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         Drug Enforcement:     more books (100)
  1. Drug Enforcement Administration (Law Enforcement Agencies) by Michael Newton, 2011-04
  2. Drug Enforcement Agents (At Risk Series) by Suzanne Lord, 1989-11
  3. The Shiny Badge: A Fictional Tale of the Drug Enforcement Administration of the United States by Ray D. Fortner, 2005-01
  4. Drug Enforcement Administration
  5. Drug Enforcement Administration (Rescue and Prevention) by Clive Somerville, 2002-10
  6. European Drug Policies and Enforcement by Nicholas Dorn, Jorgen Jersen, et all 1996-05-15
  7. The Drug Enforcement Administration (Know your government) by Rebecca Stefoff, 1989
  8. Economic Aspects of the Illicit Drug Market and Drug Enforcement Policies in the United Kingdom (Research Studies) by Great Britain. Home Office, 1988-03
  9. The Drug Enforcement Administration (Your Government: How It Works) by Meg Greene, 2001-03
  10. America's Drug Enforcement Airforce: Customs, Coast Guard, Cap, Dea and Dod Airborne Drug Busters (Power Series) by Nena Wiley, 1992-06
  11. A Shadow in the City: Confessions of an Undercover Drug Warrior by Charles Bowden, 2006-07-03
  12. Corrido De Cocaine: Inside Stories of Hard Drugs, Big Money and Short Lives by Arturo Carrillo Strong, 1990-03
  13. Drug agents' guide to forfeiture of assets (1987 revision) by United States. Drug Enforcement Administration, 1987-01-01
  14. Drug Enforcement Agency: War Against Drugs by Jessica De Grazia, 1991-10-03

21. Petition
Full text of the petition to the United States Department of Agriculture and the United States drug enforcement Administration to adopt regulations permitting industrial hemp cultivation. Recommended.
http://www.rca-info.org/indhemp.html
Full Text of Industrial Hemp Petition
March 23, 1998 Mr. Donald Arbuckle, Acting Administrator
Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs
Office of Management and Budget
Executive Office Building
Washington, DC 20503
Hand Delivered
Dear Mr. Arbuckle: Today, a coalition of individuals and organizations are jointly filing two administrative petitions, one with the United States Department of Agriculture and one with the United States Drug Enforcement Administration. The purpose of the petitions is to request the initiation of rule making proceedings at USDA and DEA that would lead to the enactment of regulations permitting the domestic production of a crop known as industrial hemp. Attached to this letter are copies of the two petitions, a single Memorandum in support of both petitions, and proposed USDA and DEA rules, which reflect the petitioners effort to carefully balance the needs of potential industrial hemp producers with the requirements of law enforcement agencies. Some law enforcement officials have opposed industrial hemp cultivation, because the crop belongs to the same species as the plant commonly known as Marijuana. The petitioners stand ready to work with the DEA, USDA, the Administration, the Congress, and other interested parties to further refine the rules to address legitimate concerns. Because implementation of our proposal would require coordinated efforts by USDA and DEA, and because of the importance of this issue for many Americans, we urge the Administration to take a strong leadership role in advancing this process.

22. The Drug Enforcement Academy
The Law Enforcement Training Institute. THE drug enforcement ACADEMY.COURSE III. As we continue to fight drug traffic, more and more
http://www.missouri.edu/~letiwww/dea2.htm
The Faculty
Gary Maddox
William Stephens

Ken Hawkins
Program Courses
470/600 Hour
Basic Training Academy

Defensive Tactics

Drug Enforcement Academy
...
Other Courses
National Programs
National Cruelty Investigations School
Administrative Programs

Missouri Criminal Code:

