Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels
on the border line between the US and Mexico
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Thursday, October 7, 2021

We Thought We Were Cool Using Drugs

"Sol Prendido" for Borderland Beat

Matt Capelouto’s daughter, Alex, was home for winter break from Arizona State University in 2019 when she died after buying and taking the pill. She didn’t get a chance to open her Christmas presents. 

One month into the pandemic in 2020, Bridgette Norring’s teenage son was found unconscious in his bed by his brother. 

Luca Manuel was just 13 when he took the drug the afternoon before he was supposed to start back at school for the first day of in-person classes since lockdown. His mother, Amanda Faith Eubanks, held her son for the last time as he was being put into the coroner’s van inside of a body bag.

These are just a few cases over the last few years in a wave of deaths among teens and young adults who bought what they believed to be a prescription pill — like a Percocet, an OxyContin or a Xanax — that turned out to be a counterfeit pill containing a deadly dose of fentanyl, a synthetic opioid a hundred times more potent than morphine. 

Many of those pills are being traded openly via social media, particularly on Snapchat, the most popular app among U.S. teens. Snapchat has been linked to the sale of fentanyl-laced counterfeit pills that have caused the deaths of teens and young adults in at least 15 states, according to The Partnership for Safe Medicines, a nonprofit public health group. NBC News independently confirmed deaths in 14 of the 15 states and identified five additional states not included in the research.

“It was as easy as ordering a pizza,” Capelouto said. “He delivered right to our house.”

Manufactured by Mexican drug trafficking organizations, these counterfeit pills look like legitimate prescription medicines. But 2 in 5 counterfeit pills seized and tested in the United States contain enough fentanyl to kill, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration.

DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said that social media companies aren’t doing enough to crack down on counterfeit pills.

"Social media companies know that their platforms are being used for this. And they need to understand that Americans are dying at record rates and they need to be a partner in stopping it,” she said Monday in an interview with Kate Snow on NBC’s “TODAY” show. 

Some of the parents of children killed by deadly counterfeit pills have come together to call on Snapchat’s parent company, Snap, to do more to educate users about this issue and identify, remove and report drug dealers misusing the platform. 

On top of raising awareness of the dangers of counterfeit pills, the company has hired more people for its law enforcement response team, which has allowed it to become more proactive in referring drug activity to law enforcement, said Snap spokesperson Rachel Racusen. 

It has also strengthened automated tools that proactively scan for potential drug-related content, consulting with the DEA and other third-party experts to keep on top of the latest slang terms, and has deleted tens of thousands of accounts identified this way, Racusen said.

However, dealers kicked off the platform can create new accounts with relative ease by using a different phone number, making it challenging to keep them off. 

In October, Snap is hosting a summit with hundreds of law enforcement officials from across the country to educate them about Snapchat, help them prepare data requests that allow Snap to respond quickly and improve lines of communication. 

The company is also exploring new tools to help parents monitor their children’s activity on Snapchat and prompt conversations about how to stay safe. 

NBC News talked to eight parents whose children’s deaths have been linked to the sale of fentanyl-laced counterfeit pills. Here are their stories.

Alexander Neville

Age 14, Orange County, California

Amy Neville said her son Alexander Neville had always been a sensitive kid, “full of intense feelings.” But as he entered puberty, he developed mood swings that seemed to grow worse from using marijuana, which he tried for the first time when he was 13. Within a year, the teen from Orange County, California, was experimenting with acid and mushrooms. 

After spending a month in a residential mood and anxiety treatment program, Alexander returned “more engaged with family,” his mom said, staying up with his dad to talk and watch movies. But within months, he told his parents that he’d taken some pills sold as OxyContin by a dealer on Snapchat. On June 22, 2020, he asked his mom to book him back into the treatment center. 

The following morning, Amy opened the door to his bedroom to find him motionless on his beanbag chair, “looking like he had just gone to sleep.” He had been poisoned by a single counterfeit pill that, according to his toxicology report, contained enough fentanyl to kill four people. He was 14.

