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Read recent news stories highlighting the success of the Thermo Scientific TruNarc Handheld Narcotics Analyzer in the field.
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Police officers’ lives are on the line every day, and one big threat they deal with is potential drug exposure on the job. To combat the drug exposure, Chandler police are expanding the use of their handheld drug analyzer, called TruNarc.
Suffolk County Police have a new tool in their fight against the fentanyl epidemic: Five new TruNarc devices that can quickly identify hundreds of illegal drugs in one simple test.
Pleasant Grove Police are now testing a new piece of equipment that will keep officers safer and it’s a new weapon in their war on drugs and opioids.
The new TruNarc device gives Geneva Police more control over the drugs they are handling, keeping them at less risk of exposure.
Watch the video interview with Chief Pepper Mock of Geneva County Police
The agency announced Tuesday that it’s using a handheld narcotics analyzer called TruNarc that can scan through transparent packaging and identify the chemical composition of more than 530 controlled substances, such as fentanyl, methamphetamine, and heroin.
Discover how the Thermo Scientific™ TruNarc™ is helping Seattle, WA area law enforcement identify substances quickly and accurately with the push of a button.
The US Air Force’s 412th Test Wing Innovation team, SparkED, has initiated the FY23 Airmen Pitch Process seeking the next great innovative idea for improvements in their program.
For inspiration this year, the program looks to the successful idea from FY22: AFOSI/Det 111's TruNarc Laser Drug Testing device. AFOSI agents employ the TruNarc analyzer out in the field as a safe, effective way to identify narcotics and opioid derivatives. The TruNarc analyzer replaced previous methods involving kits, solutions and neutralizers with a single system.
Thermo Scientific’s TruNarc Handheld Narcotics Analyzer is now in use in all 50 states and in more than 50 countries worldwide.
The TruNarc Handheld Narcotics Analyzer is one of the newest pieces of technology at the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office (TSCO). In fact, TCSO has three TruNarc systems to help identify narcotics, stimulants and depressants. One is primarily for patrol officers, one is for detectives executing search warrants and similar tasks, and a third is at the Tulsa County Jail.
The TruNarc system analyzes substances through plastic or glass, enabling deputies to maintain a barrier. The new technology will also increase speed and efficiency on the job.
The Butte Interagency Narcotics Task Force used a TruNarc narcotic analyzer and confirmed fentanyl; a total of 2.7 gross grams of the substance were seized.
Menasha police have a new device (TruNarc) that can instantly detect and identify drugs and other substances. The process can be done at either a crime scene, or during a traffic stop.
The Huron County Drug Task Force has a new tool in its arsenal to help keep the community and officers safe. Through federal funding, the task force was able to purchase a $32,000 TruNarc testing unit.
The Drug Enforcement Administration is probably one of the federal government’s busiest agencies. And now, it has a new issue to worry about – counterfeit Adderall and Ritalin. They demonstrate the use of TruNarc to help identify substances.
The TruNarc analyzer has enabled CBP to increase fentanyl seizures dramatically without compromising officers’ safety. Better technology and processes can indeed keep dangerous drugs out of the wrong hands, and, literally, out of the exposed hands of law enforcement officers.
TruNarc utilizes a proven scientific method for the analysis of seized drugs.
Snohomish County deputies are getting a new tool to help with drug investigations. TruNarc is a sensor that can identify a drug through its packaging.
Police in Rotterdam have found 2.5 tonnes of the drug methamphetamine in a secret room at a warehouse, in what is thought to be the biggest seizure of its kind in Europe.
Police have charged a man after methamphetamine valued at more than 140 million USD was found in a van he crashed into police cars parked outside a Sydney police station.
Eleven drug task force agencies across Kentucky are using a new hand-held device that gives them the ability to analyze drugs in the field before sending them to a lab. The TruNarc device uses laser technology to identify a wide range of drugs, including heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine and the potent synthetic opioid fentanyl, which can be harmful or even deadly, if absorbed through the skin or inhaled.
Troopers say the device gives them added protection, especially if they end up stopping someone who has fentanyl or carfentanyl, a drug that can be deadly. Troopers say the TruNarc device can analyze a substance and tell the trooper what it is within about two to three minutes. And that evidence is admissible in court.
See the TruNarc Handheld Narcotics Analyzer in action in Aceh Indonesia.
