US20050097931A1
2005-05-12
10/703,325
2003-11-10
A drink locking unit providing a means of temporarily blocking off and securing the contents of a previously opened common commercial drinking vessel against the harm of inconspicuous social event drink lacing and the subsequent dangers of drug rape/drug robbery and comprising a shaft (4) activated expandable plug (3) which can be secured in the expanded position within the drinking vessel's orifice (2) by a shaft position locking mechanism (38) and a key (7).
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B65D39/12 » CPC main
Closures arranged within necks or pouring openings or in discharge apertures, e.g. stoppers expansible, e.g. inflatable
B65D55/14 » CPC further
Accessories for container closures not otherwise provided for; Locking devices; Means for discouraging or indicating unauthorised opening or removal of closure Applications of locks, e.g. of permutation or key-controlled locks
B65D55/145 » CPC further
Accessories for container closures not otherwise provided for; Locking devices; Means for discouraging or indicating unauthorised opening or removal of closure; Applications of locks, e.g. of permutation or key-controlled locks of permutation locks
Y10T70/558 » CPC further
Locks; Special application; For closures; Cover, lid, cap, encasing shield; Removable; Directly seating Cover-carried lock
Not Applicable.
FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCHNot Applicable.
SEQUENCE LISTING OR PROGRAMNot Applicable.
(2) BACKGROUND—FIELD OF INVENTIONThis invention relates to a Drink Locking Unit suitable for inserting in, and safely securing of, the open drinking orifice of any previously opened common commercial drinking vessel. The function of the Drink Locking Unit is to PREVENT the inconspicuous introduction of an illegal party Drug/Pill/Powder/Liquid such as GHB or Rohypnol into the unguarded, open drinking orifice of an owner's previously opened, partially full, common commercial drinking vessel by predatory persons having an intent to lace the drink and illegally gain control and eventually assault/rob/drug rape the inattentive, distracted, or temporarily absent drinking vessel's owner.
For the purposes of this application the shapes of common commercial drinking vessels are classified as follows:
3.1 Prior art relating to the protection of a social drinker against inconspicuous social drink lacing by any potential drug rape/drug robbery predator consists of the following three methods
3.2 Conclusion. None of the currently available methods are able to offer the social drinker effective “lace free security” against determined, criminal minded, drug equipped, “new acquaintances” or adjacent social strangers. Such drug oriented people are now becoming frequent predators at many of today's social partying/dancing/drinking events.
(4) OBJECTS AND ADVANTAGES(4.1) The Drink Locking Unit is an anti-drug safety device aimed at providing any responsible social/party group drinker with a simple and definitive means of protecting his/her previously opened drink from inconspicuous social event drink lacing and the probable follow-on personal dangers of drug rape/drug robbery.
(4.2) The Drink Locking Unit can be placed into the open orifice in the top of an owner's previously opened common commercial drinking vessel and then easily locked in position by the drink owner. Access to the drinking vessel orifice and to the vessel contents is then blocked.
The locking mechanism of the installed Drink Locking Unit may be activated by either
(4.3) Once secured with a Drink Locking Unit, the previously opened drinking vessel and its contents may be left socially unattended by the owner without incurring the threat of inconspicuous drink lacing by other attendees at a social event. Upon return to the secured drinking vessel's standing location, the drink owner is able to easily open the lock and remove the Drink Locking Unit from the vessel's orifice, thus rendering the secured vessel's contents accessible for safe drinking again.
(4.4) The Drink Locking Unit serves as:
The Drink Locking Unit does not need to be of a “Fort Knox” security level in order to be effective. In the past, all locking practice has necessitated locks to be made physically strong in order to prevent the lock from being forced or destroyed, prior to the vessel or chamber being opened and the contents stolen. In the case of the Drink Locking Unit, the vessel's contents are essentially worthless and not worth stealing. The value of the Drink Locking Unit lies not in its strength or ability to prevent the vessel's contents from being stolen but in its ability to successfully indicate to the drink owner whether or not a surreptitious attempt has been made to gain access to, and possibly violate rather than steal, the vessel's contents. This is demonstrated by considering any of the following three typical social event drink lacing attempt scenarios:
In these and similar cases, the Drink Locking Unit is able to provide, for the first time, a device capable of preventing the drink owner from unwittingly consuming a laced drink and becoming the subject of yet another drug rape/robbery crime.
(5) DRAWINGSDrawing 1 of 8
FIG. 1. General Arrangement Drawing of Drink Locking Unit.
