A DJ displays music as people dance at the nightclub "La Dune" in the French southern city of La Grande Motte, on early July 10, 2021. (Photo by SYLVAIN THOMAS/AFP via Getty Images) Across France, more than 300 people have reported being pricked out of the blue with needles at nightclubs or concerts in recent months.
Doctors and multiple prosecutors are on the case, but no one knows who’s doing it or why, and whether the victims have been injected with drugs — or indeed any substance at all.Club owners and police are trying to raise awareness, and a rapper even interrupted his recent show to warn concert-goers about the risk of surprise needle attacks.It's not just France: Britain’s government is studying a spate of "needle spiking" there, and police in Belgium and the Netherlands are investigating scattered cases too.On May 4, 18-year-old Tomas Laux attended a rap concert in Lille in northern France, where he smoked a bit of marijuana and drank some alcohol during the show.
When he came home, he told The Associated Press, he was feeling dizzy and had a headache – and he spotted a strange little skin puncture on his arm and a bruise.The next morning, the symptoms didn’t disappear and Laux went to his doctor, who advised him to go to the emergency room.
Medics confirmed evidence of a needle prick, and Laux was tested for HIV and hepatitis. His results came out negative, like other victims' so far."I've given up going to concerts since it happened," Laux said.Hundreds of kilometers (miles) away, Leanne Desnos recounted a similar experience after going to a club in the southwest city of Bordeaux in April.