Commuters have been warned of terrifying ‘Devil Breath’ drug attacks in London.
The warning came from a woman who claims that she was a victim of a mysterious woman whilst she travelled on the Elizabeth Line.
Also known as scopolamine or burundanga, the drug is derived from the Borrachero tree and was once used by the CIA as a truth serum.
There are now claims it is being weaponised in honey trap scams via dating apps such as Tinder and Grindr.
Victims are said to be rendered into a zombie-like state with as little as 10mg, making them easy to manipulate, hallucinate, and follow commands, sometimes with fatal consequences.
Some however claim the alleged scam is little more than an urban myth.
Now a Londoner has come out, warning people that she was almost a victim of this attack whilst she travelled in the train.
Speaking on a TikTok video, she said: ‘Today I am on the train, this is the first train, so the train is empty, the previous one had just left a few seconds earlier so I was one of the first people who got on the train.
‘So I sat down and had the whole carriage to myself.
‘A few minutes later I noticed someone walking very slowly and I looked up and I am thinking “this woman is walking very slowly, what is going on” and when I looked up I realised that she was staring in my direction.’
She goes on to describe that at first she thought this person was a tourist about to ask her for directions, but things start taking an unusual twist.
The TikToker, who goes by the handle @debyoscar, went on: ‘She walks and stands in front of me, so at this point I’m like “how can I help you because this train is empty” and she is looking at me, and I am like “how can I help?”‘
She explains that this mysterious woman is holding a newspaper and is ‘waving it around’ in a ‘really strange’ manner.
‘She makes her way very slowly, still maintaining eye contact, and she sits down next to me,’ the woman explains.
She then tells that as the train moves, all of a sudden she starts feeling dizzy and very high, and she describes ‘the room getting very dark and it’s spinning’.
She started to worry that it may be low blood sugar and that she may be about to faint.
She then remembered that she had previously watched a video about the drug which causes similar symptoms.
She said: ‘In the groggy state, I start thinking “Oh my Gosh, is this what I think it is?”
‘I pick up my phone and I leave a very groggy voice note to my sister in Italian. The woman is still staring at me and I start [describing the woman’s appearance].’
To make things even creepier, she then claims the woman, while still looking at her, starts to walk away to another carriage.
‘Then I remembered, in those videos [about the drug], they normally leave and somebody else will swoop in and basically lead you to cash machine and lead you to transfer your money to them.’
She claims she stood up in the train and moved to the next carriage and spotted a man and a woman who were sat one seat apart from each other in an otherwise empty carriage.
‘I thought, what if these are the people that are watching me, because where they are sat they could clearly see where I was sat earlier.’
She said she felt ‘dread’ and thought ‘you need to get out now’.
She claims she waited for the doors to almost close to leave the carriage.
‘I waited until I heard the doors beep, and as soon as the doors beep I stood up and when I stood up the two South Asian people in front of me immediately looked at me and then looked at each other, and that was all I needed to see.
‘I stumbled out of the train, and the doors closed behind me. When the fresh air hits me, the dizziness feeling subsides.’
She finished the video by saying: ‘I don’t know what that was. I don’t know if it was black magic, a spell, or hypnotherapy, whatever it is, it was scary, but it was very real.
‘I am just here to warn you to be careful and be wary.’
She added: ‘I am thankful God that I left before they could do anything because I am planning a wedding so my account would have fed them for a few years, you know. So I am just thankful that didn’t happen to me. But please be wary, they are in London.’