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Terrifying new 'zombie drug' Flakka that's WORSE than ice has flooded Australia
Terrifying new 'zombie drug' Flakka that's WORSE than ice has flooded AustraliaA drug which sends users into a paranoid frenzy where they act like zombies and bite the flesh off strangers faces is widely available in Australia and costs as little as $7.50 a hit.Called flakka, but known on the street as 'gravel' and by chemists as alpha-PVP, the terrifying hallucinogen has earned a reputation as one of America's scariest drugs - and it's being synthesised in China and shipped in the kilograms to Australia.Users can order the drug online and have it delivered to their mailbox the next day, or find an synthetic alternative in their local sex shop shelves - with no understanding of its dosage or contents.
besides independent
Flakka: What is the 'zombie drug' blamed for face-eating attacks?
Flakka: What is the 'zombie drug' blamed for face-eating attacks?When police in Florida pulled a 19-year-old student away from the bodies of his two alleged victims – one of whom he had reportedly bitten in the face – they knew what to blame.They had seen it before, in the shape of attacks carried out by drug users under the influence of flakka or bath salts, a powerful man-made drug."When you see a case like this where someone is biting off pieces of somebody's face, could it be flakka?
in the same way nj
What is flakka? The 'zombie drug' that causes terrifying hallucinations
What is flakka? The 'zombie drug' that causes terrifying hallucinationsA designer drug that has been linked to a number of bizarre incidents over the last few years is back in the news after police say a 19-year-old college student may have been on the hallucinogen when he allegedly stabbed a couple and ate one of the victim's faces.Authorities said it took multiple officers and police dogs to stop the Florida State University sophomore on Tuesday from biting pieces of flesh off the man, even after he was hit with a stun gun by sheriffs, according to the Palm Beach Post.The test results for synthetic drugs, such as flakka and bath salts, are still pending, but the police statements have started another national conversation about the the drug that was once an epidemic in parts of Florida.