Michael Meyden is accused of making the smoothies with benzodiazepine, a drug typically prescribed for anxiety, according to a probable cause affidavit.

An Oregon man accused of spiking smoothies with sedatives and giving them to his daughter’s pre-teen friends has been charged with multiple felonies, according to court documents.

Michael Meyden, 57, of Lake Oswego, allegedly drugged three of his daughter’s friends while they slept over on the night of Aug. 25, 2023, according to court documents and a probable cause affidavit filed this week in Clackamas County.

The girls, all 12 years old, were hospitalized and tested positive for benzodiazepine, described in the affidavit as a drug typically prescribed for anxiety, with common prescriptions under the names Valium, Xanax and Klonopin. Benzodiazepines are a depressant that produces sedation, sleepiness and a relaxed mood, the affidavit said.

  • @[email protected]
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    20410 months ago

    This seems to be more serious that what have been suggested by other comments.

    Luckily one of the girls didn’t like the smoothie and didn’t take much. She didn’t fall into deep sleep and was the one who suspected something fishy going on when the man kept coming to the basement. The man even tried to separate the girls. Again, the girl protected her friends by pulling them closer to her. She finally managed to contact her family friend, when the man went outside, messaging them to come and bring her home, and once she was saved, the other families followed suit.

    Given a different scenario where everyone took the smoothies, I speculate with high degree of confidence someone would get sexually assaulted or worse.

    • PlasmaDistortion
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      10 months ago

      And this is why we don’t allow our kids to participate in sleep overs.

      Edit: Downvote all you want, sleepovers are weird and too risky.

      Edit 2: Ok I wasn’t going to include this context but since you are all so ignorant I feel the need to. My son went on a sleep over when he was 14 and ended up getting molested. So for the rest of my kids (yes they are teen girls), there is a zero sleep over policy.

      So for all of you judgmental assholes, fuck off.

      • @Dkarma
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        7510 months ago

        And this is why you have the weird kids who can’t function

      • @Custoslibera
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        5910 months ago

        Sleepovers were a huge part of my childhood.

        Waking up in the morning at your best friends house and playing Nintendo with the volume on the tv way down before their parents are awake who then make us pancakes are core memories.

        Should be a said though that my friends parents were reasonable close friends with my own parents and my friends slept over at my place regularly as well.

        You raise your kids however you want but don’t underestimate the small experience of independence a sleepover can give a child.

      • @ammonium
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        4510 months ago

        Do you also not allow your kids to set foot in a car? Much more dangerous than sleepovers

      • @EdibleFriend
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        3810 months ago

        Kids get abducted if you allow them to go outside, never let them go outside.

      • @Passerby6497
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        2110 months ago

        Your child is going to hate you for smothering them and unfairly limiiting their ability to be a child because of your misplaced anxieties. This sort of shit is an exception to the normal, and your hurting your children by cowering in fear over something that’s a very low probability.

        I hope you don’t drive your kids anywhere, that’s waaaaaaay too risky and dangerous for them if you think sleepovers are risky.

      • littleblue✨
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        1710 months ago

        Yes, yes, restrict and police rather than educate and enable personal agency. All children need is to live in an impermeable bubble of perfect safety, not learn any life skills at all… 🤦🏼‍♂️

        Fucksake. Your kids are going to be stunted adults that require $$$$ of therapy to function in the real world. Congrats.

        • @ours
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          410 months ago

          I grew up with a guy that was stunted by his parents. Study, don’t go out except on a few select occasions, do this sport, no girls.

          He did really great at school, great student, good guy, good athlete. Then he had to live home for university and went completely overboard. Overweight, stuck with a controlling woman who took advantage of him, failing in his studies. It’s really sad.

      • ainokea
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        10 months ago

        You’re their parent, who cares what rando internet strangers think. You do what you feel is best for your kids.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Weirdly specific. I had an argument about this exact thing on a post a few weeks ago. There was someone who had a friend who lost was divorced by his wife (phrasing issue) and couldn’t understand why other parents were wary of him hosting a sleepover for his daughter. He had done so many times as a married man but suddenly couldn’t.

        So the argument was about how women in general, especially parents of little girls, can’t blindly trust every man they meet. There were some salty males insisting that line of logic is sexist.

        Anyway, banning all sleepovers isn’t the solution. Properly chaperoned sleepovers with two parents present should be fine.

        [Edit: Yes, I realize that it’s technically sexist. The fact that it is is beside the point that it’s necessary for women to be wary of men. If you don’t understand why, ask literally any woman in your life to explain it for you]

        [Edit #2: I’m not engaging anyone else on the subject from this point. I have successfully fallen into the same trap of holding dudes’ hands who don’t understand that strange men do, in fact, pose a risk to women, and now my morning has been wasted.

        I already elaborated this point more than enough. If you still feel the need to express how this offends you after you read down this thread, I would urge you to look elsewhere into women’s perspectives on the subject before you just handwave it like these guys are trying to do.]

        • @ammonium
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          1010 months ago

          Explain to me how that is not sexist?

          Here’s the Oxford Dictionary of sexism:

          sexism /ˈsɛksɪz(ə)m / ▸ noun [mass noun] prejudice, stereotyping, or discrimination, typically against women, on the basis of sex: sexism in language is an offensive reminder of the way the culture sees women.

          To burst your bubble, some of the most famous rapists and child molesters I know of had their wives help them. Women can be monsters too.

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            99% of sexual assault cases are perpetrated by men, and 91% of the victims are women

            I really don’t wish to rehash this. For the sake of simplicity, yes. It fits the technical definition of sexism. However, arguing that women shouldn’t be wary of men they don’t know because it might hurt someone’s feelings is completely ridiculous, especially when the thing at stake is a woman or girl’s safety.

            I understand, believe me because I had to reassure several people multiple times, that women can also be monsters. That doesn’t change the fact that perpetrators of sexual assault cases are overwhelmingly men.

            This cannot be overstated. Even sexual assault against men is perpetrated 86% of the time by other men. See Page 32

            I hesitate to even engage you on this because there’s a fine line between logically arriving at the point that it is in fact sexist, and blindly extending the claim to the connotation that discrimination in that sense shouldn’t exist at all. If you are going to argue the latter, I’m not going any further than this.

            • @Blue_Morpho
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              1110 months ago

              It is a difficult problem because using statistics like that you end up supporting people who say you should be wary of blacks because 14% of the population is black yet commit 53% of the murders.

              Imo it’s more important to look at the percentage of crime in general. Googling says around 12,000 pedos out of 330 million people. If you live your life by your statistics you shouldn’t let your kids inside a car. Driving them to a sleepover is far more dangerous than the sleepover.

              • @[email protected]
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                10 months ago

                If you live your life like that

                The reality is that women do.

                using statistics like that you end up supporting people who say you should be wary of blacks because 14% of the population is black yet commit 53% of the murders

                No, this is a different thing. People who espouse that line of logic are explicitly using it to justify racism. There are several other factors that play into that specific statistic, including the population density of black people in areas where crime is already high, and the likelihood of being economically disadvantaged just by being in a black family from generational poverty.

                That stat specifically is simplified to a bare number and used as a bludgeon by racists.

                Googling says around 12,000 pedos out of 330 million people

                I understand how you misinterpreted the point, given the actual subject of the post, but those statistics are about sexual assault in general. 1 in 3 women experience unwanted sexual contact in their lifetime. I’d say that’s high enough number to warrant being aware of a situation where you, as a woman, might be vulnerable to that.

                To relate to the point you’re trying to make about comparing this to justifying racism with black crime stats, would you choose to walk through a neighborhood where the crime rate was high? Regardless of the demographic makeup of the neighborhood, is it morally wrong to arrive at the conclusion that you are not safe in certain areas because the statistical likelihood of being assaulted is higher?

                Does the sentence “If I don’t walk through this neighborhood then I must be prejudiced against the people here who don’t commit crimes” make sense to you?

                If the answer to all of those is no, then you can at least recognize the line of logic women have to be conscious of when they are faced with potentially being in a precarious situation around a man who they don’t know.

                • @Blue_Morpho
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                  410 months ago

                  People who espouse that line of logic are explicitly using it to justify racism.

