16 Comments
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Neville Fitzgerald's avatar

I would suggest finding another toxicology page report from that time from Bellevue to see if that drug that starts with Q is a clearer read

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Neville Fitzgerald's avatar

Secondly what 25 year old male would even bother taking vitamins?

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Stuart Wilson's avatar

I too thought the P word was positive, and the Q word was Quinine. Glad to see others thought the same!

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LONG In The TRUTH's avatar

.....could the 'Q' word be, 'QUNINE'? Not sure WHY Bellevue would TEST for THAT, but - sure LOOKS like what it is - and CAN produce psychiatric effects.....https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4918116/

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Lizzie's avatar

Ha! I thought the same thing at first! I guess it could be? I wish there was a way to get a copy of the original form.

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LONG In The TRUTH's avatar

.....I also wonder if its presence, could SKEW the results somehow.....

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Syd van Vliet's avatar

First thing that comes up with a "Quinine effects" Google search is "Blurred vision", so not helpful if he was supposed to carry out the mission on his own. Not an issue though if his role was merely to be there on the scene.

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John A. Joslin's avatar

The ‘Q’ word is very tricky… the image is so indistinct it appears to include lower-case letters although all the OTHER listed drug names are UPPER-CASE , if also blurry.

The scribbled ‘P’ word does look like a cursive rendition of ‘Positive’ . (The ‘Results’ column it appears in is headed at the top by two helpful options , NEG and POS. ) -JJ ( Detroit near Canada )

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Lizzie's avatar

Also, I believe the "p" word next to Glutethimide is "positive."

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David Whelan's avatar

Positive is a strong possibility. Good call. Not so sure about Quallade but it would fit the pattern.

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Lizzie's avatar

Silly question, but could the "Q" word be quaalude?

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Jacquie's avatar

Could the Q word be Quinapril? The reason I suggest it is I was once a school nurse and handed out psychotropic meds like candy, One person periodically was prescribed Quinapril and/or Clonadine to counteract the adverse effects caused by their ADD meds, mainly elevated BP.

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May 15
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Jacquie's avatar

IDK if he was hypertensive but f if someone was administering psychotropics for him, increased BP could have been a side effect that warranted treatment. It woud be so interesting to know the chemical makeup of the pills in his hotel room. {Deep sigh}

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Noah Shopsowitz's avatar

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Luke Forster's avatar

Is it possible it’s Piriton that’s handwritten on the sheet?

“Piriton, being a sedative, can create a state where individuals are more receptive to hypnotic suggestions, but this is not a direct causal relationship. The sedative effect is a separate phenomenon.”

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Neville Fitzgerald's avatar

Has it been established the reasoning as to why bullets we’re not purchased in Hawaii and if it was to avoid scrutiny at airport even though he traveled to New York with gun and back to Hawaii and back to New York again with gun. One can assume bullets were brought back to Hawaii with that gun and again back to New York. Why has Dana Reeves never been interviewed? Paid off to stay quiet or that he knows more than he can reveal? As a travel agent how much did his wife plan his trips? Who has been paying for her visits to New York for the last 45 years and why stay married? She knows too much and cannot leave? Is there a connection to her work for All About Jesus Ministries in Hawaii to that of the same named organization in Georgia?

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