Drawing 2 of 8
FIG. 2. Sectional view of Type 1 Drink Locking Unit in a Class A, B, or C, common commercial drinking vessel in the inserted but as yet unlocked position.
FIG. 3. Sectional view of Type 1 Drink Locking Unit in a Class A, B, or C, common commercial drinking vessel in the inserted and locked position.
Drawing 3 of 8
FIG. 4. Sectional view of Type 2 Drink Locking Unit in a Class D common commercial drinking vessel in the inserted and locked position.
FIG. 5. Sectional-Plan immediately above the opened drinking orifice of a Class D common commercial drinking vessel.
Drawing 4 of 8
FIG. 6. Lockable Shaft for Type 1 Drink Locking Unit.
FIG. 7. Sectional-Plan view of FIG. 6.
FIG. 8. Lockable Shaft for Type 2 Drink Locking Unit.
FIG. 10. Sectioned plan of FIG. 9.
Drawing 5 of 8
FIG. 15. Example of a Multi-Story Locking Mechanism having THREE Stories and utilizing TWO Sliding Locking Tumblers (36A, 36B.) and ONE Sliding Decoy Tumbler (37).
Drawing 6 of 8
FIG. 20. Keyhole Orientation Option one, Potent Keyholes—Locking K1 Unlocking K4.
FIG. 21. Keyhole Orientation Option two, Potent keyholes—Locking K2. Unlocking K5
FIG. 22. Keyhole Orientation Option three, Potent keyholes—Locking K3. Unlocking K6
FIG. 23. Keyhole Orientation Option four, Potent keyholes—Locking K4. Unlocking K1
FIG. 24. Keyhole Orientation Option five, Potent keyholes—Locking K5. Unlocking K2
FIG. 25. Keyhole Orientation Option six, Potent keyholes—Locking K6. Unlocking K3
Drawing 7 of 8
FIG. 30. Locking Operation—Sliding Locking Tumbler in unlocked position. Common Key in ready position.
FIG. 31. Locking Operation—Common Key pushes Sliding Locking Tumbler towards center of lock in which position it restrains the Lockable Shaft.
FIG. 32. Locking Operation—Sliding Locking Tumbler in final locked position. Common Key has been withdrawn. All keyholes, both potent and impotent, around the perimeter of the lock are now visually indistinguishable and of equal depth.
FIG. 33 Unlocking Operation—Sliding Locking Tumbler in locked position. Common Key in ready position.
FIG. 34 Unlocking Operation—Common Key pushes Sliding Locking Tumbler towards perimeter of lock.
FIG. 35 Unlocking Operation—Sliding Locking Tumbler in final unlocked position. Common Key has been withdrawn. Lockable Shaft is now free to move to contract the Expandable Plug components, thus permitting an owner to remove the Drink Locking Unit from the drinking vessel's orifice.
Drawing 8 of 8
FIG. 36 Typical Story keyhole arrangement for a four keyhole configuration.
FIG. 37 Typical Story keyhole arrangement for a six keyhole configuration.
FIG. 38 Typical Story keyhole arrangement for a eight keyhole configuration.
(6) LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS
The Drink Locking Unit is a simple to operate, conveniently sized device which is able to secure the contents of a previously opened common commercial drinking vessel belonging to a temporarily absent or otherwise inattentive drink owner. The Drink Locking Unit thus provides the social drinker with the means to remain safely immune from the possibility of becoming just another social event drug rape/drug robbery statistic.
(8) DETAILED DESCRIPTION—MAIN EMBODIMENT8.1 Contents of the Drink Locking Unit.
The Drink Locking Unit consists of three interconnected sub-units (reference numerals 3, 4, 6.—page 10) For consistency and ease of later operational description purposes these three sub-units are addressed sequentially in order from the lowest sub-unit up through the topmost sub-unit. The three integrated sub units of the Drink Locking Unit are as follows:
The shape (but not the function) of any of the above three interconnected sub-units within any specific model of the Drink Locking Unit may vary in order to match up and mate with the various shapes and/or diameters of the drinking orifices popular amongst the vast array of common commercial drinking vessels currently used in today's social/partying/drinking circuits. The lower end portion of the Lockable Shaft which activates the Expandable Plug components may be of such a shape that the motion as necessary to expand the plug can be any motional variety of (a) pull up, (b) press down, or (c) rotate, or any combination of these motions.
