At least four people died and 140 got sick in Washington, likely from a bad batch of synthetic marijuana, known as K2 or “Spice,” according to local officials.
In one instance, a firefighter said that 11 people were sickened in the city’s E and 3rd streets in northwestern D.C. at around 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Those people, he said, looked like zombies from “Night of the Living Dead.”
Many of the alleged Spice overdoses have taken place near a homeless shelter at 2nd and D streets.
Fire officials also said that being dehydrated from the summer heat can make Spice users more susceptible to overdoses.
“You will see people that are unconscious, people that are vomiting, people that are collapsing or maybe being overly aggressive – those are signs that they may be impacted or under the influence,” said D.C. Fire and EMS Chief Gregory Dean in the Fox affiliate report.
“Each day we’ve seen the number of cases rise,” said the director of the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) Nirav D. Shah in a statement at the time. Shah added: “Synthetic cannabinoids are unsafe. They are not regulated and people don’t know what chemicals may be in them, like rat poison. While efforts are underway to get the contaminated drugs out of circulation, it’s possible they could re-emerge. We urge people not to use synthetic cannabinoids now or ever.”
Manufacturers often slightly tweak the ingredients and the names when their products are targeted. Some brand names include K2, Spice, and Kronic. K2 and Spice have become slang for the drug, despite the brand.