Manufacturing a narcotic drug under ARS 13-3408 is a Class 2 felony — and one of the only drug offenses in Arizona that carries mandatory prison time regardless of the amount involved. If you’re facing this charge, you need a defense team that understands what’s at stake. Call 24/7.
Arizona treats narcotic drug manufacturing as one of the most serious drug offenses on the books. Unlike simple possession or even possession for sale, a conviction under ARS 13-3408(A)(4) triggers mandatory prison — no matter how small the quantity.
The statute also covers a companion offense: possessing equipment or chemicals for the purpose of manufacturing, which carries its own felony classification and distinct sentencing consequences. If you’re facing either charge, the stakes could not be higher.
Quick Reference: ARS 13-3408 Manufacturing Offenses
| Aspect | Manufacturing (A)(4) | Possession of Equipment/Chemicals (A)(3) |
|---|---|---|
| Statute | ARS § 13-3408(A)(4) | ARS § 13-3408(A)(3) |
| Classification | Class 2 Felony | Class 3 Felony |
| First Offense Range | 3 to 12.5 years | 2 to 8.75 years |
| Presumptive Sentence | 5 years | 3.5 years |
| Probation Eligible | No — mandatory prison | Yes (first felony offense, no disqualifying priors) |
| Prop 200 Eligible | No | No |
| Mandatory Fine | $2,000 or 3x drug value (whichever is greater) | $2,000 or 3x drug value (whichever is greater) |
What ARS 13-3408 Prohibits
Two subsections of ARS 13-3408 cover manufacturing-related conduct:
ARS 13-3408(A)(4) — Manufacturing a narcotic drug. A person shall not knowingly manufacture a narcotic drug.¹
ARS 13-3408(A)(3) — Possessing equipment or chemicals for the purpose of manufacturing. A person shall not knowingly possess equipment or chemicals, or both, for the purpose of manufacturing a narcotic drug.²
“Manufacture” is defined broadly under ARS 13-3401(17) as to produce, prepare, propagate, compound, mix, or process a controlled substance, directly or indirectly, whether by extraction from natural substances or by chemical synthesis, or by a combination of both.³
The definition also includes packaging or repackaging and labeling or relabeling of containers.
What Qualifies as a “Narcotic Drug”
Under ARS 13-3401(20), Arizona’s definition of narcotic drugs includes nearly 100 substances, covering both natural and synthetic origins.⁴
Common narcotics that appear in manufacturing cases include:
- Fentanyl and fentanyl mimetic substances (including analogs)
- Heroin
- Cocaine and cocaine base (crack)
- Oxycodone, hydrocodone, and other prescription opioids
- Cannabis (marijuana concentrates, including THC extracts and hash oil)
- Methadone
- Carfentanil
Cannabis is classified as a narcotic drug under Arizona law. That means extracting THC concentrates from marijuana qualifies as manufacturing a narcotic drug, not marijuana production.
This is a critical distinction because it converts what might otherwise be charged under the marijuana statute (ARS 13-3405) into a far more serious narcotic manufacturing offense.
Important note on Proposition 207: Arizona’s Smart and Safe Arizona Act (ARS 36-2850 et seq.) legalized adult possession of up to 5 grams of marijuana concentrate for those 21 and older.
ARS 13-3408(A) itself acknowledges this carve-out with its opening clause:
“Except as provided in section 36-2850… section 36-2852 and section 36-2853.”
Additionally, a valid Arizona Medical Marijuana Act (AMMA) card provides an affirmative defense to marijuana concentrate possession.
However, Prop 207 does not authorize unlicensed manufacturing or extraction of concentrates — producing concentrates outside of a licensed facility can still be charged as narcotic drug manufacturing under ARS 13-3408(A)(4).
Elements the Prosecution Must Establish
To convict you under ARS 13-3408(A)(4), the prosecution must prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt:⁵
1. You knowingly manufactured a narcotic drug.
The prosecution must prove you acted with knowledge — that you knew you were manufacturing a substance and that the substance was a narcotic drug. “Knowingly” is the critical mental state.
Accidentally producing a narcotic byproduct during a lawful chemical process, for example, would not satisfy this element.
2. The substance was a narcotic drug.
Confirmed through crime lab testing. The prosecution must establish the substance qualifies as a narcotic drug under ARS 13-3401(20).
3. The conduct constitutes “manufacturing.”
The prosecution must prove that what you did falls within the statutory definition — producing, preparing, compounding, mixing, processing, packaging, or repackaging a narcotic drug.
For the companion charge under ARS 13-3408(A)(3), the prosecution must prove:
1. You knowingly possessed equipment or chemicals (or both).
2. The possession was for the purpose of manufacturing a narcotic drug.
The prosecution must prove the equipment or chemicals were intended for narcotic drug manufacturing.
How These Cases Typically Begin
Narcotic manufacturing investigations in Arizona commonly originate from:
- Controlled buys and informants. An informant or undercover officer purchases narcotics from a target, and the investigation expands to identify the source of supply and the location where the drugs are being produced.
- Precursor chemical tracking. Arizona requires reporting of precursor chemical transactions under ARS 13-3404.⁶ Purchases of chemicals commonly used in narcotic production — at volumes or frequencies that suggest illegal manufacturing — trigger law enforcement attention.
- Surveillance and wiretaps. Large-scale manufacturing operations are often identified through extended surveillance, phone taps, and electronic monitoring authorized by court order.
- Neighbor complaints and utility records. Unusual chemical odors, excessive ventilation equipment, abnormal utility consumption, and frequent short-duration visits to a property can prompt investigation. These reports often lead to search warrants.
- Package interdiction. Postal inspectors and shipping companies flag suspicious packages containing precursor chemicals, pill press equipment, or completed narcotic products. Seizure leads to investigation of the sender, recipient, or both.
- Federal task force operations. DEA, HSI, and multi-agency task forces conduct long-term investigations targeting manufacturing and distribution networks, often resulting in simultaneous state and federal charges.
Penalties
Manufacturing a Narcotic Drug — ARS 13-3408(A)(4)
This is a Class 2 felony with mandatory prison. Under ARS 13-3408(E), a person convicted of manufacturing a narcotic drug is not eligible for suspension of sentence, probation, pardon, or release from confinement on any basis until the sentence is served.⁷
No threshold amount is required — this mandatory prison provision applies regardless of how much narcotic drug was manufactured.
Per ARS 13-702, first offense sentencing ranges:⁸
| Sentence | Duration |
|---|---|
| Mitigated | 3 years |
| Minimum | 4 years |
| Presumptive | 5 years |
| Maximum | 10 years |
| Aggravated | 12.5 years |
These ranges increase with allegeable prior felony convictions under ARS 13-703.
Possessing Equipment or Chemicals to Manufacture — ARS 13-3408(A)(3)
This is a Class 3 felony. Unlike actual manufacturing, this offense is eligible for probation under ARS 13-3408(C) — but only for defendants who have no prior felony convictions and who have not been sentenced under repeat offender (ARS 13-703), dangerous offense (ARS 13-704), or other probation-disqualifying provisions.⁹
Per ARS 13-702, first offense sentencing ranges for a Class 3 felony:
| Sentence | Duration |
|---|---|
| Mitigated | 2 years |
| Minimum | 2.5 years |
| Presumptive | 3.5 years |
| Maximum | 7 years |
| Aggravated | 8.75 years |
Mandatory Fines
Both offenses carry a mandatory fine under ARS 13-3408(J): the greater of $2,000 or three times the value of the narcotic drugs involved. The judge cannot suspend any part of this fine.¹⁰
No Prop 200 Protection
Proposition 200 (ARS 13-901.01) mandates probation for first and second personal-use drug possession convictions, but explicitly excludes manufacturing.