Since Alex died, Amy has campaigned to educate parents and children about the risks of counterfeit pills. She recently sent Snap’s CEO Evan Spiegel a letter co-signed by the parents of six other young people who died from taking counterfeit pills bought through Snapchat. 

“Snapchat is an accomplice,” Amy said. 

According to the company’s latest transparency report, it removed 5.5 million pieces of content violating its guidelines throughout 2020, of which 427,000 pieces of content fell under the “regulated goods” policies, which includes drugs and firearms. 

More than 5.5 billion Snaps are posted to Snapchat every day. 

The letter called for the company to proactively refer reported drug dealers to law enforcement, rather than simply deleting their accounts. 

It also asked Snapchat to be more transparent about how it’s responding to the problem and to treat law enforcement requests for information with more urgency.

“It’s a matter of life and death,” Neville said. “I can’t save Alex, but I have to save these other kids.”

Daniel Puerta-Johnson

Age 16, Santa Clarita, California

Jaime Puerta found his 16-year-old son Daniel unconscious in bed in their home in Santa Clarita, California, in April 2020. Daniel, who Jaime described as “very charismatic” with lots of friends, had taken just half of what he thought was an OxyContin pill that Puerta believes his son bought through Snapchat. 

“I called 911 and they were able to get his heartbeat back,” said Puerta, who thinks Daniel “got bored and wanted to self-medicate” during the pandemic.

Daniel was declared brain dead at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, and days later, Puerta and Daniel’s mother, Denise Johnson, made the agonizing decision to have Daniel removed from life support. 

“He passed away peacefully with his mother in his bed stroking his beautiful blond hair while I was holding his hand,” Puerta said. 

When the L.A. county sheriff’s office started to investigate, Puerta said they asked for access to Daniel’s phone and wanted to look at his Snapchat account. Daniel’s parents didn’t have the code. So detectives subpoenaed Snap for Daniel’s account.

Puerta said he’s frustrated by how long Snap takes to respond to law enforcement requests for information, noting that suspected drug dealers evade detection by closing down and opening a succession of accounts.

Since Daniel’s death, Puerta has spoken to dozens of parents whose children died from fentanyl poisoning, and the vast majority say their children bought counterfeit pills through Snapchat. 

Puerta wants Snapchat to report suspected dealers to law enforcement proactively rather than just removing their accounts.

“None of that is going to work unless you can figure out a way to keep these dealers off the platform,” he said. 

On milestone dates, like Daniel’s birthday and the first anniversary of his death, Puerta invites some of Daniel’s closest friends to his home to reminisce about funny or heartfelt moments. 

“I miss him so much,” he said. “It was an honor and privilege to be his father.”

Alexandra Capelouto

Age 20, Temecula, California

“For the most part my daughter didn’t fit the mold of a person you would think would die from drugs,” said Matt Capelouto, a small-business owner from Temecula, California, whose daughter Alexandra died in December 2019 after taking half a pill she thought was OxyCodone.

“We live in the suburbs. Our kids grew up in a two-parent household. We’re a faith-based family.”  

Alex, 20, was home for Christmas break from Arizona State University, where she was majoring in sociology on a full academic scholarship, when she took the deadly counterfeit pill. Two days before Christmas, she’d spent the day shopping with her mom, Christine, and had excitedly shown her father all the presents she’d bought for family members. 

“I got a call the next morning from my youngest daughter saying: ‘Dad, come home. Alex is dead.’” Capelouto said.

The family later checked Alex’s phone and saw that the transaction with the person who apparently sold her the pill had taken place on Snapchat. “It was as easy as ordering a pizza; he delivered right to our house,” Capelouto said.

“I don’t know how Evan Spiegel sleeps at night knowing this kind of activity takes place on his platform,” he added, referring to the CEO of Snapchat’s parent company, Snap. 

