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This is a personal experience of mine: I was a resident advisor (RA) in college. I had the displeasure of dealing with 2 residents that had taken 4 doses of LSD each. It was not a pleasant experience for them, for me, or anyone that had to deal with the incident. These 2 young women (girls, really) happened to also be friends of mine. I stumbled across them coming back into the dorms. At first, it was "fine". They were kind of goofy, kind of chill, just wanted me to get them back to their room and put a movie on for them. No problem; I can handle that. Very quickly, though, things turned. I never did figure out if there was a trigger, but one of the two turned extremely violent in a hurry. As in, trying to grab scissors and stab her best friend to death kind of violent. It was rapidly apparent that no, I cannot handle this. I followed my training: called campus security, identified myself, informed them I was an RA, and told them I had 2 girls that had taken 4 hits of acid a piece, and that they needed medical attention ASAP. They thought it was a prank call. I lost it. Told them I was going to hang up and call 911 myself, then come back after for their job. Well, wasn't long after that before first responders arrived. And I mean they sent everyone. It was really overkill. I don't event know how many cops showed, it was a lot, but campus was directly across the street from the city's police HQ. Think there were 3 fire engines and a couple of ambulances. The girls went to the ER, had their stomachs pumped and were force-fed activated charcoal. I had to be checked out by the EMTs, as well, because I got bit by the one that turned violent (I had her pinned between my back and a wall so I could free my hands to use the phone to make the necessary calls. I got bit on the back of my head, of all places). So, no, I wouldn't call it safe, and I wouldn't recommend it to anyone, either. But, of course, that's just one experience by proxy. |
There's also the issue that a lot of drugs really aren't what people say they are. Depending on the time period your anecdote took place in, it's highly possible that what they took wasn't really LSD, but one of the many psychedelic analogs and designer drugs that have been prolific in the last 2 decades sold as LSD but much more dangerous.
I remember in the mid 2000s (maybe early 2010s?) there was a huge amount of people buying 25X-NBOMES (gray area "legal" to order cheaply on the clearnet at the time) and selling them as LSD on blotters to people who weren't testing what they had or had never taken LSD and didn't know any better. And unlike LSD these are actually physically dangerous in quantities not much higher than the ones you'd take for a recreational dose and could trigger all kinds of mental breakdowns and persisting physical problems due to their toxicity (ranging from psychosis and aggression to seizures and death)
So I wonder if in your case, this contributed to the situation- them being unknowing recipients of a dangerous analog sold to them as LSD, and their taking 4x the dose triggering that outcome.