Under subsection (C), personal possession or use “shall not include possession for sale, production, manufacturing or transportation for sale of any controlled substance.”¹¹
Manufacturing vs. Possession of Equipment
These two charges look similar on paper, but the consequences are dramatically different.
| Manufacturing (A)(4) | Possession of Equipment/Chemicals (A)(3) | |
|---|---|---|
| Felony Class | Class 2 | Class 3 |
| Prison Range | 3 to 12.5 years | 2 to 8.75 years |
| Probation Available | No | Yes (for qualifying defendants) |
| Mandatory Prison | Yes — always | Only with priors or other disqualifiers |
A defense that reduces the charge from actual manufacturing to possession of equipment can mean the difference between mandatory prison and the possibility of probation.
This is one of the most critical negotiation points in manufacturing cases.
Collateral Consequences
- Employment. A felony manufacturing conviction closes career paths requiring background clearance, professional licensing, or positions of trust. Manufacturing carries a heavier stigma than possession charges.
- Asset Forfeiture. Arizona law allows seizure and forfeiture of cash, vehicles, real property, and equipment connected to drug manufacturing activity.
- Immigration. Drug manufacturing is an aggravated felony under federal immigration law. A conviction triggers mandatory deportation for non-citizens with virtually no relief available.
- Gun Rights. Lifetime prohibition on possessing firearms under both Arizona and federal law.
- Professional Licenses. Arizona licensing boards can deny, suspend, or revoke any professional license based on a drug manufacturing conviction.
- Child Custody. Manufacturing convictions — particularly those involving operations in a residence — can be used as grounds to modify or terminate custody and parenting time.
Defense Strategies
Challenging “Manufacturing” vs. Simple Possession
If you were found with raw materials or partially processed substances but no completed narcotic product, the prosecution may struggle to prove manufacturing actually occurred.
Possessing precursor chemicals or equipment is a Class 3 felony with potential probation — not the mandatory-prison Class 2 felony that manufacturing carries.
Lack of Knowledge
The prosecution must prove you knowingly manufactured a narcotic drug.
If you were present at a location where manufacturing occurred but didn’t know what was happening, or if you were told you were helping with a legitimate process, the knowledge element may not be met.
Fourth Amendment Violations
Manufacturing cases frequently involve search warrants for residences, vehicles, and storage units.
We examine: whether the warrant was supported by probable cause, whether the affidavit contained false or misleading information, whether the scope of the search exceeded the warrant, and whether any evidence was seized outside the warrant’s authorization.
If the search was unlawful, the evidence gets suppressed.
Challenging Lab Results
Crime lab analysis is not infallible.
We examine: chain of custody, testing methodology, contamination risks, and whether the lab correctly identified the substance as a narcotic drug under ARS 13-3401(20).
Errors in lab testing can undermine the prosecution’s ability to prove the substance element.
Entrapment
If law enforcement or an informant induced you to manufacture narcotic drugs through pressure, manipulation, or coercion — and you would not have done so otherwise — entrapment applies.
Arizona uses an objective test: would the law enforcement conduct have caused a normally law-abiding person to commit the offense?
Lawful Purpose Defense (Equipment/Chemicals Charge)
For the ARS 13-3408(A)(3) charge, the prosecution must prove the equipment or chemicals were possessed for the purpose of manufacturing a narcotic drug.
If the equipment or chemicals have legitimate uses, the prosecution’s case on purpose may be challenged:
- scientific research
- industrial processes
- lawful cannabis operations under Arizona’s recreational or medical marijuana programs
Challenging the Scope of “Manufacture”
The statutory definition includes packaging and repackaging. But not every act that touches a narcotic drug constitutes manufacturing. Simply dividing a bulk quantity into smaller portions for personal use, without any chemical process or production activity, may not meet the definition.
