There are better way to drug somebody without getting their clothes wet and dirty. Like, you know, chloroform or something. Now they'll have to pay for cleaning and drying afterwords.
Use of chloroform as an incapacitating agent has become widely recognized, bordering on clichéd, due to the popularity of crime fiction authors having criminals use chloroform-soaked rags to render victims unconscious. However, it is nearly impossible to incapacitate someone using chloroform.[25] It takes at least five minutes of inhaling an item soaked in chloroform to render a person unconscious. Most criminal cases involving chloroform also involve another drug being co-administered, such as alcohol or diazepam, or the victim being found to have been complicit in its administration. After a person has lost consciousness due to chloroform inhalation, a continuous volume must be administered and the chin must be supported in order to keep the tongue from obstructing the airway, a difficult procedure even for an anesthesiologist. In 1865 as a direct result of the criminal reputation chloroform had gained, medical journal The Lancet offered a "permanent scientific reputation" to anyone who could demonstrate "instantaneous insensibility" using chloroform,[26] and as of 2015 no such demonstration has been forthcoming.[25]
"In Japan, consumers like a bit of variety. This summer, Coca-Cola’s I LOHAS water will test few flavors that move more-than-a-little beyond the expected. The growing I LOHAS brand – which topped $1 billion in retail sales in 2014 – has branched into two new flavors: tomato and aloe. (...) "