Alex’s death was initially ruled an overdose. But that didn’t sit well with her father. 

“She didn’t take too much of something,” he said. “She was sold something misrepresented to her. She was poisoned.” 

After other similar deaths in Temecula, the sheriff’s department opened Alex’s case as a criminal investigation and was able to subpoena Snapchat for information about the alleged dealer, Capelouto said.

Earlier this year, Matt and Christine Capelouto traveled to Sacramento, the state capital, to propose Alexandra’s Law, which would make it easier to charge drug dealers with murder. The bill didn’t make it out of committee. But the couple continues their advocacy work.

Devin Norring

Age 19, Hastings, Minnesota

Occasionally, Bridgette Norring sees the man who allegedly sold her son Devin, 19, the counterfeit pill that killed him last year.

“Knowing he literally lives a couple of blocks away from us and gets to walk free is a hard thing to deal with,” she said. 

Devin, a shy and loyal kid who loved making rap music, had dabbled with marijuana. But during his last year of life, he went on a health kick, hitting the gym and pestering his parents to drink less Mountain Dew. 

When the pandemic hit, Devin had appointments for dental work for cracked teeth and an MRI scan to investigate the cause of debilitating migraines, but they were all canceled. 

On the afternoon of April 4, 2020, Devin’s younger brother, Caden, found Devin unconscious in his bed. 

The family later learned, by Snapchat messages sent by Devin’s friends, that he had taken a pill he believed to be Percocet, a pain medication his dentist had previously prescribed him. He had bought the pill through Snapchat with a friend late the previous evening.

“We had no reason to believe any of our kids would be overdosing on anything,” Norring said. 

Since Devin died, kids from their neighborhood in Hastings, Minnesota, have sent Norring’s family screenshots seemingly showing local drug dealers marketing their wares on Snapchat and Instagram, she said. 

“I don’t think they are doing enough,” Norring said. ”We are still reporting Snaps from Devin’s dealer a year later to our local authorities.” 

The Norring family installed a memorial bench by the river in the park Devin cycled to with his friends to camp and fish. They celebrated his birthday and “one-year angel-versary” there with some of his friends. 

Norring has thrown herself into raising awareness about counterfeit pills and pushing for stronger penalties for dealers.

“I don’t want my son to become another faceless statistic,” she said. 

A Facebook spokesperson said that selling counterfeit drugs on Instagram “breaks our rules” and that the company uses technology to detect and remove violating posts, hashtags and accounts “before anyone sees them.”

Ryan McPherson

Age 23, Sauk Rapids, Minnesota

When Ryan McPherson, known to his family as “Puff,” was 15, he suffered a severe concussion during baseball practice, was airlifted to a hospital and prescribed Vicodin for his resulting migraines. He was on and off opiates through his teenage years until doctors stopped prescribing them. 

After that, he turned to drug dealers to buy what he thought was Percocet and Xanax, according to his mom, Allison Beattie. 

In the early hours of Nov. 15, 2020, when he was 23, Ryan and his brother, John, both took pills they thought were Percocet and collapsed at their dad’s house. Paramedics arrived too late to save Ryan. But they were able to bring John back using three shots of Narcan, a medication that can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose. 

“I don’t remember a whole lot of the month after,” said Beattie, who has been sober since March 2019 after battling opioid addiction for years.

Detectives on the scene immediately suspected fentanyl poisoning, Beattie said. They took Ryan’s phone, homed in on Snapchat and got a warrant to access messages sent to him by the childhood friend suspected of selling him pills. That friend was later charged with third-degree homicide and has been offered a plea deal of 74 months in prison, which he has yet to accept. 

Snap has been sending out public service messages to its users via a partnership with the nonprofit Song for Charlie, warning about how just one counterfeit pill can kill. But Beattie said that turning people whom Snap finds marketing illicit drugs on its platform into law enforcement would be more effective. 

With the first anniversary of Ryan’s death approaching, Beattie said she takes life one day at a time.