8.2 Configuring the Expandable Plug/Platform Component to Fit the Various Opened Orifice Shapes of Previously Opened, Common Commercial Drinking Vessels.
The drinking orifice shapes of the majority of common commercial drinking vessels can be accommodated by using either of two dimensionally different shaped configurations of the Expandable Plug/Platform.
(8.2.1) A Type 1 Drink Locking Unit.
A Type 1 Drink Locking Unit is configured to service those common commercial drinking vessels having circular, flat top drinking orifices such as:
(8.2.2) A Type 2 Drink Locking Unit.
A Type 2 Drink Locking Unit is configured to service those common commercial drinking vessels listed as Class D i.e. Flip top metal cans containing soda, beer, juice, iced tea, iced coffee, or energy drinks, all of which have eccentric oval/kidney/or equivalent shaped sharp edged metal drinking orifices.
(9) Physical Description of Components of the Drink Locking Unit.(9.1) The Expandable Plug/Platform.
A plug component of sufficient length and suitable cross sectional shape as necessary to accommodate and block off physical access to the open orifice in the top of the previously opened common commercial drinking vessel selected to be secured. In order to accommodate the above noted two (8.2.1 and 8.2.2) significantly different drinking orifice shape groups existing in today's common commercial drinking vessel market place (i.e. Class A through. C vessels, and Class D vessels) it is necessary to consider two different plug configurations. Each plug configuration has a different top platform and, cross sectional plug shape as necessary to mate with the top surface shapes and orifices shapes of these significantly different drinking vessel groups.
On a vertical axis passing through either of the above Expandable Plug/Platform components is a hole of suitable dimension to permit the movement of the lower end of the Lockable Shaft.
In both Type 1 and Type 2 Drink Locking Units the plug component is of sufficient length to reach through the drinking orifice of the opened common commercial drinking vessel and reach down to a section of the vessel neck or top that is larger in cross section than the vessel drinking orifice. The plug internal volume is of sufficient volume to house one part of a wedge mechanism located in the lower part of the plug. Once the plug has been inserted through the drinking orifice, the plug configuration is such that it can, by the owner's manual movement of an adjacent Lockable Shaft, be enlarged in shape as necessary to anchor the Expandable Plug in place beneath the drinking orifice perimeter.
The Expandable Plug/Platform comprises
The anchoring mechanism within the Expandable Plug/Platform comprises guide holes which pass through the lower part of the plug and house Sliding Block(s) (9).
The inner end face of each block interfaces with, and is able to be moved by, the lower face of the Lockable Shaft. The outer end of each block interfaces with the neck or underside of the top of the drinking vessel. There are sufficient Sliding Blocks to securely anchor the plug in the drinking vessel orifice.
Sliding Block material may be:
(d) An Elastic Loop (10). An elastic band or flexible spring tension chord surrounds the periphery of the plug in such a way as to pressure the Sliding Blocks to remain as centrally close together as possible as they slide in the guide hole(s) within the plug and thus permit easy withdrawal of the unlocked Expandable Plug/Platform from the drinking vessel orifice.
(9.1.1) Expandable Plug/Platform of the Type 1 Drink Locking Unit
The platform component is of such a shape as to cover the top of the drinking vessel. The Expandable Plug component of the Type 1 Drink Locking Unit has a circular cross section as necessary to match, pass through and mate with the common commercial drinking vessels that have circular shaped glass/plastic drinking orifices of the typical bottle neck variety.
(9.1.2)) Expandable Plug/Platform of the Type 2 Drink Locking Unit
The platform component is of such a shape as to cover the top of the drinking vessel. The Expandable Plug component of the Type 2 Drink Locking Unit is off-set from the center of the platform and has an oval/kidney shaped cross section as necessary to match, pass through and mate with the Class D flip top can, off-set, oval/kidney shaped, sharp edge, metal drinking orifice.
(9.2) The Lockable Shaft.
Length. The Lockable Shaft has sufficient length to permit its lower male wedge shaped or cam shaped end to engage the Sliding Blocks in the expandable plug and, when activated by the owner, to move them outwards.
The lower end. The lower wedge/cam shaped end is of such a shape that the Lockable Shaft movement to activate and expand the Sliding Blocks in an outwards motion can be any of the (a) pull up, (b) press down or (c) rotate, motions or any combination of these motions.
