Introduction
Many people have taken the world's trusted Tylenol but that trust was tested during the Chicago Tylenol Scandal. The Chicago Tylenol Scandal consisted of many deaths, thorough investigation, and skeptical customers. Till this day, the mystery is still unsolved. The unsolved Chicago Tylenol Scandal of 1982 is the world’s worst case of medicine tampering that has since changed the way products are packaged.
Chicago Tylenol Scandal
Victims and date. The murders had a major effect on these seven people. In late september into early October, seven people died unexpectedly in the Chicago area. The youngest of the seven was a girl named Mary Kellerman. She was a 12-year-old who took one Tylenol capsule to assuage her pain before falling on the floor of her home. The doctors later assumed it was a stroke. Mary McFarland, Paula Prince, and Mary Reiner were the next suspects who died shortly after taking Tylenol to alleviate headaches (Moreno, 2011). Adam Janus also took Tylenol before he
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After they found out what was causing the murders, they started looking for who committed the crime and never found the murderer. Their first approach was seeing if it was contaminated before or after leaving the factory. Some theories said that maybe the factory workers wanted to kill a lot of people at one time anonymously (Latson, 2014). After fingerprints and tests, they determined it was poisoned after leaving the factory (Markel, 2014). The second suspect was a man named James Lewis. He sent in a note to the Tylenol company saying that if they payed him 1 million dollars he would stop the murders. The investigators took fingerprints from James and his wife. They were eventually pronounced guilty. Investigators also took the Unabomber as a suspect because he lived in Chicago as a kid, and that's where his parents still live. He was also free from committing the crime. Even after 30 years, they still don’t know who did it (Associated Press,
A 15 year-old Norland High School student has been arrested for shooting a rabbi. The rabbi, whose name was Joseph Raskin, was walking to the temple last year when he was shot. Neighbors in the community worked tirelessly along with the police in order to find the rabbi 's killer. Rabbi Joseph was not carrying any money when he walked to the temple.
They order the FBI to do a new chemical test but Steven’s lawyer believes they are going to find another way to lie through that. February 12th start Avery’s trial and Bobby Dassey was a whiteness for Teresa’s lawyer. Bobby says “Steven asked him if he wanted to help get rid of the body” which was a big eye opener for the judge. Teresa’s brother testified to listening to his sister’s voicemails but denied deleting some of them. Then it leaves us thinking well who did?
The murders of more than 7 backpackers in New South Wales (NSW, Australia during the 1990s, were committed by one of Australia's notorious serial killers, Ivan Milat. Ivan was born on the 27th December 1944 at Guildford, NSW, Australia into a large family. The bodied of seven missing young missing backpackers from different parts of the world were discovered in a shallow grave in the Belanglo State Forest. Five of the bodies that were found were foreign backpackers visiting Australia from Germany,3, and Britain,2.
The Oklahoma City bombing in 1995 was one of the worst mass murders in our history now let’s start reviewing some of the key factors in the case. On the morning of April 19, 1995, the Alfred P. Murrah federal building blew up near 9:02 a.m. A Ryder truck was the bomb that was parked in front of the building and the driver left the truck on feet. The truck exploded, being triggered remotely shortly after 09:00 a.m. A man by the name of Timothy McVeigh was stopped 90 minutes after the bombing by a state trooper for license plates missing on his Mercury Marquis.
They determined he was committing the crimes because of an event that happened in his past which was the murder of his mother. They based their profile of the unsub living in the area and growing up there because all the murders happened in small area rather than spread out over a long distance. They called the unsub severally antisocial because he had no connection to any of the victims and did not have a calling sign, he also did not stick around and was gone before the cops got to the scene. They diagnosed him with having a mental disorder with his last murder where he shot a man who was kissing his girlfriend yet he thought he was raping her. This is where they found out that what he was seeing and thinking was not real life and he was delusional.
