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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Fourth-Graders Suffer Illness After Possibly Ingesting
Title:US CA: Fourth-Graders Suffer Illness After Possibly Ingesting
Published On:1998-09-24
Source:San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-07 00:17:06
FOURTH-GRADERS SUFFER ILLNESS AFTER POSSIBLY INGESTING LSD

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Fourteen youngsters got sick or dizzy or began
hallucinating Wednesday when a fourth-grader brought what a doctor
believed to be LSD and shared it with classmates, authorities said.

Dr. Michael Sarti of Providence-Holy Cross told reporters he believes
the children tasted LSD, despite early reports the substance was
cocaine. He said some of the children ``were seeing colors and things
that aren't there. It sounds like an hallucinogen, like LSD. We had a
hiatus on LSD, but it seems to be coming back in vogue.''

The 9- and 10-year-old children tasted or ingested the substance at
Haddon Avenue Elementary School when a girl student passed it around,
apparently starting in the yard early in the day and later in class.

One child went home sick early in the day and 13 others were later
taken to two hospitals after illness began to spread. Three youngsters
were hospitalized overnight for observation.

Police said a preliminary investigation revealed that the girl found a
box containing a powder and a vial of liquid in a box near her Pacoima
home.

Police Lt. Rick Papke said some of the children ingested the
substance, others merely licked it and were sickened.

``They were completely disoriented, acting irrationally,'' Papke said.
``Their symptoms were of those who had ingested a controlled
substance.''

But late Wednesday it was still not known exactly what the substance
was.

``The children believed it was cocaine,'' said Socorro Serrano, a
spokeswoman for the Los Angeles Unified School District. ``They passed
it around in the playground before school and out of curiosity started
to taste it.''

Edgar said the girl who brought the substance was among those
affected.

``She was writing in her journal,'' the boy said. ``She said she had a
hard time spelling her name. It's because she was so dizzy.''

Parents gathered anxiously outside the school when word of the trouble
spread.

``This school is pretty safe,'' said Edwin Ramirez, a parent who
volunteers to help provide security at Haddon. ``The worst thing we've
had here before was a kid with a broken finger. I don't know how this
could have happened.''

Checked-by: Patrick Henry
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