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Question by L.T.M. ~ עץ אלון: How many Americans have noticed how many shooters were among the 6 million kids now on psychotropic drugs?
Though shocked by bizarre shootings in schools, few Americans have noticed how many shooters were among the 6 million kids now on psychotropic drugs.

Just three weeks after Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold went on their April 20 killing spree at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., President Clinton hosted a White House conference on youth violence. The president declared it a strategy session to seek “the best ideas from people who can really make a difference: parents and young people, teachers and religious leaders, law enforcement, gun manufacturers, representatives of the entertainment industry and those of us here in government.”

. . . . There was, however, complete silence from the president when it came to including representatives from the mental-health community, whom many believe can provide important insight about the possible connection between the otherwise seemingly senseless acts of violence being committed by school-age children and prescription psychotropic drugs such as Ritalin, Luvox and Prozac.

. . . . There are nearly 6 million children in the United States between the ages of 6 and 18 taking mind-altering drugs prescribed for alleged mental illnesses that increasing numbers of mental-health professionals are questioning.

. . . . Although the list of school-age children who have gone on violent rampages is growing at a disturbing rate — and the shootings at Columbine became a national wake-up call — few in the mental-health community have been willing to talk about the possibility that the heavily prescribed drugs and violence may be linked. Those who try to investigate quickly learn that virtually all data concerning violence and psychotropic drugs are protected by the confidentiality provided minors. But in the highly publicized shootings this spring, information has been made available to the public.

–April 16: Shawn Cooper, a 15-year-old sophomore at Notus Junior-Senior High School in Notus, Idaho, was taking Ritalin, the most commonly prescribed stimulant, for bipolar disorder when he fired two shotgun rounds, narrowly missing students and school staff.

–April 20: Harris, an 18-year-old senior at Columbine High School, killed a dozen students and a teacher before taking his own life. Prior to the shooting rampage, he had been under the influence of Luvox, one of the new selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, or SSRI, antidepressants approved in 1997 by the Food and Drug Administration, or FDA, for children up to the age of 17 for treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder, or OCD.

–May 20: T.J. Solomon, a 15-year-old at Heritage High School in Conyers, Ga., was being treated with Ritalin for depression when he opened fire on and wounded six classmates…Two other high-profile cases from last year show a similar pattern:

–May 21, 1998: Kip Kinkel, a 15-year-old at Thurston High School in Springfield, Ore., murdered his parents and then proceeded to school where he opened fire on students in the cafeteria, killing two and wounding 22. Kinkel had been prescribed both Ritalin and Prozac. Although widely used among adults, Prozac has not been approved by the FDA for pediatric use.

–March 24, 1998: Mitchell Johnson, 13, and Andrew Golden, 11, opened fire on their classmates at Westside Middle School in Jonesboro, Ark. Johnson had been receiving psychiatric counseling and, although information about the psychotropic drugs that may have been prescribed for him has not been made public, his attorney, Val Price, responded when asked about it: “I think that is confidential information, and I don’t want to reveal that.”

. . A great deal has been written about all of these cases. There have, however, been no indications that all of these children watched the same TV programs or listened to the same music. Nor has it been established that they all used illegal drugs, suffered from alcohol abuse or had common difficulties with their families or peers.

They did not share identical home lives, dress alike or participate in similar extracurricular activities. But all of the above were labeled as suffering from a mental illness and were being treated with psychotropic drugs that for years have been known to cause serious adverse effects when given to children.

http://www.ritalindeath.com/Doping-Kids.htm

Watch this > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dgrb2CmoRhM

Who wants to bet me..the Arizona shooter is another case like those in the links above?

Best answer:

Answer by Brandon ♥s Baby Isaac
A handful out of 6 million. That’s hardly a statistic.

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Question by marnefirstinfantry: What would you do with 5 million dollars after taxes..? Any thoughts…?
Hard-Luck Lottery Winner Says He’s Broke
Tells Lawyer Thieves Emptied His Bank Accounts
AP

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (Jan. 12) – A man beset by problems since winning a record lottery jackpot says he can’t pay a settlement to a casino worker because thieves cleaned out his bank accounts.

