Drug Cocktail "K-powdered milk" Kills 6 People in Bangkok
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Drug Cocktail "K-powdered milk" Kills 6 People in Bangkok
'K-powdered milk' drug cocktail kills six
published : 12 Jan 2021 at 08:00
The national police chief has pledged to crack down on a new illegal drug cocktail known as "k-powdered milk" after six people died in Bangkok on the same day after using it.
National police chief Pol Gen Suwat Jangyodsuk said police could not yet confirm whether the substance, which looks like powdered milk, was a combination of ketamine and sleeping pills as speculated, as the results of the autopsies had not yet been released.
Some reports said it also contained methamphetamine and heroin.
The drug is known as "k-nom pong" among Thai users.
Pol Gen Suwat said he had instructed the Metropolitan Police Bureau (MPB) and the Narcotics Suppression Bureau (NSB) to urgently investigate where the substance came from and how it was distributed.
An incident, like this, in which so many people died after taking the same drug on the same day has never occurred before, the national police chief said on Monday.
Five of the six people died in an area under the jurisdiction of Wat Phraya Krai police station in Bangkok.
Pol Gen Suwat said police suspected that the substance might contain controlled medications such as clonazepam smuggled in across the borders.
Chief of the MPB Pol Lt Gen Phukphong Phongpetra said the six people -- three males and two females -- aged between 21-34 years. All of them were believed to have died after taking the drug as the white powdery narcotic was found at the scenes.
Examination of the substance and an investigation into the deaths is underway, Pol Lt Gen Phukphong said.
The Office of the Narcotics Control Board( ONCB) is currently analysing the substance to determine what it is and where it came from, said national police spokesman Pol Maj Gen Yingyos Thepjumnong.
According to the spokesman, the drug is a combination of heroin, ketamine, methamphetamine and a type of sleeping pill. The drug calms and stimulates the brain at the same time.
Chief of the NSB Pol Lt Gen Montri Yimyaem said the drugs were mixed by some groups of users to make the sensation more pleasurable, while dealers used the practice to raise the price and lower their costs. This particular drug might have come from Pathum Thani province, he said.
Pol Lt Gen Montri also noted that there are a lot of entertainment venues in the Wat Phraya Krai area which may have been one of the reasons the deaths occurred in such close proximity to one another, speculating that there may be a common source involved.
Secretary-General of the ONCB Wichai Chaimongkol said the ONCB has arrested more than 650 ketamine users since 2018, and this drug might be a variant laced with cocaine, which could also explain its "powdered milk" appearance.
A similar drug was confiscated in 2018, he said, but it was never a widely used substance had not been attributed to any deaths at the time or since, Mr Wichai added.
Assoc Prof Weerachai Phutdhawong from Faculty of Liberal Arts and Science, Kasetsart University wrote on his Facebook page that the "powdered milk ketamine" was mainly composed of four substances -- ketamine, heroine, ice and a sleeping pill called "Rosé" (ramelteon, commonly prescribed under the brand name Rozerem).
Three other substances found included sodium pentothai, pencuronium bromide and potassium chloride which are used in prisoner executions, according to the academic.
https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/ge ... -kills-six
published : 12 Jan 2021 at 08:00
The national police chief has pledged to crack down on a new illegal drug cocktail known as "k-powdered milk" after six people died in Bangkok on the same day after using it.
National police chief Pol Gen Suwat Jangyodsuk said police could not yet confirm whether the substance, which looks like powdered milk, was a combination of ketamine and sleeping pills as speculated, as the results of the autopsies had not yet been released.
Some reports said it also contained methamphetamine and heroin.
The drug is known as "k-nom pong" among Thai users.
Pol Gen Suwat said he had instructed the Metropolitan Police Bureau (MPB) and the Narcotics Suppression Bureau (NSB) to urgently investigate where the substance came from and how it was distributed.
An incident, like this, in which so many people died after taking the same drug on the same day has never occurred before, the national police chief said on Monday.
Five of the six people died in an area under the jurisdiction of Wat Phraya Krai police station in Bangkok.
Pol Gen Suwat said police suspected that the substance might contain controlled medications such as clonazepam smuggled in across the borders.
Chief of the MPB Pol Lt Gen Phukphong Phongpetra said the six people -- three males and two females -- aged between 21-34 years. All of them were believed to have died after taking the drug as the white powdery narcotic was found at the scenes.
Examination of the substance and an investigation into the deaths is underway, Pol Lt Gen Phukphong said.
The Office of the Narcotics Control Board( ONCB) is currently analysing the substance to determine what it is and where it came from, said national police spokesman Pol Maj Gen Yingyos Thepjumnong.
According to the spokesman, the drug is a combination of heroin, ketamine, methamphetamine and a type of sleeping pill. The drug calms and stimulates the brain at the same time.
Chief of the NSB Pol Lt Gen Montri Yimyaem said the drugs were mixed by some groups of users to make the sensation more pleasurable, while dealers used the practice to raise the price and lower their costs. This particular drug might have come from Pathum Thani province, he said.
Pol Lt Gen Montri also noted that there are a lot of entertainment venues in the Wat Phraya Krai area which may have been one of the reasons the deaths occurred in such close proximity to one another, speculating that there may be a common source involved.
Secretary-General of the ONCB Wichai Chaimongkol said the ONCB has arrested more than 650 ketamine users since 2018, and this drug might be a variant laced with cocaine, which could also explain its "powdered milk" appearance.
A similar drug was confiscated in 2018, he said, but it was never a widely used substance had not been attributed to any deaths at the time or since, Mr Wichai added.
Assoc Prof Weerachai Phutdhawong from Faculty of Liberal Arts and Science, Kasetsart University wrote on his Facebook page that the "powdered milk ketamine" was mainly composed of four substances -- ketamine, heroine, ice and a sleeping pill called "Rosé" (ramelteon, commonly prescribed under the brand name Rozerem).
Three other substances found included sodium pentothai, pencuronium bromide and potassium chloride which are used in prisoner executions, according to the academic.
https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/ge ... -kills-six
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