“I honor him by staying sober,” she said. “Even though the pain is the most horrific pain a mother could feel.”

Kierston Torres-Young

Age 19, Vancouver, Washington

Kierston Torres-Young was 19 when she died, but was even younger at heart, said her mom, Stephani Martinez. 

“She loved sloths and soft pillows with animals on them,” said Martinez, who works in a residential home for problem gamblers. “On Christmas and her birthday, she didn’t really ask for clothes or high heels or makeup or any of that. She just liked to be a kid.”

Kierston was vocally anti-drugs, having witnessed the harm caused by addiction up close. Both her parents had struggled with substance abuse, but are now in recovery, Martinez said.  

On the evening of July 10, Martinez’s phone rang several times. “I instantly knew something was wrong,” she said. 

Martinez called her dad back and he broke the news: Kierston was dead. She and a friend had taken what they thought was Percocet, delivered by a boy they met on Snapchat, as they hung out and watched Netflix, the friend later told Martinez. Shortly afterward, Kierston and her friend both passed out face down. Only her friend could be resuscitated. 

“I felt like I lost everything,” Martinez said. “She was my baby.”

Kierston’s toxicology report hasn’t been completed, but the EMT who responded to the 911 call told her friend’s mom that it was fentanyl. Her death is being investigated by the local crime unit.

“Snapchat is a trap,” Martinez said. “The detective told me it’s a go-to for everything you need. You can buy whatever you want there.”

Martinez said the suspected dealer is still on Snapchat advertising “Percs for sale.” 

Sept. 3 would have been Kierston’s 20th birthday. Martinez took a trip with her sisters and other family members to Kierston’s favorite beach in Seaside, Oregon. She put some sand into a tiny jar she now keeps on her keychain.

“I just sat on the beach and thought about my daughter, listening to the waves, like she did.”

Luca Manuel

Age 13, Shasta County, California

When Luca Manuel was 5, his mother, Amanda Faith Eubanks, said he would receive gift cards and cash for his birthday because the family was moving and could not bring many toys with them.

“He said, ‘Why don’t we get new toys for the kids who don’t have any?’” Eubanks recalled, noting that Luca donated his presents to homeless children at a local mission. 

“My heart broke in a thousand good ways,” Eubanks said. “He really lived in service to others.”

When Luca was 12 or 13, he dabbled with marijuana, Eubanks said. His parents, recently divorced, were worried about him. He was being bullied at school and his grandfather, with whom he was close, had died. 

About a week and a half before he died, 13-year-old Luca had a root canal. Afterward he complained about the pain, including to a 19-year-old on Snapchat, who had previously sold him marijuana. The 19-year-old allegedly offered to sell him a Percocet, Eubanks said.

“It was not a Percocet. It wasn’t even mixed with Percocet,” she said. “He only had fentanyl in his system.”

Luca took the pill the afternoon before he was supposed to start back at school for the first day of in-person classes since lockdown. 

“The last time I held Luca, it was as he was being put into the coroner’s van inside of a body bag,” Eubanks said.

It took five months for Snap to respond to a subpoena for information about the suspected dealer, who continued to sell through Snapchat during that period, Eubanks said. 

In July, Luca’s alleged dealer was arrested for homicide, criminal threats directed to law enforcement officials, and various drug-related violations. He’s in Shasta County Jail awaiting a hearing. 

“When the dealer is convicted, and I pray he is, I’m going to petition the coroner’s office to have Luca’s ticket changed,” Eubanks said. “It will not say overdose. It will say homicide.”

Dylan Kai Sarantos

Age 18, Los Angeles, California

While Dylan Kai Sarantos was an easy, happy baby, he started to get into trouble during his teenage years and self-medicated with Xanax, according to his mom, Cindy Sarantos.

After time in rehab and intensive outpatient treatment and therapy, Dylan seemed to have turned a corner, his mother said. He was finishing high school, had a job at Chipotle and designed his own “emo” style clothes and music.

