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Heroin Laws in Canada

Criminal Code & Controlled Drugs and Substances Act

Heroin: Consequences of a Schedule I Drug

If you have been charged with a crime in Montreal, you should consult with a criminal defence lawyer in your area

MontrealLawyersNear Me

Shadley Bien-Aimé

Montreal, Quebec
2000 Rue Mansfield, Suite 1610
(514) 866-4043

Montreal Criminal Lawyer, Zayid Al-Baghdadi

Montreal, Quebec
507 Place d'Armes suite 1700
(514) 967-3239

Steven Slimovitch - criminal lawyer

Montreal, Quebec
500 Place d'Armes #1800
(514) 984-2309

Leonard Waxman

Montreal, Quebec
276 Saint-Jacques St., Suite 305
(514) 342-4498

Poletto Jean Avocat

Montreal, Quebec
7012 Boul. St-Laurent, Suite 300
(514) 990-3123

Battah Lapointe - Avocats S.E.N.C.R.L.

Montreal, Quebec
1080 Côte Du Beaver-Hall, 1610
(514) 861-1110
Heroin in Montreal, Quebec - Glossary of Terms

Glossary of Legal Terms

Mainlining

Injecting a substance directly into the bloodstream through a vein, which leads to an instant high but it is also the riskiest method to consume drugs in terms of overdosing.

Reasonable doubt

The Supreme Court of Canada has said that reasonable doubt “falls much closer to absolute certainty than to proof on a balance of probabilities” and “that something less than absolute certainty is required, and that something more than probable guilt is required."

Schedule I

Schedule I drugs are commonly characterized as “hard drugs.” They include street drugs such as heroin, cocaine, and opium and numerous pharmaceutical-grade drugs such as oxycodone and morphine. Schedule I drugs show a high risk of dependency. See Schedule I of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act.

Skin-popping

The administration of a street drug under the skin, which allows it to diffuse slowly, extending the duration of the feeling of euphoria.