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Florida man asks police to test meth for authenticity

Officers said they would be happy to test the authenticity of illegal narcotics for anyone else who might be questioning what they purchased.

A Florida man was arrested after he called police and asked them to test his methamphetamine's authenticity, officials said.

Thomas Eugene Colucci, of Spring Hill, called the Hernando County Sheriff’s Office on Thursday asking for officers to test meth he had recently purchased, the Hernando County Sheriff's Office said on Facebook.

Colucci told officers that he was an "experienced drug user" and believed he had been sold bath salts instead of meth, authorities said. They said he told police he “knew what it should feel like" and that the substance wasn't producing the desired effect.

Colucci said he wanted the police to test the meth so others wouldn't buy fake meth from the person who sold it to him, authorities said. Officers tested the substance and found that it was, in fact, meth, police said.

Officers arrested Colucci and took him to a hospital for a medical evaluation before they took him to the Hernando County Detention Center.

Colucci was held on $7,000 bond on charges of possession of methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia. It wasn’t immediately clear whether he had retained a lawyer, and he couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

The sheriff's office said that if a person has "doubts about the authenticity of any illegal narcotics you have on-hand or have obtained from another person, the Hernando County Sheriff’s Office is pleased to provide this service, FREE of charge."