Newsstand - Highest Traces of Cocaine Found on U.S. Bills While Spanish Notes Crowned in Europe




lin821
Aug 6, 08, 4:16 am
From livescience.com: (August 5th, 2008)

Paper money contains high traces of cocaine, regardless of whether or not the paper money came into direct contact with the drug. And U.S. bills take the top spot, covered in the greatest amount of the illegal powder, while Spanish notes are the most highly contaminated in Europe, a new study finds.

The findings, detailed in the latest issue of the journal Trends in Analytical Chemistry, reflect the popularity of the illicit drug, the researchers say.

"These findings should not be surprising, because cocaine and other drugs are traded using cash, which is handled by the same fingers that directly touch the drugs or wrappings," chemists Sergio Armenta and Miguel de la Guardia from the University of Valencia in Spain write. "Moreover, many cocaine users use a wrapped banknote to sniff this drug, so inducing direct cocaine contamination of the banknotes."
The chemists found U.S. bills contained an average of between 2.9 and 28.8 micrograms of cocaine depending on the year and city, with a maximum of more than 1,300 micrograms found on some 1996 bills.

One more reason for FTers to use credit cards, I guess. If you have to carry a load of cash, don't take the 1996 bills onboard with you. :D

You can read the full story here (http://www.livescience.com/strangenews/080805-money-residue.html).

I also wonder what's the amount/traces of cocaine needed to "trigger" sniffing dogs' attention?


chrissxb
Aug 6, 08, 4:17 am
I'd like to know about these spanish notes. aren't euros anywhere the same?

dg4255
Aug 6, 08, 4:31 am
Sure, Euros are the same in Germany as they are in Spain, however, each EU nation prints it's own Euro bills and coins. The coins are the easiest to tell where it was minted. Italian coins have the overlaying RI (Repubblica Italiana).. in France, RF (Republique francaise).. etc etc etc..
Unlike euro coins, euro notes do not have a national side. This information is instead encoded within the first character of each note's serial number.

The first character of the serial number is a letter which uniquely identifies the country that issues the note. The remaining 13 characters are numbers which, when added up and the digits of the resulting sum then added together again until a single digit remains, give a checksum also particular to that country. Because of the arithmetic of the check-sum, consecutively-issued banknotes are not numbered sequentially, but rather, "consecutive" banknotes are 9 digits apart.
The W, K and J codes have been reserved for the EU member states currently not participating in the euro, while the R, F and G prefixes are reserved for states within the Euro-zone that, at present, do not issue Euro banknotes.
Country codes are alphabetised according to the countries' names in the official language of each country, but reversed:
Z - Belgium
Y - Greece
X - Germany
V - Spain
U - France
T - Ireland
S - Italy
P - Netherlands
R - Luxembourg
N - Austria
M - Portugal
L - Finland
H - Slovenia
G - Cyprus
F - Malta
Luxembourg, Cyprus, and Malta are the only current full EU member and Euro-using countries that do not issuetheir own euro notes.
Denmark (W), Sweden (K), United Kingdom (J) all have codes issued to them in the event they adopt the euro.

So, this system of lettering on the euro notes makes it easy to see where the note came from. Be careful of those euro notes starting with V. I just checked my pockets and 4 notes started with S and 1 started with N. I guess licking these notes won't really get me high. Shame.


Pizzaman
Aug 6, 08, 9:22 pm
Moderator Hat On

Nothing travel-specific here, so I'm closing this thread.

Moderator Hat Off

Edited to add: The OP made some good points about the possible travel implications, so I'm re-opening the thread. Let's try to keep the discussion to travel-related points.

lin821
Aug 6, 08, 10:49 pm
Sure, Euros are the same in Germany as they are in Spain, however, each EU nation prints it's own Euro bills and coins.
<snipe>
(Bolding mine)

Thank you for such an informative post, dg4255. ^

I don't collect coins but sort of develop a hobby to keep coins (a small amount as souvenirs) from the countries that I visit. I'll know better next time how to spot them by the country identifiers. According to the research article, other than germs, coins give you a "metallic" odor from the transferred iron atoms. Safe to say they are cocaine-free, I suppose. :p

If all paper money is at risk of traces of cocaine, anyone knows how sensitive sniffing dogs are (as far as cocaine goes)? I am sure nobody wants to deal with such surprise at the airport when the currencies you carry may call for attention from the dogs.



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