I would be interested to hear your opinion of how regulatory discretion plays into all of this. In loose terms, regulatory discretion is a practice
sometimes engaged in by the federal agencies wherein they ignore the strict letter of the law for the greater good, typically when the harm done by
the violation of the law is minor or non-existent and there is no intent to violate the law. Believe it or not, sometimes the regulators just show
good judgement, especially when pursuing a violation is just not worth their effort.
In other words, unless it's a very slow day the DEA has better things to do than go after amateur chemists for no good reason. I think that is the
reason that many of us order questionable supplies in small amounts all the time, get reported by the supplier, but generally do not hear the dreaded
Knock On The Door. |