Saturday, September 29, 2012
The Tylenol Murders - 1982
On this date in 1982, flight attendant Paula Prince buys
a bottle of cyanide-laced Tylenol.
Prince was found dead on October 1, becoming the final
victim of a mysterious ailment in Chicago, Illinois. Over the previous 24
hours, six other people had suddenly died of unknown causes in northwest
Chicago. After Prince's death, Richard Keyworth and Philip Cappitelli,
firefighters in the Windy City, realized that all seven victims had ingested
Extra-Strength Tylenol prior to becoming ill. Further investigation revealed
that several bottles of the Tylenol capsules had been poisoned with cyanide. Mary
Ann Kellerman, a seventh grader, was the first to die after ingesting the
over-the-counter pain reliever. The next victim, Adam Janus, ended up in the
emergency room in critical condition. After visiting his older brother in the
hospital, Stanley Janus went back to Adam's house with his wife, Theresa. To
alleviate their stress-induced headaches, they both took capsules from the open
Tylenol bottle that was sitting on the counter. They too were poisoned--Stanley
died and Theresa lapsed into a coma. That same day, Mary Reiner, who had a
headache after giving birth, took the tainted pills. A woman named Mary
McFarland was also poisoned. While bottles of Extra-Strength Tylenol were
recalled nationwide, the only contaminated capsules were found in the Chicago
area. The culprit was never caught, but the mass murder led to new tamper-proof
medicine containers. It also led to a string of copycat crimes, as others
sought to blackmail companies with alleged poisoning schemes, most of which
proved to be false alarms.
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