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Was Ethan Crumbley On Prozac?

If Ethan Crumbley was a marijuana user, that fact would have been publicized by now — or will soon become known. If he was on Prozac or some other pharmaceutical concoction, we may never know because “medical privacy” trumps public health and public safety.

Already the coverage from Michigan is focusing on his parents’ politics, not the kid’s mental state. The grown-up Crumbleys were obdurate when the school told them Ethan needed counseling — but it’s possible the family doctor had prescribed an SSRI for their unhappy 15-year-old.  More than one in 20 teenage boys in the US are on anti-depressants — and more than one in 10 teenage girls.

Evidence that Prozac induces suicidal ideation and bizarre flip-outs emerged when Eli Lilly was conducting clinical trials in the mid-1980s. The relevant episodes were misrepresented to the Food & Drug Administration, which granted marketing approval in December, 1988, with no warning required on the package. After a drug is marketed, only a tiny fraction of the adverse events it induces get reported to the FDA. Patients have to tell their doctors, who then have to file paperwork with the manufacturers, who then have to voluntarily tell the FDA that their products are dangerous. Thus only about 1% of the adverse events get reported.

Among the adverse events brought on by Prozac soon after it hit the market were numerous suicides and homicides, some of which resulted in legal action by the victims or survivors. Lilly’s strategy was to conceal the trend by settling every case out of court. One of the first to capture national attention involved Joseph Wesbecker, a Louisville, Kentucky printing press operator who, on Sept. 14, 1989, killed eight co-workers with an AK-47 and injured a dozen others before committing suicide. Wesbecker had been prescribed Prozac five weeks before and his psychiatrist, noting that Wesbecker had become “very, very agitated,” told him to stop taking it on Sept. 11. Victims who survived the shooting, relatives of those who died, and members of Wesbecker’s family subsequently sued Eli Lilly, charging that the company “knew or should have known that users of Prozac can experience intense agitation and preoccupation with suicide, and can harm themselves or others.”

In February, 1990 psychiatrists Martin Teicher and Jonathan Cole and nurse Carol Glod published “Emergence of intense suicidal preoccupations during fluoxetine treatment” in the American Journal of Psychiatry. It described six patients who developed “intense, violent suicidal preoccupations” within two to seven weeks of starting treatment with Prozac. The authors estimated that between 1.9 and 7.7 percent of Prozac users would develop suicidal obsessions. Teicher and his co-workers subsequently reported that Prozac patients were “at least three-fold more likely to develop new suicidal ideation” than patients treated with the older antidepressants, and that patients were also more likely to develop suicidal thoughts for the first time ever while taking Prozac.

Lilly responded, “Our experience does not show a cause and effect relationship between our products and suicidal or violent thoughts or acts. Unfortunately, these thoughts and acts are part of the disease of depression.” But the company made its first small concession, noting on the Prozac label in May, 1990, that “suicidal ideation” and “violent behavior” had been reported (as had pancreatitis) as side-effects. This reference appeared in the “Postintroduction Reports” section towards the bottom of the label. No mention of suicidal ideation was added to the “Precautions” section.

The FDA held a hearing in September 1990 at which its Psychotropic Drugs Advisory Committee (most of whose members got funding from antidepressant manufacturers) considered whether “Selective” Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) can induce violent and suicidal thoughts. They voted 9-0 not to recommend a more prominent warning and 6-3 not to recommend a warning in small type that would have read, “In a small number of patients, depressive symptoms have worsened during therapy, including the emergence of suicidal thoughts and attempts. Surveillance throughout treatment is recommended.”

As evidence linking SSRIs to suicide homicide kept mounting, Lilly and the other antidepressant manufacturers made a few finite, begrudging concessions. A turning point came in April 2004, when the British Medical Journal reported that GlaxoSmithKline had concealed data showing that Paxil more than quadrupled suicidal ideation among teenagers. A few months later the FDA acknowledged a study showing that SSRI use induced suicidal thoughts in two out of 100 adolescents and ordered a black box warning. Prozac sales dipped as a result and Lilly et al commissioned the study that JAMA published April 18, showing that SSRI use induces suicidal ideation in only one in 100. Suicidal ideation,” “Suicide gesture,” “Suicide attempt,” and other such terms do not accurately characterize the extremely bizarre flip-outs induced by SSRIs. Carefully planning to annihilate the student body fits the profile. Biting your mother 57 times. Driving your car around in circles until you smash into a tree… Years ago, at a meeting of the Prozac Survivors Support group that I covered for the Anderson Valley Advertiser,  Bonnie Leitsch, a flamboyant redhead from Louisville who sounded like Minnie Pearl, tried to explain what Prozac did to her thinking:

“It’s hard for people to understand. They say ‘you must know what you’re doing,’ but you do not. You cannot distinguish reality. I could never tell if I was awake or asleep. That was the hardest thing for me to determine. I would lay down in bed and I would think ‘Now am I dreaming this or am I awake and doing this?” My mind constantly ran, it never would stop. I could be having this conversation with you and the whole time if I was drinking coffee, I could be thinking about running it on my hand and wondering what it would feel like. Thinking irrational thoughts. And yet still able to communicate at what would appear to be a rational level. That’s why I think psychiatrists and psychologists and doctors who are dealing with people on Prozac are totally oblivious to what’s going on. These people are the best liars in the whole world in terms of being able to come to you and say ‘I’m fine.’ But the whole time they might be thinking ‘I wonder what it would feel like to stick this knife in my hand?’ And, ‘I can take on a motorcycyle gang and kill ‘em all.’ Most of these people on Prozac like myself lose all natural ability to love. It becomes a spiritual dullness. You cease to know right from wrong. Because there’s no wrong and you’re right 100 percent and the hell with the rest of you.”

On that fatal morning in Michigan, Ethan Crumbley wrote a note that his teacher found. As described by the NY Times Dec. 4, “The note contained the following: a drawing of a semiautomatic handgun, pointing at the words: “‘The thoughts won’t stop. Help me.’  In another section of the note was a drawing of a bullet, with the following words above that bullet: ‘Blood everywhere.’ Between the drawing of the gun and the bullet is a drawing of a person who appears to have been shot twice and bleeding. Below that figure is a drawing of a laughing emoji. Further down the drawing are the words, ‘My life is useless.’ And to the right of that are the words, ‘The world is dead.’

In 1994 Alexander Cockburn and I wrote an expose that the LA Times spiked describing how Lilly and the other manufacturers of SSRIs had denied and were still trying to suppress the fact that these chemicals  can induce bizarre flip-outs. Lilly succeeded in preventing the FDA  from putting a “black box” warning on the Prozac package until 2004.  The moral of the story is: the house always comes out ahead.

Every so often a critic of Big Pharma is allowed to make a peep. In 2017, after the British Medical Journal published a paper pooh-poohing the evidence linking SSRIs to suicide and homicide, they ran a note of protest hedded “Antidepressants and Murder: Case not Closed” by Peter C. Gøtzsche, MD, a Danish epidemiologist. He concluded:  ”Looking at precursor events to suicide and violence is just like looking at prognostic factors for heart disease. We say that increased cholesterol, smoking and inactivity increase the risk of heart attacks and heart deaths and therefore recommend people to do something about it. Psychiatric leaders, however, routinely try to get away with untenable arguments. Many say, for example, that antidepressants can be given safely to children arguing that there were no more suicides in the trials, only more suicidal events, as if there was no relation between the two, although we all know that a suicide starts with suicidal thoughts, followed by preparations and one or more attempts. The same can be said about homicide. It can no longer be doubted that antidepressants are dangerous and can cause suicide and homicide at any age. It is absurd to use drugs for depression that increase the risk of suicide and homicide when we know that cognitive behavioural therapy can halve the risk of suicide in patients who have been admitted after a suicide attempt and when psychotherapy does not increase the risk of murder.”

The upside of being ignored is that your warning stays relevant.

A Sense of Proportion

When Tariq Alazraie opened the Mason St. Dispensary in San Francisco’s Tenderloin District some 20 years ago, it had a unique feature: computers that homeless people could use whether or not they spent $40 for an eighth of an ounce (which was then the lowest price in town). Nobody got the bum’s rush.

Alazraie later opened a store on Grove Street off Divisadero called BASA (Bay Area Safer Alternatives, pronounced as in Bossa Nova) in a neighborhood trying to brand itself "NoPa" (North of Panhandle). BASA has high-quality products, low prices, and a good reputation among consumers and neighbors. Nevertheless, it has been ripped off five times in recent years. On one occasion Alazraie, who is 50-something, was kidnapped and pistol-whipped by the intruders. He is a former officer in the Jordanian Air Force and can handle himself. 

Last week there was a break-in at BASA that made the news. Video from the store’s security system showed two SFPD cars arriving and the officers not emerging until the last burglar had left the store lugging  a sack full of cannabis products. NBC showed the video and interviewed Anisa Alazraie, Tariq’s eldest daughter. I called Tariq to express admiration for how well she had expressed her dismay. She’s studying political science at USF and plans to go to law school, he said.

