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Death of roach-eating contest winner remains a mystery

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MIAMI (MCT) — Eddie Archbold ate so many live roaches he had to cover his mouth with his hand to keep them from crawling out. He swallowed the 3-inch insects faster than he could chew, trying to down as many as possible in four minutes to win a pet python in a most unusual eating contest.

It could be weeks before an autopsy can determine why the West Palm Beach, Fla., man died. But experts said that eating roaches, while disgusting, shouldn’t have killed him.

None of the other participants in the “Midnight Madness” bug-eating competition at Ben Siegel Reptiles in Deerfield Beach on Friday night got sick. There were four ball pythons to be won, and so many people signed up, the store owner decided to have a meal-worm-eating qualifying round.

“It was pretty disgusting, but I like to participate in the reptile community and I don’t mind putting on a show,” said Matthew Karwacki, a 26-year-old student at Florida Career College in Lauderdale Lakes who won a lesser platinum ball python in the cricket-eating contest. “I guess if you really want a snake you can eat a hell of a lot of bugs.”

Over the course of the night, Archbold ate more than 60 grams of meal worms, 35 three-inch-long “super worms” and part of a bucket full of discoid roaches. He started vomiting after the last contest and collapsed outside the store.

Dr. Bill Kern, a professor of entomology at the University of Florida, said it could have been an allergic reaction to so much foreign protein that killed Archbold.

“We know cockroaches shed a lot of allergens, but they’re not toxic in and of themselves,” Kern said. “Very few (human) cultures tend to eat cockroaches because they store large amounts of uric acid and nitrogenous waste. And they tend to be scavengers and feed on things most people wouldn’t consider to be desirable.”

Luke Lirot, an attorney representing Ben Siegel, the store’s owner, said the roaches Archbold ate sell for a dollar a piece as reptile feed. He said these insects are “raised in a sterile container from the time they’re little critters” and are perfectly safe to eat.

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