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But experts largely call the panic overblown, saying parents shouldn't worry about kids getting rainbow fentanyl while trick-or-treating. There has always been fear of Halloween candy being ...
In August, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration alerted the public to the existence of bright-colored fentanyl pills that resemble candy — now dubbed "rainbow fentanyl." The DEA warned that ...
California police sounded the alarm over drug traffickers using rainbow and other candy coloring in fentanyl on Saturday. The Monterey Police Department posted an image of a small bag of candy ...
"Dubbed "rainbow fentanyl" in the media, this trend appears to be a new method used by drug cartels to sell highly addictive and potentially deadly fentanyl made to look like candy to children and ...
Broward County Public Schools sent an alert to parents, faculty and staff recently to be aware of the candy-colored pills, dubbed “rainbow fentanyl,” and said the drug has been found in actual ...
Prior to the Los Angeles drug bust, there was already hubbub around fentanyl finding its way into Halloween candy — in particular, a substance referred to as rainbow fentanyl, which is fentanyl ...
That’s because I track media coverage of reported incidents of trick-or-treaters receiving razor blades in apples or pins and poison in candy bars. My data goes back to 1958, and my principal ...
The bust sparked new calls for parents to be cautious this Halloween about candy their children bring home. There have been multiple reports this year of fentanyl manufactured in rainbow colors or ...
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