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  2. Fair Sentencing Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_Sentencing_Act

    Crack cocaine. The Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–220 (text)) was an Act of Congress that was signed into federal law by United States President Barack Obama on August 3, 2010, that reduces the disparity between the amount of crack cocaine and powder cocaine needed to trigger certain federal criminal penalties from a 100:1 weight ratio to an 18:1 weight ratio [1] and eliminated the ...

  3. Crack cocaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crack_cocaine

    Crack baby is a term for a child born to a mother who used crack cocaine during her pregnancy. The threat that cocaine use during pregnancy poses to the fetus is now considered exaggerated. [ 27 ] Studies show that prenatal cocaine exposure (independent of other effects such as, for example, alcohol, tobacco, or physical environment) has no ...

  4. Lacing (drugs) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lacing_(drugs)

    Crack-cocaine: Benzocaine: Coco snow: Crack cut with benzocaine. Benzocaine is a dental anaesthetic that mimics coke's numbing effect. Crack-cocaine: Procaine: Double rock: Crack cut with procaine. Procaine is a dental anaesthetic that mimics coke's numbing effect. LSD: Strychnine: Back breakers (sometimes backbreaker)

  5. Cocaine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cocaine

    A woman smoking crack cocaine "Rocks" of crack cocaine. Crack is usually smoked in a glass pipe, and once inhaled, it passes from the lungs directly to the central nervous system, producing an almost immediate "high" that can be very powerful – this initial crescendo of stimulation is known as a "rush". This is followed by an equally intense ...

  6. Cocaine boom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cocaine_boom

    Initially, crack had higher purity than street powder. [19] Around 1984, powder cocaine was available on the street at an average of 55 percent purity for $100 per gram (equivalent to $293 in 2023), and crack was sold at average purity levels of 80-plus percent for the same price. [18]

  7. Arguments for and against drug prohibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arguments_for_and_against...

    [170] [171] For example, up until 2012, crack cocaine carried penalties one hundred times more severe than cocaine despite the fact that these drugs are essentially identical. Especially in urban black communities, convictions were nearly exclusively for crack, while cocaine use is statistically much higher among affluent whites.

  8. Women in the drug economy in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_drug_economy...

    The advent of crack cocaine, a cheaper version of cocaine that could be smoked, in American inner-city neighborhoods in the 1980s coincided with rampant deindustrialization, increasing unemployment rates, and an increasing number of female heads-of-households.

  9. Free base - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_base

    Trituration of the free base from cocaine hydrochloride (or "cooking") is done by dissolving the cocaine hydrochloride in water over constant heat, while simultaneously adding a base (such as baking soda) to form the free base cocaine. The free base of cocaine forms a solid "rock", pieces of which can be smoked directly (crack cocaine). [4]