Jokes19 mins ago
Just when I thought the US couldn't get any crazier!!
You couldn't have written this in a very bad Holywood movie
http:// www.mai l.com/i ....239 8-stage -teaser 1-2
I mean we all hear these weird stories from time to time, but even the Miami Police have been shoced by this. Feel really sorry for the victim, but what on earth was the perpretator doing on the streets, surely he should have been in a secure place?
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I mean we all hear these weird stories from time to time, but even the Miami Police have been shoced by this. Feel really sorry for the victim, but what on earth was the perpretator doing on the streets, surely he should have been in a secure place?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The perpetrator was, apparently under the influence of a relatively new "designer drug" called bath salts that is amphetamine like in its influence. It can be smoked, taken intravenously,snorted or swallowed. It causes (obviously) severe hallucintaions especially affecting reality, time and space.
Seems the Miami area is rife with manufacturers of such and, of course, there's always someone willing to experiment...
Seems the Miami area is rife with manufacturers of such and, of course, there's always someone willing to experiment...
Seem to be a concoction of this..Bath salts are also known as "Ivory Wave," "Purple Wave," Vanilla Sky," and "Bliss." It's a street drug made with mephedrone, MDPV, and methylone -- not at all the same as the epsom salts that are commonly used as a bath product in many homes. However, because they're not marketed for human consumption, they are not illegal. The high associated with the drug includes hallucinations and feelings of paranoia, in addition to suicidal thoughts.
"It's confusing. Is this what we put in our bathtubs, like Epsom salts? No. But by marketing them as bath salts and labeling them 'not for human consumption,' they have been able to avoid them being specifically enumerated as illegal," a doctor tells WebMD.
"It's confusing. Is this what we put in our bathtubs, like Epsom salts? No. But by marketing them as bath salts and labeling them 'not for human consumption,' they have been able to avoid them being specifically enumerated as illegal," a doctor tells WebMD.
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