Edward Archbold was among
20 to 30 contestants participating in Friday night's "Midnight Madness"
event at Ben Siegel Reptiles in Deerfield Beach, authorities said.
The participants' goal: consume as many insects and worms as they could to take home a $850 python.
Archbold swallowed roach after roach, worm after worm. While the store didn't say exactly how many Archbold consumed, the owner told CNN affiliate WPLG that he was "the life of the party."
"He really made our night more fun," Ben Siegel told the station.
Soon after the contest was over, Archbold fell ill and began to vomit, the Broward County Sheriff's Office said Monday.
A friend called for medical help. Then, Archbold himself dialed 911, the store said in a Facebook post.
Eventually, he fell to
the ground outside the store, the sheriff's office said. An ambulance
took him to North Broward Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.
The Broward Medical Examiner's Office conducted an autopsy and are awaiting test results to determine the cause of his death.
No other contestant fell ill, the sheriff's office said.
"Very saddened by this. I
mean, it was a shock," Siegel told WPLG. "Eddie was a very nice guy. We
just met him that night, but everybody that works here was very fond of
him."
Luke Lirot, who says he
is legally representing the store, said in a post on the store's
Facebook page that all participants "signed thorough waivers accepting
responsibility for their participation in this unique and unorthodox
contest."
"The consumption of
insects is widely accepted throughout the world, and the insects
presented as part of the contest were taken from an inventory of insects
that are safely and domestically raised in a controlled environment as
food for reptiles," Lirot said.
In the wild, cockroaches
are scavengers that pick up various bacterial organisms such as
salmonella while walking through spoiled food, the New York City
Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
Cockroaches themselves
don't transmit disease, though "many disease-causing organisms can grow
and multiply in their guts and can then be deposited ... during
defecation."
Pharaoh Gayles was one of those who took part in the contest. He explained his reasoning to CNN affiliate WPTV.
"Some of the snakes were pretty expensive," he said. "I thought if I could eat the bugs to get one, it'd be a good idea."
No comments:
Post a Comment
This is a public viewable website, post something that is not harmful to other people