A 9-year-old student in New Mexico gave fellow students gummies - only to realise later they were not ordinary lollies.
They had apparently been laced with tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the chemical responsible for how marijuana affects the brain, and were being used by the student's parents as medical marijuana. Kristi Del Curto, dean of elementary students at Albuquerque School of Excellence, told the Albuquerque Journal the fifth-grader brought the box of gummies she found at home and shared with friends at the school cafeteria one morning.
"She thought she was sharing candy, and if you saw the picture on the box, it did look like candy," Del Curto told the paper.
The student later felt dizzy during class and was sent to the school nurse. After school officials determined the fifth-grader had eaten THC-laced gummies, students were asked over the school's public address system who else had the candies, the paper reported. Del Curto said five other students had gummies. Some did not seem to have been affected, and some others were "giggly," she said. The student who brought the candies felt ill after eating five.
One student told KRQE News 13 she immediately realised they were not ordinary candies after she ate one and started feeling dizzy. Paramedics were later called to check on the students.