Study: Cocaine found on Spanish euros

Published: Aug. 2, 2008 at 3:03 PM

VALENCIA, Spain, Aug. 2 (UPI) -- Euros found in Spain had the largest cocaine traces among similar currency used in other European countries, a study has found.

University of Valencia Professor Miguel de la Guardia said his study, which was published in the Trends in Analytical Chemistry science journal, discovered that euros in Spain had cocaine traces five times higher than those located in Germany, the EU Observer reported Friday.

"Traces of the drug are found not only on notes that have been in direct contact with it, but on nearly all the notes in circulation," the Analytical Chemistry Department professor said.

The study came years after a 2006 study found that 94 percent of all Spanish banknotes contained some trace of the illegal drug, the Observer said.

The publication said 40 to 51 percent of British banknotes studied had traces of cocaine, while only 6 percent of francs used in Switzerland had sizable traces of the drug. Snopes.com says various studies of U.S. currency have produced varied results but that roughly four out of five bills are contaminated with cocaine.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Federer ends year at No. 1 (33 min)
Florida, Alabama again 1-2 in BCS poll (53 min)
UPI Thoroughbred Racing Roundup
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
NHL: San Jose 4, Vancouver 2
Modest Atlantic hurricane season ends
fark
Rockville Police shoot Jesus. Awwwwwkwaaaaaard
Store apologizes for suggesting that men should make their wives "feel special this Christmas" by...
"She wanted to get rid of a World War II hand grenade a relative had given her on Thanksgiving"
That sound you just heard was Mike Huckabee's political career going down in flames
Two dogs in Beijing diagnosed with swine flu, will be treated with soy sauce
Austrian government moves to ban Santa Claus, saying he is a foreign invader who threatens the racial...