The mid portion. The mid portion of the Lockable Shaft is shaped to contain rings, grooves, holes, helixes or lugs or any combination of rings, grooves, holes, helixes or lugs as necessary to enable typical Sliding Tumblers (36 or 37) of the Shaft Position Locking Mechanism to engage with the Lockable Shaft and, depending on the position of its sliding tumblers, secure it in the locked, or release it to the unlocked position.
The top end. The top end of the Lockable Shaft protrudes vertically up above all other unit components and functions as the operator's manual lock/unlock operating Handle or Knob (5).
(9.4) The Shaft Position Locking Mechanism.
The Shaft Position Locking Mechanism is a locking system located above, and secured by fasteners (8) to, the top surface of the Expandable Plug/Platform component with which it interfaces and which allows the sliding or rotating Lockable Shaft to be manually locked or unlocked in a desired position by the Drink Locking Unit's owner.
The Lockable Shaft locking requirement may be achieved by using any of the following:
Locking mechanisms examples (9.4.1.), (9.4.2) and (9.4.3). above, are commonly available locking systems. Each of these three systems is capable of providing the locking means for the Drink Locking Unit's Lockable Shaft. These locking mechanisms are able to interface with rings, grooves, holes, helixes or lugs or any combination of rings, grooves, holes, helixes or lugs on a shaft and prevent the appropriate movement of the shaft as is necessary to lock it in a place. Each is capable of being adapted to serve the purpose of the Drink Locking Unit's locking requirements and can, if selected, be incorporated as part of the overall Drink Locking Unit's design. All these locks are in the public domain and as such their functions will not be described further in this application.
Description of a preferred “Multi-Story” Locking Mechanism.(9.4.4)
The Multi-Story Locking Mechanism is an owner re-settable combination, low cost means of mechanically locking the movement of a shaft, in this case the Lockable Shaft (4) utilizing:
The Multi-Story Locking Mechanism is shown on FIGS. 15, 20-25, and 30-38 and described below.
(9.4.1.1) The Multi-Story Locking Mechanism has six major components:
(a) Story Discs. Story Discs are of even thickness and have a periphery which may be circular, irregular, or polygon in shape. At the center of each Story Disc is a hole of sufficient size to accept the sliding Lockable Shaft. Near the periphery of each Story Disc are holes to accept the Fasteners used to sandwich the Expandable Plug/Platform and Multi-Story Locking Mechanism components together. All Story discs within any given lock unit can be identical or non-identical in identifying perimeter shape, symbol marking, color, or texture as may be desired for operating or commercial marketing purposes.
(b) Tumbler Tumbler Guides/Spacers are of even thickness as necessary Guides/Spacers to provide vertical spacing between the Story Discs and are of such a shape:
(c) Sliding Locking A Sliding Locking Tumbler is of an even thickness, and this Tumbler thickness is slightly less than the thickness of the Tumbler Guide Spacers. The clearance thickness ensures that the top and bottom surfaces of the Sliding Locking Tumbler slide easily between the above and below Story Discs surfaces. The two longest edges of the Sliding Locking Tumbler slide between the corresponding edges of the Tumbler Guide/Spacers. The end movements of the Sliding Tumblers are limited by the Tumbler Guide/Spacers. The Sliding Locking Tumbler has an irregular Lockable Plunger Shaft interference/none-interference hole near its center. The hole functions in either of two slide positions:
(d) Sliding Decoy A Sliding Decoy Tumbler is similar in form to the Sliding Locking Tumbler Tumbler except that its Lockable Shaft interference/none interference hole is reversed in operating position to that of a Sliding Locking Tumbler. When the Owner uses the Drink Locking Unit a Sliding Decoy Tumbler remains untouched in the same unlocked, none interference, position during all of the owner's locking/unlocking activities.
(e) Fasteners Bolts, Nuts, Rivets etc. secure the sandwiched layers of the Drink Locking Unit together.
(f) Common Key The common Key (7) is a simple strut piece suitably shaped to fit into any one of the Multi Story Locking Mechanism's keyholes. When inserted into a potent keyhole the Common Key is able to push a Sliding Locking Tumbler or a Sliding Decoy Tumbler from its existing position to its alternate position. When the common Key is pushed into an impotent keyhole, lock picking time is wasted, the Key is ineffective and is unable to influence or make any changes to the overall locking mechanism's condition.
(9.4.2.) Physical Assembly of the Multi-Story Locking Mechanism.
Consider first the physical arrangement of the “first story” of the Multi-Story Locking Mechanism as shown in FIG. 15.
