No, SCRAM (Secure Continuous Remote Alcohol Monitoring) technology is designed to detect alcohol consumption through skin sweat, not cocaine or other drugs.
No, a SCRAM ankle monitor is designed to detect alcohol consumption by monitoring an individual's sweat for ethanol. It is not capable of detecting drugs like cocaine.
It is not recommended to consume drugs while wearing a SCRAM alcohol monitoring bracelet, as it may interfere with the effectiveness of the device. The bracelet is designed to detect alcohol consumption, not drugs, but any substance that affects your perspiration may impact the readings. It is important to follow all guidelines provided by the monitoring program to ensure accurate results and compliance.
Cocaine refers to the drug in its powder form, while crack is cocaine that has been processed into a rock crystal, typically smoked. Crack is a more potent and fast-acting form of cocaine, leading to a quicker and more intense high. Additionally, crack is generally cheaper and more addictive than powder cocaine.
no, it's only crack after it's been altered into a smoke-able form. regular cocaine cannot be smoked until it's combined with (usually) baking soda and heat. that forms crack which is a smoke-able form of cocaine. rock cocaine comes from re-rocking which is when the middle guy cuts the cocaine and further processes it into a hard substance. incidentally it arrives in this country in a hard form because it's easier to transport, but i guarantee you whatever cocaine you are buying has been re-rocked and is not in the original hard state.
Crack has never been legal. Crack cocaine is just a different, more dangerous form of cocaine, that became popular in the 1980s, and cocaine has been illegal in the United States since 1914. For a long time, people had been freebasing cocaine. Freebasing is when you put the cocaine on a piece of tin foil, and light a cigarette lighter underneath it. As the cocaine cooks, a vapor rises from it, and you inhale the vapor with a straw made from tin foil. Sometime in the late 1970s, somebody figured out that if you boil cocaine with water, baking soda, and other household chemicals, it produces a rock-like substance that burns at a lower temperature than regular cocaine. This makes it very easy to smoke, and makes the high more intense than freebasing: since it burns faster than regular cocaine, you end up smoking more of it in the same amount of time. And since you end up smoking more of it in the same amount of time, the risk of overdose and death is that much greater. Since crack is essentially a diluted form of cocaine, it is cheaper than regular cocaine. The cheap price is what caused the crack epidemic in the 1980s, since people who normally wouldn't have been able to afford the steep price of a cocaine addiction could now get high every day for cheap.
No, a SCRAM ankle monitor is designed to detect alcohol consumption by monitoring an individual's sweat for ethanol. It is not capable of detecting drugs like cocaine.
No, an alcohol scram device is specifically designed to detect the presence of alcohol in a person's system, not cocaine or other drugs. These devices typically measure alcohol content through breath, blood, or sweat samples. For detecting cocaine, specialized drug testing methods, such as urine or saliva tests, are required.
No. But if you have a SCRAM, you may be tested randomly for drugs and because you have a SCRAM, you are already in trouble and you don't need more.
The SCRAM bracelet is designed to detect alcohol consumption through the skin. It is not specifically designed to detect inhalants or other substances.
No
no
No, the SCRAM bracelet is designed to detect alcohol consumption through skin sweat. It does not detect drug use, including marijuana.
No
Meth bew?
The scram can detect t.h.c in the air when your around it. my parole officer asked me if i was smoking marijuana and luckily i wasnt but the moniter detected it.
"Scram bracelets" are typically used to monitor alcohol consumption by measuring alcohol sweat levels from the skin. They are not designed to detect drug use.
No, the SCRAM bracelet is designed to detect alcohol consumption by measuring a person's perspiration for ethanol molecules. It does not detect the presence of cetyl alcohol or any other substances besides alcohol.