                  Just as you use your statistic to justify sexism. You don’t consider the factors that cause men to be sexual predators. Because to you, the cause isn’t your problem, being attacked is your problem. You can’t have it both ways.

                  1 in 3 women experience unwanted sexual contact in their lifetime.

                  100% of women will experience a car crash in their lifetime. (3-4 accidents per lifetime).

            • @ammonium
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              410 months ago

              That sounds much more reasonable, but don’t forget these numbers are also skewed by sexism, on many levels. Victims might not even realize they are victims. In many jurisdictions a woman having nonconsensual sex with a man isn’t even considered rape.

              Now, I don’t believe the numbers are even close to 50/50 or that women don’t have the right thing being wary. But being wary is one thing, simply banning all sleepovers at the house of single male parents is another. I’d still call that sexist.

              • RickRussell_CA
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                210 months ago

                In many jurisdictions a woman having nonconsensual sex with a man isn’t even considered rape

                It wasn’t defined as rape in the US until 2013. The FBI only considered “penetration” to be rape until the definition was revised, so national statistics didn’t represent ANY female-on-male rapes, unless the female used a body part or object on the male victim’s anus.

        • @Passerby6497
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          10 months ago

          There were some salty males insisting that line of logic is sexist.

          [Edit: Yes, I realize that it’s technically sexist. The fact that it is is beside the point that it’s necessary for women to be wary of men. If you don’t understand why, ask literally any woman in your life to explain it for you]

          I appreciate that you even understand that what you’re saying is sexist and are self aware enough to realize it is and had to come up with a goalpost moving reason why your statement isn’t actually sexist, really.

          So the argument was about how women in general, especially parents of little girls, can’t blindly trust every man they meet.

          If you don’t understand why people would be upset that people lost trust in their ability to not be a rapist just because their wife died, I think you need to take a full college course in empathy. This isn’t “blindly trusting every man they meet” this is specifically “I no longer trust you because you don’t have a woman in the house who would prevent you from being a pedophile”, and is 10000% a sexist statement.

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            Fellas, is it wrong to fear for the safety of your children?

            It’s quite ironic of you to take that stance, on this post.

            Yeah, it’s sexist. That doesn’t make taking precaution wrong. If you want clarification on that subject, go read the essay I wrote for the other guy. Or maybe ask a lady friend. Most women tend to understand this concept pretty well, given they have to live with it.

            • @Passerby6497
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              210 months ago

              Yeah, no. None of my lady friends would tell me they’d stop trusting a dude to watch their kids because his wife died. Because I’ve seen how they treated a friend who had that happen after he lost his wife young to cancer. They supported the dude and he still got to let his daughter and friends hang out at his house and sleep over. Maybe that’s just because they’re not secretly sexist? Not everyone is so afraid of their own shadow that they’d abandon a friend like that.

              Also, I’m only aware of 1 or 2 ladies in my friend group who haven’t told me about being sexually assaulted, so believe it or not, I understand how common this is. But hey, what do I know about it, I’m just some guy whose had to comfort a partner and multiple friends after being assaulted. I haven’t had to truly experience it.

              • @[email protected]
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                310 months ago

                Every racist and misogynist thinks their -ism is justified too. It’s not that they know it’s wrong and do it anyway.

              • @[email protected]
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                -310 months ago

                To be clear, the man in question was divorced. Unknown reasons. Not widowed.

                Also, I’m not over here saying that no man should ever be trusted in that situation. Just that I won’t blame parents who do look at that situation and don’t want their girls at that sleepover.

                In any case, I’m pretty tired of arguing against the “secretly sexist” accusations. Call it what you want. The concept is out there, and you clearly understand it.

      • @ChexMax
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        -1810 months ago

        People are down voting you, but I’ve heard about a lot of inappropriate behavior at sleepovers from people close to me, boys and girls. Me and my siblings were not allowed to go to sleepovers. Nobody thought we were weird. Once my parents grew a relationship with a friend’s parents, that rule got broken once in a while. Other than that, we were allowed to invite a friend over for a sleepover if we wanted one 🤷🏼‍♀️ I’m an adult now with my own child, and I’m really glad my parents protected me. I will have the same rule

        • TheHarpyEagle
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          3310 months ago

          Genuine question, what makes your house safer for a sleepover than other parents’? Of course you know your house is safe, but other parents could feel the same way.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            Yeah but it’s you who has to make the decisions about your kid’s safety, not them. And you don’t know what you don’t know. I wouldn’t blindly 100% trust strangers with my kid just because of a logical fairness any more than I would lend my car to random person off the street because I have no evidence they would steal it.

            I think it’s best if you can get to know people first. Even if it’s just for your own peace of mind and so that it’s visibly clear to them that there will be someone holding them accountable.

          • @Gradually_Adjusting
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            -410 months ago

            They did say that the rule gets broken on occasion if the parents knew the other parents really well.

            • @[email protected]
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              210 months ago

              Which is kinda funny, because people are sexually asaulted way more by people they know vs. people they don’t know.

  • @StereoTrespasser
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    15310 months ago

    I don’t feel safe. I might not respond but please come get me

    My God, I would have an absolute panic attack if my kid ever texted me this. I would be shaking with fear and rage the entire drive over.

    • @agitatedpotato
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      2510 months ago

      Id be at that door in 10 mins with a felony tucked in my waistband.

      • Khrux
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        4110 months ago

        That could be phrases differently.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          It’s completely unreasonable too.

          Buy a proper holster, people, it’s stylish and functional 😤

          • @[email protected]
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            710 months ago

            You also won’t accidentally shoot yourself in the inner thigh where a lot of important things are like your circulatory system.

            • littleblue✨
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              310 months ago

              Fun fact: femoral artery: ~45 seconds to bleed out.

    • @[email protected]
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      610 months ago

      As a primary (elementary) teacher I once had a grade 2 kid with scolded fingers from her mum. My principal ordered me to go home and paid for a taxi that day. Fortunately I have never crossed paths with that mother again.

  • partial_accumen
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    11610 months ago

    Burying the lede here:

    "Eventually two parents went to Mayden’s home to get the other two girls, but Meyden was reluctant to let them leave, the affidavit said. "

    The guy that drugged the girls didn’t want them to leave with their parents?!

    • @xantoxis
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      8110 months ago

      I think he was expecting the benzos to wear off before parents had any chance to inspect their kids. They showed up too early, and the effects of the benzos would have been quite evident, and he’d be in a fuckload of trouble. Which is exactly what’s happening.

  • FenrirIII
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    6910 months ago

    Any explanation for this is going to be horrible

    • @a4ng3l
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      10610 months ago

      Not that actually doing it isn’t absolutely horrible but wait till you have children, at about 7yo they invite 8 of their friends in your house and it’s pouring outside.

      The idea of sedating them will eventually come in mind. Then obviously you’ll discard it.

      And come the moment of cleaning the mess they inevitably leave you’ll wonder if you should have done it.

      • Chainweasel
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        10 months ago

        Yeah, there’s a big difference between using melatonin as a “sedative” so they don’t stay up all night and wreck the house, and using a powerful sedative to knock them out and abuse them.
        Granted, I am NOT advocating using melatonin on other people’s kids, especially without consent from the parents, but one of those scenarios is considerably more evil than the other.
        This guy gave the kids adult anxiety meds in smoothies, that makes this particular scenario much worse than a misguided attempt to make them go to bed early.

        • @[email protected]
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          4510 months ago

          The motive here appears to be much more sinister. If you haven’t read the article in full…

          After Meyden went back upstairs, the third girl, frightened for her friend who had been sleeping heavily, again pulled close to her, the affidavit said.

          Meyden returned a second time and again tried to separate the girls from each other. He also put his finger underneath the nose of the girl who pretended to be sleeping “as if to see if she was soundly asleep, he then waved his hand in front of her face,” she told police, according to the affidavit.

          Meyden then went outside through a sliding glass door and the girl frantically began calling and texting her parents and friends to pick her up.

        • @a4ng3l
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          3310 months ago

          Giving any psychoactive substance to anyone and especially kids without a specific prescription from a licensed practician is absolutely insane.

          Beside recreational drugs when an adult wishes to obviously.

        • @a4ng3l
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          2510 months ago

          In my view that’s not much better. Still not acceptable to medicate minors without parental approval and medical supervision. You never know for sure who’s allergic to what. Not your kid stay the fuck away.

      • Flying Squid
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        110 months ago

        Then obviously you’ll discard it.

        Apparently, since the article didn’t bring up any sort of sex crimes, he did not discard it.

        Where did he get the Benzos from?

        • Herbal Gamer
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          4210 months ago

          According to the affidavit, two girls slept on a pull-out couch in the basement, while two others slept in a bedroom in the basement. The third girl, who didn’t drink much of the smoothie, reported that Meyden came downstairs more than once. She had been sleeping close to another girl and said Meyden tried to physically separate the two, the document stated.

          After Meyden went back upstairs, the third girl, frightened for her friend who had been sleeping heavily, again pulled close to her, the affidavit said.

          Meyden returned a second time and again tried to separate the girls from each other. He also put his finger underneath the nose of the girl who pretended to be sleeping “as if to see if she was soundly asleep, he then waved his hand in front of her face,” she told police, according to the affidavit.

          I’m not sure but it does sound fishy as fuck.

          • Flying Squid
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            410 months ago

            I don’t disagree. But you’d think the article would be more explicit if he was suspected of sexually assaulting the girls.

            • @xantoxis
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              2710 months ago

              The parents showed up before he could. Also, one of the girls wasn’t affected as much and was able to run defense.

              He was trying to sexually assault them. There’s no question here.

              • @[email protected]
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                -310 months ago

                He has something fishy in mind - that’s for certain.

                But how can you say “there’s no question” about whether he wanted to sexually assault them?

                Maybe he wanted to kill them or something.

            • @[email protected]
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              1210 months ago

              Might just be written with context they were given and not insinuation. Which is good. But yeah. It seems he was trying to be a predator here from the context.

            • TheHarpyEagle
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              1210 months ago

              They can’t say for sure because, thank goodness, it didn’t happen. But there are very few good explanations for heavily drugging children and attempting to physically move them.

            • @[email protected]
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              210 months ago

              Some news places wouldn’t want to assume and put it in writing since that might “taint a jury pool” of they read about it before trial. Or a libel suit if the news places was wrong in their assumption.

              I believe that sexual assault/rape was 100% his goal, but I’m not a new organization.

        • @[email protected]
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          1410 months ago

          One of the girls didn’t have any smoothie. She said he came downstairs multiple times to check if they were asleep.

          Sounds fishy.

          • @EmpathicVagrant
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            2810 months ago

            Sounds to me like one girl not wanting smoothie saved all her friends.

        • @a4ng3l
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          610 months ago

          The article doesn’t mention that either but I read often that benzos are really common in the states, so likely a prescription.

    • @seth
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      2510 months ago

      deleted by creator

    • Amanduh
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      210 months ago

      Did you read the article? It seems like predatory behavior… gross

  • @PrincessLeiasCat
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    One girl drank two cups, and another girl drank one cup and a third said she did not like the smoothies and barely drank any at all. It was unclear how many smoothies Meyden’s daughter drank, but one girl told police it appeared to be a significant amount, the affidavit said.

    One girl drank at least twice as much as the others, and the guy drugged his own daughter, too. What a piece of shit.

    A girl who told police she drank two smoothies said she began to feel woozy, hot and clumsy, shortly after finishing the second smoothie. She said she “blacked out” and slipped into a “thick, deep sleep” she never experienced before, the affidavit said.

    I know they’re only 12, but how much did he put in there I wonder?

    And did the girl who didn’t drink much of the smoothie just not like the flavor or whatever, or did she think it tasted weird because she could taste whatever he spiked it with?

    • @[email protected]
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      710 months ago

      It’s possible it tasted fine but subliminally she knew something was wrong about the drink because of his behavior. Everyone should listen to their instincts like that child, she followed her instincts again later that night and saved herself and her friends.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      and the guy drugged his own daughter, too. What a piece of shit.

      Well, he probably rightly assumed his daughter would not want him assaulting her friends and would tell someone.

    • Drusas
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      110 months ago

      I occasionally take alprazolam under the tongue, and it does taste awful. Leaves a sort of metallic aftertaste.

