Top Oak Park, IL Drug Possession Lawyers Near You
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200 W. Madison Street, Suite 3500, Chicago, IL 60606-1567
1 North Wacker Drive, Suite 4400, Chicago, IL 60606
161 N Clark St, Suite 1600, Chicago, IL 60601
5310 N. Harlem Avenue, Suite 210, Chicago, IL 60656
35 East Wacker Dr, Suite 1980, Chicago, IL 60601
7115 S Virginia Rd, Suite 107, Crystal Lake, IL 60014
58 E. Clinton St., 5th Floor, 5th Floor, Joliet, IL 60432
110 N Upper Wacker Dr, 34th Floor, Chicago, IL 60606
20 South Clark Street, Suite 500, Chicago, IL 60603
650 N. Dearborn Street Suite 750, Chicago, IL 60654
825 Chicago Ave, Unit C-8, Evanston, IL 60202
211 W Wacker Dr, Ste 500, Chicago, IL 60606
203 N LaSalle St, Suite 2100, Chicago, IL 60601
1550 N Northwest Hwy, Suite 203, Park Ridge, IL 60068
415 N LaSalle Dr, Suite #300A, Chicago, IL 60654
235 North West Street, Waukegan, IL 60085
215 Romeo Rd, Suite 200, Romeoville, IL 60446
53 W Jackson Blvd, Suite 964, Chicago, IL 60604
71 S Wacker Dr, Suite 1860, Chicago, IL 60606
2325 Dean St, Suite 800F, St. Charles, IL 60175
1947 Barrington Ave, Bolingbrook, IL 60490
130 E Randolph St, Suite 3900, Chicago, IL 60601
1655 S. Blue Island Avenue, Chicago, IL 60608
53 West Jackson, Suite 1215, Chicago, IL 60604
180 N. LaSalle Street, Suite 3700, Chicago, IL 60601-2809
Oak Park Drug Possession Information
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Drug Possession
Drug possession is the illegal possession of a controlled substance. Essentially, to be convicted of a drug possession charge, you knowingly must have a controlled substance in your possession or within your proximity, like storing it in your vehicle. Drug possession can also include having a device used for the consumption of a controlled substance. This is a criminal offense under both Illinois state law as well as federal law.
Types of Drug Possession Charges
Sometimes drug possession is referred to as actual possession or “constructive” possession, meaning that an individual knowingly has access to and control of a controlled substance but it is not on the person. Some common ways for constructive possession occur is when a person knowingly stores an illegal controlled substance in their car or at their home. Possessing a smaller quantity of a controlled substance for personal use is commonly known as “simple possession.“
What Is A Controlled Substance?
Federal law as well as state law determines the severity of drug possession charges based on the type of drug and divides them into different “schedules.” Each schedule is based on the potential for dependency and abuse. This sliding scale of schedules starts with Schedule V drugs, having the lowest risk, and increases in severity up to Schedule I, posing the most severe risk.
- Schedule I: Heroin, ecstasy, lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), marijuana, peyote
- Schedule II: Methamphetamine, cocaine, morphine, methadone, phencyclidine (PCP), fentanyl
- Schedule III: Anabolic steroids, ketamine, barbiturates, testosterone, Tylenol with codeine
- Schedule IV: Valium, Xanax, Tramadol
- Schedule V: Other unlawfully obtained prescription drugs and cough medicines like Robitussin with codeine