Authorities believe LSD, or possibly a designer drug known as "bath salts", may have been in Eugene's system when he chewed the face of his victim. ^ "Medical examiner rules out bath salts in Miami face-chewing attack". The Two-Way 'Bath Salts' Drug Suspected In Miami Face-Eating Attack May 30, 201212:50 PM ET By Mark Memmott.
Miami police say face-eating attack similar to other "bath salts" incidents. MIAMI, May 29, 2012 . A long-awaited toxicology report shows Austin Harrouff was not, as authorities openly speculated at the time, on flakka or bath salts when he allegedly killed a Florida couple at their home and.
In this handout image provided by Jackson Memorial Hospital, cannibal attack victim Ronald Poppo, 65, shows the extent of his injuries for the first time while still in the hospital on June 12. In May 2012, the nation first caught wind of "bath salts" thanks to the "Miami Cannibal" attack. In the hours after Rudy Eugene chewed the face off homeless man Ronald Poppo near the MacArthur.
The department ruled out the most common components found in so-called bath salts, which mimic the effects of cocaine or methamphetamine and have been associated with bizarre crimes in recent months. Rudy Eugene, the Causeway Cannibal who ate the face off a homeless man he attacked along the MacArthur Causeway, was apparently not high on bath salts or any other exotic street drug at the time. Archive Did Bath Salts Spark Miami's Gruesome 'Zombie' Attack? FLORIDA FEAR FACTOR A popular new drug is emerging as a likely explanation for why a homeless Miami man bit off another man's.
A Florida student accused of killing two people and partially eating one of the victim's faces was not under the influence of synthetic drugs when the attack took place, his attorney said. Austin Harrouff's attorney, Nellie King, was citing FBI toxicology tests that were released Wednesday afternoon, contradicting early law enforcement accounts that the 19-year-old was high on bath salts, or.