A major drug ‘cook’ from the Netherlands was caught by German police and sent to prison for 10 years for running one of the largest methamphetamine labs ever found in Germany, thanks to the TruNarc Handheld Narcotics Analyzer, which was used to identify chemicals found in his lab.
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid analgesic that is similar to morphine but is 50 to 100 times more potent.
Technology in the field, including the tried and true Thermo Scientific TruNarc, is helping law enforcement officials stay safer and increasing their situational awareness when encountering both old and new narcotics.
Various police departments across the United States are using TruNarc Handheld Narcotics Analyzers to help combat the opioid epidemic – and keep themselves safe – by carefully identifying unknown substances in the field.
Fox 25 Boston profiles the Gemini Analyzer
Fox 25 Boston profiles the TruNarc Handheld Narcotics Analyzer.
San Diego Sheriff's Department just bought 15 TruNarc devices. The hand-held scanners can detect and identify drugs without the deputies having to come into physical contact because the TruNarc uses laser technology to scan through plastic bags. This technology has become increasingly important with the rise of drugs like Fentanyl. Just a microscopic amount can cause an overdose, which has made first responders wary of handling it.
A new weapon is helping specialist Gold Coast police wage the war on illegal drugs. "Essentially, it's like having a mobile drug lab in your briefcase," Bond University criminologist Terry Goldsworthy said.
There have been multiple instances of Arkansas law enforcement officers needing medical attention after handling unknown drugs. TruNarc can identify any illegal substance based on the chemical compound directly through the container, keeping officers safe.
Arkansas authorities said Wednesday that new technology purchased by the state will expedite drug identification and save law enforcement officers' lives. TruNarc will allow officers to identify a narcotic within minutes -- enabling officers to make arrests quicker and collect evidence without the danger of being exposed to dangerous drugs.
On Wednesday, The Arkansas Drug Director Kirk Lane unveiled a new device called TruNarc, which can detect over 450 different drugs digitally in just minutes.
"The neat thing about it is you can actually use the laser through the packaging that the controlled substance is in without even opening that package," Lane said. It safely expedites the process of finding out what substance someone may have overdosed on.
La Mesa is one of several local law enforcement agencies in recent months to acquire the handheld TruNarc Analyzer, which allows officers to keep suspected narcotics, including fentanyl, securely encased in its packaging.
Last month, the Charles County Sheriff’s Office received a grant for a handheld narcotics analyzer called TruNarc, which accurately identifies drugs in minutes and can improve the safety of officers as well as help citizens.
The agency used the TruNarc analyzer for the first time around Jan. 19, when they found a drug dealer in Waldorf with more than $3,000 worth of heroin mixed with fentanyl. By using the TruNarc analyzer directly on the scene, officers were able to quickly identify that the heroin contained fentanyl, which is a very dangerous drug to handle.
The Indiana State Police has purchased three additional TruNarc analyzers with funding from the Department of Justice. The new purchase complements five TruNarc units already deployed by the agency.
“There are drugs out there that are made to look like they’re illegal drugs, but they’re not,” Sgt. John Perrine of ISP said. “This will allow us to determine whether they’re real or fake drugs.”
Watch the story on a local news program.
The Fort Wayne Police Department has deployed the TruNarc analyzer, giving law enforcement the opportunity to identify drugs like never before. Describing the TruNarc analyzer as a game changer, Fort Wayne Police Sgt. Jonathan Bowers says the analyzer gives officers rapid information on "what's being shipped in, what's being sold, what's being bought, what's being seized and what people are addicted to right now."
"For us, we need to know day-to-day what we're actually buying and seizing, so to have good quality lab results either immediately or within an hour or two totally changes the game for us," Bowers says. See the story on NewsChannel 15, a local news source.
Collaborating to reduce the social burden of illicit drugs, the New South Wales (Australia) Police and NSW Health Pathology were recent finalists in the NSW Innovation and Health Symposium 2015, held in Sydney.
Since 2013, the team has deployed the TruNarc analyzer to identify suspected drugs at the crime scene. On-site analysis limits the need to send less-than-trafficable quantities to a forensic lab, and frees up staff time for other tasks. As a result of the collaboration, a backlog of 2,500 cases in 2013 was reduced to less than 300 by the end of 2014.