Opium
- Poppy Cultivation, Morphine and Heroin Manufacture
13 May 2010By Al-Ikhawah Al-Mujahidun
First of all, it seems like the information about
opium cultivation and preparation and other chemistry
came from a 1993 Department of Justice publication
that was sponsored by DEA.
That booklet is, I understand, out-of-print, and will
not be reprinted. It is an amazing document because it
essentially tells you all you really need to know
about opium poppies, opium, and the basic procedures
for extraction and conversion of morphine to heroin.
I can also tell you that a USDA scientist named Mary
Acock, was involved in the larger project that
produced the book. It's my opinion that, had any of
those government dudes thought about it for more than
a few minutes, they never would have published it in
the first place. It is simply too full of "dangerous"
information. - Jim Hogshire
*****
Opium
is the name for the latex produced within the seed
pods of the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum.
The plant is believed to have evolved from a wild
strain, Papaver setigerum, which grows in
coastal areas of the Mediterranean Sea. Through
centuries of cultivation and breeding for opium, the
species somniferum evolved. Today, P.
somniferum is the only species of Papaver
used to produce opium. Opium contains morphine,
codeine, noscapine, papaverine, and thebaine. All but
thebaine are used clinically as analgesics to reduce
pain without a loss of consciousness. Thebaine is
without analgesic effect but is of great
pharmaceutical value due to its use in the production
of semisynthetic opioid morphine analogues such as
oxycodone (Percodan), dihydromorphenone (Dilaudid),
and hydrocodone (Vicodin).
The psychological effects of opium may have been
known to the ancient Sumerians (circa 4,000 B.C.)
whose symbol for poppy was hul, "joy" and gil,
"plant". The plant was known in Europe at least 4,000
years ago as evidenced by fossil remains of poppy seed
cake and poppy pods found in the Neolithic Swiss Lake
Dwellings. Opium was probably consumed by the ancient
Egyptians and was known to the Greeks as well. Our
word opium is derived from the Greek. The poppy is
also referred to in Homer's works the Iliad and the
Odyssey (850 B.C.). Hippocrates (460-357 B.C.)
prescribed drinking the juice of the white poppy mixed
with the seed of nettle.
The opium poppy probably reached China about the
fourth century A.D. through Arab traders who advocated
its use for medicinal purposes. In Chinese literature,
there are earlier references to its use. The noted
Chinese surgeon Hua To of the Three Kingdoms (220-264
A.D.) used opium preparations and Cannabis indica
for his patients to swallow before undergoing major
surgery.
The beginning of widespread opium use in China is
associated with the introduction of tobacco smoking in
pipes by Dutch from Java in the 17th century. The
Chinese mixed Indian opium with the tobacco, two
products that were being traded by the Dutch. This
practice was adopted throughout the region and
predictably resulted in increased opium smoking, both
with and without tobacco.
By the late-1700s the British East India Company
controlled the prime Indian poppy growing regions and
dominated the Asian opium trade. By 1800, they had a
monopoly on opium; controlling supply and setting
prices.
In 1805, the German pharmacist Friedrich W.
Serturner isolated and described the principal
alkaloid and powerful active ingredient in opium. He
named it morphium after Morpheus, the Greek god
of dreams. We know it today as morphine. This event
was soon followed by the discovery of other alkaloids
of opium: codeine in 1832 and papaverine in 1848. By
the 1850s these pure alkaloids, rather than the
earlier crude opium preparations, were being commonly
prescribed for the relief of pain, cough, and
diarrhea. This period also saw the invention and
introduction of the hypodermic syringe.
By the late eighteenth century opium was being
heavily used in China as a recreational drug. The
Imperial court had banned its use and importation but
large quantities were still being smuggled into China.
In 1839 the Qing Emperor ordered his minister Lin Zexu
to address the opium problem. Lin petitioned Queen
Victoria for help but was ignored. In reaction, the
emperor confiscated 20,000 barrels of opium and
detained some foreign traders. The British retaliated
by attacking the port city of Canton. Thus the First
Opium War began. The Chinese were defeated and the
Treaty of Nanjing was signed in 1842. The British
required that the opium trade be allowed to continue,
that the Chinese pay a large settlement, and that the
Chinese cede Hongkong to the British Empire. The
Second Opium War began and ended in 1856 over western
demands that opium markets be expanded. The Chinese
were again defeated and opium importation to China was
legalized.
In the United States during the 19th century, opium
preparations and 'patent medicines' containing opium
extract such as paregoric (camphorated tincture of
opium) and laudanum (deodorized opium tincture) became
widely available and quite popular. In the 1860s
morphine was used extensively pre- and
post-operatively as a painkiller for wounded soldiers
during the Civil War. Civil War physicians frequently
dispensed opiates. In 1866 the Secretary of War stated
that during the war the Union Army was issued 10
million opium pills, over 2,840,000 ounces of other
opiate preparations (such as laudanum or paregoric),
and almost 30,000 ounces of morphine sulphate. The
inevitable result was opium addiction, called the
'army disease' or the 'soldier's disease.' These opium
and morphine addiction problems prompted a scientific
search for potent but nonaddictive painkillers. In the
1870s, chemists synthesized a supposedly
non-addictive, substitute for morphine by acetylating
morphine. In 1898 the Bayer pharmaceutical company of
Germany was the first to make available this new drug,
3,6-diacetylmorphine, in large quantities under the
trademarked brand name Heroin. 3,6-diacetylmorphine is
two to three times more potent than morphine. Most of
the increase is due to its increased lipid solubility,
which provides enhanced and rapid central nervous
system penetration.