With the Covid lockdown, Dylan lost access to the professional mental health and recovery support he’d come to rely on. “It’s one of the worst things that can happen for somebody struggling,” Sarantos said.

On the afternoon of May 8, she found Dylan unresponsive in his bedroom. As an emergency room nurse, she knew he was already gone. He was 18.

She would later learn, by reading Dylan’s phone, that he’d bought what he thought was ecstasy through a Snapchat dealer. His autopsy report revealed that he’d ingested a deadly dose of fentanyl. 

“I was in shock and hyperventilating,” she said.

The police recorded his death as an accidental overdose and didn’t take his phone for examination, Sarantos said. She tracked down the father of a young man in a nearby county who had died under similar circumstances shortly after Dylan to swap notes. They believe the same Snapchat dealer sold their children poisoned pills. 

Cindy assembled evidence on the suspected dealer and sent it to her police department. “They didn’t do anything,” she said. “The kid is still on Snapchat offering to sell Xanax, molly, Percocet and showing his bank account.”

A spokesperson for El Segundo Police Department said that they had investigated the case but did not find enough evidence to file criminal charges. 

Sarantos was one of several parents to attend a Zoom meeting with Snap this year. 

“They said they didn’t realize it was such a big problem,” she said. “I feel like they didn’t care.”

nbc news

24 comments:

  1. All the blame shouldn't fall solely on the dealers' hands.......the Sackler family should be charged in criminal court as well 🤷🏻‍♂️

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    1. They have been on several felonies...from NY Times: Purdue has long demanded that the federal charges against it be resolved before it would agree to a larger settlement with cities, tribes, states and individuals, who claim that its relentless marketing of OxyContin directly contributed to a crisis of addiction and overdoses, resulting in towering costs in health care, law enforcement and unemployment. Lawyers close to negotiations expect that the final settlement may emerge early next year.

      In the federal settlement, the company agreed to plead guilty to felony charges of defrauding federal health agencies and violating anti-kickback laws. The penalties include $3.54 billion in criminal fines and $2 billion in criminal forfeiture of profits, the largest penalties ever levied against a pharmaceutical manufacturer. The company pleaded guilty to marketing opioids to more than 100 doctors that it suspected of writing illegal prescriptions and lying about this to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration.

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    2. I’m guessing you don’t watch the news KG

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  2. Replies
    1. That’s obviously never going to happen and is an all-around illogical concept to think that you could get people to stop doing drugs especially in the western world. Your post is just another example of choosing idealism over pragmatism.

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  3. Your government is the biggest dealer how about we subpoena them lol

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    1. Yes but the US drugs don't kill like the ones from Mexico.

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    2. @10:56 exactly. People are dying from illicit fentanyl not legal measured doses or patches of fentanyl.

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  4. Sol cool in-depth article.
    It should be sent to Almo, and translated into Spanish.
    This will show him what the cartels, are transporting those parents, should get lawyers to sue the government of Mexico, for not doing nothing to stop the flow of drugs.
    Almo got a group of Mexican lawyers and a group of lawyers in Texas to sue the gun manufacturer, when we all know it's the criminals that kill people.

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  5. Seems like fentantl is the devils gift to the world

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    1. More like Chinas gift to the Americas .

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    2. Los chinitos sure do hate America

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    3. Carfentanil is even worse but it's nothing new... The Russians used it in 2002 to gas some rebels that took over a theater, killed them all but unfortunately killed the 120 civilians in the theater as well. It's pretty much a weapon, for the time being it's being released via a different medium...

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  6. Chinese suppliers making millions and won't ever get charged or even get sanctioned.
    It's a big business, if the US government really wanted to stop the drugs, they would.
    The fact is, drug money is to profitable and they don't want to lose on those billions.
    They blame the mexican cartels but chose to acknowledge where the mexican cartels get all their drugs from.
    I knew America was deep in helping production of coke when I was watching news in a Spanish channel.
    The news was about Peru expanding coke production.
    Ronald Regan was shaking hands with the Peruvian president with a big smile on his face.
    War on drugs is a joke but only the rich are laughing.



