The most dangerous drugs are classified as Schedule I, which have a high addiction or abuse potential and no recognized medical use. Possession of these drugs is forbidden under the law. You cannot obtain a legal prescription for the. The next most dangerous drugs are Schedule II, with a high potential for abuse but having a recognized medical use. They decrease in seriousness to Schedule V. Drugs that are available by prescription only but are not on one of the drug schedules are called "dangerous drugs" as opposed to "narcotics."
Opium is a Scheduled 2 Narcotic according to the Controlled Substance Act.
Depends on where you're located. Federally, it is not scheduled but in California it is a CII. Actually, as of July 2010, apomorphine is no longer a scheduled or controlled substance in California, per Assembly Bill 1414.
Buspirone is not considered a scheduled drug in the United States. It is classified as a non-controlled substance in the benzodiazepine class.
No.it is a non-narcotic
No Ultram (Tramadol) is not considered a controlled substance in the state of Georgia, though it is listed as a dangerous drug.
it is listed as a Schedule III narcotic. so yes, if a drug is on any of the Schedules (I-IV) it is considered a controlled substance.
Yes, quetiapine is a prescription medication that is classified as a scheduled drug in some countries. It is a controlled substance due to its potential for abuse and misuse.
It's an abbreviation for Possession of a Scheduled drug. It's the same as Possession of a controlled substance.
That looks like an abbreviation for Scheduled IV Controlled Substance. It's a misdemeanor of the first degree for possession of a Scheduled IV narcotic.
A good guess is controlled dangerous substance....
then you will get off if you can prove this
It is not 'regulated' as, for instance, narcotics and scheduled drugs are regulated, but it is a highly dangerous poisonous substance and it's sale and use is monitored and tracked.