Haha, with my very introductory-level understanding of topics found in advanced discussion, I didn't really have a clue about what ion-mobility spectrometry was. So from the picture I saw of the thing when I clicked the link, I thought it was like some kind of scanner gun that they could just point-and-click at you, and it would tell them if you had drugs or explosives on you. My heart about skipped a beat.
So after some quick reading, it sounds to me like it does kinda like what a GC/MS does, only with IMS it makes it much faster (am I getting this right?). Therefore for analysis to occur, I suppose they would first have to be obtain a sample of something for which to analyze (durr, I know).
It definitely sounds like a cool thing to have. But as far as its use by law enforcement for narcotics detection, wouldn't the only real implication be that it would expedite the conviction process of certain drug busts that aren't completely obvious? Or I guess there's the ideas of specific testing versus nonspecific? What about analogues?