EuTuCroquet?
“What's happening to my special purpose!?”
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2017
- Messages
- 5,401
- Reaction score
- 8,708
Bulging eyes and arguing with buildings: New cases of flakka use reported in Missouri
Police in Bonne Terre, Missouri, report two new cases of people suspected of using the street drug flakka, a synthetic bath salt known to cause bizarre behavior and sometimes death. This time, police say, the men were brothers.
One of the brothers overdosed and caused a disturbance at an apartment in town on Saturday, Bonne Terre Police Chief Doug Calvert told the Daily Journal in Park Hills, Missouri.
Then, on Monday, “at the same apartment, his brother went berserk and tore up the apartment. Fortunately, someone was smart enough to open the door this time, so no one dove out of a window,” Calvert told the newspaper.
Law enforcement officials are “sounding the alarm” because they suspect both men were using flakka, KMOV in St. Louis reported.
...
In one of the most high-profile cases of flakka abuse in the state, four people went on a naked rampage in November 2017 through the town of Sullivan in eastern Missouri.
They barked and yelled and broke into buildings, stripping off their clothes in public and showered in soda water, police said.
“We had multiple incidents this past weekend of people on some kind of substance acting out of their minds,” Sullivan Police Lt. Patrick Johnson told the Sullivan Independent Newsat the time. “Barking like dogs, running up and down the street, or other farm animals, entering people’s homes, breaking into a business, yelling outside of local businesses.”
Police suspected the users had mixed methamphetamine with flakka, a drug reported in Florida, Kentucky, Ohio and other parts of the country before it hit Missouri.
...
George Mekhjian, an emergency department physician with SSM Health St. Joseph Hospital-St. Charles, told Fox 2 in St. Louis he thinks the flakka problem in Missouri is getting worse.
“They come yelling and screaming, and spitting, scratching, punching, hitting,” he said. “We have to restrain them physically and chemically. And when I say physically, they are so agitated that they act like what we call superhumans. It takes us like six to 10 adults to restrain the patient.”
Calvert told the Daily Journal that in nearly 30 years of law enforcement work he’s never seen anything like this.
One of the brothers overdosed and caused a disturbance at an apartment in town on Saturday, Bonne Terre Police Chief Doug Calvert told the Daily Journal in Park Hills, Missouri.
Then, on Monday, “at the same apartment, his brother went berserk and tore up the apartment. Fortunately, someone was smart enough to open the door this time, so no one dove out of a window,” Calvert told the newspaper.
Law enforcement officials are “sounding the alarm” because they suspect both men were using flakka, KMOV in St. Louis reported.
...
In one of the most high-profile cases of flakka abuse in the state, four people went on a naked rampage in November 2017 through the town of Sullivan in eastern Missouri.
They barked and yelled and broke into buildings, stripping off their clothes in public and showered in soda water, police said.
“We had multiple incidents this past weekend of people on some kind of substance acting out of their minds,” Sullivan Police Lt. Patrick Johnson told the Sullivan Independent Newsat the time. “Barking like dogs, running up and down the street, or other farm animals, entering people’s homes, breaking into a business, yelling outside of local businesses.”
Police suspected the users had mixed methamphetamine with flakka, a drug reported in Florida, Kentucky, Ohio and other parts of the country before it hit Missouri.
...
George Mekhjian, an emergency department physician with SSM Health St. Joseph Hospital-St. Charles, told Fox 2 in St. Louis he thinks the flakka problem in Missouri is getting worse.
“They come yelling and screaming, and spitting, scratching, punching, hitting,” he said. “We have to restrain them physically and chemically. And when I say physically, they are so agitated that they act like what we call superhumans. It takes us like six to 10 adults to restrain the patient.”
Calvert told the Daily Journal that in nearly 30 years of law enforcement work he’s never seen anything like this.