Imagine going days without feeling safe to take any medicine. A popular event that happened in 1982 was the Chicago Tylenol Murders. A group of victims were killed by taking the everyday medicine that has been poisoned. The Chicago Tylenol Murders of 1982 are very dangerous because of the sudden first killings, main suspects, and testing the Tylenol. Tampered Tylenol was found at a couple different stores and there was a small chance for a victim to get a poisoned tablet. Tylenol tablets with cyanide in them killed seven people in 1982 (Lerner & Learner, 2007). This was a tragic part of history. In downtown Chicago victims bought cyanide injected tylenol bottles at five stores and 2 more bottles were found at another store (Lerner & Learner, …show more content…
Husband, James William Lewis, and wife, LeAnn, were in Kansas City a couple years sooner and were accused for a neighbor's death and money frauds.The first case was forgotten from wrong police methods (Pusey, 2017). A letter came to Johnson and Johnsons office after 7 days after the beginning deaths. It said: "Since the cyanide is inside the gelatin, it is easy to get buyers to swallow the bitter pill. So far, I have spent less than $50 and it takes me less than 10 minutes per bottle." This happened when many inspectors were meeting (Pusey, 2017). Lewis claimed the letter was about his wife's old employee and proof of money being redirected from travel agencies banks. Lewis served 20 years in jail for his try of blackmail and a seperate card deception (Pusey, 2017). Owners of a letter from the travel agency in Chicago which stated $1 million was required to stop the deaths. Inspectors closed on Nancy, an a old unpaid employee after closing, and Robert Richardson, husband drawn to her statement. Proof showed they were not who they acted to be after vanishing from Chicago many days sooner than when Tylenol killings occurred (Pusey,
While Roger Arnold is a plausible culprit for the 1982 Chicago Tylenol murders, James W. Lewis is more likely to be the murderer. To begin, Colleen Adame, a true crime author, writes about the circumstances that led to James Lewis becoming a suspect: “In October 1982 Robert Richardson sent a letter to Johnson and Johnson, demanding $1,000,000 in exchange for him to stop the killing” (Adame 807). It was later determined that Robert Richardson was an alias that Lewis used. After the police had issued a warrant for the arrest of James Lewis and his wife, Lewis decided to send a second extortion letter to Ronald Reagan: “A second extortion letter was sent in connection to these murders. This time the letter was sent to President Reagan” (Adame
In the case State v. Mark Ducic, Mark is on trial for the murders of Barbra Davis and Donald (Don). Ducic had allegedly murdered Barbra for thinking she was going to tell the police about him dealing drugs, and Don for being the only witness to the murder. When Barbra died, her body was found with numerous drugs in her system and later her friend, Don was found dead too. When the coroner first received the bodies, she believed they had died to accidental overdoses, then after reviewing the police reports changed her mind to homicides that were done out through strategic planning. Ducic was said to have mixed oxycontin with other drugs to create a “hot shot” to make the drug injection look like an overdose.
Myra Litton 's corpse ignited conspiracy theories before it cooled to room temperature. It was one of those desperate February days during the drought-ending winter when feeling merely sullen would have been welcome. The snow that had knocked my satellite dish off kilter a few days earlier, depriving me of television and Internet, had melted enough to lure me into making the seven mile crawl into Iris to pick up my mail. At the Iris Store I pushed into a dank huddle of wet plaid that was crowding the porch, just in time to hear Julie Alquist relate how her husband, a volunteer EMT with the fire district, was the first to arrive at Myra 's house after the UPS driver reported seeing someone on the floor.
They tricked Dr. W.W. Weinenger, by telling him that a small boy’s leg was crushed by a tractor. Once the doctor realized what had happened and treated him, they took the doctor and shot him in the head with a shotgun. As the shotgun splattered blood everywhere, it got on their hands. While they loaded the doctor's body into his car and pushed it into the river, one of their handprints were left on the car with the blood. The police were able to identify the fingerprint and track everyone down even though they had spread into different areas of the county.
Catherine Gay AP Chemistry Mr. Sanders May 6, 2016 The Poisoner’s Handbook Introduction The Poisoner’s Handbook by Deborah Blum is a book about the untold story of how poisons affected the Jazz Age New York City.