Heroin was initially used with much success as a
superior cough suppressant for patients with (then
incurable) tuberculosis. Tuberculosis patients
continued to die, but without the tortuous coughing
and pain. A second use of heroin was to combat
morphine addiction - just as morphine was originally
used to combat opium addiction. Soon after its
introduction, however, Heroin was recognized as having
narcotic and addictive properties far exceeding those
of morphine.
In December 1914, the United States Congress passed
the Harrison Narcotics Act which called for control of
each phase of the preparation and distribution of
medicinal opium, morphine, heroin, cocaine, and any
new derivative that could be shown to have similar
properties. It made illegal the possession of these
controlled substances. The restrictions in the
Harrison Act were most recently redefined by the
Federal Controlled Substances Act of 1970. The Act
lists as a Schedule II Controlled Substance opium and
its derivatives and all parts of the P. somniferum
plant except the seed.
The first period of large scale heroin smuggling
into the United States since its prohibition occurred
during the years 1967 through 1971. Turkish opium was
processed into heroin in France and then smuggled into
New York.
In the mid-1970s Mexican brown heroin appeared. It
was sold at a lower price than European heroin and
became readily available in the West and Midwest. By
the mid-1980s the U.S. heroin market was being
supplied from three regions: Mexico, Southwest Asia
(Pakistan, Afghanistan, Turkey, Lebanon), and
Southeast Asia (Burma, Laos, Thailand). Soon
thereafter, South American heroin from Columbia
appeared.
In 1997, Southeast Asia still accounts for well
over half of the world's opium production. It is
estimated that the region has the capacity to produce
over 200 metric tons of heroin annually. Although much
of it is consumed in Asia, thousands of kilograms of
Southeast Asian heroin enter the United States each
year.
The chemical structure of opiates is very similar
to that of naturally produced compounds called
endorphins and enkephalins. These compounds are
derived from an amino acid pituitary hormone called
beta-lipotropin which when released is cleaved to form
met-enkephalin, gamma-endorphin, and beta-endorphin.
Opiate molecules, due to their similar structure,
engage many of the endorphins' nerve-receptor sites in
the brain's pleasure centers and bring about similar
analgesic effects. In the human body, a pain stimulus
usually exites an immediate protective reaction
followed by the release of endorphins to relieve
discomfort and reward the mental learning process.
Opiates mimic high levels of endorphins to produce
intense euphoria and a heightened state of well-being.
Regular use results in increased tolerance and the
need for greater quantities of the drug. Profound
physical and psychological dependence results from
regular use and rapid cessation brings about
withdrawal sickness.
In addition to the pleasure/pain centers, there is
also a concentration of opiate receptors in the
respiratory center of the brain. Opiates have an
inhibiting effect on these cells and in the case of an
overdose, respiration can come to a complete halt.
Opiates also inhibit sensitivity to the impulse to
cough.
A third location for these receptors is in the
brain's vomiting center. Opiate use causes nausea and
vomiting. Tolerance for this effect is built up very
quickly. Opiates effect the digestive system by
inhibiting intestinal peristalsis. Long before they
were used as painkillers, opiates were used to control
diarrhea.
The opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, is an
annual plant. From a very small round seed, it grows,
flowers, and bears fruit (seed pods) only once. The
entire growth cycle for most varieties of this plant
takes about 120 days. The seeds of P. somniferum
can be distinguished from other species by the
appearance of a fine secondary fishnet reticulation
within the spaces of the coarse reticulation found all
over their surface. When compared with other
Papaver species, P. somniferum plants will
have their leaves arranged along the stem of the
plant, rather than basal leaves, and the leaves and
stem will be 'glabrous' (hairless). The tiny seeds
germinate quickly, given warmth and sufficient
moisture. Sprouts appear in fourteen to twenty-one
days. In less than six weeks the young plant has grown
four large leaves and resembles a small cabbage in
appearance. The lobed, dentate leaves are glaucous
green with a dull gray or blue tint.
Within sixty days, the plant will grow from one to
two feet in height, with one primary, long, smooth
stem. The upper portion of this stem is without leaves
and is the 'peduncle'. One or more secondary stems,
called 'tillers', may grow from the main stem of the
plant. Single poppy plants in Southeast Asia often
have one or more tillers.
