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         Drug Enforcement:     more books (100)
  1. Pot clubs in peril: are San Francisco zoning boards a bigger threat to medical marijuana than the DEA?(Drug Enforcement Administration): An article from: Reason by Greg Beato, 2007-02-01
  2. La DEA, desfogue de la industria bélica de EU. (la Agencia para la Lucha Contra las Drogas)(TT: The Drug Enforcement Administration, vent for the bellicose ... of the US): An article from: Siempre! by Salvador del Río, 1997-03-13
  3. In appeal of U.S. capture of stateless drug-laden vessel in international waters, First Circuit finds that Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act (MDLEA) does ... An article from: International Law Update by Gale Reference Team, 2007-03-01
  4. Food and Drug enforcement standards for medical devices: Joint hearing before the Subcommittee on Human Resources and Intergovernmental Relations and the ... Congress, first session, September 14, 1995 by United States, 1997
  5. Drugs in the 1990's: Emerging trends; the challenges facing the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Justice Department, and the Coast Guard : hearing ... Third Congress, second session, May 25, 1994 by United States, 1995
  6. Federal, state, and local drug enforcement and interdiction efforts along the Southwest border: Hearing before a subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, ... Congress, second session : special hearing by Postal Service, and General Government., . United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on Treasury, 1989-01-01
  7. Drug Enforcement Administration: Controlled Substances Act
  8. Refugee issues in Southeast Asia and Europe and international issues on drug enforcement and administrative law: Based on a fact-finding trip to Southeast ... Ninety-seventh Congress, second session by Anonymous, 1982-01-01
  9. Drug Enforcement Manual
  10. Organized crime drug enforcement by Justice, and Commerce, the Judiciary, and Related Agencies, . United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Appropriations. Subcommittee on Departments of State, 1983-01-01
  11. 21st Century Complete Guide to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Narcotics Trafficking and the National Drug Intelligence Center, Law Enforcement, ... Money Laundering (Two CD-ROM Set) by U.S. Government, 2008-01-13
  12. 2007 21 CFR 1300-END (Drug Enforcement Admin) by Government Institutes, 2007-01-28
  13. Street-Level Drug Enforcement: Examining the Issues
  14. Trafic de Stupéfiant: Lutte Contre Les Narcotrafiquants Au Mexique, Haschisch, Drug Enforcement Administration (French Edition)

61. Example Form
Discussion board on drug enforcement issues and policies.
http://tuscaloosaissues.htmlplanet.com/index.html
Free Web site hosting - Freeservers.com
TUSCALOOSA ISSUES This site is dedicated to the REAL issues in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama that affect the rights and privileges we have under The Constitution of the United States and The Constitution of The State of Alabama. To get us started, I will pose various questions to the citizens of Tuscaloosa County. This should help to awaken public awareness about the infringements on our rights. Do you know what government entity controls WANS (West Alabama Narcotics Squad, alias, West Alabama Narcotics Task Force, alias, West Alabama Narcotics; actual name used by them to get federal funding, Tuscaloosa Metro Drug Enforcement)? Would you expect a city police officer to go to a Municipal Judge or Magistrate, or to go to a County District Judge or County District Magistrate, when he/she wants to obtain a search warrant for your house that lies in the County of Tuscaloosa? Can a Tuscaloosa City Police Officer, get a county search warrant, to search your house, if your house lies outside of the City of Tuscaloosa Police Jurisdiction but and, within The County of Tuscaloosa. If you saw a "drug raid" happening in The City of Tuscaloosa or in The

62. Clallam County Law Enforcement - Drug Enforcement
Traffic Enforcement. Traffic School. Domestic Violence. drug enforcement. JailAdministration. Level III Sex Offenders. Crime Prevention. Sheriff's Posse. Courts.
http://www.clallam.net/LawEnforcement/html/law_drug.htm

