Mahoney had studied the effects of ephedrine meth on the brain in the early 2000s at UCLA. The psychosis he saw then was bad, but it was usually the result of extended sleep deprivation. In 2016 Mahoney took a WVU job as a meth researcher and specialist in the university’s addiction clinic. Less than a year into the job, the P2P crystal meth from Mexico started showing up. Mahoney was inundated with meth patients who came in ranting, conversing with phantoms. “I can’t even compare it to what I was seeing at UCLA,” he told me. “Now we’re seeing it instantaneously, within hours, in people who
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