National Post

Teen leaped after eating pot cookie

- By Lisa Rein

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is providing chilling new details about a 19-yearold college student who leaped four stories to his death at a Holiday Inn in Denver after eating a pot cookie.

The case is Exhibit A in a stern warning about the dangers of edible pot that calls for clearer labels, better education and dosage guidelines that advocate limited portion sizes.

“Although the decedent in this case was advised against eating multiple servings at one time,” researcher­s wrote of Levy Thamba, an exchange student from the Republic of Congo on spring break with his friends in Denver in March 2014, “he reportedly consumed all five of the remaining servings of the THC-infused cookie within 30-60 minutes after the first serving.” Thamba was “marijuana-naive, with no known history of alcohol abuse, illicit drug use, or mental illness,” the CDC said.

The warnings could further fuel the debate about legal marijuana use in the four states and the District of Columbia that now allow anyone over 21 to legally purchase the drug, including in sweet products, such as cookies, brownies and candy. Colorado, along with Washington, were the first states to legalize marijuana use.

Denver coroners listed “marijuana intoxicati­on” from cannabis-infused cookies as a significan­t condition contributi­ng to Thamba’s death, which was classified as an accident.

The CDC gives more detail: A police report indicated that at first he ate only a single piece of his cookie, as directed by the sales clerk.

But “approximat­ely 30-60 minutes later, not feeling any

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