As the plant grows tall, the main stem and each
tiller terminates in a flower bud. During the
development of the bud, the peduncle portion of the
stem elongates and forms a distinctive 'hook' which
causes the bud to be turned upside down. As the flower
develops, the peduncle straightens and the buds point
upward. A day or two after the buds first point
upward, the two outer segments of the bud, called
'sepals,' fall away, exposing the flower petals.
Opium poppies generally flower after about ninety
days of growth and continue to flower for two to three
weeks. The exposed flower blossom is at first crushed
and crinkled, but the petals soon expand and become
smooth in the sun. Opium poppy flowers have four
petals. The petals may be single or double and may be
white, pink, reddish purple, crimson red, or
variegated. The petals last for two to four days and
then drop to reveal a small, round, green fruit which
continues to develop. These fruits or pods (also
called 'seedpods', 'capsules,' 'bulbs,' or 'poppy
heads') are either oblate, elongated, or globular and
mature to about the size of a chicken egg. The
oblate-shaped pods are more common in Southeast Asia.
The main stem of a fully-matured P. somniferum
plant can range between two to five feet in height.
The green leaves are oblong, toothed and lobed and are
between four to fifteen inches in diameter at
maturity. The mature leaves have no commercial value
except for use as animal fodder.
Only the pod portion of the plant can produce opium
alkaloids. The skin of the poppy pod encloses the wall
of the pod ovary. The ovary wall consists of an outer,
middle, and inner layer. The plant's latex (opium) is
produced within the ovary wall and drains into the
middle layer through a system of vessels and tubes
within the pod. The cells of the middle layer secrete
more than 95 percent of the opium when the pod is
scored and harvested.
Cultivators in Mainland Southeast Asia tap the
opium from each pod while it remains on the plant.
After the opium is scraped, the pods are cut from the
stem and allowed to dry. Once dry, the pods are cut
open and the seeds are removed and dried in the sun
before storing for the following year's planting. An
alternative method of collecting planting seeds is to
collect them from intentionally unscored pods, because
scoring may diminish the quality of the seeds. Aside
from being used as planting seed, the poppy seeds may
also be used in cooking and in the manufacture of
paints and perfumes. Poppy seed oil is straw-yellow in
color, odorless, and has a pleasant, almond-like
taste. The opium poppy grows best in temperate, warm
climates with low humidity. It requires only a
moderate amount of water before and during the early
stages of growth. In addition, it is a 'long day'
photo-responsive plant. As such, it requires long days
and short nights before it will develop flowers. The
opium poppy plant can be grown in a variety of soils;
clay, sandy loam, sandy, and sandy clay, but it
responds best to sandy loam soil. This type of soil
has good moisture-retentive and nutrient-retentive
properties, is easily cultivated, and has a favorable
structure for root development. Clay soil types are
hard and difficult to pulverize into a good soil
texture. The roots of a young poppy plant cannot
readily penetrate clay soils, and growth is inhibited.
Sandy soil, by contrast, does not retain sufficient
water or nutrients for proper growth of the plant.
Excessive moisture or extremely arid conditions
will adversely affect the poppy plant's growth and
reduce the alkaloid content. Poppy plants can become
waterlogged and die after a heavy rainfall in poorly
drained soil. Heavy rainfall in the second and third
months of growth can leach alkaloids from the plant
and spoil the opium harvest. Dull, rainy, or cloudy
weather during this critical growth period may reduce
both the quantity and the quality of the alkaloid
content.
Opium poppies were widely grown as an ornamental
plant and for seeds in the United States until the
possession of this plant was declared illegal in the
Opium Poppy Control Act of 1942. New generations of
plants from the self-sown seed of these original
poppies can still be seen in many old ornamental
gardens.
The major legal opium poppy growing areas in the
world today are in govemment-regulated opium farms in
lndia, Turkey and Tasmania, Australia. The major
illegal growing areas are in the highlands of Mainland
Southeast Asia, specifically Burma (Myanmar), Laos,
and Thailand, as well as the adjacent areas of
southern China and northwestern Vietnam. The area is
known as the 'Golden Triangle'. In Southwest Asia,
opium poppies are grown in Pakistan, Iran, and
Afghanistan. Opium poppy is also grown in Lebanon,
Guatemala, Colombia and Mexico.
The highlands of Mainland Southeast Asia, at
elevations of 800 meters or more above sea level, are
prime poppy growing areas. Generally speaking, these
poppy-farming areas do not require irrigation,
fertilizer, or insecticides for successful opium
yields.
Most of the opium poppies of Southeast Asia are
grown in Burma (Myamnar), specifically in the Wa and
Kokang areas which are in the northeastern quadrant of
the Shan State of Burma. Laos is the second-largest
illicit opium-producing country in Southeast Asia and
third-largest in the world.
In Laos, poppy is cultivated extensively in
Houaphan and Xiangkhoang Provinces, as well as the six
other northern provinces: Bokeo, Louangnamtha,
Louangphabang, Oudomxai, Phongsali and Xaignabouli.
Poppy is also grown in many of the remote, mountainous
areas of northern Thailand, particularly in Chiang
Mai, Chiang Rai, Mae Hong Son, Nan and Tak Provinces.
