Judges: STEVE CLARK, Attorney General
Filed Date: 8/27/1987
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Mr. James T. Clark Executive Director Arkansas State Crime Laboratory P. O. Box 5274 Little Rock, Arkansas 72215
Dear Mr. Clark:
This is in response to your request for an opinion regarding Ark. Stat. Ann. 82-2617 (Cum. Supp. 1985). You have asked the following specific question:
Should the weights in Section (d) of Arkansas Statute 82-2617 be regarded to include adulterants and diluents or to be pure drug weights?
It is my opinion that the weights set forth in 82-2617(d) must be regarded as pure drug weights. The Arkansas Supreme Court considered this question in 1977 in the case of Dixon v. State,
We must conclude from the statute as a whole that the reference is to pure heroin. In several instances the statute refers to any material, compound, mixture, or preparation that contains ``any quantity' of specified prohibited substances (or uses similar language). . . . On the other hand, the rebuttable presumption of an intent to deliver heroin arises only from the possession of more than 100 milligrams of "heroin." Inasmuch as the draftmen of this Uniform Act took pains to prohibit traffic in many specified drugs in an adulterated form, we must infer that the omission of similar language with reference to heroin was deliberately selected to exclude such adulterations.
260 Ark. at 860-861 .
This case has been neither modified nor overruled. It is well-established that the legislature is presumed in enacting a statute to have had in mind the judicial construction of former statutes on the subject; and it will be assumed that the legislation was enacted in light of this construction. Trullinger v. Rosenblum,
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker.