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Rohypnol
November
1993: A 16 year old boy kills a 17 year old boy at the Copenhagen
maintrainstation. The 16 year old had never seen his victim before.
According to the Danish justice and doctors advisoryboard the 16
year old could have lost all inhibitions after he had taken one
and a half flunitrazepam
of the brand Rohypnol.
Rohypnol,
the trade name for flunitrazepam, has been a concern for the last
few years because of its abuse as a "date rape" drug.
People may unknowingly be given the drug which, when mixed with
alcohol, can incapacitate a victim and prevent them from resisting
sexual assault. Also, Rohypnol may be lethal when mixed with alcohol
and/or other depressants.
Rohypnol produces sedative-hypnotic effects including muscle relaxation
and amnesia; it can also produce physical and psychological dependence.
In Miami, one of the first sites of Rohypnol abuse, poison control
centers report an increase in withdrawal seizures among people addicted
to Rohypnol.
Rohypnol
is not approved for use in the United States and its importation
is banned. Illicit use of Rohypnol began in Europe in the 1970s
and started appearing in the United States in the early 1990s, where
it became known as "rophies," "roofies," "roach,"
"rope," and the "date rape" drug.
Another
very similar drug is now being sold as "roofies" in Miami,
Minnesota, and Texas. This is clonazepam, marketed in the U.S. as
Klonopin and in Mexico as Rivotril. It is sometimes abused to enhance
the effects of heroin and other opiates. Based on emergency room
admission information, Boston, San Francisco, Phoenix, and Seattle
appear to have the highest use rates of clonazepam.
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