In China, opium poppies are cultivated by ethnic
minority groups in the mountainous frontier regions of
Yunnan Province, particularly along the border area
with Burma's Kachin and Shan States. Son La Province,
situated between China and Laos, is a major opium
poppy cultivation area in Vietnam, as are Lai Chau and
Nghe An Provinces.
It is noteworthy that the dominant ethnic groups of
Mainland Southeast Asia are not poppy cultivators. The
Burmans and Shan of Burma, the Lao of Laos, the Thai
of Thailand, the Han Chinese of Yunnan, China, and the
Vietnamese of Vietnam are lowlanders and do not
traditionally cultivate opium poppies. Rather, it is
the ethnic minority highlander groups, such as the Wa,
Pa-0, Palaung, Lahu, Lisu, Hmong, and Akha who grow
poppies in the highlands of the countries of Southeast
Asia.
A typical nuclear family of Mainland Southeast
Asian highlanders ranges between five and ten persons,
including two to five adults. An average household of
poppy farmers can cultivate and harvest about one acre
of opium poppy per year. Most of the better fields can
support opium poppy cultivation for ten years or more
without fertilization, irrigation, or insecticides,
before the soil is depleted and new fields must be
cleared. In choosing a field to grow opium poppy, soil
quality and acidity are critical factors and
experienced poppy farmers choose their fields
carefully. In Southeast Asia, westerly orientations
are typically preferred to optimize sun exposure. Most
fields are on mountain slopes at elevations of 1,000
meters (3,000 feet) or more above sea level. Slope
gradients of 20 degrees to 40 degrees are considered
best for drainage of rain water.
In Mainland Southeast Asia, virgin land is prepared
by cutting and piling all brush, vines and small trees
in the field during March, at the end of the dry
season. After allowing the brush to dry in the hot sun
for several days, the field is set afire. This method,
called 'slash-and burn' or 'swidden' agriculture, is
commonly practiced by dry field farmers - both
highland and lowland - throughout Mainland Southeast
Asia in order to ready the land for a variety of field
crops. The slash-and-burn method is also used to clear
fields for poppy cultivation. Before the rainy season
in April, fields by the hundreds of thousands all over
the region are set ablaze. A fog-like yellow haze
hangs over the area for weeks, reducing visibility for
hundreds of miles. In the mountains, the dense haze
blocks out the sun and stings the eyes.
A typical highlander family will plant an area of
two or three rai in opium poppy (2.53 rai is
equivalent to one acre). In August or September,
toward the end of the rainy season, highland farmers
in Southeast Asia prepare fields selected for opium
poppy planting. By this time, the ash resulting from
the burn-off of the previous dry season has settled
into the soil, providing additional nutrients,
especially potash. The soil is turned with
long-handled hoes after it is softened by the rains.
The farmers then break up the large clumps of soil.
Weeds and stones are tossed aside and the ground is
leveled off.
Traditionally, most highland and upland farmers in
Southeast Asia do not use fertilizer for any of their
crops, including the opium poppy, but in recent years
opium poppy farmers have started using both natural
and chemical fertilizers to increase opium poppy
yields. Chicken manure, human feces or the regions'
abundant bat droppings are often mixed into the
planting soil before the opium poppy seed is planted.
The planting must be completed by the end of
October in order to take advantage of the region's
'long days' in November and December.
The opium poppy seed can be sown several ways:
broadcast (tossed by hand); or fix-dropped by hand
into shallow holes dug with a metal-tipped dibble
stick. About one pound of opium poppy seed is needed
to sow one acre of land. The seeds may be white,
yellow, coffee-color, gray, black, or blue. Seed color
is not related to the color of the flower petals.
Beans, cabbages, cotton, parsley, spinach, squash and
tobacco are crops typically planted with the opium
poppy. These crops neither help nor hinder the
cultivation of the opium poppy, but are planted for
personal consumption or as a cash crop.
In the highlands of Southeast Asia, it is a common
practice to plant maize and opium poppies in the same
fields each year. The maize keeps down excessive weeds
and provides feed for the farmer's pigs and ponies. It
is grown from April to August. After harvesting the
maize, and with the stalks still standing in the
fields, the ground is weeded and pulverized. Just
before the end of the rainy season, in successive
sowings throughout September and October, the poppy
seed is broadcast among the maize stalks. These stalks
can protect young opium poppy plants from heavy rains.
The opium poppy plants form leaves in the first
growth stage, called the 'cabbage' or 'lettuce' stage.
After a month of growth, when the opium poppy is about
a foot high, some of the plants are removed (called
'thinning') to allow the other plants more room to
grow. The ideal spacing between plants is believed to
be 20 to 40 centimeters, or about eight to twelve
plants per square meter, although some researchers in
northern Thailand have reported as many as 18 plants
per square meter.
