Texas Woman Poisoned by Touching Napkin
Stuck in Car Door Handle
Breitbart,
by
Bob Price
Original Article
Posted By: Dreadnought,
8/21/2022 7:43:45 PM
Houston, Texas — A Texas suspects she was poisoned by touching a napkin stuffed in her car’s door handle outside a Houston restaurant. Doctors agreed she had been poisoned but were unable to identify the poisonous material.
Erin Mims joined her husband at a Houston-area restaurant to celebrate her birthday last Tuesday afternoon. As she left the restaurant she noticed someone stuck a napkin in the door handle on the passenger side of her car, Fox 26 Houston’s Sherman Desselle reported. She pulled the napkin out of the door and opened it to get in the car. Once inside she asked her husband if he stuck the napkin
Reply 1 - Posted by:
berthabutt 8/21/2022 8:20:34 PM (No. 1255610)
Fentanyl or? Thank god she washed her hands.
22 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
ms1234 8/21/2022 8:21:24 PM (No. 1255612)
The napkin was a ruse. No known poison can act that fast by mere tactile contact unless there is an open wound for it to enter. She was probably poisoned at the restaurant either by staff or her husband. Nothing about retrieving the napkin for testing or the door handle. Where is the napkin? Most likely an attempted murder by her husband or someone that had a vendetta at the restaurant.
20 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
ms1234 8/21/2022 8:23:34 PM (No. 1255613)
Forgot about the poisonous arrow or dart frog. Very lethal and toxic to humans and is toxic to the touch. Sorry.
16 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
jj1319 8/21/2022 8:24:34 PM (No. 1255614)
DMSO.
10 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
Quigley 8/21/2022 9:49:31 PM (No. 1255640)
You should see what happened to the guy that touched bidet’s diaper and huncher’s crack … pipe.
11 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
Safari Man 8/21/2022 11:02:29 PM (No. 1255653)
Anyone who doubts this story is on the right track in my book. Unless this was polonium or plutonium, the description she gave doesn't pass the smell test. Either the whole thing is a hoax (so she could get attention or some sort of insurance fraud), or the truth is very different than what is being reported.
18 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
Chicagoan 8/21/2022 11:27:09 PM (No. 1255670)
A scene out the "The Jackal" with Bruce Willis and Richard Gere.
6 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
DVC 8/22/2022 12:02:35 AM (No. 1255689)
There are multiple bizarre drugs out there now which can be absorbed through the skin and can harm you in extremely low doses.
Most cops these days wear nitrile gloves when touching anything on a crime scene or when interacting with sketchy arrestees.
13 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
DVC 8/22/2022 12:03:32 AM (No. 1255691)
Wrong, #2. You should learn more before making uninformed comments. Touching fentanyl has killed people, no open wounds and it acts in minutes, like this.
17 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
hoosierblue 8/22/2022 7:19:05 AM (No. 1255800)
No Honey, I didn't put the napkin in the door handle. Oh, by the way, did I mention that I took out a $5 million policy on you.
8 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
faceincrowd 8/22/2022 10:05:22 AM (No. 1255979)
Fishy story. Doesn't pass the smell test.
3 people like this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
MDConservative 8/22/2022 11:41:53 AM (No. 1256085)
Motive, opportunity and means...
The "poison" was placed in the driver's side door handle in a public parking lot. There's means and opportunity. Now for the motive. Poison kills...so the idea of "kidnapping" is out. (It makes little sense anyway. I would think most people parked at a restaurant are accompanied by another. And when was she supposed to "pass out" and be collected?) Who would want this woman dead? Some stranger, as a prank? Unlikely. Her husband, perhaps. But where's proof?
The napkin may have gone missing, but the door handle should retain traces, one would think. Was it checked and tested by police or DEA? Doesn't seem to be the case. How about security camera footage? Anyone approach her car while celebrating? Um, no mention. “The doctor came in, and told me it wasn’t enough in my system to determine what it was..." Hmmm.
More telling to me is this: "She said several people said they had similar situations. Fox 26 said they were unable to confirm the reports." Apparently it's rampant, but no confirmation to this point?
0 people like this.
Reply 13 - Posted by:
ms1234 8/22/2022 12:18:13 PM (No. 1256129)
#9, You seem quite knowledgeable in Fentanyl toxicity. I'm assuming you have studied and/or created papers on the subject?
However, Before you criticize others on this PURELY opinion site about the toxicity of
casual Fentanyl contact please read some of the studies done on this subject. A good sample of one is
"The spread of misinformation about overdose risk from casual contact with fentanyl in mainstream and social media." Unless you also went to the Institute for Integrative Toxicology
at MSU, you might just consider providing your reasoning and note the differences between
organic toxins vs synthetic toxins and the ability of normal hospitals to identify either form and their PPM levels need for detection. Many hospitals do not have the facilities or test kits needed for more exotic forms of toxins. Every hospital now days can test for micro levels of Fentanyl as it's currently the leading cause of overdoes deaths. It would be rare for a standard hospital to be able to test for the venom of the Puffer fish or even the venom from the spurs of a Platypus both of wish are organic toxins (although the Platypus toxin is not normally lethal to humans). At any rate, the story as told is highly suspect as to the cause and should be read with great skepticism.
1 person likes this.
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