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Incapacitating agent
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==Rape drugs== {{Main|Date rape drug}} A date rape drug, also called a predator drug, is any drug that can be used as incapacitating agent to assist in the execution of [[drug facilitated sexual assault]] (DFSA). The most common types of DFSA are those in which a victim ingested drugs willingly for recreational purposes, or had them administered surreptitiously:<ref name="Lyman 2006 70">{{cite book|last=Lyman|first=Michael D.|title=Practical drug enforcement|year=2006|publisher=CRC|location=Boca Raton, Fla.|isbn=978-0849398087|pages=70|edition=3rd}}</ref> it is the latter type of [[assault]] that the term "date rape drug" most often refers to. {{quote|"The findings by Du Mont and colleagues support the view that alcohol plays a major role in drug-facilitated sexual assault. Previously, Weir noted that cases of drug-facilitated sexual assault were frequently found to involve alcohol, marijuana or cocaine, and were less likely to involve drugs, such as flunitrazepam (Rohypnol) and gamma-hydroxybutyrate, that are commonly described as being used in this context. Similar findings have been reported by others, including Hall and colleagues, in a recent retrospective study from Northern Ireland".||{{cite journal |vauthors= Butler B, Welch J|date=3 March 2009|title= Drug-facilitated sexual assault|journal=Canadian Medical Association Journal|volume= 180|issue=5|pages= 493β4|doi=10.1503/cmaj.090006|pmid=19255067|pmc=2645469}}<ref>{{cite journal | pmc = 2645469 | pmid=19255067 | doi=10.1503/cmaj.090006 | volume=180 | issue=5 | title=Drug-facilitated sexual assault | year=2009 | journal=CMAJ | pages=493β4 | last1 = Butler | first1 = B | last2 = Welch | first2 = J}}</ref>}}
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