During the first two months, the opium poppies may
be damaged or stunted by nature through the lack of
adequate sunshine, excessive rainfall, insects, worms,
hail storms, early frost, or trampling by animals. The
third month of growth does not require as much care as
the first two months. Three to four months after
planting, from late December to early February, the
opium poppies are in full bloom. Mature plants range
between three to five feet in height. Most opium poppy
varieties in Southeast Asia produce three to five
mature pods per plant. A typical opium poppy field has
60,000 to 120,000 poppy plants per hectare, with a
range of 120,000 to 275,000 opium-producing pods. The
actual opium yield will depend largely on weather
conditions and the precautions taken by individual
farmers to safeguard the crop. The farmer and his
family generally move into the field for the final two
weeks, setting up a small field hut on the edge of the
opium poppy field.
The scoring of the pods (also called 'lancing,'
'incising,' or 'tapping') begins about two weeks after
the flower petals fall from the pods. The farmer
examines the pod and the tiny crown portion on the top
of the pod very carefully before scoring.
The grayish-green pod will become a dark green
color as it matures and it will swell in size. If the
points of the pod's crown are standing straight out or
are curved upward, the pod is ready to be scored. If
the crown's points turn downward, the pod is not yet
fully matured. Not all the plants in a field will be
ready for scoring at the same time and each pod can be
tapped more than once.
A set of three or four small blades of iron, glass,
or glass splinters bound tightly together on a wooden
handle is used to score two or three sides of the pod
in a vertical direction. If the blades cut too deep
into the wall of the pod, the opium will flow too
quickly and will drip to the ground. If the incisions
are too shallow, the flow will be too slow and the
opium will harden in the pods. A depth of about one
millimeter is desired for the incision.
Using a blade-tool designed to cut to that depth,
scoring ideally starts in late afternoon so the white
raw opium latex can ooze out and slowly coagulate on
the surface of the pod overnight. If the scoring
begins too early in the afternoon, the sun will cause
the opium to coagulate over the incision and block the
flow. Raw opium oxidizes, darkens and thickens in the
cool night air. Early the next morning, the opium gum
is scraped from the surface of the pods with a
short-handled, flat, iron blade three to four inches
wide.
Opium harvesters work their way backwards across
the field scoring the lower, mature pods before the
taller pods, in order to avoid brushing up against the
sticky pods. The pods continue to produce opium for
several days. Farmers will return to these plants -
sometimes up to five or six times - to gather
additional opium until the pod is totally depleted.
The opium is collected in a container which hangs from
the farmer's neck or waist.
The opium yield from a single pod varies greatly,
ranging from 10 to 100 milligrams of opium per pod.
The average yield per pod is about 80 milligrams. The
dried opium weight yield per hectare of poppies ranges
from eight to fifteen kilograms.
As the farmers gather the opium, they will commonly
tag the larger or more productive pods with colored
string or yarn. These pods will later be cut from
their stems, cut open, dried in the sun and their
seeds used for the following year's planting.
The wet opium gum collected from the pods contains
a relatively high percentage of water and needs to be
dried for several days. High-quality raw opium will be
brown (rather than black) in color and will retain its
sticky texture. Experienced opium traders can quickly
determine if the opium has been adulterated with tree
sap, sand, or other such materials. Raw opium in
Burma, Laos and Thailand is usually sun-dried, weighed
in a standard 1.6 kilogram quantity (called a 'viss'
in Burma; a 'choi' in Laos and Thailand), wrapped in
banana leaf or plastic and then stored until ready to
sell, trade, or smoke. While opium smoking is common
among most adult opium poppy farmers, heavy addiction
is generally limited to the older, male farmers. The
average yearly consumption of cooked opium per smoker
is estimated to be 1.6 kilograms.
A typical opium poppy farmer household in Southeast
Asia will collect 2 to 5 choi or viss (3 to 9
kilograms) of opium from a year's harvest of a
one-acre field. That opium will be dried, wrapped and
stacked on a shelf by February or March. If the opium
has been properly dried, it can be stored
indefinitely. Excessive moisture and heat can cause
the opium to deteriorate but, once dried, opium is
relatively stable. In fact, as opium dries and becomes
less pliable, its value increases due to the decrease
in water weight per kilogram.
Before opium is smoked, it is usually 'cooked'.
Uncooked opium contains moisture, as well as soil,
leaves, twigs, and other impurities which diminish the
quality of the final product. The raw opium collected
from the opium poppy pods is placed in an open cooking
pot of boiling water where the sticky globs of opium
alkaloids quickly dissolve. Soil, twigs, plant
scrapings, etc., remain undissolved. The solution is
then strained through cheesecloth to remove these
impurities. The clear brown liquid that remains is
opium in solution, sometimes called 'liquid opium'.
This liquid is then re-heated over a low flame until
the water is driven off into the air as steam leaving
a thick dark brown paste. This paste is called
'prepared', 'cooked', or 'smoking' opium. It is dried
in the sun until it has a putty-like consistency. The
net weight of the cooked opium is generally only
eighty percent that of the original raw opium. Thus,
cooked opium is more pure than its original, raw form,
and has a higher monetary value.