I asked what he made of the cops’ inaction. Were they trying to embarrass District Attorney Chesa Boudin? 

"I don’t think so," he said. "I think they’re afraid. If something goes wrong, they’ll be held accountable." 

Tariq said that after the rip-off in which he took a beating, he had briefly lost perspective. "At one point I was there at the store with my shotgun and watching the video, and after a while I thought ‘If I shoot just one round, I will maim and hurt a few people. For what? To protect my property? Bullshit! I’m not doing it!’"

He met with the police captain in charge at Park Station. "I told him, ‘I really don’t want anybody getting hurt. It’s only property. Let it go."

And so there was no confrontation as the last burglar left BASA and no dangerous high-speed chase through city streets as the driver made a U-turn and headed east.

More Reasons We’re Doomed

"Venture capitalists have bet big on crypto start-ups in 2021, investing more than $27 billion globally as of late November," according to a piece in the NY Times Business Section Dec. 1. "Many of the investments were made by the venture capital arms of crypto companies, businesses whose continued growth will depend on the ecosystem expanding," writes Ephrat Livni. 

The financiers have appropriated the language. The word ecosystem, which used to refer to biological/geographic relationships, now refers to financial maneuvers. The electricity-wasting process by which computers create cryptocoins is called mining.  For infrastructure, which used to mean plumbing, wiring, and roads, Ms Livni has a new application: "Coinbase Ventures, the investment arm of the Coinbase cryptocurrency exchange, is backing companies building infrastructure such as Solana, a blockchain network; businesses offering crypto financial services, like BlockFi, and decentralized finance projects, known as DeFi projects, in which automated transactions are handled by code; and entities working on the digital economy of the metaverse, where users buy and sell digital goods for their virtual lives, like nonfungible tokens, or NFTs."

WTF?  The production of cryptocurrency now uses more electricity than the nation of Finland. The huge banks of servers that generate bitcoins get ferociously hot, so to save on the cost of keeping them cool, the financiers locate them in Iceland. Who cares if the glaciers melt a little faster? They’re part of the old ecosystem.

When the Imaginary Party takes power all cryptocurrency "mining" will cease and bitcoins will be worthless.

8 Comments

  1. Charles Brandenburg December 10, 2021

    Yes marijuana is responsible for this. Not a shitty people who think god would put a right to own guns as it’s 2nd most important ‘right’ only next to this…. Fuck you gun loving Americans. Freedom of speech is stronger than a gun and one day will lead to you all loosing your guns.

  2. Douglas Coulter December 10, 2021

    Measure my pain with your numbers
    Define my whole life with a word
    Killing me slowly with Big Pharm
    Bleeding me softly with new drugs
    Stealing my whole life with faux science
    Robbing me falsely with your DSM

    I read the DSM 4 they claim it was inspired
    But then I’ve seen asylums where multitudes expired
    The Nazi’s killed us early before they killed the Jews
    Gassing us quick with those engines
    Carbon monoxide’s preferred
    Killing us softly for no wrongs
    Killing us quickly for our songs
    Destroying a people cause our words
    Speak against evil all along

    I open books of history, crazy people change the world
    While all those normal folks hold war banners unfurled
    I cannot wear your Jackboots they cause my feet much pain
    Tearing my heart with your slogans
    Killing the weak is perverse
    Destroying the earth for a profit
    Putting poor people in orange
    Prisons and psych wards are filling
    Killing us slowly for a song

    to the tune Killing Me Softly by Carol King
    Parody by Douglas Wayne Coulter 2021

    Read Medication Madness by Peter Breggin for clear studies and legal claims against SSRIs. They destroy human empathy and create total narcissists.

