Well l have no idea what you are referencing. Lol, you just have this infinite amount of data just floating arount your head, ready to be plucked for any given topic.
It's a sedative (also called a hypnotic) for treating insomnia, and it often has some crazy side effects. It can impair a person's thinking & reactions, and some people using it do things like driving, walking, eating, making calls, cooking, having sex, etc. with no memory of doing them. The effects are even worse if a person has had any alcohol to drink, even if it was earlier in the day. I've never taken it, but one of my little brothers did for a short time...my doctor did suggest it once for my insomnia, but after doing my own research my answer was hell no. My brother was one of the people who did risky things under its influence, including having sex on two occasions, once at his place in front of his friends and once in a bar! He was mortified when he heard about it later, because that kind of behavior is something that he'd never do in his right mind. Needless to say, he quit taking that shit.
To add to Tam's example...people sleepwalk, my bf goes into the kitchen and eats... and has no recollection doing it. Someone actually used Ambiem as the reason they killed someone. I don't touch it.
It doesn't sound all that much fun to me. My brother didn't think so either. Not knowing/remembering what the hell you did (or did it with or to) and putting yourself and others in danger isn't my idea of a good time.
Attorney: Ex-NFL player Sharper plans to plea in rape cases LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Just five years from reaching the NFL pinnacle as an All-Pro and Super Bowl champion, Darren Sharper is now likely headed for a lengthy prison sentence after reaching plea agreements in charges involving the drugging and sexual assault of at least nine women in four states, his lawyer said Friday. The alleged sexual assaults happened after Sharper's 2011 retirement and followed a similar pattern. In all of the cases, Sharper is accused of slipping drugs to women and sexually assaulting them when they were unconscious or otherwise unable to resist or consent. His Los Angeles attorney, Blair Berk, said Sharper would enter pleas in Los Angeles and Phoenix on Monday and would make similar pleas later in New Orleans and Las Vegas. Brian Russo, his attorney in Arizona, said his client will use video conferencing from Los Angeles, where he's being held, to allow him to make a change of plea in Phoenix. Sharper had a 14-year All-Pro career as a safety with three teams, including the 2010 Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints. He was later an analyst for the NFL Network. Only prosecutors in Nevada provided details of their part of the deal with Sharper. He is expected to plead guilty there on Tuesday to one felony charge of attempted sexual assault, with the expectation that he'll face between 38 months and eight years in prison, Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson told The Associated Press. He had previously been charged in Nevada with two counts of felony sexual assault, each carrying a possible sentence of 10 years to life. ''We are pleased that Mr. Sharper is accepting responsibility for the crimes he committed in Nevada,'' Wolfson said. Wolfson said the Nevada prison term would run concurrent with other sentences in other states. ''I'm not sure where he's going to serve his time,'' Wolfson said, ''But he's going to serve significant time.'' The announcement came following a morning of closed-door meetings in the Los Angeles chambers of Superior Court Judge Michael E. Pastor. The Las Vegas charges, filed earlier Friday before the plea agreements were announced, had the same pattern as the previous allegations. Prosecutors there alleged that Sharper went club-hopping with two female tourists and took them to his hotel room on the Las Vegas Strip, where he drugged and sexually assaulted them while they were unconscious. Sharper has been jailed in Los Angeles since February 2014 after pleading not guilty to drugging and raping two women there in 2013. The New Orleans charges allege that the former safety sexually assaulted three women in 2013. He also faces charges in Arizona, where he is accused of drugging three women and sexually assaulting two of them in November 2013 in the Phoenix suburb of Tempe. New Orleans District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro wrote in a statement that he expects Sharper will be sent to Louisiana within 30 days to plead guilty to federal and state charges filed there. Cannizzario thanked victims in the cases for remaining involved despite personal attacks on their credibility. ''This plea constitutes a complete vindication of these victims as well as their truthfulness,'' he wrote. Sharper was a safety with the Green Bay Packers, Minnesota Vikings and New Orleans Saints. He played in one Super Bowl with the Packers and was part of the Saints' only championship season. He was working as an analyst for the NFL Network before being fired when the rape allegations surfaced.
l had read this plea stunner on TMZ...most importantly, it will spare his victims the trauma of having to testify. The beauty of this man's exterior proves that you never know the demons going on inside. I read somewhere that this kind of rape is close to necrophilia, without the corpse. He needs phsycological help. I hope he gets it while in jail.
Gotta be careful what you expose your kids to when they're young and become adolescents. Some experiences are so psychologically shocking they can imprint on one's psycho/sexual development. That had an episode on Criminal Minds that touched on how a potential serial killer got into the sick 'rush' of murdering prostitutes. His mother was a professor at a medical school and one time as a young teen he saw a naked female cadaver, the first naked woman he'd ever seen in his life, and it gave him this intense feeling of sexual arousal. Problem now is in his mind he's got nudity and sex, women and death combined in this weird, deviant stew inside his mind and he can't get past it. Not saying this happens to everyone, but if you're someone who's psychologically vulnerable, an unexpected event can become a catalyst for sexually deviant behavior later in life. There's a reason why we all like what we like, and usually it can be traced to imprinting events very early in life.
You make a compelling point. The man who murdered Megan Canker(?) and the reason behind Megan's Law was repeatedly sexually abused as a youth. I think it's important that when society dissects such deviant crimes, it is fully stressed these behaviors are only being possibly explained, but never excused. Full accountability is paramount. Darren"s plea deal nabbed him 9 years. Not sure if It's the final tally but if so, pleading in four states, having committed multiple rapes...yet received only 9 years? Darren got an incredible break -- he definitely deserved more.
It appears this was just for one State. He has to face sentencing in two other States as well. We will see if they are served consecutively or concurrently.