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Jalruza
Boot Lover


Registered: 10/09/04
Posts: 1,985
Last seen: 15 years, 7 months
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Writing a scientific publication / book about drugs
#5953107 - 08/11/06 06:07 AM (17 years, 5 months ago) |
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I was just wondering whats the laws around this at the moment?
The last time i remember reading a book where the author was tip toeing around using drugs for some purposes, he kept saying that "neither the athor nor publicher advices people to take illegal substances and we are not resposnible for your actions" or something like that
So can you write and publish a book with say, a guide on how to take certain substances in certain settings and simply say your not responsible for readers action?
I havent seen any books or guides published anywhere where the author would openly write about drug consuption.
Even Learys Psychedelic experience thres not a word there about taking drugs.
So can you write it or what? Or do you have to tip toe around it and say things "supposing if one was to take certain substances and do this that that, this would happen"?
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Lily_Morgan
I'm #1 !!

Registered: 07/05/06
Posts: 437
Loc: Eastern Shore
Last seen: 16 years, 3 months
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Re: Writing a scientific publication / book about drugs [Re: Jalruza]
#5953111 - 08/11/06 06:14 AM (17 years, 5 months ago) |
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You really do have to tip toe around it, but mostly for legal reasons.
For example, if one were to take drugs based on statements made in your publication and seriously fuck him/herself up, and you HADN'T put in that specific disclaimer in your book stating that you were NOT responsible for the readers actions...they could sue the ever living hell out of you.
An editor/publisher/lawyer would tell you the same thing.
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Seuss
Error: divide byzero


Registered: 04/27/01
Posts: 23,480
Loc: Caribbean
Last seen: 2 months, 20 days
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Re: Writing a scientific publication / book about drugs [Re: Jalruza]
#5953121 - 08/11/06 06:23 AM (17 years, 5 months ago) |
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Read this... it is a bit different, but not really...
http://www.freedomforum.org/templates/document.asp?documentID=15793
Quote:
SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — The publisher of a technical manual for hit men settled a lawsuit filed by a woman who fought off a hired killer who used the book as a guide.
Bobby Joe Wilson sought at least $4.5 million in damages from Paladin Press of Boulder, Colo., in a lawsuit filed in federal court in Eugene in September 2000. The case was scheduled for trial next week.
The sides won't disclose terms as part of the settlement agreement, said Lloyd Berstein, a Portland lawyer representing Paladin.
Paladin Press publishes titles such as The Anarchist Cookbook, Be Your Own Undertaker: How to Dispose of a Dead Body and Silencers for Hand Firearms.
The lawsuit was the first to be filed after a similar lawsuit in Maryland triggered national concern that free-speech rights might erode as more people blame publishers and movie producers for crimes inspired by their work.
But Wilson's lawyer, Don Corson of Eugene, said yesterday that the lawsuit boiled down to whether the publisher conspired or aided and abetted in the crime against Wilson. The settlement reached Feb. 5 didn't require the publisher to curtail any of its book production or distribution, he said.
"This was not a case where First Amendment defenders were rising up. This kind of activity was not generally recognized as being protected by the First Amendment," Corson said.
The case began in 1998 while Wilson and her husband, Robert Leslie Goggin, 29, were getting a divorce. Goggin hired Robert Vaughn Jones, also 29, to murder his wife in exchange for $100,000 from her life insurance policy.
Goggin and Jones each were sentenced in 1999 to 17 1/2 years in prison for the attack.
In court, Jones testified that Goggin recruited him to kill Wilson. Jones said he then purchased Hit Man: A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors, published by Paladin Enterprises.
In her lawsuit, Wilson outlined two dozen points of advice from the book that Jones followed to the letter in planning to kill her.
The advice covered such points as disposing of evidence, creating a disguise, selecting weapons and avoiding conviction if caught, according to court records in the case.
A spokesman for Paladin Enterprises said company officials won't comment about whether Wilson's lawsuit caused them to alter their business practices.
In defending the Maryland lawsuit, Paladin lawyers had claimed Hit Man was intended for a broad audience of crime buffs and mystery writers. However, the company agreed in September 2000 to stop selling the book in a settlement of the Maryland lawsuit.
-------------------- Just another spore in the wind.
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