Justin Tubbs
justin@ennisdailynews.com
Brenda Laznovsky remembers Jan. 8 at the most terrifying day of her life.
That was the day she got a call from Ennis High School, telling her to come. She
thought her son was in trouble. Maybe he had gotten into a fight, or maybe he had
hurt himself somehow, she thought.
However, her son Austin Montgomery, a 16-year-old sophomore at EHS, had a bad
reaction after smoking synthetic cannabinoids, and the first glimpse she caught of
him when she arrived at the school was in the back of an ambulance.
Paramedics at the scene told Brenda that her son had ingested K2, a drug that is
becoming increasingly popular in urban areas, as it promises a stronger high than
normal marijuana and is many times more affordable than normal marijuana.
Towards the end of his fourth period class, Austin went with a friend to the
bathroom. In there, his friend, who supplied him with marijuana, told him to try
something new he had.
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