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    ILLEGAL DRUGS / 
    CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
    
    Controlled Substances Act (CSA) 
    [Contraband (i.e., illegal to possess) 
    Substances and How “Classification” is Determined]
    
    
     The 
    Controlled Substances Act (CSA), Title II of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse 
    Prevention and Control Act of 1970, is the legal foundation of the 
    government's fight against the abuse of drugs and other substances. This law 
    is a consolidation of numerous laws regulating the manufacture and 
    distribution of narcotics, stimulants, depressants, hallucinogens, anabolic 
    steroids, and chemicals used in the illicit production of controlled 
    substances.  
    
    
    The CSA places all substances that are regulated under existing federal law 
    into one of five schedules. This placement is based upon the 
    substance's medicinal value, harmfulness, and potential for abuse or 
    addiction. Schedule I is reserved for the most dangerous drugs that 
    have no recognized medical use, while Schedule V is the 
    classification used for the least dangerous drugs. The act also provides a 
    mechanism for substances to be controlled, added to a schedule, 
    decontrolled, removed from control, rescheduled, or transferred from one 
    schedule to another. Punishment for violations of the law are severe, 
    especially for Schedule I and Schedule II drugs, which are “100% contraband” 
    (Schedule I) or “conditionally contraband” absent approved DEA use by those 
    holing a permit (Schedule II). See <http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/concern/abuse/chap1/penal/chart1.htm>
     
    
    
    Proceedings to add, delete, or change the schedule of a drug or other 
    substance may be initiated by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the 
    Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), or by petition from any 
    interested party, including the manufacturer of a drug, a medical society or 
    association, a pharmacy association, a public interest group concerned with 
    drug abuse, a state or local government agency, or an individual citizen. 
    When a petition is received by the DEA, the agency begins its own 
    investigation of the drug. 
    
    
    The DEA also may begin an investigation of a drug at any time based upon 
    information received from law enforcement laboratories, state and local law 
    enforcement and regulatory agencies, or other sources of information. 
     
    
    
    Once the DEA has collected the necessary data, the DEA Administrator, by 
    authority of the lawyer General, requests from the HHS a scientific and 
    medical evaluation and recommendation as to whether the drug or other 
    substance should be controlled or removed from control. This request is sent 
    to the Assistant Secretary of Health of the HHS. Then, the HHS solicits 
    information from the Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration and 
    evaluations and recommendations from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, 
    and on occasion, from the scientific and medical community at large. The 
    Assistant Secretary, by authority of the Secretary, compiles the information 
    and transmits back to the DEA a medical and scientific evaluation regarding 
    the drug or other substance, a recommendation as to whether the drug should 
    be controlled, and in what schedule it should be placed.  
    
    
    The medical and scientific evaluations are binding to the DEA with respect 
    to scientific and medical matters. The recommendation on scheduling is 
    binding only to the extent that if HHS recommends that the substance not be 
    controlled, the DEA may not control the substance.  
    
    
    Once the DEA has received the scientific and medical evaluation from HHS, 
    the Administrator will evaluate all available data and make a final decision 
    whether to propose that a drug or other substance be controlled and into 
    which schedule it should be placed.  
    
    The CSA also creates a closed system of distribution for those authorized to 
    handle controlled substances. The cornerstone of this system is the 
    registration of all those authorized by the DEA to handle controlled 
    substances. All individuals and firms that are registered are required to 
    maintain complete and accurate inventories and records of all transactions 
    involving controlled substances, as well as security for the storage of
    controlled substances.
    
     
    
    Photographs of 
    some of the 100s of Illicit
    
    Ecstasy Pills Sold in the USA
    (Sample pictures from http://www.erowid.org)
    
     
    
      
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    Contraband Drugs and United 
    States Law
    
      
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        Schedule I (MOST CONTROLLED OF ALL 
        SUBSTANCES/DRUGS)   | 
        
        Examples: Heroin; Codeine 
        methylbromide; “ crystal meth”; Peyote; Normethadone, 
        Acetyldihydrocodeine, Dihydromorphine, etc. | 
       
      
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         FEDERAL
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        Sec. 1308.11
         Schedule I shall consist of 
        the drugs and other substances, by whatever official name, common or 
        usual name, chemical name, or brand name designated, listed in this 
        section. Each drug or substance has been assigned the DEA Controlled 
        Substances Code Number set forth opposite it. 
        For federal penalty ranges, 
        see:   | 
       
      
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         STATE
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        STATE definition of Schedule I 
        drugs: (Georgia) 
         (A) The drug or other 
        substance has a high potential for abuse; 
         (B) The drug or other 
        substance has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the 
        United States; and 
        
        (C) There is a lack of 
        accepted safety for use of the drug or other substance under medical 
        supervision.   | 
       
      
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        Schedule II   | 
        
        Highly Controlled; DEA permit 
        must be secured for anyone to possess or use. | 
       
     
      
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