A Handbook For Law Enforcement Officers
...
Home
The Law Enforcement Training Institute
THE DRUG ENFORCEMENT ACADEMY
COURSE III
As we continue to fight drug traffic, more and more officers are becoming directly involved. The days when "the narcs" could take care of it all are long gone, and as a practical matter all officers should be able to deal with drug traffic at some level. Drug dealing is occurring everywhere, and many departments simply cannot field a SWAT team to handle all drug arrest and raid situations. Well, that doesn't have to cripple your department's ability to carry out these operations. Certainly there are situations that call for the highly advanced training of the SWAT officer, but not all of them do. This training is not a SWAT course, but is an intermediate level course designed for the narcotics officer and patrol officer who should be able to carry out most of these duties. In many cases we have become over reliant on SWAT teams, when any capable officer can be trained to handle most drug arrests and raids. Day 1 will be in the classroom, discussing raid concerns, planning, and teamwork. Some basic survival strategies will also be applied to these operations. We will be going over the method of dynamic entry that we will practice on Day 2.

23. King County Sheriff's Office Drug Enforcement Unit
King County Sheriff's Office drug enforcement Unit impacting the manufactureand distribution of controlled substances in the Greater Puget Sound region.
http://www.metrokc.gov/sheriff/deu.htm
The Drug Enforcement Unit of the King County Sheriff's Office has gone through a reorganization and is now part of the Criminal Profiteering Investigations (CPI) Unit . You will find updated information about the unit on the website at The redirector will take you there in twenty seconds, or you may select the link above. Updated: March 10, 2003
King County Sheriff's Office Sheriff's Directory Sheriff's Main Page What's Hot in King County? King County ... Search Links to external sites do not constitute endorsements by King County.
By visiting this and other King County web pages,
you expressly agree to be bound by terms and conditions of the site.
The details.

24. King County Sheriff's Office Drug Enforcement Unit
drug enforcement Unit Statistics. Link Therefore, the demand for trainingand public lectures surrounding drug enforcement is large. The
http://www.metrokc.gov/sheriff/deu1.htm
This page is no longer available. The Drug Enforcement Unit of the King County Sheriff's Office has gone through a reorganization and is now part of the Criminal Profiteering Investigations (CPI) Unit . You will find updated information about the unit on the website at The redirector will take you there in twenty seconds, or you may select the link above. Updated: March 10, 2003
King County Sheriff's Office Sheriff's Directory Sheriff's Main Page What's Hot in King County? King County ... Search Links to external sites do not constitute endorsements by King County.
By visiting this and other King County web pages,
you expressly agree to be bound by terms and conditions of the site.
The details.

25. Drug Enforcement Administration
drug enforcement ADMINISTRATION I. RESOURCE SUMMARY, (Budget Authority in Millions). $1,145.830.Drug Resources by Decision Unit. Domestic Enforcement. $249.850.
http://www.ncjrs.org/htm/dea.htm
DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION I. RESOURCE SUMMARY (Budget Authority in Millions) Drug Resources by Goal 1996 Actual 1997 Enacted 1998 Request Goal 1 Goal 2 Goal 5 Total Drug Resources by Function Investigations Intelligence International State and Local Assistance Research and Development Regulatory and Compliance Prevention Total Drug Resources by Decision Unit Domestic Enforcement Foreign Cooperative Investigations Drug and Chemical Diversion Control State and Local Task Forces Intelligence Laboratory Services Training Research, Engineering, and Technical Operations ADP Management and Administration Construction Drug Diversion Control Fee Account Crime Control Act Total Drug Resources Personnel Summary FTEs (direct) Total FTEs (w/reimbursable) Information Total Agency Budget Drug Percentage (Detail may not add to totals due to rounding.) II. METHODOLOGY
  • All DEA resources are 100 percent drug-related.
III. PROGRAM SUMMARY
  • DEA is the lead Federal agency for the enforcement of narcotics and controlled substance laws and regulations. The agency's priority mission is the long-term immobilization of major drug trafficking organizations through the removal of their leaders, termination of their trafficking networks and seizure of their assets.
    DEA supports the Federal drug control priorities through its programs that reduce domestic drug-related crime and violence, reduce the domestic drug production and availability, and continue to target for investigation and prosecution those who illegally manufacture, traffic in, and distribute illicit drugs in the United States. DEA's primary responsibilities, organized by goal, include the following:

