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Date Rape Drugs

I have a female friend who you'd generally class as a "butterface", and one evening at a nightclub she had her drink spiked and passed out in the club, only to wake up where she had been sitting, as whoever had roofied her subsequently saw her in better lighting and put her back where he found her. As to why she didn't go to the police, now that is something I don't understand.
 
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From September 2018:

"I started the evening with two bottles of Prosecco, then had three Jägerbombs, a pint of Snakebite, two Porn Star Martinis, four pints of lager and a Cheeky Vimto. Then [name] must have slipped me a roofy, because I woke up in bed with him."

https://forums.forteana.org/index.p...-anaesthetic-agents.59926/page-3#post-1781477

maximus otter
I'm a man who likes a drop of wine (chablis, pouilly-fuissé, oak-laden New World chardonnay, Champagne, prosecco etc) but two bottles of Prosecco and the rest – including five (FIVE!!!) pints – would put me in hospital or on the mortician's slab. Yep, must be the roofy! I know that's the point you're making but sheesh, using all my fingers and toes I run out of the number of units of alcohol in that evening out...
 
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This is a case local to me from a few years ago. Basically, a student goes missing, can't be found for some weeks. His body is discovered some time later. High levels of GHB are detected.

A mother whose son was found dead with high levels of the drug GHB in his system is calling for the drug to be reclassified.

Donna O'Halloran's son David disappeared after a night out in Stirling city centre in January 2013.

The body of the 18-year-old mathematics student was found three months later in a wooded area above Bridge of Allan.

Toxicology tests showed he had high levels of GHB - a class C drug - in his system.

His mother, who believes his drink was spiked, wants the drug to be reclassified as a class A drug.

From this article on BBC website.

That's despite the actual toxicology report finding:

Tests on David’s body found he‘d had apparently high levels of GHB in his system for four months.

From this article.

I found myself conflicted about this one. I can fully sympathize with his mother's grief, but at the same time it seems that it was everyone's fault but her son's. The taxi driver who didn't deliver David right to his door - despite him wanting to walk the last distance home. The university for not taking better care of their students. The nightclub for asking him to leave when he'd seemingly had too much to drink (and for serving him prior to that). The person or persons unknown who supposedly spiked his drink.

Not her son; who necked a half bottle of vodka before going out clubbing with his mates in January, in Scotland, in temperatures that were -4°C, wearing just jeans, a t-shirt and a shirt.:(

More about the search, prior to the discovery of the body here, including the involvement of a psychic.:headbang:
 
I found myself conflicted about this one. I can fully sympathize with his mother's grief, but at the same time it seems that it was everyone's fault but her son's. The taxi driver who didn't deliver David right to his door - despite him wanting to walk the last distance home. The university for not taking better care of their students. The nightclub for asking him to leave when he'd seemingly had too much to drink (and for serving him prior to that). The person or persons unknown who supposedly spiked his drink.

Not her son; who necked a half bottle of vodka before going out clubbing with his mates in January, in Scotland, in temperatures that were -4°C, wearing just jeans, a t-shirt and a shirt.
Yes. I guess no-one really wants to believe that a loved one could have made enough bad choices to actually lead to their own death. It's very sad. :(
 
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