63. Prince Albert Joint Forces Unit HOME
A Police enforcement unit comprised of RCMP and Prince Albert City Police officers mandated to drug enforcement and major crime investigations.
http://www3.sk.sympatico.ca/pajfu/
PRINCE ALBERT
JOINT FORCES UNIT Welcome to our Home Page
The City of Prince Albert is located near the geographical center of the western Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Prince Albert is a thriving city of approximately 36,000 residents and is home to many industries including agriculture, forestry, tourism, mining and corrections.
Prince Albert Joint Forces Unit is was created in 1996 as a result of the amalgamation of police investigators from the Prince Albert City Police, the RCMP General Investigation Section and the RCMP Federal Enforcement Section. Operating under a very broad mandate these investigators are responsible for all levels of drug enforcement as well as the management and investigation of all serious crime in a geographical area encompassing about 140,000 square miles.
The Prince Albert Joint Forces Unit supports CRIME STOPPERS and encourages citizens to report suspicious criminal activity by placing an untraced anonymous call to either
-Prince Albert Crime Stoppers at 922-8477 or
-Saskatchewan Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477
Please Visit our LINKS Page
Visit the Prince Albert RCMP Community Services Media Release Page pajfu@sk.sympatico.ca

64. DEA/Drug Enforcement Rollout
Print Friendly Version, DEA/drug enforcement Rollout John Ashcroft, AttorneyGeneral US Department of Justice Washington, DC March 19, 2002. Thank you.
http://www.state.gov/g/inl/rls/rm/2002/9233.htm
[Print Friendly Version]
DEA/Drug Enforcement Rollout
John Ashcroft, Attorney General
U.S. Department of Justice
Washington, DC
March 19, 2002 Thank you. It's my honor to be here today with the men and women of the Drug Enforcement Administration. Public service is a privilege and an honor under any circumstances, but these past six months have deepened the commitment we all share to protect the health and safety of Americans. These months have reminded us of what it was that we pledged to serve and protect when we assumed the responsibilities of our offices. We serve much more than a government, or a people. We are the stewards and protectors of set of values that together founded a nation. When the nation came under attack on September 11, these values came under attack. For the men and women of the Drug Enforcement Agency, of course, the job of protecting our values pre-dates September 11. Nothing does more to diminish our potential both as individuals and as a nation than illegal drug use. Yours is the daily, dangerous, on-going work of reducing the onslaught of illegal drugs in our nation. The apprehension of Benjamin Arellano-Felix earlier this month, the head of one of the largest and most violent drug trafficking organizations, is an example of your good work. Arellano-Felix was on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list. His organization is responsible for twenty percent of the cocaine that crosses the southwest border into the United States. Arellano-Felix's capture proves that when we identify major drug supply networks, isolate their leadership, and target our resources on dismantling these networks root and branch, we can reduce the availability of drugs on our streets. On behalf of a grateful nation, I thank Administrator Asa Hutchinson, the men and women of the DEA as well as Mexican authorities, the FBI and our U.S. Attorney's office for the Southern District of California for their courage and dedication in bringing about this capture.

65. President's FY 2003 Budget Proposal For The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA
President's FY 2003 Budget Proposal for the drug enforcement Administration (DEA)Asa Hutchinson, DEA Administrator Testimony Before the House Committee on
http://www.state.gov/g/inl/rls/rm/2002/9235.htm
[Print Friendly Version]
President's FY 2003 Budget Proposal for the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
Asa Hutchinson, DEA Administrator
Testimony Before the House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee for the Departments of Commerce, Justice, State, the Judiciary and Related Agencies
Washington, DC
March 20, 2002 Good Morning Chairman Wolf, Ranking Member Serrano, and distinguished members of the Subcommittee: I am grateful for the opportunity to address this Subcommittee on the President's FY 2003 Budget Proposal for the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). More than ever, I am grateful to the Subcommittee for its unwavering support of DEA's fight to end the cycle of drug abuse, violence, and crime carried out by drug trafficking organizations in our communities, and against our values and our families. Most recently, the Subcommittee has demonstrated its commitment to DEA by supporting our FY 2002 budget initiatives for DEA's Special Operations Division, forensic sciences, and information infrastructure; providing $2 million in discretionary grant funding for the Harold Rogers Prescription Drug Monitoring Program; and holding a hearing on OxyContin in December of 2001, which raised national awareness of this growing problem. Your strong support is greatly appreciated by DEA's men and women who courageously carry out our drug law enforcement mission every day domestically and overseas. The President's National Drug Control Strategy On February 12, 2002, President Bush unveiled the new National Drug Control Strategy, which sets clear and specific national goals for reducing drugs in America, which in turn will save thousands of lives. The President's National Drug Control Policy is based on three core principles:

66. Home Page
Youth Program Created by Olympian Wrestler Anthony Buddy Lee in his Woodbridge, Virginia neighborhood. This program is designed to teach children Life Skills through the use of a jump rope. Buddy's program is endorsed by the US Department of Justice drug enforcement Administration (DEA)
http://www.jumpingbuddy.com
The Jumping Buddies Club Is Proud To Be In Partnership With The U.S. Department Of Justice Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Washington, D.C. Division. "Skip Over Drugs & Jump Into Fitness"
Got Something To Say? Please Sign Our Guest Book Sign Our Guest Book
View Our
Guest Book To Our Woodbridge, Virginia Web Site! The Jumping Buddies Club Would Like To Welcome' The Jumping Buddies are proud to announce the addition of many new Buddies to our competition team. 2003 AAU MINI TOURNAMENT Welcome new Jumping Buddies: Alaina, Alexandra, Allison, Anna (pictured above) Becky, Courtney, Lindsey, (not in picture) Meaghan, Michael (Not in picture) "All Star" Anna! Check out 2002 photos for more pictures of our new Buddies! Lauren Powers The Jumping Buddies Recently Traveled to Orlando Fl. for the USA Jump Rope Nationals June 2002 Click here to view pictures Photos of the Colisanti's Gardens Click here to check them out! ... Click here to view pictures JBC Flash Back! Can You Name These Members? Hey Look! Sammie's Upside Down!

67. Drug Enforcement Administration
drug enforcement Administration. The mission of the drug enforcementAdministration (DEA) is to enforce the controlled substances
http://usembassy.state.gov/tokyo/wwwh7200.html
i-mode U.S. Mission Home The Ambassador What's New ... Links United States Embassy Tokyo, Japan
Drug Enforcement Administration
The mission of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) is to enforce the controlled substances laws and regulations of the United States and to bring to the criminal and civil justice system of the United States or any other competent jurisdiction, those organizations, and principal members of organizations, involved in the production and distribution of illegal drugs and related criminal activity. Additionally, DEA is tasked with the responsibility of recommending and supporting enforcement programs aimed at reducing the availability of controlled substances and precursor chemicals in the domestic and international markets. Not only is DEA the lead agency for domestic enforcement of federal drug laws and related violations, but it also has sole responsibility for coordinating and pursuing U.S. drug investigations and related crimes abroad. DEA is responsible, under the policy guidance of the Secretary of State and U.S. Ambassadors, for all programs associated with narcotics violations and related crimes with foreign law enforcement counterparts. DEA maintains offices in 44 countries throughout the world with over 350 Special Agents and support staff assigned to those offices.

68. Project Harmony - Drug Enforcement And Prevention Program For Siberian Youth
The drug enforcement and Prevention Program for Siberian Youth (DEPSY) complementsand builds on Project Harmony's 20002002 Juvenile drug enforcement and
http://www.projectharmony.org/programs/prof/current/depsy/