26. MD State Police Drug Enforcement Section
Comprised of Drug Investigative Services and MultiJurisdictional Drug Task Forces, the Command provides support and resources to field installations and special units within the state police, as well as local law enforcement agencies.
http://www.mdsp-dec.org/index.html
The Drug Enforcement Section leads the Maryland State Police's aggressive enforcement of Maryland's controlled dangerous substance laws. Comprised of Drug Investigative Services and Multi-Jurisdictional Drug Task Forces, the Drug Enforcement Section provides support and resources to field installations and special units within the state police, as well as local law enforcement agencies.
DRUG IDENTIFICATION
Ecstasy

MDMA

GHB

DXM
...
Rohypnol

27. Interagency Crime And Drug Enforcement
INTERAGENCY CRIME AND drug enforcement II. METHODOLOGY All Interagency Crimeand drug enforcement (ICDE) resources are scored 100 percent drugrelated.
http://www.ncjrs.org/htm/icde.htm
INTERAGENCY CRIME AND DRUG ENFORCEMENT I. RESOURCE SUMMARY (Budget Authority in Millions) Drug Resources by Goal 1996 Actual 1997 Enacted 1998 Request Goal 5 Total Drug Resources by Function Investigations Intelligence Prosecution Total Drug Resources by Decision Unit Drug Enforcement Administration Federal Bureau of Investigation INS U.S. Marshals Service U.S. Customs Service ATF Internal Revenue Service U.S. Coast Guard U.S. Attorneys Criminal Division Tax Division Executive Office Total Drug Resources Personnel Summary Total FTEs Information Total Agency Budget Drug Percentage (Detail may not add to totals due to rounding.) II. METHODOLOGY
  • All Interagency Crime and Drug Enforcement (ICDE) resources are scored 100 percent drug-related. The ICDE appropriation provides funding to support and maintain the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) program.
III. PROGRAM SUMMARY
  • The OCDETF program currently constitutes a nationwide structure of 13 regional task forces which utilize the combined resources and expertise of member Federal agencies, in cooperation with state and local investigators and prosecutors, to target major narcotic trafficking and money laundering organizations. A restructuring of these regions to more closely align the program with current and emerging drug trafficking patterns, to cluster districts with common issues and drug trafficking threats, and to enhance communication and coordination within and among regions will be implemented in 1997. When completed, the number of task force regions will be reduced to nine. All programmatic functions support Goal 5 of the National Drug Control Strategy.

28. FASS TOURNAMENT 2002 Where: The Phoenician, When: Friday, August 23, 2003
Provides information on tournament in Phoenix, AZ benefiting the drug enforcement Administration Survivors Fund.
http://home.earthlink.net/~deaphx2/deaphx2
Dea Survivors benefit fund
Presents the
FASS TOURNAMENT
Where: The Phoenician
6000 East Camelback Road
When: Friday, August 23, 2002
7:00 a.m. Check-in, 8:00 a.m. Start
Background
The Drug Enforcement Administration Survivors Benefit Fund was founded in October 1997 consolidating five existing regional funds
established in the memory of DEA Special Agents killed in the line of duty. The Agents in whose memory these funds were established
were: Enrique "Kiki" Camarena, Richard Fass, Rick Finley, Everett Hatcher, Paul Seema, and George Montoya. To date, the Survivors Benefit Fund has disbursed $325,651 to the families of law enforcement employees and officers in Arizona and throughout the United States. Please remember that the Survivors Benefit Fund is financed solely through donations. Without the generous support of our sponsors, the fund is unable to assist those within our family in their most vital time of need. Purpose The Drug Enforcement Administration Survivors Benefit Fund was formed exclusively for charitable and educational purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. The main purpose of the Fund is to distribute monies for the