  • @[email protected]
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    3410 months ago

    Shitty article writing. He didn’t spike their drinks with ‘benzodiazepine’, he spiked them with ‘a benzodiazepine’.

    ‘Benzodiazepine’ isn’t any specific drug, it’s a structural class of drugs

    • @[email protected]
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      1110 months ago

      Looks like you’re right. I was expecting it to be like amphetamine, where it’s both a class and a specific compound.

      • @[email protected]
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        1010 months ago

        The poor writing is academic, the story is horrifying. But the horror of the story had already been commented on, so I was nitpicking.

        Amphetamine is a shortening of a specific structural name, and is the example for the class of similar drugs, while benzodiazepine is a more general structural name for drugs that have linked benzene and diazepine rings; all of the drugs of interest have different functional groups, and there’s no ‘base’ drug that they’re modifications of

  • @Pretzilla
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    3110 months ago

    This was recently in an episode of The Bear.

    Catering a party of hyperactive kids and made spiked smoothies to sedate them. Wow.

  • @jordanlund
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    2510 months ago

    Bill Cosby is NOT a role model!

  • @Cosmicomical
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    910 months ago

    Wasn’t this the plot of an episode of bear?

  • @[email protected]
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    Is it possible that the girls wanted to get rid of the father of their friend, spiked their own smoothies, and now an honest man is being pitchforked?

    Did that man do anything else than being present? Playing with the girls? Taking part in the sleepover? Did he have the drugs on hand? Did any of the girls have access to that drug at all? Was there a grudge?

    How single-sided can this reporting be?

    But after reading the initial article, yeah, probably a predator. Still. A thorough investigation should take place. There are well-meaning and involved people who don’t have an interest in abuse. It’s still possible the daughter was sick of her hyper-involved dad, and planned the whole thing. :')

    • RickRussell_CA
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      1510 months ago

      It’s still possible the daughter was sick of her hyper-involved dad, and planned the whole thing

      What the actual F, dude?

    • @[email protected]
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      1110 months ago

      When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, and not zebras. The guy needs to have an investigation done, and a proper trial, yes of course. And if something else happened, hopefully it’ll come out during that, but that’s a bit of a weird thing to gravitate towards first, man.

      • @[email protected]
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        010 months ago

        I’m not gravitating to that first at all. The other side of the story has been already told. I’m just saying what if. And things like that have happened. Why woulda nyone jump to the conclusion that it might be my first thought? It’s my last one. But one that has to be completely discussed and dismissed. Innocent until proven guilty. That article didn’t even hint at the possibility, it is an atrocity of journalism.

        • @[email protected]
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          510 months ago

          I think what is more probable than a bunch of elementary kids stealing drugs, is that this guy isn’t actually a predator and just a REALLY stupid dad tired of the girls keeping him up all night. Figured Klonopin in a small enough dose would be perfectly safe. But he’s an idiot so he messed up the dose.

          But more likely than all that is he’s just a sick creep. But this is why we have due process.

    • @tacosplease
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      410 months ago

      Seems most likely that he wanted the girls to chill out and go to sleep, so he gave them benzos.

  • @[email protected]
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    -2310 months ago

    I have 2 year old twins… I get it.

    I mean it’s wrong and I would never do that, but I get it.

    • @[email protected]
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      4810 months ago

      He went down and tried to separate the girls in their sleep while putting his hands on them.

      One girl describes how unsafe she felt for her drugged friends when he was trying to separate them.

      • @candybrie
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        10 months ago

        That’s obviously not what they meant.

        They get the desire to make a group of kids chill out and sleep.

        The blurb and headline make no insinuation of sexual abuse.

        • DarkThoughts
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          fedilink
          -2510 months ago

          Oh yeah, the good man just wanted them kids to be quiet with that drug cocktail. Jesus fucking Christ dude, stop being so naive.

          • @candybrie
            link
            1910 months ago

            I’m not a dude and I was talking about the commenter not the person in the story.

          • @Modern_medicine_isnt
            link
            1810 months ago

            The person probably didn’t read the article, and you did. You can enlighten them politely.