More than 70 people overdose on K2 in a single day in New Haven

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One witness said: "they were dropping like they had the plague."




Hour after hour, people kept dropping. Sirens blared. There were so many overdoses — people passed out, vomiting, convulsing — that emergency workers could hardly sprint fast enough to keep up.

“Even while we were trying to return people to service, they were passing victims on the ground,” Fire Chief John Alston told reporters.

Over the course of 24 hours in New Haven, Conn., Wednesday, more than 70 people overdosed on what authorities believe to be synthetic marijuana, also known as K2 or spice. Dozens of those overdoses took place on the New Haven Green, a historic downtown park bordering the Yale University campus.

Most were treated at local hospitals, but at least five refused to be transported. By late Wednesday night there had been no deaths reported. In some cases, patients who were hospitalized later returned to the Green and had to be treated a second time, New Haven Police Officer David Hartman told WTIC. One person had to be transported three times over the course of the day, he said.

“They were having to transport faster than they might normally just to turn the cars around and get them back out,” Sandy Bogucki, New Haven’s director of emergency medical services, said in a news conference.

Police and fire officials said the K2 was potentially laced with some type of opioid. Kathryn Hawk, an emergency department physician at Yale New Haven Hospital, told the New Haven Register that the Drug Enforcement Administration confirmed the drugs contained K2 mixed with fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that’s roughly 50 times as potent as heroin.

Some patients treated at the Green did not initially respond to naloxone, and needed a higher concentration of the overdose reversal drug once they arrived at hospitals, Bogucki said.

Police said they arrested a person of interest in connection with the mass overdose. New Haven Police Chief Anthony Campbell identified him only as a man who is known to police for drug violations and was found in possession of a drug believed to be K2. City officials cautioned in a news release that the arrested person is not yet confirmed as “the perpetrator sought in these cases,” but had a warrant against him for violating probation.

Federal officials last month issued a warning about the spread of synthetic marijuana across the country. In recent months, K2 has caused hundreds of people in about 10 states to be hospitalized, sometimes with severe bleeding. Several people have died because of complications. The danger lies in the drug’s unpredictability and its tendency to be cut with potent opioids or in some cases an anticoagulant used in rat poison.

“The message has to be very clear to people that any time you are taking a synthetic drug, you have really no idea, as we’ve seen today, what you’re taking and how that drug is going to affect you,” Hartman told WTNH late Wednesday night.

Most of the people who overdosed Wednesday in New Haven were lower-income or homeless, Hartman told WTNH. The demographics led officials to say they believed “somebody was giving these drugs out.”

The mass overdose began Tuesday night and forced police to continue monitoring the Green late into Wednesday night. Local officials said it was unlike anything they had seen before. “This is the highest number of victims in the shortest amount of time,” New Haven Fire Chief John Alston told News 12.

As reports of overdoses began mounting, multiple fire department units responded. “And after about the sixth one,” Alston said. “We knew we were going to have a multi-casualty incident.”

When the number was at 30 overdoses, the police chief told WVIT to warn residents: “Do not come down to the Green and purchase this K2. It is taking people out very quickly, people having respiratory failure.”

At one point Wednesday, shouts interrupted a news conference with the fire chief to alert authorities to another overdose.

“We’re getting another call,” Alston told reporters, some of whom began chasing after medical workers as they rushed to treat the affected person.

Bodies are literally dropping all around me from suspected drug overdoses despite massive effort by #NewHaven cops & fire. I've never seen anything quite this bad happening at once. .@WTNH #CTnews pic.twitter.com/bQhlmNMkw7

— Mario Boone, Jou. (@MarioBooneTV) August 15, 2018
“Another person down on the green,” Amy Hudak, a reporter for WTNH tweeted from the scene. Twenty minutes later, she tweeted again.

“Another person down.” Two minutes later: “And another . . . this is unbelievable.”

One crew of emergency responders treated nine people within one hour, Alston told reporters. “We’re pretty beat up.”

Lt. Ernest Jones, an EMT for the New Haven Fire Department, described the day to the New Haven Register as a “domino effect.”

