A former manager of broadcaster Park Na-rae raised so-called new allegations in an additional exposé interview.
In a recent broadcast of MBN "News Fighter," the former manager of Park Na-rae appeared in person and revealed the actual pill packets that Park Na-rae allegedly received repeatedly from Mr. A. The former manager said the packet contained a pink "butterfly-shaped pill" that was also reported to have been found with YouTuber Short Mouth Sun.
A psychiatrist who appeared on the program that day said the pill is "suspected to be phentermine," and explained, "this is a controlled substance drug that requires a doctor's prescription." He added, "it suppresses appetite, but overuse can cause side effects such as anxiety, insomnia and heart palpitations," and said, "some people take it expecting a stimulant effect, so it is a drug with a high risk of abuse."
He also warned, "this drug is prohibited from being prescribed continuously for more than 28 days, and if it was taken repeatedly outside of medical institutions, it could be problematic."
The former manager claimed, "It seemed Park Na-rae had already developed a tolerance to the drug," and said, "there were times when she took two packets before bed at once." He testified, "the pill packets handed over by the injection aunt were not in the usual 'morning, noon, evening after meals' format but were divided into multiple time slots and available to take at any time, which made the risk of abuse appear high."
He also said, "When she received two months' worth of the medicine at a time, I heard it was managed with a 'contact me when the medicine runs out' method rather than a fixed cycle," raising suspicions about the prescription process. In particular, he revealed, "the injection aunt once said, 'Short Mouth Sun also takes this medicine four times a day.'" However, this is only the former manager's claim and has not been verified.
Meanwhile, although there were allegations that Short Mouth Sun received controlled substance drugs from Mr. A for the purpose of dieting, she denied the related allegations, saying, "I received medicine for swelling, but I have never received illegal prescriptions or intravenous procedures."
[Photo] OSEN DB
[OSEN]