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Diagnostic impurities are the naphthalenes 1-benzyl-methylnaphthalene and 1,3-dimethyl-2-phenylnaphthalene, [108] arising in the Nagai and Leuckart routes, and cis-or trans-1,2-dimethyl-3-phenylaziridine, ephedrine, or erythro-3,4-dimethyl- 5-phenyloxazolidine, arising in the Nagai and Emde routes; these are absent in the reductive amination ...
Crack house closure by West Midlands Police in the United Kingdom. A drug house [a] is a residence used in the illegal drug trade. Drug houses shelter drug users and provide a place for drug dealers to supply them. Drug houses can also be used as laboratories to synthesize (cook) drugs, or cache ingredients and product.
Toxic chemicals resulting from methamphetamine production may be hoarded or clandestinely dumped, damaging land, water, plant life and wild life, and posing a risk to humans. [15] [10] Waste from methamphetamine labs is frequently dumped on federal, public, and tribal lands. The chemicals involved can explode and clandestine chemistry has been ...
3,4-Methyl enedioxy methamphetamine (MDMA), commonly known as ecstasy (tablet form), and molly (crystal form), [19] [20] is an empathogen–entactogenic drug with stimulant and minor psychedelic properties.
The illegal drug trade, drug trafficking, or narcotrafficking is a global black market dedicated to the cultivation, manufacture, distribution and sale of prohibited drugs. Most jurisdictions prohibit trade, except under license, of many types of drugs through the use of drug prohibition laws.
Passed the House on September 26, 1996 (386-34 Roll call vote 434, via Clerk.House.gov, in lieu of H.R. 3852) Signed into law by President Bill Clinton on October 3, 1996 The Comprehensive Methamphetamine Control Act of 1996 is a bill ( S. 1965 ) enacted into law ( Pub. L. 104–237 (text) (PDF) ) by the 104th Congress of the United States .
Reported by the joint conference committee on December 8, 2005; agreed to by the House on December 14, 2005 (251-174, Roll call vote 627, via Clerk.House.gov, in lieu of H.R. 3199) and by the Senate on March 2, 2006 (89-10, Roll call vote 29, via Senate.gov, in lieu of H.R. 3199) Signed into law by President George W. Bush on March 9, 2006
The penalties for sale of a controlled substance varies between states. In Oregon, a person convicted three times of selling 3.3 pounds of meth would face a maximum of four years in prison. By comparison, the potential penalty would be 13 years in prison in California, 21 years in federal court, and up to life in Texas.