Powerball winner Jack Whittaker gave that explanation in a note last fall to a lawyer for Kitti French, who accused him of assaulting her at the Tri-State Racetrack and Gaming Center, a slots-only casino near Charleston, according to a motion French’s lawyer filed this week demanding payment of the confidential settlement.

Powerball winner Jack Whittaker gave that explanation in a note last fall to a lawyer for Kitti French, who accused him of assaulting her at the Tri-State Racetrack and Gaming Center, a slots-only casino near Charleston, according to a motion French’s lawyer filed this week demanding payment of the confidential settlement.

Whittaker won a nearly 5 million on Christmas 2002, then the largest undivided lottery prize in U.S. history. He took his winnings in a lump sum of 3 million after taxes.

Since then, he has faced his granddaughter’s death by drug overdose; he has been sued for bouncing checks at Atlantic City, N.J., casinos; he has been ordered to undergo rehab after being arrested on drunken driving charges; his vehicles and business have been burglarized; and he has been sued by the father of an 18-year-old boy, a friend of his granddaughter’s, who was found dead in Whittaker’s house.

Best answer:

Answer by someonecanbme
no thoughts. i have a life of my own to worry about.

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Providing indigent defense; Taxpayers paid million in last 3 years
Shar Porier/Wick Communications In Arizona, counties have the burden of funding all indigent defense cases in accordance with the Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, and the county has spent nearly million on indigent defense over the past three years.
Read more on San Pedro Valley News-Sun

Jail ordered following probation violations
YORK — A year ago, Judge Alan Gless said Andrew Ford could remain on probation, although heíd violated numerous terms of his probation after being convicted of dealing drugs.
Read more on York News-Times

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Providing indigent defense; Taxpayers paid million in last 3 years
Shar Porier/Wick Communications In Arizona, counties have the burden of funding all indigent defense cases in accordance with the Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, and the county has spent nearly million on indigent defense over the past three years.
Read more on San Pedro Valley News-Sun

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Logo Choice – Psyched
drug rehab
Image by Mark Cummins

People: Rodney King engaged to juror from trial that won him .8 million
Also: Oprah Winfrey, Paul McCartney tagged for Kennedy Honors; Wyclef Jean mocks Sean Penn; Bob Woodward finally has title for book on Barack Obama.
Read more on Contra Costa Times

Boston Dawna, the Batman of Venice Beach, calls it quits
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Hipsters, hustlers, celebrities, thieves, dope peddlers and just about everyone else in gritty, quirky Venice Beach know Boston Dawna.
Read more on The Vacaville Reporter

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Everett man jailed on million bail over alleged threat against nurse
EVERETT — John Keinath was not amused when a nurse laughed about his plan to name his newborn after the late mob boss, John Gotti. She thought he was joking. He wasn’t.
Read more on Everett Herald

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Hard-Luck Lottery Winner Says He’s Broke
Tells Lawyer Thieves Emptied His Bank Accounts
AP

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (Jan. 12) – A man beset by problems since winning a record lottery jackpot says he can’t pay a settlement to a casino worker because thieves cleaned out his bank accounts.

Powerball winner Jack Whittaker gave that explanation in a note last fall to a lawyer for Kitti French, who accused him of assaulting her at the Tri-State Racetrack and Gaming Center, a slots-only casino near Charleston, according to a motion French’s lawyer filed this week demanding payment of the confidential settlement.

Powerball winner Jack Whittaker gave that explanation in a note last fall to a lawyer for Kitti French, who accused him of assaulting her at the Tri-State Racetrack and Gaming Center, a slots-only casino near Charleston, according to a motion French’s lawyer filed this week demanding payment of the confidential settlement.

Whittaker won a nearly $315 million on Christmas 2002, then the largest undivided lottery prize in U.S. history. He took his winnings in a lump sum of $113 million after taxes.

Since then, he has faced his granddaughter’s death by drug overdose; he has been sued for bouncing checks at Atlantic City, N.J., casinos; he has been ordered to undergo rehab after being arrested on drunken driving charges; his vehicles and business have been burglarized; and he has been sued by the father of an 18-year-old boy, a friend of his granddaughter’s, who was found dead in Whittaker’s house.

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