home

Warning : Plagiarism Laws Are Surpassed

(This is a Web Site - Alpha testing site)(01-22-2021)

We at H.D.J. lab services specialize in many fields we operate threw diligence and guidance.

We practice ethics where we succeed and where that others succeed.

We believe in encouragement not discouragement that's our policy.

We help the world to continue to grow and get bigger.. (If we're doing it? It will be shown?)

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

Business line of constitution:

SCHEDULING AND WRITING BLUEPRINTS.

VISUAL-PROGRAMMING AND SPEECH PATHOLOGY

BRANDING AND ADVERTISING

SCHOOL POLICE CONTROL

BUSINESS ID CARD PRINTING

FINANCIAL REPRODUCTION

URINE SPECIFICATION

"LEXICOGRAPHING"

DEFENDING OF ALL LEGAL PROCEDURES

DRUG TEST,S.T.D.TEST,AND D.N.A. TEST

UPCOMING TRENDS

Criminal analysis divsion

Criminal Intelligence Analysis is divided into operational (or tactical) and strategic analysis. The basic skills required are similar, and the difference lies in the level of detail and the type of client to whom the products are aimed. Operational Analysis aims to achieve a specific law enforcement outcome.

This might be arrests, seizure or forfeiture of assets or money gained from criminal activities, or the disruption of a criminal group. Operational Analysis usually has a more immediate benefit. Strategic Analysis is intended to inform higher level decision making and the benefits are realised over the longer term.

It is usually aimed at managers and policy-makers rather than individual investigators. The intention is to provide early warning of threats and to support senior decision-makers in setting priorities to prepare their organizations to be able to deal with emerging criminal issues.

This might mean allocating resources to different areas of crime, increased training in a crime fighting technique, or taking steps to close a loophole in a process..

The Criminal Analysis Sub-directorate (CAS), part of the Specialized Crime and Analysis Directorate provides analytical support to units in the General Secretariat and on request to member countries.

CAS currently has 11 Criminal Intelligence Analysts based at the General Secretariat in Lyon, France, as well as 3 analysts based in Sub Regional Bureaus (currently Buenos Aires, San Salvador and LoBang).

The staff, a mix of both seconded officers and under-contract staff currently comprised of eleven nationalities, allow for the unit to draw on a wide range of experience, contacts and languages.

The unit currently provides three main Analytical services: Operational Analytical support, Strategic Analysis and Risk Assessments as well as Training and Consultancy in Analytical matters. The unit, working in close co-operation with the other Specialized Crime Units provides analytical support for INTERPOL 5 Priority crime areas working with member countries on specific assessments

<Read more...>

DAYTON OHIO H.D.J. LABS DRUG TEST DIVSION

H.D.J. LABOTORYS DRUG TEST;

DRUG TEST,S.T.D.TEST,AND D.N.A. TEST:

General information about drug testing in the USA Drug tests in the USA can be divided into two general groups, federally and non-federally regulated testing. Federally regulated testing started when Ronald Reagan enacted executive order 12564, requiring all federal employees refrain from using illegal substances in specified DOT regulated occupations.

Drug testing guidelines and processes, in these areas exclusively, are established and regulated (by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration or SAMHSA, formerly under the direction of the National Institute on Drug Abuse or NIDA) require that companies who use professional drivers, specified safety sensitive transportation and/or oil and gas related occupations, and certain federal employers, test them for the presence of certain drugs. These test classes were established decades ago, and include five specific drug groups. They do not account for current drug usage patterns. For example, SAMHSA / DOT tests exclude semi-synthetic opioids, such as oxycodone, oxymorphone, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, etc., and other prescription medications that are widely abused in the United States.

Cannabinoids (marijuana, hashish - tests for metabolite THCCOOH) Cocaine (cocaine, benzoylecognine, cocaethylene)- tests for cocaine metabolite) Amphetamines (amphetamine, methamphetamine) Opiates (heroin, opium, codeine, morphine, 6-MAM) Phencyclidine (PCP) Methadone (MTD) Barbiturates (BAR) Benzodiazepines (BZO) Tricyclic antidepressants (TCA) Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA or ecstasy) [1] While SAMHSA/NIDA guidelines only allow laboratories to report quantitative results for the "NIDA-5" on their official NIDA tests, many drug testing laboratories and on-site tests also offer a wider or "more appropriate" set of drug screens which may be more reflective of current drug use patterns.

As noted above, these tests include synthetic pain killers such as Oxycodone (Oxycontin, Percoset), Oxymorphone, Hydrocodone (Vicodin), Hydromorphone, benzodiazepines (Valium, Xanax, Klonopin, Restoril) and barbiturates in other drug panels (a "panel" is a predetermined list of tests to run).

The confirmation test (usually GC/MS, or LC/MS/MS) can tell the difference between chemically similar drugs such as methamphetamine and methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA or ecstasy), and in the absence of detectable amounts of methamphetamine in the sample, the lab will either report the sample as negative or report it as positive for MDMA. What the lab reports to the client depends upon whether MDMA was included in the panel as something to be tested for. Gamma

<Read more...>