Student fell to death after eating pot cookie
By Associated Press April 3, 2014 6:48 am
DENVER (AP) —
A Wyoming college student visiting Denver on spring break jumped to his
death after eating a marijuana cookie that his friend legally purchased
in one of Colorado's recreational pot shops, authorities said Wednesday.
An
autopsy report lists marijuana intoxication as a "significant
contributing factor" in the death of 19-year-old Levi Thamba Pongi, a
native of the Republic
of Congo who fell from a motel balcony on March 11.
It
marked the first time the Denver medical examiner's office has listed a
marijuana edible as a contributor to a death, said Michelle
Weiss-Samaras, a spokeswoman for the office.
"We have not had that," she said.
Investigators believe Pongi and his friends came to Colorado to try marijuana, Weiss-Samaras said.
The
friends told investigators that
Pongi ate the cookie and "exhibited hostile behavior" that included
pulling things off walls and speaking erratically, the autopsy report
said.
Attempts
by the three friends to calm Pongi seemed to work until he went outside
and jumped over the balcony railing, according to the report.
Denver police ruled the death an accident but said their investigation remains open.
Colorado
law bans the sale of recreational marijuana products to people under
21. It is also illegal for those under 21 to possess marijuana, and
adults can be charged with
a felony for giving it to someone under the legal age.
Authorities
said one of Pongi's friends was old enough to buy the cookie from a pot
shop. It was unclear whether the friend might face charges.
The
medical examiner's office had Pongi's body tested for at least 250
different substances, including bath salts and synthetic marijuana,
which are known to cause strange behavior. His blood tested positive
only for THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, according to the
report.
One of Pongi's friends also tried the cookie but stopped
after feeling sick, Weiss-Samaras said.
The
marijuana concentration in Pongi's blood was 7.2 nanograms of active
THC per milliliter of blood. Colorado law says juries can assume someone
is driving while impaired by marijuana if their blood contains more
than 5 nanograms per milliliter of the chemical.
Officials
at Northwest College in Powell, Wyo., say Pongi started taking classes
as an exchange student in January. He was studying engineering.
"The Northwest College campus community continues to grieve after Levy's death," the college
said in a statement. "All of us were deeply saddened by this tragic incident and feel for his family."
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