29. E.thePeople : Comment : Drug Enforcement
drug enforcement posted 06/11, by John Fellowes (viewed 4863) Popularity 13.0(7 encourage, 0 discourage) If the total cost of enforcing drug laws and all
http://www.e-thepeople.org/a-national/comment/15210/1/view
About Login Become a member Donate ... Public Forum Views: Trad. Best All New Help with Views ... Free Marijuana! Drug enforcement
posted 06/11, by John Fellowes (viewed : 6394)
Popularity 13.0 (7 encourage, discourage)
If the total cost of enforcing drug laws and all related costs including home security, incarceration, lost time at work and god knows how many other related costs were added up it would probably mean that each individual with a problem could have their own individual nurse and counselor to take care of them with the money used to try enforcing the laws. Does anyone want to venture a guess at the total budget.
Was this comment unique, informative or persuasive ? Was it relevant You decide whether others should read it.
Post a comment to this comment. Choose a theme... Public Forum meta Democratic Renewal America's Global Role Sort by: [ Pop Time ] 1-10 of 76 legalize it
theresa, p:88.0, 06/10
Legalize It! I think that is the best thing I have seen in a while. People who do not smoke pot (ma......
6 more comments
Helpful information

Wardish, p:41.0, 06/12

30. E.thePeople : The Town News : Comment : Drug Enforcement
drug enforcement posted 06/11, by John Fellowes (viewed 4870) Popularity 13.0(7 encourage, 0 discourage) If the total cost of enforcing drug laws and all
http://www.e-thepeople.org/a-townnews/comment/15210/1/view
The Town News presents About Login Become a member Donate ... Public Forum Views: Trad. Best All New Help with Views ... Free Marijuana! Drug enforcement
posted 06/11, by John Fellowes (viewed : 6394)
Popularity 13.0 (7 encourage, discourage)
If the total cost of enforcing drug laws and all related costs including home security, incarceration, lost time at work and god knows how many other related costs were added up it would probably mean that each individual with a problem could have their own individual nurse and counselor to take care of them with the money used to try enforcing the laws. Does anyone want to venture a guess at the total budget.
Was this comment unique, informative or persuasive ? Was it relevant You decide whether others should read it.
Post a comment to this comment. Choose a theme... Public Forum meta Democratic Renewal America's Global Role Sort by: [ Pop Time ] 1-10 of 76 legalize it
theresa, p:88.0, 06/10
Legalize It! I think that is the best thing I have seen in a while. People who do not smoke pot (ma......
6 more comments
Helpful information

Wardish, p:41.0, 06/12

31. Criminal Justice Policy Foundation
Race and drug enforcement CJPF President Eric E. Sterling's speech, Drug Laws and Thought Crime, to a Temple University Law School
http://www.cjpf.org/drug/drugsandrace.html

Drug War Failure
Pro-Control Strategies Terrorism and Drug Prohibition Race and Drug Enforcement ... Colombia
Race and Drug Enforcement
CJPF President Eric E. Sterling's speech, "Drug Laws and Thought Crime," to a Temple University Law School symposium in the Spring of 2001 is published in the

September 13, 2002
Sterling's remarks, " Drug Laws and Thought Crime ," argue that the war on drugs serves to maintain white privilege vis a vis African Americans, and other people of color, by disproportionately stigmatizing and punishing them. Drug prohibition was created along with re-segregation policies after Plessy v. Ferguson (1896). It was reanimated by racially tinged competition for jobs in the 1930s in which whites, displaced by the depression and the "dust bowl" sought employment advantages against Mexican agricultural laborers in California. It matured in the 1960s and 1970s in a reaction to the civil rights movement, urban riots, and a dramatic increase in crime in the U.S. The "war on drugs" was fully expressed in the 1980s and 1990s in the legislative and law enforcement response to the crack epidemic, depicted by the media as a urban, black phenomenon of crime and depravity.

