Society - Crime

A young woman from Dénia denounces having been a victim of chemical submission after receiving a puncture during a festival

August 02 from 2022 - 13: 20

A young woman from Dénia was with her friends enjoying the FIB festival in Benicàssim when she noticed the puncture with which her nightmare began. This is a new case of chemical submission, which are increasing in large numbers throughout Spain in recent months as many affected have reported both to the authorities and through social networks.

Image: Emergency entrance of the Dénia Hospital, where the young woman was treated after the punctureEmergency entrance of the Dénia Hospital, where the young woman was treated after the puncture

This case that has affected a young woman from Dénia, and which has been reported by the newspaper Lift-EMV, is considered the first uncovered in the Valencian Community, although other complaints are being studied.

Sara Vives, 26, was enjoying a concert when a group of boys walked towards where she was and, as they passed each other, they hit each other, three of them brushing her shoulder. At the third contact she felt a puncture. "As if they nailed a banderilla to me," she tells the Lift-EMV.

“If they had punctured me, they would have wanted something”

All the high-profile cases in recent weeks in which women have been injected with drugs, usually liquid ecstasy, at nightclubs and parties, immediately came to mind. Soon she noticed her blood pressure drop and sentías if his body were asleep. At this point, as she tells her diary, she began to be very scared, worried looking around her with the feeling that someone was going to do something to her. "If they had punctured me, they would have wanted something." She fled from where she was, attentive to the movement of all the men she came across, until she reached the violet point, a place where she was treated poorly and without being taken seriously, as she has explained. She then went to report to the Civil Guard what had happened to her.

She went to an outpatient clinic that same night with her friends and, despite her insistence, they could not do any tests, inviting her to go to the hospital. She did so the next morning, already in Dénia, where they did tests but found no trace of the drug since it dissolves quickly in her blood. Of course, they activated the accidental puncture protocol to rule out that she had contracted something through the needle. She was prescribed medication and a check-up every three months to prevent any illness resulting from the puncture.

After passing through the Dénia Hospital, she went to the city's Court of Instruction No. 3, where she formalized the complaint of the puncture, as well as denounced the actions of the people who attended her at the festival's purple point.

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