This victim said it was part of Buck’s “role-playing and fantasy to inject people with methamphetamine” and that although the victim had never injected meth before, “Buck assured him that it would be fine”.īuck allegedly ignored this victim’s agreement to only do a small dose and “emptied an entire syringe in him”. “Buck told Victim 5 that it was not gratifying for him if Victim 5 did not ingest methamphetamine,” the complaint said.Īnother victim said he learned about Buck when he was homeless and living in a park, and said he was nicknamed “Doctor Kevorkian”, a reference to the pathologist known for helping terminally ill patients die.
One victim said he had fallen asleep on Buck’s couch and had been drugged while he was asleep, forcing him to go to the hospital the next day, where staff confirmed he had ingested a “tar-like substance”. Some victims were sexually assaulted while unconscious, the filing suggested. Buck, whose arrest came after a third man overdosed in his home this month, would offer to pay his victims for sex, force them to do drugs, inject them directly, give them tranquilizers without telling them and take photos of them, the complaint said.