32. Drug Enforcement Administration - Who Does What At The US Mission
The drug enforcement Administration (DEA) works together with German and internationaldrug law enforcement agencies on matters regarding international drug
http://www.usembassy.de/mission/e12_3_10.htm
The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) works together with German and international drug law enforcement agencies on matters regarding international drug control programs and drug related money laundering.
Mission Sections Administration Consular Sections Customs Defense Organizations ... U.S. Secret Service (USSS)

33. RCMP Drug Enforcement
drug enforcement. The DRUG AWARENESS PROGRAM is an integral component of drugenforcement aimed at reducing the overall demand for drugs in Canada.
http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/drugenf/drugs.htm

34. Drug Enforcement
safety issues. Everyone in the community needs to be aware of thedanger of drug abuse. This a specific drug. Drug Identification.
http://www.bloompd.com/html/de.html
Part of our mission is to protect life and property. We form partnerships with residents, business owners and community organizations to Pro-Actively address the causes of crime, fear of crime and various public safety issues. Everyone in the community needs to be aware of the danger of drug abuse. This page provides information on the history, identification, and effects of the most widely used drugs. Click on a name in the list to find information on a specific drug.
Drug Identification MDMA (Ecstasy)
OXYCONTIN (Oxycodone)

GAMMA HYDROXY BUTYRATE

METHAMPHETAMINE
...
PSILOCYBIN

If you have any information concerning illegal drug activity or have any questions, please contact the Bloomsburg Police Department at 570-784-4155 ext.114 Home Community Policing Special Units Parking ... Contact Us

35. LSD - The Problem-Solving Psychedelic
This article summarizes the events which eventually led to the scheduling by the drug enforcement Administration of LSD to schedule I.
http://www.psychedelic-library.org/staf1.htm

36. Drug Enforcement Agency Museum
drug enforcement Agency Museum The exhibit, Illegal Drugs in America, follows theevolution of the drug enforcement Administration to its presentday status.
http://www.co.arlington.va.us/acvs/DEA.htm

37. O.P.P. Drug Enforcement Section
Location OPP Home drug enforcement Section drug enforcement Section.The drug enforcement Section provides investigative leadership
http://www.gov.on.ca/opp/des/english/
Skip Navigation Home Contact Site Map ... Provincial Marihuana Eradication Program Location: O.P.P. Home
Drug Enforcement Section
The Drug Enforcement Section provides investigative leadership and expertise to curtail the importation, production, trafficking and use of illicit drugs in Ontario. The Section is responsible for the management of strategically located Joint Force drug units comprised of officers from the Section, O.P.P. Regions, municipal police services and R.C.M.P. These Units conduct daily street enforcement as well as identifying and targeting criminal trafficking organizations. The Drug Enforcement Section works in conjunction with municipal police services, national and international agencies to apprehend organized drug traffickers locally and on a global basis. The Section works closely with and shares information with other enforcement units within the O.P.P., such the Organized Crime Section, including Provincial Auto Theft Team (P.A.T.T.), the Provincial Weapons Enforcement Unit (P.W.E.U.), the Biker Enforcement Unit, Proceeds of Crime Unit (P.O.C.), and Rural Agricultural Crime Team (R.A.C.T.) throughout the province. Dedicated to drug awareness, education, and public safety, members of the Drug Enforcement Section provide comprehensive training to local detachment officers involved with the D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program conducted at schools across the province. Drug Enforcement members conduct presentations to community and individual private sector groups, and provide lectures to municipal police services, federal and international agencies.

