Anonymously contributed:
US energy lab missing cocaine, amphetamine samples
Associated Press, 02.17.11
WASHINGTON -- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California failed to keep track of samples of dangerous drugs, including cocaine, amphetamines, opium and black tar heroin, the Energy Department's inspector general said in a report Thursday.
Some drugs were missing. But in one case the lab found more opium and black tar heroin than records showed had been purchased legally.
The report said the accounting lapses created "an opportunity for improper or illegal use."
Employees at Livermore, one of the federal government's top science labs, handle as many as 42 different kinds of dangerous drugs, including black tar heroin, cocaine, phencyclidine and steroids. The drugs are used for bio-medical research and forensic science, and in the lab's health clinic for the treatment of workers there. Workers are required under federal law to track their use closely with penalties that can include fines of up to $10,000 per violation.
The report said employees failed to adequately monitor at least six of the 42 varieties of drugs on site.
Officials with the Energy Department's National Nuclear Security Administration, which operates the labs, told the inspector general they agreed that a more rigorous tracking system was needed. Associate NNSA Administrator Gerald Talbot Jr. wrote in a letter that Livermore managers "immediately" changed their inventory procedures after the inspector general reported problems to them last month and are making further improvements through June. Talbot also noted that Livermore's analytical lab has not purchased any drugs for forensic science in at least two years, but inspectors said missing records meant there was no evidence this was true.
The inspector general said there were missing quantities of an amphetamine known as MDA that disappeared between 2004 and 2009. But the report found five times more opium and 20 times more black tar heroin at the lab than records could account for. "Livermore was in possession of additional quantities of high risk controlled substances without any documentation showing that they existed," the report said, adding that sloppy record-keeping meant that "responsible personnel were not in a position to determine if controlled substances were purchased and then misused or misappropriated."
Inspectors found records at the lab for "one bottle" of cocaine hydrochloride but no references to the amount inside; it also found references to two additional shipments of cocaine hydrochloride in 2006 but it was unclear whether those shipments ever arrived.
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8 comments:
So which building is all this in again?
Did they look on the 5th floor of 111?
Sorry, I had them.
You see, as I walked by the FSC lab, I had a headache because I forgot my glasses.
So I went to what I thought was the first aid cabinet, and took what I though was Excedrin. I also knocked over a few vials when I reached in, cause the light was bad. But I swept up the mess and put is in the waste basket.
I felt kinda good about it at the time. My pee was blue later that evening.
My bad.
Dozens of people must have gotten a buzz off those milligram amounts.
Who cares about missing cocaine. It is a research lab with responsible, educated adults. So what if they counted wrong.
If they have some missing, order more. So what.
If Americans 100 years ago were able to see what is happening now in America with all this drug paranoia, they would think we have lost our minds. We certainly have lost our freedom. We can't even drink our old Coca-Cola, which was better tasting anyway.
I just got a new supply tonight on East 14th. I will bring it in and put it back tomorrow. How much should I bring in?
They are sitting next to LANLs missing hard drive, in Dr. Lee's Lop Nor office.
Did it get misplaced in the Superblock with some SNM and is now on it's way to other parts of the country?
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