804322
From King County, Washington on 6/18/2024
Assumed to be cocaine
This is a messy brew of 6 major substances:
despropionyl p-fluorofentanyl
4-ANPP
p-fluorofentanyl
methamphetamine
cocaine
fentanyl
But we found lots of contaminants too, with traces of methyl ecgonidine (MED) + despropionyl ortho-methylfentanyl + ortho-methylfentanyl + tropacocaine. Trace substances in small quantities are usually harmless, but can sometimes cause health problems. Unexpected sensations may be due to these.
Fentanyl is potent and the amount changes by batch. If you weren't expecting it, consider getting test strips online or from a harm reduction program. Carry naloxone (Narcan) to reverse overdoses. Don't use alone so someone can help if you go out.
There are a lot of different substances in this sample. We don't know the harms that some of these can cause. Be careful and be prepared for unexpected reactions.
Fluorofentanyl is showing up recently. It's the result of different raw materials being used to make fentanyl. We don't know yet if it causes any specific problems.
Looks = white powder
Need free supplies and advice to keep you safe? Find your nearest harm reduction program at harmreduction.org
Major substances in graph:
Peak 10.41 = p-fluorofentanyl
Peak 10.64 = fentanyl
Peak 4.3 = methamphetamine
Peak 8.43 = cocaine
Peak 9.38 = despropionyl p-fluorofentanyl
Peak 9.38 = 4-ANPP
Method(s): GCMS
Lab Notes:
Record for Sample 804322 last updated 1 Aug 2024.
From King County, Washington on 6/18/2024
Assumed to be cocaine
This is a messy brew of 6 major substances:
despropionyl p-fluorofentanyl
4-ANPP
p-fluorofentanyl
methamphetamine
cocaine
fentanyl
But we found lots of contaminants too, with traces of methyl ecgonidine (MED) + despropionyl ortho-methylfentanyl + ortho-methylfentanyl + tropacocaine. Trace substances in small quantities are usually harmless, but can sometimes cause health problems. Unexpected sensations may be due to these.
Fentanyl is potent and the amount changes by batch. If you weren't expecting it, consider getting test strips online or from a harm reduction program. Carry naloxone (Narcan) to reverse overdoses. Don't use alone so someone can help if you go out.
There are a lot of different substances in this sample. We don't know the harms that some of these can cause. Be careful and be prepared for unexpected reactions.
Fluorofentanyl is showing up recently. It's the result of different raw materials being used to make fentanyl. We don't know yet if it causes any specific problems.
Looks = white powder
Need free supplies and advice to keep you safe? Find your nearest harm reduction program at harmreduction.org
Major substances in graph:
Peak 10.41 = p-fluorofentanyl
Peak 10.64 = fentanyl
Peak 4.3 = methamphetamine
Peak 8.43 = cocaine
Peak 9.38 = despropionyl p-fluorofentanyl
Peak 9.38 = 4-ANPP
Method(s): GCMS
Lab Notes:
Record for Sample 804322 last updated 1 Aug 2024.
From King County, Washington on 6/18/2024
Assumed to be cocaine
This is a messy brew of 6 major substances:
despropionyl p-fluorofentanyl
4-ANPP
p-fluorofentanyl
methamphetamine
cocaine
fentanyl
But we found lots of contaminants too, with traces of methyl ecgonidine (MED) + despropionyl ortho-methylfentanyl + ortho-methylfentanyl + tropacocaine. Trace substances in small quantities are usually harmless, but can sometimes cause health problems. Unexpected sensations may be due to these.
Fentanyl is potent and the amount changes by batch. If you weren't expecting it, consider getting test strips online or from a harm reduction program. Carry naloxone (Narcan) to reverse overdoses. Don't use alone so someone can help if you go out.
There are a lot of different substances in this sample. We don't know the harms that some of these can cause. Be careful and be prepared for unexpected reactions.
Fluorofentanyl is showing up recently. It's the result of different raw materials being used to make fentanyl. We don't know yet if it causes any specific problems.
Looks = white powder
Need free supplies and advice to keep you safe? Find your nearest harm reduction program at harmreduction.org
Major substances in graph:
Peak 10.41 = p-fluorofentanyl
Peak 10.64 = fentanyl
Peak 4.3 = methamphetamine
Peak 8.43 = cocaine
Peak 9.38 = despropionyl p-fluorofentanyl
Peak 9.38 = 4-ANPP
Method(s): GCMS
Lab Notes:
Record for Sample 804322 last updated 1 Aug 2024.