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Why greenbacks make good 'drug money.'(research on cocaine contamination of dollar bills)(Brief Article)


Where there's money, there's cocaine.

This aphorism aphorism (ăf`ərĭz'əm), short, pithy statement of an evident truth concerned with life or nature; distinguished from the axiom because its truth is not capable of scientific demonstration.  doesn't just indicate the extent to which modern culture has embraced mood-altering drugs--it's a fact. Fully 78 percent of the $1 bills circulating in Miami carry traces of cocaine, a federally funded study has found. So do similar shares of singles in Houston and Chicago. The only difference is that Miami's currency tends to carry more of the white powder.

In conducting the analyses that established those numbers, Jack Demirgian of Argonne (Ill.) National Laboratory (ANL ANL - Argonne National Laboratory ) and his colleagues handled hundreds of cocaine-tainted bills--some bearing as much as 1 milligram milligram /mil·li·gram/ (mg) (mil´i-gram) one thousandth (10-3) of a gram.

mil·li·gram
n. Abbr. mg
A metric unit of mass equal to one thousandth (10-3) of a gram.
 each. Yet while the chemists' skin readily absorbed cocaine from other contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object.
 items, it never picked up the drug from dollars.

To figure out why, Demirgian enlisted the help of Benjamin S. Tani, also of ANL, to study the bills with scanning electron microscopy. They saw no cocaine on the bills' surface; instead, they found it wedged in the nooks and crannies Noun 1. nooks and crannies - something remote; "he explored every nook and cranny of science"
nook and cranny

detail, item, point - an isolated fact that is considered separately from the whole; "several of the details are similar"; "a point of information"
 below.

Magnified, the currency's linen fibers "look almost like hacksaw blades," Demirgian notes. "We think that cocaine particles on the surface become fractured by the natural bending of the bills" and fall into the irregular holes formed by the money's fibers. British paper currency which his team examined this summer, has more rounded fibers and far smaller holes--none apparently large enough for the cocaine crystals to enter.

"I think this study showed that [U.S.] money does like to hold onto the drugs that it comes into contact with," says Kent Lunsford of the Office of National Drug Control Policy The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) was established by the National Narcotics Leadership Act of 1988 (21 U.S.C.A. § 1501 et seq.) and began operations in January 1989.  in Washington, D.C. The finding, he says, seems to undermine the argument many lawyers had been tendering: that clients caught with cocaine on their hands had innocently picked it up from money.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Raloff, Janet
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Oct 4, 1997
Words:292
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