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Reason: None provided.
  • Fentafloyd died in the morning, before 9 o'clock (it was pronounced dead at the hospital around 9:30 AM).

  • The toxicology exam was taken about 12 hours after that.

  • Fentanyl's half-life is somewhere between 2 to 4 hours. Let's take 4 to be conservative.

  • At time of death the blood concentration was ~8x higher than the toxicology exam (3 half-lives).

  • At time of death, Fentafloyd had ~90 ng/mL of fentanyl in the blood.

  • That is about ~10 times the average amount to overdose and die. Of course Fentafloyd might have some resistance since that was not his first rodeo of swalling drugs when stopped by cops.

Edit: points 2-3 do not apply, as some of you pointed out. I'll keep it so people understand the context of the corrections.

34 days ago
44 score
Reason: Original
  • Fentafloyd died in the morning, before 9 o'clock (it was pronounced dead at the hospital around 9:30 AM).

  • The toxicology exam was taken about 12 hours after that.

  • Fentanyl's half-life is somewhere between 2 to 4 hours. Let's take 4 to be conservative.

  • At time of death the blood concentration was ~8x higher than the toxicology exam (3 half-lives).

  • At time of death, Fentafloyd had ~90 ng/mL of fentanyl in the blood.

  • That is about ~10 times the average amount to overdose and die. Of course Fentafloyd might have some resistance since that was not his first rodeo of swalling drugs when stopped by cops.

34 days ago
1 score