America contains an abundance of inexplicable and moot mysteries. Mysteries associating murder and drugs along with other menacing matters. Some mysteries have been unsolved for many years. One of those mysteries being the mystery of who killed Jimmy Hoffa and where his body is. Ever since James Riddle Hoffa disappeared, the mystery of where his body is and who killed him has rattled America.
it’s hard to try investigate when you really don’t know who did it. Everyone will have their own theiors about the Lizzie Borden case it makes you think long and hard about it although we do have one more person that can take the blamed for all of this is Bridget Suilivsn. For example, She has been in the family for a long time. There is really not enough evidence against Bridget although she lied on her death bed and where she was at when the crime scene happen. Bridget seem like a nice person some say she had anger issues with the family.
In 1995, Timothy McVeigh was responsible for making a bomb and blowing up a federal building in Oklahoma, which earned him the title of the most prolific mass murder in America (Saferstein, 2105). Using a moving truck to house and transport the bomb, he parked it at the federal building and simply walked away (Saferstein, 2105). Shortly after, the truck bomb exploded with such force, it killed 168 people and completely ruined the building (Saferstein, 2105). As fate would have it, he was stopped driving a vehicle by a state trooper for having no license plate later that same morning and arrested for transporting a firearm (Saferstein, 2105). This was fortunate for investigators to take custody of McVeigh after they discovered evidence that
There was improvement in many areas of the country following the crackdown on prescription drug abuse and pill mills. However, another result of the crackdownwas a diminution in the availability of prescription painkillers and the price for the painkillers on the street became more expensive. The ones who became addicted to painkillers during the pill mill epidemic then turned to heroin. The crackdown of pill mills inadvertently fueled the epidemic of heroin. “Between 2007 and 2012, heroin use rose 79 percent nationwide, according to federal data.
10. Kristen H. Gilbert (Mental Disability) Kristen Gilbert born in Massachusetts on the 13th November 1967, with Kristen Strickland as her birth name. Kristen graduated at age 16, and was also a prone to neurotic behavior. In 1988, Kristen became a registered nurse and also married Glenn Gilbert. She had two child, and claimed her grandmother's death is what led to failure in her marriage.
There was not much done on these young men murders but the federal government brought charges of civil rights violations against those that was involved in the murder. There was eighteen men involved in the murder but only seven was convicted in 1965. The FBI worked the case to bring justice to these innocent young men. The members of Neshoba County law enforcement decided to give the Klu Klux Klan a head start regarding to Goodman, Schwerner and Chaney. The two carloads of Klan members pursed the the boys and reached them on a local road.
With the false accusations taking place and the puzzling evidence found, investigators are still unable to find the killer of Jonbenet
The Pure Food and Drug act of 1906 was the 1st consumer protection law by the Federal Government, this act was passed by President Theodore Roosevelt. The main purpose of the Pure Food and Drug act was to prohibit transportation of contaminated, poisonous, and misbranded foods, drugs, medicines and liquors. Without the pure food and drug act our food, medication, and other product would be filled with dangerous chemicals that would have harm in our health and potentially cause death. Before the 20th century, there were no laws or regulations that protected Americans from hazardous foods and medicines. This meant that there were no restrictions of what chemicals could be put in one’s food or medicine, leaving the open to mass deaths of contaminated or poisonous products.
In my opinion I believe Heinz made the wrong choice to steal the drug from the druggist. The reason I think he made a bad decision is because, in the being of the story it explains how she is near death from a very rare kind of cancer of which the doctors aren 't even sure if the drug will be effective since she is very sick and near death. I understand that it is his wife and that he was very desperate to get this drug that could possibly save her life, which is why he stole the drug. When he decides to steal the drug from the man 's laboratory, Heinz didn 't fully take in consideration the aftermath stealing the drug might have caused. The chance of the drug to work is not very likely since the woman was near death, but even if she did
They were affected by Johnson and Johnson blatantly not giving them important information related to the case. For example, it was kept secret for a very long time that cyanide was found in one of the company plants. Whether it was related to the cyanide poisoning in the Chicago doesn’t matter, the consumer has the right to know of all the information that has been found throughout the investigation of the case. In relation to Johnson and Johnson, they were putting consumers at risk when they didn’t tell the consumers of the cyanide found in the company plant, which is said to have no relation to the Tylenol contamination according to the