Site Map
Contact Us
Program Overview
Background
Juvenile drug prevention is a key component to the Russian Federation's overall attempt to combat drug trafficking, distribution, and use. The answer, in many cases, is education and awareness. The Drug Enforcement and Prevention Program for Siberian Youth (DEPSY) complements and builds on Project Harmony's 2000-2002 Juvenile Drug Enforcement and Prevention Initiative (JDEP) DEPSY's community coalition approach and in-school curriculum will prove, as they have for JDEP in Petrozavodsk, to be critical pieces in providing Siberian communities with the skills and information necessary to help youth make positive life decisions. Through the in-school drug prevention and awareness curriculum already developed during JDEP, Siberian communities will have the tools to help youth make good decisions related to drugs, smoking, sex, violence, and crime. DEPSY will help create greater awareness of crime and drug prevention through education, develop local and regional coalitions to address youth development issues as a broad-based community problem, and take the established curriculum deeper into the Siberian regions. US Program Partners
The City of Burlington, Vermont

69. Project Harmony - CPTI: Juvenile Drug Enforcement And Prevention Program
The expansion of the Juvenile drug enforcement and Prevention Program (JDEP)has been a collaborative effort with the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the
http://www.projectharmony.org/programs/prof/past/cpti/jedp/

Site Map
Contact Us
Program Overview The expansion of the Juvenile Drug Enforcement and Prevention Program (JDEP) has been a collaborative effort with the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ministry of Education and City Administrations in four regional centers of Russia: Petrozavodsk, Velikiy Novgorod, Volgograd and Irkutsk. The initiative began in the city of Petrozavodsk in the Autonomous Republic of Karelia. Since 1998, Project Harmony has established a coalition of partners in Petrozavodsk, led by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and including educational administrators, teachers, and city officials. As a result of their collaboration and partnership with US police officers, a juvenile drug intervention unit was created within the Petrozavodsk City Police Department in 1999 to address the community invasion of drugs and alcohol. Project Harmony has partnered with this unit to develop teams of police officers and life skills teachers to team-teach in secondary school classrooms about drug-free behavior and healthy lifestyle choices. This coalition of key community stakeholders, in partnership with American school resource officers, produced a teacher's manual and classroom curriculum for 9th and 10th graders which includes thirteen lessons devoted to drug abuse prevention strategies. This curriculum is called DOM (Children, Education and Police) and was co-authored by Olga Baranova, Head of the Drug Intervention Unit, and Svetlana Goranskaya, Director of the Karelian Pedagogical Institute. INL funded the initial printing and national distribution of 3000 copies of the DOM curriculum in 2001.

70. Web Address Change
drug enforcement Adminstration (DEA) About the drug enforcementAdministration; Contact the drug enforcement Administration; Drug
http://www.louisville.edu/library/ekstrom/govpubs/federal/agencies/justice/dea.h
Web address change: http://library.louisville.edu/government/federal/agencies/justice/dea.html
This page will cease as of September 1, 2003. Please change your bookmarks to the new web address.

71. Drug Enforcement Administration
drug enforcement Administration Department of Justice www.dea.gov. Optionson this page will help you to narrow your search before selecting submit.
http://www.usajobs.opm.gov/a9dea.htm
Job Search USAJOBS by Email FAQs Forms
Drug Enforcement Administration
Department of Justice
www.dea.gov
Options on this page will help you to narrow your search before selecting submit. Be sure to review the announcement carefully and follow "Where to Apply" and "How to Apply" directions when submitting your application. Some of the jobs have a limited area of consideration; applications from outside the area of consideration may not be evaluated or acknowledged.
Search by Keyword in Title
Type in a Keyword
Search by Series Number
Type Series # into box
Where Would You Like to Work?
Select the state, region, or area outside the United States where you would like to work. Or select ALL for worldwide opportunities. Select here for information on geographic regions. All Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware D.C. Metro Area Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Puerto Rico Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virgin Islands Virginia Washington State West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Atlantic Overseas Pacific Overseas and Guam All Southeast States All Mid Western States All Great Plains States All Mid Atlantic States All Southwest States All Western and Pacific States All New England States Outside the United States Europe and Africa Asia, Australia, Guam and Pacific Islands

