Quote from: raven92 on April 14, 2012, 10:20 amPolice officers working undercover have exceptions from certain criminal laws. For instance, law enforcement officers directly engaged in the enforcement of controlled substance laws are exempt from laws surrounding the purchase, possession, sales or use of illegal substances.This means that there's no way to identify an undercover officer based on their willingness or refusal to use an illegal drug. Reverse stings are common in the enforcement of controlled substance laws. In a reverse sting operation, a police officer sells drugs that have previously been confiscated and then arrest the buyer.- 21 U.S.C. 885(d) of the U.S. Code.I used to work for a law firm and was told that fortunately here in England we have much stricter regulations concerning entrapment than in the US.As with everything though, it's important to put yourselves in the shoes of law enforcement and consider if it would be an effective use of resources to have to continually create sellers accounts on SR at $150 dollars every time just to send a junkie down for personal quantities of drugs.I don't deal with this aspect of SR but I have seen something of the war on drugs in real life and the sellers who use boats in the dead of night and sell on the street have tonnes of the stuff - we are simply a drop in the ocean by comparison.This is not to mention the fact it would be trivially easy for someone to arrange for delivery to an address other than their own which of course you should do for any kind of contraband.V.