WPalm Bch Man Dies Choking on Roaches {Vid incl}

Is Florida having a shortage of Lobsters, shrimps or even Craw daddy’s. They are going for the roach?? Then you have the class clown he had to kick the bucket…..of roaches I imagine,  by choking on them? Don’t say it…I read your mind….not nice, but I almost with you about the, you know chocking? We never have done that in NYC. We do Hotdogs, chicken wings, beer…They once in a while find mice in the healthy organic salad bars. I wonder how they feel about bed bugs? They could make some money on that.  Eating all the bed bugs at people’s houses and apartments. Just don’t take a bunch at the same time dude!
adamfoxie*

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  • 2004 photo of Edward Archbold2004 photo of Edward Archbold
  • Original story: Man dies after bug-eating contest in Deerfield BeachOriginal story: Man dies after bug-eating contest in Deerfield Beach 


A West Palm Beach man who collapsed after a cockroach-eating contest last month choked to death on bug parts and his own vomit, the Broward County Medical Examiner ruled Monday.
Edward Archbold, 32, a canvas worker, had stuffed handfuls of roaches and worms down his throat during an Oct. 5 contest at the Ben Siegel Reptile Store in Deerfield Beach.
Shortly after winning the prize, an expensive ivory ball python, Archbold began to retch violently and collapsed outside the store. He later died at Broward Health North Medical Center. None of the other contestants became ill, Ben Siegel said.
Medical Examiner Dr. Craig Mallak determined Archbold "died as a result of asphyxia due to choking and aspiration of gastric contents."
Mallak further cited "findings of airway obstruction by the arthropod body parts." Cockroaches are members of the arthropod family.
Mallak's report noted there were no "lethal intoxicating
substances" in Archbold's system. He classified the death as an accident.
Siegel described Archbold, who won the python for a friend, as "a super nice guy."
"He was outgoing.

He was the life of the party," the shop owner said.
All contestants signed waivers accepting responsibility, and weren't allowed to drink alcohol. Siegel said three aspiring bug eaters were eliminated for bringing beer to the contest.
The bugs were not wild, but rather raised in captivity under sterile conditions, Siegel said. "They're bred for exotic pet feed and they're completely safe," he said.
After Archibold's death, theories abounded on the Internet as to what killed him: He choked on his own vomit, suffered an allergic reaction, or inhaled the insects' hard, dry shells.
Experts on insect eating advise against consuming live roaches. They're fraught with bacteria and have spiny legs.
"It's like swallowing a fish hook," said Florence Vaccarello Dunkel, associate professor of entomology at Montana State University and editor of the Food Insect Newsletter.

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