38. New Hampshire Hemp Council V. Marshall (1/30/2000, No. 99-1082)
New Hampshire Hemp Council, Inc. v. Marshall, Acting Administrator, United States drug enforcement Administration (1/28/2000, No. 991082), United States Court of Appeals, For the First Circuit.
http://www.law.emory.edu/1circuit/jan2000/99-1082.01a.html
Emory Law Home Search LawLink Calendar ... Emory University Home First Circuit Opinion January 2000 Index First Circuit Home Page Federal Courts Finder This Case in WordPerfect Format
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit No. 99-1082 NEW HAMPSHIRE HEMP COUNCIL, INC. and DEREK OWEN, Plaintiffs, Appellants, v. DONNIE R. MARSHALL, ACTING ADMINISTRATOR, UNITED STATES DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION, Defendant, Appellee. APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE [Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, Jr., U.S. District Judge Before Selya, Boudin and Lynch, Circuit Judges Gordon R. Blakeney, Jr. for appellants. Dana J. Martin , Appellate Staff, Civil Division, Department of Justice, with whom David W. Ogden , Acting Assistant Attorney General, Paul M. Gagnon , United States Attorney, and Mark B. Stern , Appellate Staff, Civil Division, Department of Justice, were on brief for appellee. BOUDIN, Circuit Judge . This case, which involves the definition of marijuana as used in federal criminal statutes, has its origin in a defeated legislative proposal in New Hampshire. In 1998, Derek Owen, a member of the New Hampshire state legislature, co-sponsored a bill to legalize and regulate the cultivation of "industrial hemp." The connection between the criminal statutes and Owen's bill is that both the drug commonly known as marijuana and various industrial products (

39. O.P.P. Drug Enforcement Operational Units
Location OPP Home drug enforcement Section Operational UnitsOperational Units. Toronto Airport drug enforcement Unit JFO.
http://www.gov.on.ca/opp/des/english/desunits.htm
Skip Navigation Home Contact Site Map ... Provincial Marihuana Eradication Program Location: O.P.P. Home Drug Enforcement Section
Operational Units
Huronia
London

Kingston

North Bay
...
Windsor
HURONIA COMBINED FORCES DRUG UNIT
The Huronia Combined Forces Drug Unit was created in 1993, this unit operates within Central Region. Central Ontario is home to many new and popular strains of illicit drugs, such as Special K, Crystal Meth, Ice., etc. The Muskoka-Haliburton regions lend themselves to the possibility of growing marihuana in remote locations. H.C.F.D.U. members combat this with an aggressive marihuana eradication campaign including the use of informants, media, investigative techniques and helicopters. H.C.F.D.U. is a drug enforcement initiative in partnership with Peterborough-Lakefield Community Police Service, Barrie Police Service, South Simcoe Police Service, O.P.P. Central Region and O.P.P. Drug Enforcement Section. The Police Services involved with H.C.F.D.U. can be contacted at:

40. Drug War Facts: Militarization Of Drug Enforcement
Drug War Facts. Militarization of drug enforcement. Brief Chronologyof Domestic Military Involvement. 1878The Posse Comitatus Act
http://www.drugwarfacts.org/military.htm
Militarization of Drug Enforcement
Brief Chronology of Domestic Military Involvement
  • 1878-The Posse Comitatus Act makes it illegal for the military to act as police on U.S. territory or waters. 1981-Posse Comitatus Act is amended to allow limited military involvement in policing. 1991-Posse Comitatus Act is amended to allow counter-drug training of civilian police by the military. 1995-Joint Task Force 6, under direction of the Defense Secretary, is expanded to the entire continental United States. It has 700 troops, including 125 combat-ready troops on the U.S.-Mexican border. (Houston Chronicle, 1997, June 22) May 1997- Esequiel Hernandez click here July 2000-US Congress approves $1.3 Billion in military aid to Colombia to fight their drug war as part of "Plan Colombia". An additional 60 combat helicopters are approved for use in Colombia, and the cap on US military personnel assisting in the Colombian conflict is doubled to 500.
"The US Congress approved in July 2000 an emergency supplemental assistance request for fiscal years 2000-2001 of $1.32 billion, of which $862.3 million was allocated to Colombia and the balance to neighboring countries (primarily Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador) and to US agencies' Andean region antidrug operations. Of the $862.3 million allocated to Colombia, $521.2 million is new assistance to the Colombian armed forces and $123.1 is assistance to the police, with the rest ($218 million) going to alternative economic development, aid to displaced persons, judicial reform, law enforcement, and promotion of human rights.

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