Cooked opium is suitable for smoking or eating by
opium users. Traditionally there is only one group of
opium poppy farmers, the Hmong, who prefer not to cook
their opium before smoking. Most other ethnic groups,
including Chinese opium addicts, prefer smoking cooked
opium. If the opium is to be sold to traders for use
in morphine or heroin laboratories, it is not
necessary to cook it first. The laboratory operators
generally use 55-gallon oil drums or huge cooking vats
to dissolve the raw opium before beginning the
morphine extraction process.
Raw or cooked opium contains more than thirty-five
different alkaloids, including morphine, which
accounts for approximately ten percent of the total
raw opium weight. Heroin manufacturers must first
extract the morphine from the opium before converting
the morphine to heroin. The extraction is a simple
process, requiring only a few chemicals and a supply
of water. Since the morphine base is about one-tenth
the weight and volume of raw opium, it is desirable to
reduce the opium to morphine before transporting the
product any great distance. Morphine is sometimes
extracted from opium in small clandestine
'laboratories' which may be set up near the opium
poppy fields.
The process of extracting morphine from opium
involves dissolving opium in hot water, adding lime to
precipitate the non-morphine alkaloids and then adding
ammonium chloride to precipitate the morphine from the
solution. An empty oil drum and some cooking pots are
all that is needed.
The following is a step-by-step description of
morphine extraction in a typical Southeast Asian
laboratory:
- An empty 55-gallon oil drum is
placed on bricks about a foot above the ground and a
fire is built under the drum. Thirty gallons of
water are added to the drum and brought to a boil.
Ten to fifteen kilograms of raw opium are added to
the boiling water.
- With stirring, the raw opium
eventually dissolves in the boiling water, while
soil, leaves, twigs, and other non-soluble materials
float in the solution. Most of these materials are
scooped out of the clear brown 'liquid opium'
solution.
- Slaked lime (calcium
hydroxide), or more often a readily available
chemical fertilizer with a high content of lime, is
added to the solution. The lime converts the water
insoluble morphine into the water soluble calcium
morphenate. The other opium alkaloids do not react
with the lime to form soluble calcium salts. Codeine
is slightly water soluble and gets carried over with
the calcium morphenate in the liquid. For the most
part, the other alkaloids become part of the
residual sediment 'sludge' that comes to rest on the
bottom of the oil drum.
- As the solution cools, and
after the insolubles precipitate out, the morphine
solution is scooped from the drum and poured through
a filter of some kind. Burlap rice sacks are often
used as filters. They are later squeezed in a press
to remove most of the solution from the wet sacks.
The solution is then poured into large cooking pots
and re-heated, but not boiled.
- Ammonium chloride is added to
the heated calcium morphenate solution to adjust the
alkalinity to a pH of 8 to 9, and the solution is
then allowed to cool. Within one or two hours, the
morphine base and the unextracted codeine base
precipitate out of the solution and settle to the
bottom of the cooking pot.
- The solution is then poured
off through cloth filters. Any solid morphine base
chunks in the solution will remain on the cloth. The
morphine base is removed from both the cooking pot
and from the filter cloths, wrapped and squeezed in
cloth, and then dried in the sun. When dry, the
crude morphine base is a coffee-colored powder.
- This 'crude' morphine base,
commonly known by the Chinese term p'i-tzu
throughout Southeast Asia, may be further purified
by dissolving it in hydrochloric acid, adding
activated charcoal, re-heating and re-filtering. The
solution is filtered several more times, and the
morphine (morphine hydrochloride) is then dried in
the sun.
- Morphine hydrochloride (still
tainted with codeine hydrochloride) is usually
formed into small brick-sized blocks in a press and
wrapped in paper or cloth. The most common block
size is 2 inches by 4 inches by 5 inches weighing
about 1.3 kilograms (3 lbs). The bricks are then
dried for transport to heroin processing
laboratories.
Approximately 13 kilograms of opium, from one
hectare of opium poppies, are needed to produce each
morphine block of this size. The morphine blocks are
bundled and packed for transport to heroin
laboratories by human couriers or by pack animals.
Pack mules are able to carry 100-kilogram payloads
over 200 miles of rugged mountain trails in less than
three weeks.
The conversion of morphine hydrochloride to heroin
base is a relatively simple and inexpensive procedure.
The necessary chemicals are readily available
industrial chemicals. The equipment is very basic and
quite portable. Heroin conversion laboratories are
generally located in isolated, rural areas due to the
telltale odors of the lab's chemicals. Acetic
anhydride, in particular, is a key chemical with the
easily identified very pungent odor of pickles.
Heroin synthesis is a two-step process which
generally requires twelve to fourteen hours to
complete. Heroin base is the intermediate product.
Typically, morphine hydrochloride bricks are
pulverized and the dried powder is then placed in an
enamel or stainless steel rice cooking pot. The liquid
acetic anhydride is then added. The pot lid is tied or
clamped on, with a damp towel used for a gasket. The
pot is carefully heated for about two hours, below
boiling, at a constant temperature of 185 degrees
Fahrenheit. It is never allowed to boil or to become
so hot as to vent fumes. It is agitated by tilting and
swirling until all of the morphine has dissolved.