(10.1) The Expandable Plug/Platform.
Each of the two Expandable Plug/Platform configurations, as used in the Types 1 and 2 Drink Locking Units are shaped as necessary to fit the two significantly different marketed common commercial drinking vessels. Both operate in the same manner as described below.
(10.1.1) Operating Means of Securing the Drink Locking Unit in the Common Commercial Drinking Vessel's Previously Opened Orifice.
After inserting the Expandable Plug/Platform component of the Drink Locking Unit in the orifice of the common commercial drinking vessel the overall shape of the Expandable Plug can be changed by manually moving the top of the Lockable Shaft and consequently moving the wedge shaped lower end of the Lockable Shaft against the Sliding Blocks in the plug. This action causes the Sliding Blocks to move outwards and against or beneath the orifice of the common commercial drinking vessel. The so positioned Lockable shaft is then secured in this position by inserting the common Key into the appropriate keyhole and pushing one or more Sliding Locking Tumblers of the Shaft Position Locking Mechanism in such a direction as to interface with the rings, grooves, holes, helixes, or lugs and to prevent the Lockable Shaft from moving.
(10.1.2) Operating Means of Releasing the Anchored Expandable Plug/Platform of the Drink Locking Unit from the Common Commercial Drinking Vessel's Orifice.
The plug is released/unanchored from the open common commercial drinking vessel's orifice by inserting the common Key into the appropriate keyhole and pushing the Sliding Locking Tumblers in such a direction as to free up the Lockable Shaft. Once freed, the owner can manually move the Lockable Shaft by its Handle (5) in such a way as to allow the Sliding Blocks to be returned to their central position by the restoring force of the extended Elastic Loop surrounding them. The Drink Locking Unit's plug can now be withdrawn from the common commercial drinking vessel's orifice.
(10.2) The Owner's Means of Applying and Locking the Drink Locking Unit onto a Previously Opened Common Commercial Drinking Vessel.
Step—“One”
Insert the contracted Expandable Plug/Platform end of the Drink Locking Unit into the drinking vessel's orifice.
Step—“Two”
Move the top end of the Lockable Shaft into the locked position and manually hold it there. The Expandable Plug/Platform is now expanded beneath the open common commercial social drinking vessel's orifice.
Step—“Three”
Sequentially insert the common Key (7) into each of the previously owner memorized potent keyholes harboring Sliding Locking Tumblers (36) and push each Sliding Locking Tumbler from its non-interference with the Lockable Shaft position, to its interference with the Lockable Shaft position (as per FIG. 30,31,32.) The Tumblers now hold the Lockable Shaft in the locked position.
Step—“Four”
Release the manual hold (from Step Two) and put the common key in a safe place. Having carried out the four locking steps the Drink Locking Unit is now secured on the drinking vessel.
(10.3)) The Owner's Means of Releasing the Locked Drink Locking Unit from the top of a Previously Opened Common Commercial Drinking Vessel.
Release Step “One.”
Insert the common Key (7) into each of the diametrically opposite and previously owner memorized keyholes that harbor Sliding Locking Tumblers (36) and push each Sliding Locking Tumbler from its interference to its non-interference position with the Lockable Shaft (as per FIGS. 33, 34, and 35). The Lockable Shaft is now free to move.
Release Step “Two”
Move the Knob of the Lockable Shaft (5) into the release plug position. The Expandable Plug/Platform's securing action beneath the open common commercial social drinking vessel's orifice is released.
Release Step “Three”
Remove the Drink Locking Unit from the drinking orifice of the open common commercial drinking vessel.
Having carried out the three release steps the drinking vessel is now available for drinking use in the owner's customary manner.
(10.4) Functional Purpose of the Sliding Decoy Tumbler
Activity of the Sliding Decoy Tumbler (37) as a means of improving the Multi Story Locking Mechanism's security and further foiling attempts by unauthorized persons to pick and open it is described below:
Depending on the Multi-Story Locking Mechanism's Tumbler Guide Spacer configuration it can have from four to eight or more keyholes per Story as per FIGS. 36, 37, 38. It can also have any practical number of Stories. As an example, this application will consider a typical SIX keyhole per Story (FIG. 37), and a FIVE Story Multi-Story Locking Mechanism configuration.
