^^@clayfig: so they thought they were taking meph, somehow discovered after dosing that it was 2-c-t-7, then incorrectly reported to the police that it was 2c-e?
My local public radio station covered this on my way to work this morning (this happened just several miles from my home), and according to them the "authorities identified the substance as 2C-E". I doubt they could have had lab results confirm conclusively this quickly, and a field test would not have identified it either. So my guess is they are taking somebody's word for it. Snorting 2C-T-7 would make sense for an overdose (though snorting large quantities of anything is of course a recipe for disaster).
But really this is all speculation, and the public may never know the full story. I anticipate legislation introduced in our state at least, as we've already criminalized a few of the JWH series despite no acute overdoses. At the end of the day this really can only be enforced on head shops, as most vendors leave legal responsibility to the buyer; it just makes it slightly less convenient.
It's definitely sad for anyone so young to lose their life. It's also unfortunate that few people can put such events into perspective, and see the relative safety of such drugs when compared to so many others.
Edit: my local public radio station also mentioned that 2C-E "mimics the effects of ecstasy"...typical media drug canned and regurgitated "reporting" (though I normally like MPR). But yeah, what the substance really was is anybody's guess.
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