Acetic anhydride reacts with the morphine to form
diacetylmorphine (heroin). This acetylation process
will work either with morphine hydrochloride or
p'i-tzu (crude morphine base).
When cooking is completed, the pot is cooled and
opened. The morphine and the acetic anhydride have now
become chemically bonded, creating an impure form of
diacetylmorphine (heroin). Water is added at three
times the volume of acetic anhydride and the mixture
is stirred. Activated charcoal is added and mixed by
stirring and the mixture is then filtered to remove
colored impurities. Solids remaining on the filter are
discarded. Sodium carbonate, used at 2.5 pounds per
pound of morphine, is dissolved in hot water and added
slowly to the liquid until effervescence stops. This
precipitates the heroin base which is then filtered
and dried by heating in a steam bath for an hour. For
each pound of morphine, about 11 ounces of crude
heroin base is formed. The heroin base may be dried,
packed and transported to a heroin refining laboratory
or it may be purified further and/or converted to
heroin hydrochloride, a water-soluble salt form of
heroin, at the same site.
Southeast Asian heroin base is an intermediate
product which can be further converted to either a
smoking form (Heroin No. 3) or an injectable form
(Heroin No. 4).
(Smoking Heroin, heroin
hydrochloride)
To make heroin No. 3, the crude base is mixed with
hydrochloric acid resulting in heroin hydrochloride.
Adulterants including caffeine are added after this
conversion. For each kilogram of crude heroin base
about one kilogram of caffeine is used. Various
'flavorings' such as quinine hydrochloride or
strychnine hydrochloride may be added in 7 gram or 14
gram increments. Next, the wet paste mix is stirred to
dryness over the steam bath. The resulting dry Heroin
No. 3 will be in the form of coarse lumps. These are
crushed and passed through a #8 to #10 mesh sieve, and
the grains (pieces) are then packaged for sale. The
entire process takes about eight hours and requires
only minimal skill. While extra attention to stirring
is required to assure dryness, one man can prepare a
one-kilogram block of Heroin No. 3 during this time.
(Injectable Heroin)
To the heroin base mixture in the pot, water is
added at three times the volume of acetic anydride and
mixed by stirring. A small amount of chloroform is
added. The mixture is stirred and then allowed to
stand for twenty minutes. Doing so precipitates
highly-colored impurities and a red, greasy liquid.
The water layer is carefully poured off and saved in a
clean pot, leaving the red grease in the pot. In a
clean pot, activated charcoal is stirred into the
aqueous solution and is filtered to remove solid
impurities. The decolorizing effects of the charcoal,
combined with the chloroform treatment, will leave a
light yellow solution. The use of charcoal is repeated
one or more times, until the solution is colorless.
Approximately 1.1 kilograms of sodium carbonate per
0.5 kilogram of morphine is dissolved in hot water and
added slowly to the mixture until the effervescence
stops. This precipitates the heroin base which is then
filtered and dried by heating on a steam bath. The
heroin base is heated until dryness is complete, an
imperative for the preparation of Heroin No.4. The
powder should be very white at this stage. If not
white, the base is redissolved in diluted acid,
treated repeatedly with activated charcoal,
reprecipitated and dried. The ultimate purity and
color of the resulting heroin hydrochloride depends
largely on the quality of the heroin base.
The following optional steps are sometimes taken by
skilled heroin chemists to increase quality.
For each pound of heroin base 1,100 milliliters of
ethyl alcohol is heated to boiling. The heroin base is
added and stirred until completely dissolved. The
heated solution is then quickly filtered through a
Büchner funnel that has been preheated and poured into
a heated flask. This hot filtration removes the traces
of sodium carbonate that remained in the base. The
solution is quickly cooled in an ice bath, where it
becomes very thick; like ice cream. The substance is
put into a pan and set in a large refrigerator. A fan
is set to blow across the pan to cause slow
evaporation of the alcohol while the paste
crystallizes. After several hours, it is
vacuum-filtered. The filtrate, pure ethyl alcohol, is
re-used. The solid material, 'alcohol morphine base',
is actually recrystallized heroin base.
The heroin product, either heroin base or
recrystallized heroin base, is weighed. For each pound
of solid product, 3,000 milliliters of ethyl alcohol,
3,000 milliliters of ether, and 102 milliliters of
concentrated hydrochloric acid are measured out. The
solid is dissolved by heating with one-third of the
alcohol and one-half of the acid. Another one-third of
the acid is added and mixed by stirring. Next, acid is
added slowly, drop by drop, until the product is
completely converted to the hydrochloride. Two methods
of testing this end product may be used. Either a drop
of solution evaporates on a clean glass plate, leaving
no trace of cloudiness in the residue, or a drop of
the solution placed on Congo red paper causes the
paper to turn blue.
