Gunning for Meth

ruski

Bluelight Crew
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From the Arizona Daily Star - 21/07/2006

Hand-held drug detector brings lab into the field - Introducing the 'meth gun'

A local company is poised to introduce a new kind of point and shoot — one that picks up the faintest signs of drugs on any surface.
CDEX Inc., which has its manufacturing and research operations in Tucson, has filed for a patent for a "portable, hand-held methamphetamine and illicit drug detector," a device that can scan for trace amounts of meth and other drugs using ultraviolet light. more...

Original article: http://www.azstarnet.com/business/138816.php

More descriptive/interesting video article at: http://www.cdex-inc.com/video/report-methgun.html

Company called CDEX is producing the gun.

About CDEX:
About CDEX, Inc.

CDEX Inc. is a technology development company with a current focus on developing and marketing products using chemical detection and validation technologies. At present, CDEX is devoting its resources to two distinct areas: (i) identification of substances of concern (e.g., explosives and illegal drugs for homeland security); and (ii) validation of substances for anti-counterfeiting, brand protection and quality assurance (e.g., validation of prescription medication and detection of counterfeit or sub-par products for brand protection). ValiMed is one line of CDEX products for the healthcare market. CDEX is headquartered in Rockville, Maryland with its research and development laboratory in Tucson, Arizona. For more information, visit www.cdex-inc.com.
 
Well if you're working with crystal meth, you shouldn't have much of a problem as it's not too hard to spot a piece of ice. If you're carrying around a powdered form of meth though I can see how this may get you.
 
Wasn't there a similar article about a cocaine detection device a few weeks back? I just find it hard to believe that you'll get caught unless you've already aroused suspicion with the police in the first place. It's not like they're gonna just take it out and wave it around at people, that's probably just as illegal as straight up searching people for no reason. Also, I suspect this device might be somewhat expensive, so it's not like every officer will have one.

Either way I don't do meth, so I guess sucks for folks who do. Not really a problem for me though.
 
What is this? some sort of ion-scanner like they're going to start using at the airports here in Australia. If it is, then even if you have been wearing a pair of pants from last week, that may contain non-visible particles of the drug, then the scanners will pick it up. It just seems like there's going to be alot of unnecessary detainment and searches.
Plus, these things are damn expensive.
 
ToxicFerret said:
Wasn't there a similar article about a cocaine detection device a few weeks back? I just find it hard to believe that you'll get caught unless you've already aroused suspicion with the police in the first place. It's not like they're gonna just take it out and wave it around at people, that's probably just as illegal as straight up searching people for no reason. Also, I suspect this device might be somewhat expensive, so it's not like every officer will have one.

Either way I don't do meth, so I guess sucks for folks who do. Not really a problem for me though.

Certainly search with this device will require a proper reason....although proper reason has rarely stopped many cops, and when they succeed its even harder to turn over.
 
Great, I guess they can confiscate a lot of bills now. 8)

This is stupid. Trace amounts don't mean shit.
 
wow, my friend (english) went to oz for a couple months, after a short trip to bali he was pulled at customs for having trace ammounts of mdma on his bag. He hasnt been near mdma for years and I cant see how he had traces. I told him they were speakin B/s when he told me about the gun but I guess im wrong.....8(
 
Recent Article on CNET.com about the UV "Meth" Gun

New UV gun takes aim at meth users

http://msn-cnet.com.com/New+UV+gun+takes+aim+at+meth+users/2100-11395_3-6099364.html?tag=cd.hed

By Nicole Girard
Staff Writer, CNET News.com

Last modified: July 27, 2006, 2:35 PM PDT

It's too bad there's no way of knowing the lifestyle choices made by the original owner of that shirt you bought at the thrift store last week.

Or is there?

A new "meth gun," in development by Maryland-based CDEX, enables police to use ultraviolet light to detect trace amounts of chemicals left by methamphetamines and other illegal drugs

There were 12,139 total meth incidents in 2005, according to the National Clandestine Laboratory Database.

CDEX recently filed a patent application to prepare the device for use in the "Homeland Security market," according to Wade Poteet, a principal scientist working in CDEX's Tucson, Ariz.-based research lab.

The methamphetamine and illicit-drug detector uses a form of spectroscopy technology, which enables it to pick up the faintest sign of drugs on any surface, Poteet said.
While the technology behind detecting drugs with an ultraviolet light is not new, Poteet said, this is the first time the technique, which is usually confined to a lab, will be used for this type of application.

Rich Roberts, spokesman for the International Union of Police Associations, said he could envision the meth gun as a helpful supplement to canine narcotics units.
"Dogs have a limited attention span. Plus, you're limited in canine units as far as the number of dogs," he said. "So having additional equipment like that would spread the capability of the department."

Because the guns make residue visible to the naked eye, Roberts said, they also could help officers more quickly and easily hone in on the residence of a dealer or a meth lab.
"The residue is going to be in all places, out front, on the doors, on the trash bags, on any common household items," he said. "It would be extremely handy to have one of those as a diagnostic tool prior to an event."

The device is handheld, battery-operated, and looks like a traffic radar gun, according to Poteet, who said the gadget has no official name yet. It works by transmitting ultraviolet rays across a surface, releasing what amounts to the chemical's invisible signature. The drug-detecting device then records the signature and analyzes it, Poteet said.

The multifunctional device can perform wired or wireless data uploading and downloading. It time- and date-stamps all of its tests and stores the results for later retrieval.

The gun also features a small camera for taking pictures of suspects.

"It's sort of like the Motorola Razr phone with as many functions as it has," Poteet said.
As for items purchased from secondhand stores, Poteet said the gun could possibly detect trace amounts of drugs used by a previous owner, but those amounts probably wouldn't be enough to warrant police suspicion.

"If someone is using or involved in the manufacture of meth, it's in their cuticles, their hair. They can scrub and scrub, but it's everywhere," Poteet said, "That's what the police are looking for."
The device is still in the prototype stage of development and is being field-tested on methamphetamines, but the mass-produced devices will test for cocaine, marijuana and heroin as well, according to Poteet. The price of the gun is currently about $10,000, but once in production, the price is expected to drop to about $2,000, he said.

By the time the device is ready for law-enforcement use, most likely by March 2007, it should resemble a flashlight.

"We don't want it to look like a gun and then have to point it at people," Poteet said.
 
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