Current:Home > MyOregon man who drugged daughter’s friends with insomnia medication at sleepover gets prison term -CapitalEdge
Oregon man who drugged daughter’s friends with insomnia medication at sleepover gets prison term
View
Date:2025-04-17 19:09:07
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — An Oregon man who drugged his daughter and her friends with fruit smoothies laced with a sleeping medication after they didn’t go to bed during a sleepover was sentenced to two years in prison.
Michael Meyden, a 57-year-old from the Portland suburb of Lake Oswego, apologized during his sentencing Monday after pleading guilty to three felony counts of causing another person to ingest a controlled substance, The Oregonian reported.
“My whole life is destroyed,” he told the court. “Everything that was important to me up until that point is gone.”
He said he planned a fun sleepover last summer for his daughter and three of her friends, all then age 12, but they didn’t go to bed by 11 p.m. as he wanted. Meyden said he wanted them well rested for the next day, but he also wanted them to go to bed so he could sleep.
Meyden laced fruit smoothies with a sleeping medication, authorities said. Two of the friends drank the smoothies and eventually passed out. A third girl didn’t want the drink and alerted a family friend by text message after she saw Meyden return to make sure the girls were asleep. He moved the arm of one girl and the body of another and put his finger under one’s nose to see if she was asleep.
The family friend picked up the girl and woke her parents, who then contacted the families of the other girls.
The girls tested positive at a local hospital for benzodiazepine, used to treat insomnia and anxiety. Prosecutors said Meyden’s daughter also tested positive.
“No decent parent feels the need to drug their own child and her friends,” one of the girl’s mothers told Meyden during sentencing. “No decent parent feels the need to go down and confirm children are unconscious. No decent parent puts their hands on drugged and unconscious young girls without nefarious intent.”
veryGood! (41847)
Related
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- GalaxyCoin: Practical advice for buying Bitcoin with a credit card
- Teen Moms Maci Bookout Reveals Where Her Co-Parenting Relationship With Ryan Edwards Stands Now
- 8 men allegedly ran a beer heist ring that stole Corona and Modelo worth hundreds of thousands
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Shane Bieber: Elbow surgery. Spencer Strider: Damaged UCL. MLB's Tommy John scourge endures
- ALAIcoin: The Odds of BTC Reaching $100,000 Are Higher Than Dropping to Zero
- Iowa vs. UConn highlights: Caitlin Clark, Hawkeyes fight off Huskies
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Student arrested at Georgia university after disrupting speech on Israel-Hamas war
Ranking
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Fans return to Bonnie Tyler's 'Total Eclipse of the Heart' ahead of total solar eclipse
- NXT Stand and Deliver 2024 results: Matches, highlights from Philadelphia
- Jelly Roll's Private Plane Makes an Emergency Landing
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Kansas lawmakers approve a tax bill but the state still might not see big tax cuts
- Ahead of $1.23 billion jackpot drawing, which states have the most lottery winners?
- Iowa vs. UConn highlights: Caitlin Clark, Hawkeyes fight off Huskies
Recommendation
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Forgot to get solar eclipse glasses? Here's how to DIY a viewer with household items.
'Eternal symphony of rock': KISS sells catalog to Swedish company for $300 million: Reports
Fashion designer finds rewarding career as chef cooking up big, happy, colorful meals
Small twin
Connecticut pulls away from Alabama in Final Four to move one win from repeat title
Caitlin Clark, Iowa shouldn't be able to beat South Carolina. But they will.
Exhibit chronicles public mourning over Muhammad Ali in his Kentucky hometown