Karrius12
Karrius12 t1_jahrwkr wrote
Reply to comment by jmdunkle in After further testing, Fentanyl was NOT found in the THC gummies that were taken by police last week. by DelianSK13
Even if you do think fentanyl was actually present, at the detection level of, again, 1% of the weight of a human cell, contamination from a handler or the lab is extremely likely.
Karrius12 t1_jahqxur wrote
Reply to comment by jmdunkle in After further testing, Fentanyl was NOT found in the THC gummies that were taken by police last week. by DelianSK13
It absolutely is. Analytical chemistry often requires a trained analyst to be able to correctly interpret results - even then, often the best you can get is "This is consistent with X... but could also by Y or Z or a ton of other things."
Karrius12 t1_jahqrb9 wrote
Reply to comment by jmdunkle in After further testing, Fentanyl was NOT found in the THC gummies that were taken by police last week. by DelianSK13
Right, but the point is, that number is so small as to basically be fake. We're talking 1% the weight of a human cell. These kinds of instruments are extremely sensitive, and will ping off of nothing, or noise. Even then - its hard to trust whats actually being detected is fentanyl. A lot of analytical tests simply arent that specific.
It's not that theres some contamination - its that this detection process only pings under extremely specific circumstances that aren't actually happening.
Karrius12 t1_jahnoe4 wrote
Reply to comment by jmdunkle in After further testing, Fentanyl was NOT found in the THC gummies that were taken by police last week. by DelianSK13
Sensitive equipment has to be used properly, or else you get false positives.
I want you to think about a dollar bill for a second. Just your average dollar bill.
Chances are, it has some cocaine on it.
That dollar bill has 20,000x the amount of cocaine on it than what the police are claiming they tested on the gummies. 20,000x!
Forensic science, especially in the hands of the cops, is fake more often then not. Real analytical chemists never make the kind of statements those in law enforcement do. We also understand our equipment and detection limits.
Karrius12 t1_jahy2bt wrote
Reply to comment by Diarygirl in After further testing, Fentanyl was NOT found in the THC gummies that were taken by police last week. by DelianSK13
Absolutely same, but also the way forensic science is abused by the legal system is to blame here, too. So much of it is literally fake