72. Police Drug Enforcement Program
Police Department drug enforcement Program
http://www.uark.edu/ALADDIN/cityinfo/cityweb/depts/police/PD_drug.htm
Police Department:
- Drug Enforcement Program Back to Top Program Description: The Drug Enforcement Program provides initial and follow-up investigations concerning drug related crime/intelligence reports from the Patrol Program, other law enforcement agencies, and the general public. The following information reflects the efforts of the Fourth Judicial District Drug Task Force. This Task Force is made up of Fayetteville, Springdale, University of Arkansas, Prairie Grove, West Fork, Johnson, Lincoln, Greenland, Farmington, and Elm Springs Police Departments and the Washington County Sheriff's Department. The primary duties are to investigate all leads concerning the illicit manufacturing, distribution and use of controlled substances, and to target organized crime narcotic traffickers, conspirators and offenders through investigation, arrest, and preparation for prosecution. This Task Force plans to perform 330 drug investigations and make an arrest on each completed case. Back to Top Contact Information: Contact: Richard Watson, Chief of Police

73. Success In Drug Enforcement
President Clinton's Statement on the Success in drug enforcement Success in DrugEnforcement. Medal of Freedom Presentation. America Goes Back To School, 1999.
http://clinton4.nara.gov/textonly/WH/New/html/19990826.html
President Clinton's Statement on the Success in Drug Enforcement

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
(Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts)
For Immediate Release Wednesday, August 25, 1999
STATEMENT OF THE PRESIDENT I want to congratulate law enforcement officials for the successful counter-drug operations that resulted today in numerous indictments for violations of our federal drug laws. This joint initiative required the hard work of the DEA, U.S. Customs Service, ATF, and local law enforcement agencies. It is a product of our shared determination to shield American borders from the drug threat. The efforts of this team show that by working together, we can reduce the flow of drugs into our nation and fight drug-related crime and violence. From the recent decline in youth drug use, to the law enforcement success of today’s investigations, our balanced and comprehensive national anti-drug strategy is producing real results for the American people.
What's New - August 1999
PSA on School Violence U.S. Humanitarian Relief Efforts for Turkey Earthquake Victims Success in Drug Enforcement Medal of Freedom Presentation America Goes Back To School, 1999

74. ABC7Chicago.com: Drug Enforcement Cop Nabbed In Sting
drug enforcement cop nabbed in sting. In court papers, drug enforcement agentsquoted an unnamed cooperating witness as saying Beamon called on Aug.
http://abclocal.go.com/wls/news/090602_ns_copnabbed.html
Quick Links Extra Info News Weather Traffic Sports HealthBEAT Technology Entertainment Consumer News Strange News ABC7 Bios Recipes on ABC7 News Mr. Food Restaurant Reviews All About Kids Disability Issues Someone You Should Know ABC7 I-Team Get ABC7Now ABC7 ENews ABC Programs Primetime Soaps 190 North Message Boards About ABC7 Contact ABC7 F.A.Q Job Listings Contests ABC7 Online Store Community Events Area Guide 360 Chicago Movies ABC7 Legal Center ABC7 Health Center
Drug enforcement cop nabbed in sting
September 6, 2002 (Chicago) A Chicago police officer assigned to a federal drug task force was arrested in a sting operation Friday and charged with stealing $10,000. Turan Beamon, 31, was ordered held in the Metropolitan Correctional Center pending a Monday bond hearing. Beamon has been on the Chicago force since 1994 and was recently assigned to the federal Drug Enforcement Agency's Chicago division as a task force agent. In court papers, drug enforcement agents quoted an unnamed cooperating witness as saying Beamon called on Aug. 28, wanting to make $70,000 fast. The witness recorded subsequent phone calls in which Beamon discussed ripping off a drug dealer to get the money and on Wednesday told Beamon about a dealer who was carrying $50,000, agents said.

