Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 74.djvu/106

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PUBLIC LAW 86-429-APR. 22, 1960

[74 S T A T.

suit from the manufacture of any substance which is not a narcotic drug. Unless such incidentally but necessarily resulting narcotic drug shall have been determined to be nonaddicting by the Secretary or his delegate, it may (apart from being used in the process of producing a narcotic drug for which license and quota are held) be retained or disposed of only in such manner as may be prescribed or authorized by the Secretary or his delegate. REGULATION

WITH

RESPECT TO PERSONS W^HO M A N U F ACT U E E PRECURSORS

NAE(X)TIG

SEC. 13. Persons who manufacture, compound, package, sell, deal in, or give away any narcotic precursor shall keep such records and make such reports with respect to such narcotic precursor as the Secretary or his delegate shall by regulation prescribe. The Secretary or his delegate may advise the Congress whether in his opinion the manufacture and distribution of narcotic precursors threaten to result in the diversion of narcotic drugs into other than legitimate medical and scientific channels and whether in his judgment further legislation with respect to narcotic precursors is necessary or desirable. CERTAIN PROCEDURES FOR J U D I C I A L REVIEW

64 Stat. 1129.

SEC. 14. Every final decision of the Secretary or his delegate under sections 3(i), 6, 8, 9, 11 (c), 11(e), or 11 (f) of this Act shall be subject to judicial review as provided by and in the manner prescribed m Public Law 901, Eighty-first Congress, approved December 29, 1950 (5 XJ.S.C, secs. 1031-1042). . \ M E N D M E N T TO LAW W I T H RESPECT TO EXPORTATION OF NARCOTIC DRUGS

42 Stat. 597.

38 Stat. 1912. 61 Stat. 2230.

SEC. 15. Section 6 of the Act entitled "An Act to prohibit the importation and use of opium for other than medicinal purposes", approved February 9, 1909, as amended (21 U.S.C. 182), is amended to read as follows: "SEC. 6. (a) No person subject to the jurisdiction of the United States Government shall export or cause to be exported from the United States, or from territory under its control or jurisdiction, any narcotic drug to any other country except— "(1) to a country which has ratified and become a party to the International Opium Convention of 1912 for the Suppression of the Abuses of Opium, Morphine, Cocaine, and Derivative Drugs, or to the International Opium Convention signed at Geneva on February 19, 1925, any narcotic drugs derived directly or indirectly from crude opium or coca leaves; or " (2) to a country which has ratified and become a party to the (Convention for Limiting the Manufacture and Regulating the Distribution of Narcotic Drugs concluded at Geneva, July 13, 1931, and entered into force with respect to the United States of America, July 9, 1933, as amended by the protocol signed at Lake Success on December 11, 1946, and the protocol bringing under international control drugs outside the scope of the convention of July 13, 1931, for limiting the manufacture and regulating the distribution of narcotic drugs (as amended by the protocol signed at Lake Success on December 11, 1946) signed at Paris November 19, 1948, and entered into force with respect to the United States of America, September 11, 1950, any narcotic drugs not derived directly or indirectly from crude opium or coca leaves;

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