News Nearby: New Synthetic Drug—N-Bomb—Has Mother Worried
Carley B. Alves said she learned about the hallucinogenic N-Bomb, a potent, LSD-like substance, after her 15-year-old daughter and Ursuline Academy freshman was brought home from the party in an incoherent state.
A Chesterfield mother is speaking out about a dangerous new synthetic drug that she said nearly took the life of her daughter during a party on New Year's Eve, Chesterfield Patch reports.
Carley B. Alves said she learned about the hallucinogenic N-Bomb, a potent, LSD-like substance, after her 15-year-old daughter and Ursuline Academy freshman was brought home from the party in an incoherent state.
Alves learned later by talking with other teens at the party that an individual there had been offering acid, a common name for LSD, and that it possibly could have been slipped into her daughter's drink.
Alarmed by the incident, Alves has contacted various drug enforcement agencies in the area. At least one officer said the symptoms she described were similar to N-Bomb; she also earned the attention of a St. Louis Drug Enforcement Agency official, which confirmed that N-Bomb is a new drug circulating that is similar to acid that it is "considered extremely dangerous."
For more on this story, read the full report on Chesterfield Patch.
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