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    1. I had just washed the car and this bird, pooped all over it

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  7. Fentanyl is the worse! Never seen soo many people died from drugs like from this one

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  8. I don’t care what anyone says, things were wayy better in the early 2010s when real oxy was still on the street. Sure more crime and craziness in the suburbs but it still beats today where people are just dropping like flies everywhere because there is no real oxy anymore due to how much they’ve been restricted. It doesn’t even fall through the cracks anymore. Things were way better when oxy was fairly restricted but not overly restricted (like around 2014 for instance). Now it’s just fentanyl and death. The worst case scenario.

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  9. The blues laced with fent is becoming more popular in my area. I know couple people from school that are stuck on that

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  10. Sol thanks for this article, now I have to sit with my kids for 10 minutes. Yes D. L. And C L. will sit listen to what happens when kids order drugs on Snapchat.

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    Replies
    1. Your welcome. Let them know I said stay away from drugs.

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    2. I am great full Sol P. dug somewhere and found this article, along with pictures, of the now deceased teenagers.
      Back when I was a youngster, they would have the police come to our classroom, give a lecture about drugs, it was called D.A.R.E. (Drug,Abuse, Resistance, Education), I don't know if they still offer it.

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  11. I haven't told anyone this. Its been eating me up bad. About a week ago my step-brothers wife showed up at my house. Her and my step-brother used to rent the room I'm in now. They would come by sometime to pick up stuff they still still had here from when they lived here. They were both in recovery having been court ordered to stay clean from an incident from a few months back. They both struggled with crack addiction and alcoholism. I moved up here from Florida mostly to get away from fentanyl. I ended up relapsing since moving back here. Anyway, a week ago my sister-in-law showed up around 10 AM. Right away I could tell she was high on crack and drunk. She came up to my room as I was getting ready to do a bump. She begged me to give her a bump. I refused at first but eventually gave in. I barely gave her a match head amount to snort. She bitched about the little amount. She said she wanted to even out her nostrils. Would I please give her another tiny bump for her other nostril. I have in a gave her an even smaller amount. She went downstairs and I finally did my bump. I continued to clean my room after that. After about 20 minutes I went downstairs and was shocked to see her slumped over in a chair on the porch. Her lips were blue and I knew right away that she had OD'ed. I shook her and yelled her name but she wouldn't come to. I remembered that I had two doses if Narcan in my glove box. So I administered both doses but she was still unconscious. I called 911 and started giving her CPR while I waited for the EMT's to arrive. To make sling story short, she has been on a ventilator in a coma since then. She has no brain activity. They're gonna pull the plug tomorrow. They were just waiting for all if her kids to fly in from all over the country today goodbye. Its killing me inside. No one knows I'm the one who gave it to her. When the police showed up they found a crack pipe on her and in her car. They think the coke was cut with fentanyl because that happens s lot where I live. It really bothers me that some people have called me a hero for calling 911 etc. I have to keep this secret for the rest of my life. It will destroy our family and I don't want to go to jail. I'm in the process of getting clean. This has effected me more than my own overdoses. Im gonna quit and never use again. God please forgive me. Thanks for letting me vent BB. 🙏😥✝️

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    1. This is a good wake up call, on what goes on, with people around people who are trying to sober up after a court order to stay clean. My kids are teens chels and Dylan, will get peer pressure to try new drugs, and sure don't want them to get addicted and ruin the family, sorry to hear you're going through this cycle. Some can fight it and some relapse.

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    2. Boombox. So sorry. Crap, you are going to be holding on to that for awhile, but you know we are only as sick as our secrets. I work in the field and a counselor would not intervene in this situation
      , and legally could not. I wish you well. Be very very careful who you tell as emotions are high. I wish you well, sincerely

      Delete

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