NM-2201 is specifically banned in Sweden,[8] Germany (Anlage II),[9] and Japan[10] but is also controlled in many other jurisdictions under analogue laws.
On May 30, 2018 the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice published a notice of intent to place NM-2201 and 4 other synthetic cannabinoids in schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act. This notice went into effect on June 29, 2018.[11]
Use
NM-2201 was linked to an incident in December 2015 where 25-30 people in Ocala, FL were taken to hospitals after experiencing seizures.[11]
^Pulver B, Fischmann S, Gallegos A, Christie R (March 2023). "EMCDDA framework and practical guidance for naming synthetic cannabinoids". Drug Testing and Analysis. 15 (3): 255–276. doi:10.1002/dta.3403. PMID36346325.
^Kondrasenko AA, Goncharov EV, Dugaev KP, Rubaylo AI (December 2015). "CBL-2201. Report on a new designer drug: Napht-1-yl 1-(5-fluoropentyl)-1H-indole-3-carboxylate". Forensic Science International. 257: 209–213. doi:10.1016/j.forsciint.2015.08.023. PMID26386336.
^"NM-2201". Cayman Chemical. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
^Shevyrin V, Melkozerov V, Nevero A, Eltsov O, Baranovsky A, Shafran Y (November 2014). "Synthetic cannabinoids as designer drugs: new representatives of indol-3-carboxylates series and indazole-3-carboxylates as novel group of cannabinoids. Identification and analytical data". Forensic Science International. 244: 263–75. doi:10.1016/j.forsciint.2014.09.013. PMID25305529.