“This was a particularly odd, rare occasion where (there was) call after call for man down, obviously with symptoms of some kind of overdose, and at the time of getting that patient packaged and transported to the hospital, we’d see another immediately fall down, right there,” Jones said. “At that point, we’d go help that patient, and while helping that patient, another person went down.”

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...w-haven/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.dec19f349d91
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:yawn::yawn::yawn:

so hot today in NYC....

Not my problem/ DAMN I CAN'T WAIT UNTIL MY HANDS GET ON THAT NOTE 9
I guess ya'll assuming that these are cacs cause it's Connecticut...….:smh:

there were a lot of blacks involved in this...… including the one floundering around on the ground like he was on meth while they were trying to restrain him....look at the video.

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I guess ya'll assuming that these are cacs cause it's Connecticut...….:smh:

there were a lot of blacks involved in this...… including the one floundering around on the ground like he was on meth while they were trying to restrain him....look at the video.
No I said not my problem cause I've never drank or did any kinds of drugs in my life. I have 0 sympathy for a junkie
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Then there's the other problem with K2. It can wipe out the proteins in the blood that help it clot allowing you to bleed to death. A couple of months ago nearly all the hospitals in Chicago were running out of Vitamin K (the reversal) because of a spike in K2 overdoses.
 
You east coast niggas on a new level of savagery
No more than the west coast....you guys started "the savagery"....the first level......the homeless in despair ….bums on skidrow with no cash for food are overdosing on it....west coast was overdosing in droves like two years ago.....:hmm:

Sep. 25, 2016, 2:19 p.m.
California outlaws possession of synthetic drug 'spice' amid overdoses on L.A.'s Skid Row

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ov. Jerry Brown on Sunday signed legislation that outlaws the possession of the synthetic drug "spice" after law enforcement officials and paramedics tended to dozens of overdoses on Skid Row in Los Angeles.

Senate Bill 139, introduced by Sen. Cathleen Galgiani (D-Stockton) and sponsored by the California Police Chiefs Assn., adds a number of specified drugs and chemicals to the existing list of prohibited synthetic cannabinoids.
It is already a crime to sell those drugs. But the urgency measure, which was requested by the California Narcotics Officers Assn., would make a first offense of possession of specified synthetic cannabinoids or stimulants an infraction. A second or third offense could be a misdemeanor.



This law "is very important because young people believe that if a drug is not illegal, it is okay and that it is safe," Galgiani said. "But underground chemists manufacture these drugs in warehouses and then market them to kids as being legal when in fact they are more dangerous."

For law enforcement, the rise of synthetic drugs has been difficult to regulate, as sellers change their chemical combinations often.

U.S. drug companies first developed synthetic cannabinoids in the 1980s as they sought to find drugs to treat serious diseases, such as cancer and lupus. Although their researchers failed, illegal drug manufacturers then took the formula and marketed it across Europe as herbal incense before spice arrived in new forms in the U.S. in 2009.

Galgiani's bill drew the strong support of law enforcement associations in Los Angeles, where officials have been scrambling to warn people about the drug, which can produce effects similar to those of marijuana but is a different plant material sprayed with a psychoactive chemical.

The California Police Chiefs Association said the legislation, which provides treatment and education options for anyone caught in possession of a synthetic drug or stimulant, would encourage defendants to take advantage of those programs.

"Getting people into treatment is literally lifesaving," the association has said in a statement. "Without treatment intervention, persons using these drugs face a continued downward cycle."

The measure was opposed by the American Civil Liberties Union and the Drug Policy Alliance.



I'll let you click the link below to read the rest....but you get the general idea.....:hmm::hmm::hmm:

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http://www.latimes.com/politics/ess...tlaws-possession-of-1474838057-htmlstory.html
 
Damn, some shit always happening in pistol wavin' New Haven



:lol: You ain't lying playa. Out here in NYC we call it gun waving New Haven or just Gun Waven. There's plenty weed out there but that K2 is dirt cheap. Mostly derelicts fuck with that shit.
 
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