Once the acid is added, the remaining alcohol is
stirred in. Half of the ether is then added with
stirring and the mixture is allowed to stand for
fifteen minutes. It must be examined with great care
since it is extremely volatile and flammable. Once the
first small crystals are detected, the remaining ether
is added at once. The vessel is stirred, covered and
allowed to stand for twenty minutes to one hour. The
mixture becomes nearly solid after an hour. At this
point, it is filtered and the solids are collected on
clean filter paper. The paper is wrapped around the
crystals and placed on wooden trays, usually over lime
rock, to dry. When the crystals of pure heroin
hydrochloride are dry, they are packaged. Batches of 5
to 10 kilograms are commonly made at one time, the
largest batch being an estimated 20 kilograms.
Chemicals used to isolate morphine from opium
include ammonium chloride, calcium carbonate
(limestone), and calcium hydroxide (slaked lime). The
precursor chemical normally used in the conversion of
morphine to heroin is acetic anhydride. Chemical
reagents used in the conversion process include sodium
carbonate and activated charcoal. Chemical solvents
needed are chloroform, ethyl alcohol (ethanol), ethyl
ether and acetone. Other chemicals may be substituted
for these preferred chemicals, but most or all of
these preferred chemicals are readily available
through smugglers and suppliers.
Necessary laboratory equipment includes measuring
cups, funnels, filter paper, litmus paper and a
stainless steel pot. Only the most sophisticated
heroin labs use glass flasks, propane gas ovens,
Bunsen burners, vacuum pumps, autoclaves, electric
blenders, venting hoods, centrifuges, reflux
condensers, electric drying ovens and elaborate
exhaust systems. Portable, gasoline-powered generators
are often used at clandestine heroin conversion
laboratories used to power various electrical devices.
Corrections to the text by
Jim Hogshire:
Common Misconception Numero Uno appears in Pakker's
history of opium. It is the dreaded "soldier's
disease"...
He says:
In the 1860s morphine was used
extensively pre- and post-operatively as a painkiller
for wounded soldiers during the Civil War...The
inevitable result was opium addiction, called the
'army disease' or the 'soldier's disease'.
This is an example of anti-drug propaganda which
sounds so damned possible few ever question it.
And it has worked well for the Drug Warriors from the
beginning, which was just a few years before the
Harrison act was passed. In fact, this yarn was
invented to portray opium and morphine as so powerful
and so addicting that it could take over the soul of
anyone, even against their will.
But on Cliff Schaeffer's Site there is an essay
about "soldier's disease" that does question the story
and, lo and behold, it's not true!
No doubt, opium was used very extensively in during
the Civil War, and before and after it, too. But there
is just no documentation of any mass addiction and the
phrase "soldier's disease" or its variants didn't
appear for something like 40 years after the war.
I think the essay is called "The Mythical Roots of
US drug policy."
Another slight error I think is worth correcting is
what Pakker says about the Harrison Act:
"In December 1914, the United
States Congress passed the Harrison Narcotics Act
which called for control of each phase of the
preparation and distribution of medicinal opium,
morphine, heroin, cocaine, and any new derivative that
could be shown to have similar properties. It made
illegal the possession of these controlled
substances."
The Harrison Act wasn't that bad. It did not
outlaw heroin, for instance. That didn't happen until
1923. And it didn't make possession of opium, opiates
or cocaine illegal but pretended to be a tax measure
only. The first time it was challenged, in 1916, the
Supreme Court knocked it down in a 7-3 vote. Writing
for the majority Justice O.W. Holmes acted outraged
that the government would try to make criminals out of
the majority of American citizens who all had some
form of opium in their homes. If Congess were trying
to legislate morals by this law with its "coating of
constitutionality" coming from its supposed power to
tax, they had another think coming.
What's kind of scarey is that in 1919, the Supreme
court heard two other cases in which the law was
upheld. Between 1916 and 1919 some of the judges had
changed but it still wouldn't account for the 5-4 vote
in favor of the government and (very strangely)
overturning its own opinion so quickly -- something
the Supremes just hate to do.
But, looking at the rosters it becomes apparent
that Holmes changed his mind. I have still not
completely verified this, but it sure looks like it. I
can't figure out why in the hell he would do this,
though.
As for the part about "any new derivative" with
similar properties, etc. is also not correct. That
really didn't happen until 1986 with the Analog
Substances Act.
Earlier versions of the "Harrison Act" outlawed
caffeine, too. So I guess we can count ourselves
lucky.
Btw, the poppy plant itself was outlawed in 1943 by
the "Poppy Control Act" and then it was "repealed" in
1972 when the congress jerks realized the new
Controlled Substances Act was sufficient to make them
illegal.
And Pakker is right about what's illegal. Papaver
somniferum is illegal. Every pat of the plant is
illegal *except the seeds*. As soon as the seed
sprouts, it seems to me, the thing is illegal.
Do not, repeat, do not, believe in Harper's author
and human jackal Michael Pollan's carefully
constructed "innocent gardene" defense because it will
not work in front of a real-life judge. With all
drugs, "mens rea" or "bad intent" is supposed.
OK, I gotta go now. Till later,
Jim
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