75. RCMP Toronto: Drug Enforcement Section
drug enforcement Section.
http://www.rcmp-grc.org/drugs.htm
Drug Enforcement Section Quick Index
Overview
Personnel Role Overview
    The Drug Section is responsible for the investigation of importation and trafficking of illegal drugs. People in the drug business are quite often involved in a number of other illegal activities such as money laundering, organized gangs, thefts and break and enters. As a result, drug officers find themselves entangled in complicated and lengthy investigations. The RCMP Drug units give priority to the higher level and the very sophisticated importers and traffickers who are dealing with larger quantities of narcotics and/or other illicit drugs. An essential component of these investigations is community involvement. Without the support and assistance of ordinary citizens, these types of investigations would be much more difficult, if not impossible to complete successfully.
Personnel
    RCMP Drug investigators are experienced police officers who have a diverse background in criminal investigations. The RCMP provides Drug investigators with additional training in areas such as drug identification, surveillance skills and undercover operations.
  • Click here for more information on a career with the RCMP.

76. CONFERENCE EXPLORES ETHICAL ISSUES IN DRUG ENFORCEMENT
CONFERENCE EXPLORES ETHICAL ISSUES IN drug enforcement Ethical issuesin drug enforcement were explored and discussed on October
http://www-hoover.stanford.edu/pubaffairs/newsletter/00fall/drug.html
HOOVER INSTITUTION
NEWSLETTER

Fall 2000 Home About Hoover Research Publications ... Contents Features
Thatcher

Campaign

Belgian PM

Drug Conference
...
Koret Task Force
Columns
Board Meeting

Book Review

Essays in Public Policy
On the Air ... Opinions Thomas Henriksen Recent Releases CONFERENCE EXPLORES ETHICAL ISSUES IN DRUG ENFORCEMENT The conference plan was to give police officers and other public officials a deeper understanding of the dynamics of drug enforcement in an effort to develop and implement polices that lead to more effective and humane approaches to drug control. Opening the conference were Senior Research Fellow and Nobel laureate Milton Friedman and Distinguished Fellow and former secretary of state George P. Shultz, who discussed issues related to the overarching theme of the conference. Also speaking on October 5, on the topic of the police view of drug enforcement ethics, were Hubert Williams, president of the Policy Foundation, and Eric Sterling, president of the Criminal Justice Policy Foundation, both of Washington, D.C. On October 5, the topic of racial profiling by police was discussed by Randall Kennedy, professor of law at Harvard University; Bill Lansdowne, chief of police in San Jose, Calif.; David Bejarno, chief of police in San Diego, Calif., and Penny Harrington, retired chief of police in Portland, Ore., and president of the Center for Women in Policing.

77. DRUG ENFORCEMENT LAWS, ALTERNATIVES DISCUSSED IN NOVEMBER CONFERENCE
drug enforcement LAWS, ALTERNATIVES DISCUSSED IN NOVEMBER CONFERENCEResearch Fellow Joseph McNamara kicked off the opening session
http://www-hoover.stanford.edu/pubaffairs/newsletter/00winter/conference.html
HOOVER INSTITUTION
NEWSLETTER

Winter 2000 Home About Hoover Research Publications ... Contents Features
Tower Restoration

Director's Seminar

Cyber Crime

Weekly Essays
...
Fall Retreat
Columns
Book Review

Recent Releases

Opinions
On the Air ... Newsbriefs D RUG ENFORCEMENT LAWS, ALTERNATIVES DISCUSSED IN N OVEMBER CONFERENCE Research Fellow Joseph McNamara kicked off the opening session of the Youth, Drugs, and Crime Conference, held at the Institution on November 4 and 5, by comparing the Social Security budget to the federal government’s antidrug spending. “In 1972, when President Nixon suggested a ‘war on drugs,’ the federal budget [for antidrug measures] was $101 mil-lion,” McNamara said. “In the year 2000, the drug control budget will be $17.8 billion. If Social Security benefits had increased at the same rate, current monthly payments would be $30,444.” (Left to right) Hoover research fellow Joseph McNamara; former mayor of Baltimore Kurt Schmoke; and Vancouver mayor Philip Owen McNamara, the former police chief of San Jose, California, and Kansas City, Missouri, assembled lawyers, judges, police officers, health care officials, and mayors to discuss current drug enforcement policies and explore possible alternatives. Former attorney general and Hoover distinguished visiting fellow Edwin Meese, the first speaker at the conference, linked current lower crime rates in part to “a change in attitudes by young people [that] illegal drug use is inappropriate, risky, and dangerous. ” Meese added that cooperation between national and international law enforcement and health agencies has also played a role in controlling drug use.

78. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Numbers For DoD Providers
SUBJECT drug enforcement Administration (DEA) Numbers for DoD Providers. Mail todrug enforcement Administration Registration Unit ODRR Washington, DC 20537.
http://www.tricare.osd.mil/policy/ha00pol/000407.htm
[Numerical Listing] 7 April 2000 MEMORANDUM FOR EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, TRICARE MANAGEMENT ACTIVITY SUBJECT: Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Numbers for DoD Providers
As the availability of DoD pharmacy services to beneficiaries has expanded beyond the MTF in recent years to include the use of mail-order and commercial pharmacies, it has become increasingly important to be able to identify individual providers by a unique number. Past policy guidance has directed that DoD providers use their Social Security Number (SSN) as their unique identifier. Although the DEA has recognized the Social Security Number (SSN) as equivalent to a DEA number for prescriptions written for DoD beneficiaries by DoD providers, computer software problems at non-MTF pharmacies have complicated the filling of prescriptions that identify the DoD provider by SSN. These software fields require digits consistent with a DEA registration number.
Present policy of the DEA requires that all applicants for a DEA number hold a current State medical/dental license for the same State in which the provider is assigned/practices. However, in collaboration with DoD Health Affairs and TRICARE Management Activity's Centralized Credentials Quality Assurance System (CCQAS), the DEA has agreed to initiate a unique, DoD specific process for DoD uniformed and contract providers to obtain a DEA number. This process allows each individual provider's current and unrestricted license from any state to satisfy the application's requirement. This fee-exempt DEA registration number will be used solely for DoD beneficiary prescriptions. DoD providers may not use this number for off-duty employment. Providers so involved must obtain an additional DEA registration number for those purposes through the regular application process and at regular fees.

79. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
US Department of Ju stice. drug enforcement Administration (DEA). Conducting cooperativenarcotics investigations with its Thai drug law enforcement colleagues.
http://www.usa.or.th/embassy/dea.htm
U.S. Embassy in Thailand Home Embassy News Services ... Relations
U. S. D e p a r t m e n t o f J u s t i c e
Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
In Thailand, DEA is concerned with supporting the Royal Thai Government's counter narcotics efforts, while targeting drug trafficking organizations responsible for smuggling controlled substances into the United States and the international market. Further, the DEA Bangkok Country Office has regional drug-related responsibilities in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. DEA's Bangkok Country Office has specific responsibility for the following types of law enforcement activity:
  • Managing, under the policy guidance of the Secretary of State and U.S. Ambassador, all programs associated with its drug law enforcement counterparts in Thailand and other countries in its area of responsibility.
  • Conducting cooperative narcotics investigations with its Thai drug law enforcement colleagues. This includes those organizations trafficking in methamphetamine for domestic Thai consumption as well as heroin destined for the U.S.
  • Coordinating with Thai law enforcement authorities to secure the arrest and prosecution of individuals trafficking in controlled substances. The Bangkok Country Office further coordinates with Thai authorities to secure extradition to the United States of narcotics violators wanted for prosecution in the U.S.
  • 80. Drug Enforcement Programs
    drug enforcement Branch Programs, AntiDrug Abuse Enforcement Program; Bureau ofCriminal Identification and Information ProgramCounter Drug Procurement Program
    http://www.ocjp.ca.gov/programs/prgms_brde.htm
    California Home OCJP Home OCJP Programs RFP Funding ... Site Map
    My CA
    Drug Enforcement Branch Programs

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