The line between possession and manufacturing is a factual question that can be contested.
Related Charges
- ARS 13-3408(A)(2) — Possession for Sale. Often charged alongside manufacturing. Class 2 felony.
- ARS 13-3408(A)(7) — Transport for Sale / Drug Trafficking. May be added if manufactured narcotics were transported. Class 2 felony.
- ARS 13-3407(A)(4) — Manufacturing Dangerous Drugs. Parallel statute covering non-narcotic controlled substances like methamphetamine. Also a Class 2 felony, with enhanced mandatory prison sentences for meth-specific manufacturing.
- ARS 13-3404 — Sale of Precursor Chemicals. Violations of precursor chemical reporting requirements. Felony.
- ARS 13-3404.01 — Possession of Precursor Chemicals. Possessing precursor chemicals, regulated chemicals, or manufacturing equipment in violation of statutory limits. Felony.
- ARS 13-3405 — Marijuana Production. Separate statute for marijuana cultivation. Penalties based on weight. Does not apply to manufacturing marijuana concentrates — that falls under ARS 13-3408.
- ARS 13-2314 — Money Laundering. May be added when prosecutors allege manufacturing proceeds were laundered.
- ARS 13-3102 — Misconduct Involving Weapons. If firearms were present at the manufacturing location, weapons charges may be added, potentially converting the offense to a “dangerous” crime with enhanced sentencing under ARS 13-704.
- 21 U.S.C. § 841 — Federal Drug Manufacturing. Federal charges may be filed in addition to or instead of state charges, particularly for large-scale operations, cases involving interstate commerce, or investigations led by federal agencies.
Mandatory Prison Makes Your Defense Critical
Drug manufacturing is one of the few offenses in Arizona where the law removes judicial discretion entirely. A conviction under ARS 13-3408(A)(4) means prison. That makes the quality of your defense the single most important factor in what happens next.
At Matthew Lopez Law, our defense attorneys handle narcotic drug manufacturing cases across Arizona. We understand how these cases are built, where the weaknesses are, and how to fight for reduced charges, suppressed evidence, or dismissal.
Call us 24/7 for a free consultation.
References
- ARS § 13-3408(A)(4) [prohibiting knowing manufacture of a narcotic drug]; ARS § 13-3408(B)(4) [classifying as a Class 2 felony].
- ARS § 13-3408(A)(3) [prohibiting knowing possession of equipment or chemicals for the purpose of manufacturing a narcotic drug]; ARS § 13-3408(B)(3) [classifying as a Class 3 felony].
- ARS § 13-3401(17) [defining “manufacture”].
- ARS § 13-3401(20) [defining “narcotic drugs” — listing nearly 100 substances of natural or synthetic origin].
- See Arizona Revised Jury Instructions (Criminal) — Narcotic Drug Offenses [setting forth the elements the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt for manufacturing under ARS 13-3408(A)(4)].
- ARS § 13-3404 [requiring manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers, and others to report precursor chemical transactions].
- ARS § 13-3408(E) [providing that a person convicted of manufacturing under subsection A, paragraph 4 is not eligible for suspension of sentence, probation, pardon, or release from confinement until the sentence is served or the person is eligible for release pursuant to ARS 41-1604.07 or the sentence is commuted].
- ARS § 13-702(D) [first-time felony sentencing ranges: Class 2 felony — mitigated 3 years, minimum 4 years, presumptive 5 years, maximum 10 years, aggravated 12.5 years].
- ARS § 13-3408(C) [providing probation eligibility for violations of subsection A, paragraph 1, 3, or 6 for defendants without prior felony convictions or other disqualifying sentences].
- ARS § 13-3408(J) [mandatory fine of $2,000 or 3x drug value, whichever is greater; may not be suspended].
- ARS § 13-901.01(C) [providing that personal possession or use “shall not include possession for sale, production, manufacturing or transportation for sale of any controlled substance”].