetamine, the pharmacist may refuse to sell ephedrine or pseudoephedrine to the purchaser.
(g) A retail distributor, wholesaler, or manufacturer shall report a suspicious order to the state police department in writing.
(h) Not later than three (3) days after the discovery of an unusual theft at a particular retail store, the pharmacy or NPLEx retailer shall report the unusual theft to the state police department in writing. If three (3) unusual thefts occur in a thirty (30) day period at a particular pharmacy or NPLEx retailer, the pharmacy or NPLEx retailer shall, for at least one hundred eighty (180) days after the date of the last unusual theft, locate all drugs containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine at that particular pharmacy or NPLEx retailer behind a counter in an area inaccessible to a customer or in a locked display case that makes the drug unavailable to customers without the assistance of an employee.
(i) A unit (as defined in IC 36-1-2-23) may not adopt an ordinance after February 1, 2005, that is more stringent than this section.
(j) A person who knowingly or intentionally violates this section commits a Class C misdemeanor. However, the offense is a Class A misdemeanor if the person has a prior unrelated conviction under this section.
(k) A pharmacy or NPLEx retailer that uses the electronic sales tracking system in accordance with this section is immune from civil liability for any act or omission committed in carrying out the duties required by this section, unless the act or omission was due to recklessness or deliberate or wanton misconduct. A pharmacy or NPLEx retailer is immune from liability to a third party unless the pharmacy or NPLEx retailer has violated a provision of this section and the third party brings an action based on the pharmacy's or NPLEx retailer's violation of this section.
(l) The following requirements apply to the NPLEx:
(1) Information contained in the NPLEx may be shared only with law enforcement officials.
(2) A law enforcement official may access Indiana transaction information maintained in the NPLEx for investigative purposes.
(3) NADDI may not modify sales transaction data that is shared with law enforcement officials.
(4) At least one (1) time per day, Indiana data contained in the NPLEx for the previous calendar day shall be forwarded to the state police department.
(m) A person or corporate entity may not mandate a protocol or procedure that interferes with the pharmacist's ability to exercise the pharmacist's independent professional judgment under this section, including whether to deny the sale of ephedrine or pseudoephedrine under subsection (f).
As added by P.L.192-2005, SEC.9. Amended by P.L.151-2006, SEC.27; P.L.186-2007, SEC.9; P.L.97-2010, SEC.1; P.L.221-2011, SEC.1; P.L.193-2013, SEC.8; P.L.4-2016, SEC.4; P.L.5-2016, SEC.6; P.L.9-2016, SEC.3; P.L.252-2017, SEC.25.
Structure Indiana Code
Title 35. Criminal Law and Procedure
Article 48. Controlled Substances
Chapter 4. Offenses Relating to Controlled Substances
35-48-4-0.1. Application of Certain Amendments to Chapter
35-48-4-0.5. Controlled Substance Analog; Factors
35-48-4-1. Dealing in Cocaine or Narcotic Drug
35-48-4-1.1. Dealing in Methamphetamine
35-48-4-1.2. Manufacturing Methamphetamine
35-48-4-1.5. Dealing in a Controlled Substance by a Practitioner
35-48-4-2. Dealing in a Schedule I, Ii, or Iii Controlled Substance or Controlled Substance Analog
35-48-4-3. Dealing in a Schedule Iv Controlled Substance or Controlled Substance Analog
35-48-4-4. Dealing in a Schedule v Controlled Substance or Controlled Substance Analog
35-48-4-4.1. Dumping Controlled Substance Waste
35-48-4-5. Dealing in a Counterfeit Substance
35-48-4-6. Possession of Cocaine or Narcotic Drug
35-48-4-6.1. Possession of Methamphetamine
35-48-4-8.1. Manufacture of Paraphernalia
35-48-4-8.3. Possession of Paraphernalia
35-48-4-8.5. Dealing in Paraphernalia
35-48-4-10. Dealing in Marijuana, Hash Oil, Hashish, or Salvia
35-48-4-10.1. Dealing in Smokable Hemp; Exception for Transit Through State
35-48-4-11. Possession of Marijuana, Hash Oil, Hashish, or Salvia
35-48-4-12. Conditional Discharge for Possession as First Offense
35-48-4-12.5. Priority Enrollment in Certain Treatment Programs; Exceptions
35-48-4-14. Offenses Relating to Registration Labeling and Prescription Forms
35-48-4-14.3. Extraction Resistant or Conversion Resistant Ephedrine or Pseudoephedrine
35-48-4-14.5. Possession or Sale of Drug Precursors
35-48-4-16. Defenses to Charge of Selling Narcotics Near School or Park