According to multiple reports, former Florida Democratic gubernatorial candidate and current CNN contributor Andrew Gillum was allegedly involved in a drug overdose situation in a Miami Beach hotel that police say included “suspected crystal meth.”

The police report, first obtained and reported on by the Miami New Times, describes an emergency call that involved multiple men who first responders believed to be suffering from possible drug overdoses, among them Gillum, the former mayor of Tallahassee who lost to Republican Ron DeSantis in the hotly contested 2018 gubernatorial race.

The incident report names “Andrew Gillum” as one of the men involved, and a source with knowledge of the incident confirmed to the Miami New Times that the date of birth given for Gillum matches the identifying information on the report. The Miami New Times reports:

Per the documents, Miami Beach police responded to a cardiac-arrest distress call just before 1 a.m. at the luxe Mondrian South Beach hotel. When two MBPD officers arrived, they noted that Miami Beach Fire-Rescue was already on scene treating a man named Travis Dyson for a possible drug overdose, but he was in stable condition. The officers stated that one of the men involved in the incident, Aldo Mejias, had lent Dyson his credit card information to rent a hotel room yesterday. The two men were supposed to meet later that day. Mejias told the officers that he arrived at the hotel room around 11 p.m. yesterday. Mejias said Dyson opened the door and then immediately collapsed on a bed and started vomiting. Mejias said he began giving Dyson CPR and called 911. In the meantime, Mejias said Gillum was inside the hotel room “under the influence of an unknown substance.”

The police report states that upon arriving Meijas says he “observed Mr. Gillum inside the bathroom vomiting.”

After the responding officers spoke with Mejias, the report states, they “attempted to speak to Mr. Gillum,” but “Mr. Gillum was unable to communicate with officers due to his inebriated state.”

The officers say they “observed in plain site three small clear plastic baggies containing suspected crystal meth on both the bed and floor of the hotel room,” the report states.

When Miami Beach Fire-Rescue went to the hotel later that night for a wellness check, responders said Gillum appeared to have recovered.

“Gillum left the hotel room and returned to his residence without incident,” the report states.

Police say the incident is not being treated as a criminal matter, the New Times reports.

UPDATE: Andrew Gillum Responds To Report He Was Involved in Alleged Crystal Meth Incident

Full text of the incident report narrative section below (formatting adjusted):