Such a mechanism will have thirty keyholes (six per story times five stories). Ten (two per Story) of the keyholes will give access to Sliding Tumblers and the remaining twenty keyholes will be impotent. If all of the Tumblers used were Sliding Locking Tumblers, an unauthorized “lock picker” would simply have to sequentially try the common Key into each of the thirty keyholes (i.e. up to thirty straightforward and predictable picking operations) in order to feel the location of, and then, when discovered, push each Story's Sliding Locking Tumbler into its unlocked non-interference position. The lock would then have been successfully picked and the Lockable Shaft could be moved thus permitting the Expandable Plug/Platform component to be withdrawn from the drinking vessel's orifice.
This “thirty pick” operation is not acceptable security against the threat of drink lacing, despite the fact that it would need to be surreptitiously carried out by a lock picker within a crowded social drinking environment.
The number of pick operations as necessary to pick the above example lock may be significantly increased by replacing one (or more) of the Sliding Locking Tumblers (36) with a Sliding Decoy Tumbler(s) (37). A Sliding Decoy Tumbler remains in the un-locked non-interference position until pushed, by a lock picker using a common Key (7), into the interference locking position. The lock picker believing that he/she has found and is pushing a Sliding Locking Tumbler (36) into the un-locked position will, in fact, actually be pushing a Sliding Decoy Tumbler (37) from its unlocked position into the locked position. By this action the Lockable Shaft will remain safely locked even though the other Sliding Locking Tumblers may have been discovered (felt) by the lock picker and then slid into their non-interference (unlocked) positions. At this point in the picking operation the lock picker will have no knowledge as to which of the five (in this example) Sliding Tumblers that he/she has pushed is re-locking and which is un-locking the Lockable Plunger Shaft. By utilizing the concept of substituting one or more Sliding Decoy Tumblers for one or more of the Sliding Locking Tumblers in the original Multi-Story Locking Mechanism, the complexity of the operation required to successfully pick the lock is significantly increased. By this means the Multi-Story Locking Mechanism becomes safely acceptable for use in all predator likely, social drinking, environments whilst still remaining easy and convenient for an owner to use.
In addition to the above, and still considering the example of a Five Story lock, the ratio of use between Sliding Locking, and Sliding Decoy, Tumblers may be varied anywhere from:
A potential lock picker ( having no prior knowledge as to which of the above Locking to Decoy Sliding Tumbler ratios has been selected by the owner, and in which Stories, and at what keyhole indexed orientation each has been installed in the owner specific pre-set lock) faces a long and very complex lock picking task.
For Multi-Story Locking Mechanisms having other than the five Story example used above, the ratio of Sliding Locking Tumblers to Sliding Decoy tumblers can also be varied in a similar manner.
Multi-Story Locking Mechanisms utilizing both Sliding Locking and Sliding Decoy Tumblers are easy and quick for an owner (who has memorized and knows the appropriate potent Sliding Locking Tumbler keyhole locations) to lock and unlock while at the same time remaining extremely time consuming for a predator to pick and after picking, return to their original setting (in order to avoid alerting the drink owner to the fact that his/her drink contents have been violated). The Multi-Story Locking Mechanism's degree of complexity ensures that it can be considered safe, secure and acceptable for use as a protective device in all drug rape/drug robbery, predator likely, social drinking environments.
1-6. (canceled)
7. A method for preventing the inconspicuous party introduction of an illegal party drug/pill/powder/liquid such as ghb, rohypnol, klonopin, ketamine or xanax into the unguarded open drinking orifice of an inattentive or absent owner's previously opened, partially full, common commercial drinking vessel, by predatory persons having the intent to lace contents of said common commercial drinking vessel and thus later illegally gain control of said owner for purposes of assault/robbery/drug rape, comprising the steps of:
(a) providing an expandable plug, shaped to be manually insertable into said open drinking orifice of said common commercial drinking vessel, and
(b) inserting said expandable plug into said open drinking orifice, and
(c) blocking off access to said open drinking orifice, and
(d) providing said owner with a manual means to expand and mechanically secure and/or contract and remove said expandable plug in said orifice of said common commercial drinking vessel, and
(e) providing said owner with a means to lock/unlock said expandable plug in position in said orifice of said common commercial drinking vessel by means of a removable key,
whereby said expandable said lockable plug is a means to prevent persons having possession of said illegal party drug/pill/powder/liquid from being able to gain access to and possibly lace said drink of said owner and thus by utilizing said expandable, said lockable plug said owner is able to minimize said owner's vulnerability to common but illegal party acts by others of drink lacing and subsequent acts of assault/robbery/drug rape.