Despite the Pure Food and Drug Act being formed, many the deaths and issues from drugs were still proceeding. After 107 people including a six year old, died from a poisonous ingredient in Elixir Sulfanilamide, a chemical relative of antifreeze, the distraught mother of the child wrote a letter to President Franklin Roosevelt about her grief and how something must be done. President Roosevelt responded by enacting The Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938. This act improved the past act by requiring manufacturers to submit an application to the FDA before marketing a drug, and by calling for adequate labeling for safe use of drugs. This act created requirements that certain drugs be labeled for sale by prescription only.
What is Krokodil? Desomorphine, most commonly known as “Krokodil” or “moonshine heroin”, originated in the United States in 1932 as a pain reliever for patients who just had surgery. In 1936, the United States labeled desomorphine a Schedule 1 controlled substance because of its extremely addictive qualities. Desomorphine is more affective at relieving pain than morphine and is also known to have a more intense high than heroin. This dangerous drug has resurfaced and is now being made in homes using store bought ingredients making Krokodil a very deadly drug.
Beginning in 1982, in the Chicago area, 'The Tylenol Terrorist' act begin. Four victims in the Janus family suffered from mysterious deaths. Close by, four more victims suffered from the same symptoms and were found dead. The only thing found linking these mysterious murders together, they all had Tylenol in their possession. After numerous tests had been completed on the tylenol, potassium cyanide was found inside the bottles.
Have you ever wanted to know what it feels like to have a serial killer on the loose? The Zodiac is a serial killer that terrorized all of California, and he claimed to have taken the lives of many innocent civilians through the letters he sent. While his identity remains unsolved to this day, investigators have many theories as to who it might have been. Although plenty of people believe the identity of the Zodiac Killer is Arthur Leigh Allen, others are convinced it is a few lesser-known suspects. Even though the Zodiac’s identity is still uncertain to this day there are some truths that investigators have confirmed.
There were specific situations that led to the cause of Julie Thao's actions of medication error and the death of Jasmine. The situation could have completely been avoided had Julie followed the code of ethics and avoided shorts to provide proper care for the patient. The state claimed that Thao's mistake was caused by actions, omissions and unapproved shortcuts, however, there were other factors that played a role in her carelessness as well. While failure to comply with procedure has been a factor in the medication administration error, other factors contributed as well. For example, failure to properly use the information system, or to ignore alerts or warnings have also resulted in preventable errors (Nelson, Evan, & Gardener, 2005).
Prescription drugs (opiates only) have caused over 165,000 deaths within the last 15 years and is currently on the rise. Over 2 million Americans in 2014 were addicted to Opiate prescription narcotics. The most troubling fact is listed directly on the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website: “As many as 1 in 4
Before the sun had broken on June 6th, 1996 Darlie Routier (26) of Rowlett Texas was pleading with the dispatch operator for immediate help. In this almost 6 minute long call (in which the police get there in 3 minutes and about 45 seconds in) Mrs. Routier seems to be in complete shock, as she begs the operator to quickly send police. However, in between brief periods of hysterical breathing and unintelligible sobs she soberly remarks how she picked up the suspected murder weapon and this could have tainted any fingerprints that were there before. It was her attitude that landed her in the media’s glare, however it was the evidence in this case, all circumstantial, that landed her on Texas’s Death Row. In this paper I aim to highlight and elaborate
How can hand sanitizer be a cause of… sickness? It may seem ridiculous, but there is a way to connect the two. Hand sanitizers is a cause of kids being rushed to the hospital. This anti-germ fluid may seem harmless at first glance, but as you dig deeper; a whole new story unfolds. On September 14, 2015, six year old Nhaijah Russell consumed three to four of a not so seemingly harmful liquid hand sanitizer during class at her school.
How can hand sanitizer be a cause of… sickness? It may seem ridiculous, but there is a way to connect the two. Hand sanitizer is a cause of kids being rushed to the hospital. This anti-germ fluid may seem harmless at first glance, but going in depth unravels a whole new story.
In terms of Johnson and Johnson handling the situation, they first pulled all Tylenol for the shelves in the Chicago area before recalling the product nationwide, costing the company over 100 million dollars. Second, Johnson and Johnson found that it was necessary to let doctors, hospitals, and distributors know by explaining the situation and the recall via mailgram messages. Third, the company had created a toll-free phone line