The most dangerous drug in the world: ‘Devil’s Breath’ chemical from Colombia can block free will, wipe memory and even kill

 

  • Scopolamine often blown into faces of  victims or added to drinks
  • Within minutes, victims are like ‘zombies’ –  coherent, but with no free will
  • Some victims report emptying bank accounts  to robbers or helping them pillage own house
  • Drug is made from borrachero tree, which is  common in Colombia
 

By  Beth Stebner

PUBLISHED: 22:44 GMT, 12 May  2012 |  UPDATED: 13:43  GMT, 13 May 2012

A hazardous drug that eliminates free will  and can wipe the memory of its victims is currently being dealt on the streets  of Colombia.

The drug is called scopolamine, but is  colloquially known as ‘The Devil’s Breath,’ and is derived from a particular  type of tree common to South America.

Stories surrounding the drug are the stuff of  urban legends, with some telling horror stories of how people were raped, forced  to empty their bank accounts, and even coerced into giving up an  organ.

Scroll down for video

 
Danger: 'The Devil's Breath' is such a powerful drug that it can remove the capacity for free will

Danger: ‘The Devil’s Breath’ is such a powerful drug  that it can remove the capacity for free will

 
Deadly drug: Scopolamine is made from the Borrachero tree, which blooms with deceptively beautiful white and yellow flowers

Deadly drug: Scopolamine is made from the Borrachero  tree, which blooms with deceptively beautiful white and yellow flowers

 

 

 

VICE’s Ryan Duffy travelled to the country to find  out more about the powerful drug. In two  segments, he revealed the shocking culture of another  Colombian drug world, interviewing those who deal the drug and those who have  fallen victim to it.

Demencia Black, a drug dealer in the capital  of Bogota, said the drug is frightening for the simplicity in which it can be  administered.

 

He told Vice that Scopolamine can be blown in  the face of a passer-by on the street, and within minutes, that person is under  the drug’s effect – scopolamine is odourless and tasteless.

‘You can guide them wherever you want,’ he  explained. ‘It’s like they’re a child.’

Black said that one gram of Scopolamine is  similar to a gram of cocaine, but later called it ‘worse than  anthrax.’

In high doses, it is lethal.

 
It only takes a moment: One drug dealer in Bogota explained how victims are drugged within minutes of exposure

It only takes a moment: One drug dealer in Bogota  explained how victims are drugged within minutes of exposure

 

 
Victims: One Colombian woman said that under the influence of scopolamine, she led a man to her house and helped him ransack it

Victims: One Colombian woman said that under the  influence of scopolamine, she led a man to her house and helped him ransack  it

The drug, he said, turns people into complete  zombies and blocks memories from forming. So even after the drug wears off,  victims have no recollection as to what happened.

One victim told Vice that a man approached  her on the street asking her for directions. Since it was close by, she helped  take the man to his destination, and they drank juice together.

 

‘You can guide  them wherever you want. It’s like they’re a child.’

She took the man to her house and helped him  gather all of her belongings, including her boyfriend’s cameras and  savings.

‘It is painful to have lost money,’ the woman  said,’ but I was actually quite lucky.’

According to the British Journal of Clinical  Pharmacology, the drug – also known as hyoscine – causes the same level of  memory loss as diazepam.

In ancient times, the drug was given to the  mistresses of dead Colombian leaders – they were told to enter their master’s  grave, where they were buried alive.

Devil's Breath: The drug is odourless and tasteless and can simply be blown in the face of someone on the street; their free will vanishes after being exposed to it

Devil’s Breath: The drug is odourless and tasteless and  can simply be blown in the face of someone on the street; their free will  vanishes after being exposed to it

 
Dangerous: Vice's Ryan Duffy traveled to the capital of Bogota to find out more about the drug

Dangerous: Vice’s Ryan Duffy traveled to the capital of  Bogota to find out more about the drug

 

 

In modern times, the CIA used the drug as  part of Cold War interrogations, with the hope of using it like a truth  serum.

However, because of the drug’s chemical  makeup, it also induces powerful hallucinations. 

The tree common around Colombia, and is  called the ‘borrachero’ tree – loosely translated as the ‘get-you-drunk’  tree.

It is said that Colombian mothers warn their  children not to fall asleep under the tree, though the leafy green canopies and  large yellow and white flowers seem appealing.

Experts are baffled as to why Colombia is  riddled with scopolamine-related crimes, but wager much of it has to do with the  country’s torn drug-culture past, and on-going civil war

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2143584/Scopolamine-Powerful-drug-growing-forests-Colombia-ELIMINATES-free-will.html#ixzz2n7VDoDUs Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Leave a comment