GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 2013
SESSION LAW 2013-109
HOUSE BILL 813
AN ACT to make the manufacture, possession, sale, use, and delivery of all synthetic cannabinoids unlawful.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1. G.S. 90-94 reads as rewritten:
"§ 90-94. Schedule VI controlled substances.
This schedule includes the controlled substances listed or to be listed by whatever official name, common or usual name, chemical name, or trade name designated. In determining that such substance comes within this schedule, the Commission shall find: no currently accepted medical use in the United States, or a relatively low potential for abuse in terms of risk to public health and potential to produce psychic or physiological dependence liability based upon present medical knowledge, or a need for further and continuing study to develop scientific evidence of its pharmacological effects.
The following controlled substances are included in this schedule:
(1) Marijuana.
(2) Tetrahydrocannabinols.
(3)
Synthetic cannabinoids. - Any quantity of any synthetic chemical compound
that (i) is a cannabinoid receptor agonist and mimics the
pharmacological effect of naturally occurring substances or (ii) has a stimulant,
depressant, or hallucinogenic effect on the central nervous system Any
material, compound, mixture, or preparation that is not listed as a
controlled substance in Schedule I through V, and is not an FDA-approved
drug, drug. Synthetic cannabinoids include, but are not limited to,
the substances listed in sub-subdivisions a. through j. of this subdivision and
any substance that contains any quantity of the following substances,
their salts, isomers (whether optical, positional, or geometric), homologues,
and salts of isomers and homologues, unless specifically excepted, whenever the
existence of these salts, isomers, homologues, and salts of isomers and
homologues is possible within the specific chemical designation:designation.
The following substances are examples of synthetic cannabinoids and are not
intended to be inclusive of the substances included in this Schedule:
…
j. Tetramethylcyclopropanoylindoles. Any compound containing a 3-tetramethylcyclopropanoylindole structure with substitution at the nitrogen atom of the indole ring by an alkyl, haloalkyl, cyanoalkyl, alkenyl, cycloalkylmethyl, cycloalkylethyl, 1-(N-methyl-2-piperidinyl)methyl, 2-(4-morpholinyl)ethyl, 1-(N-methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl)methyl, 1-(N-methyl-3- morpholinyl)methyl, or tetrahydropyranylmethyl group, whether or not further substituted in the indole ring to any extent and whether or not substituted in the tetramethylcyclopropyl ring to any extent. Some trade name or other names: "XLR-11.""
SECTION 2. This act becomes effective July 1, 2013, and applies to offenses committed on or after that date. Prosecutions for offenses committed before the effective date of this act are not abated or affected by this act, and the statutes that would be applicable but for this act remain applicable to those prosecutions.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 5th day of June, 2013.
s/ Daniel J. Forest
President of the Senate
s/ Thom Tillis
Speaker of the House of Representatives
s/ Pat McCrory
Governor
Approved 4:30 p.m. this 12th day of June, 2013