Quebec sisters died in Thailand from drinking DEET - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 30, 2024, 03:49 AM | Calgary | -15.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Quebec sisters died in Thailand from drinking DEET

The death earlier this year in Thailand of two sisters from Quebec was caused by drinking a cocktail that contained the insect repellent DEET, an autopsy concluded.

Bodies of Audrey and Nomi Blanger found on June 15 at hotel on Phi Phi island

Sisters Audrey and Nomi Blanger were from Pohngamook in the Lower Saint Lawrence region of Quebec. (Radio-Canada)

The death earlier this year in Thailand of two sisters from Quebec was caused by drinking a cocktail that contained the insect repellentDEET, an autopsy concluded.

Results of the autopsyat a Bangkok hospital have not beenpublicly released, but they were shown to reporters for CBC's French-language news network.

According to the report, 20-year-old Audrey and Nomi Blanger, 25,had DEET in their bodiesthat they hadingested.

Though the chemical is a potentially neurotoxic mosquito repellent, it is used as an ingredient in a euphoria-inducing cocktail that is popular among youth in Thailand. The drink contains cough syrup, Coke, DEET and ground up kratom leaves, which are a mild narcotic indigenous to Thailand.

It is thought that an overdose of DEET was accidentally mixed intothe young women's drinks.

They had just arrived on the Thai island of Phi Phi and were last seen partying with two Brazilian friends in the early morning of June 13.Forty-eight hourslater, whenstaff at their hotel hadn't seen them emerge from their room, a receptionist called police.

The sisters were staying on the Thai resort island of Phi Phi, about a 90-minute ferry ride from Phuket. (CBC)

The sisters werefound dead in their room, andit was speculated that poisoning, probably accidental, played a role. Police said they found no signs of foul play.

However, officers did find a lot of vomit in the room and there was blood on the young women's faces, leading investigatorsto say early on thatthe women may have suffered some kind oftoxic reaction.

Another autopsy is supposed to take place in Montreal, but final results from that are expected to take months. The Blangers were from Pohngamook, in Quebec's Lower Saint Lawrence region.

Mysterious deaths

In 2009, two young tourists, one from the United States and the other from Norway, who were staying at a nearby guest house also died under mysterious circumstances.

Their deaths remain unsolved, but there was speculation the women had been poisoned.

Another spate of mysterious tourist deaths occurred last year in the northern Thai city of Chiang Mai, involving several visitors from different countries staying at the same hotel in January and February.

The cause of death was not established, though some evidence suggested the use of the chemical spray chlorpyrifos, used to kill bedbugs, may have been responsible.