    • Martin Nelson February 13, 2022

      Thank you Douglas Coulter. Brilliant piece of writing. . Glad to know there is somebody else out there who is not buying the Pig Pharma propaganda. I was only ever suicidal in my life when I was on these drugs. They only turned me into a terrible, apathetic, neglectful, out of control, emotionally labile, narcissistic and selfish parent as they did my ex-wife and son’s mother, and caused me neurological (including brain) damage, drug induced parkinson’s and other sensory and organ damage from which I still have not recovered and never will. These drugs aged me about 20 years right in front of my son’s eyes when he was growing up and he once made a comment while he was watching it all go down that I looked “old and thin and I was all stooped over”. He took his hands one on my chest and one in my back and tried to straighten me out. He was just a little kid. I became a father late in life. Right in front of his eyes I had turned into an “old man” who could no longer even play catch with him because my eyes were so messed up and my reflexes from the drugs that I could not even throw and catch a ball anymore. And I got into car accidents while he was in the car with me because I could no longer drive. And was constantly going to the emergency room with all the symptoms I was having. Not even realizing for quite some time that it was the drugs. Because the damage the drugs do to your brain make you incapable of even making such a connection. That’s just how bad it gets. It’s really incredible. I overdosed on the lithium I was taking a number of times because I couldn’t even remember if I had taken it or not. So I ended up taking double. An extremely dangerous drug to do that with. I had gone through a very bad divorce and I just assumed many of the problems I was having were from the emotional aftermath of that. Most of it was the drugs though. They were literally driving me insane. Right in front of my child. And I had always been very healthy and active before that. . Well, I haven’t taken any of these neurotoxic lobotomy pills since 2017. I FINALLY learned the lesson. I had to do a lot of research just like you did, Mr. Coulter, and Dr. Breggin was one of the invaluable sources for my awakening also. . People do not understand exactly how incredibly damaging, crippling and even deadly these psych drugs are. They absolutely DESTROY people’s lives. The SSRIs and SNRIs make you obese and pre-diabetic, if not diabetic,
      and also hypomanic or full blown manic and after that happens they diagnose you with “bipolar affective disorder” and put you on something like lithium which is perhaps the most dangerous psychiatric drug of them all and it will DESTROY your brain and body permanently. Which is basically what happened to me. It is simply incredible that a substance that is so toxic to the neurological system as well as almost every other organ in the body that it was banned from the soft drink 7Up decades ago is still allowed to be given to people in much larger dosages by psychiatrists. Yes, the Crumbleys were victims of the pharmaceutical crime syndicate as well as their child’s victims obviously. When I read that one of the Crumbley parents had told the other one to just give Ethan a half of a Xanax tablet when he was “freaking out” about something one day, the light bulb went off. Just like Adam Lanza at Sandy Hook, Nikolas Cruz and all the other cases. It was psychiatric drugs again. According to FBI statistics about 60% of the mass shootings in this country have been committed by those on psychiatric drugs. The criminality of Big Pharma and psychiatrists who prescribe these drugs knowing how dangerous they are but hardly EVER warning their patients (… and why would they because then nobody would ever take these drugs and they obviously would lose patients and income…) the criminality of it all is just beyond belief. But try to sue the psychiatrist after he or she has destroyed your life with these drugs, watching you suffer with all the side effects and instead of telling you to stop taking them just prescribing ANOTHER drug for the side effect (psych drug “cocktail”) to compound the damage even more. Sure, try suing them after they’ve destroyed you physically and neurologically and you see double and have constant tinnitus and peripheral neuropathy and can barely function anymore let alone hold down even a part-time job. And let’s not forget about the PTSD you will develop after all the trauma of knowing that you live in a country where psychiatrists can legally destroy your life and perhaps even kill you and you can’t even do anything about it. Forget it. You just have to move on with a broken brain and body and children who are totally alienated from you forever because they saw you turned into a lunatic by these drugs while they were growing up. And they didn’t know it was the drugs. And neither did you until it was too late. And after your life has been ruined as an individual and a parent all you can do is request one thing from your kids: “After I am gone please promise me you will never let anybody give you a psychiatric drug as long as you live. Okay?”

  3. k h December 10, 2021

    It’s incredible to me how entitled people feel to speculate publicly about other people’s private lives and various public tragedies. I suppose it’s always been this way, but it was in private conversations around kitchen tables and bar stools.

    Now any Joe Schmoe on the internet feels free to muse over someone’s situation and monetize the situation in an effort to advance their own agenda.

    Nobody needs prescription drugs to feel murderous rage or corrosive depression these days. It’s part of our modern DNA.

    • chuck dunbar December 10, 2021

      Well-put and true.

  4. Mazie Malone February 7, 2024

    Hmmmmphhhh ….

    Addiction to Cannabis has same symptoms as Prozac …
    Frightening
    interesting…

    mm

    • H. Skip Rob March 15, 2024

      You don’t really believe Cannabis has the same symptoms as Prozac?

  5. H. Skip Rob March 15, 2024

    Since this article, which is excellent, has anyone been able to determine if Ethan Crumbley was on any drugs? We know how powerful the drug companies are, with just about everyone in the medical community, including the FHA, in their pockets. What we forget is Big Chem provides most of the ingredients to Big Pharma, so the influence is huge when the two are combined. I can only imagine how much they spend yearly on political contributions and lobbyists.

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