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- <text>
- <title>
- (1982) Cyanide-Laced Tylenol
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1982 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- October 11, 1982
- Cyanide-laced Tylenol
- Poison Madness in the Midwest
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Seven people die after taking cyanide-laced Tylenol
- </p>
- <p> Adam Janus, 27, had a minor chest pain last Wednesday morning,
- so he went out and bought a bottle of Extra-Strength Tylenol
- capsules. About an hour later in his home in the Chicago suburb
- of Arlington Heights, Janus suffered a cardiopulmonary collapse.
- He was rushed to Northwest Community Hospital, where doctors
- worked frantically to revive him. "Nothing seemed to help," said
- Dr. Thomas Kim, chief of the hospital's critical-care unit. "He
- suffered sudden death without warning. It was most unusual."
- </p>
- <p> That evening, grief-stricken relatives gathered at Janus' home.
- Someone offered to go out for aspirin. No need, said Stanley
- Janus, 25, Adam's younger brother, who had noticed a bottle of
- Tylenol in the kitchen. He and his wife Theresa, 19, each took
- at least one capsule. At 8:15 p.m., five hours after his brother
- died, Stanley was pronounced dead. Theresa died on Friday
- afternoon.
- </p>
- <p> By week's end at least seven Chicago-area residents had died
- under similar circumstances. Each had ingested an Extra-Strength
- Tylenol capsule laced with cyanide. Food and Drug Administration
- officials suspect that someone unconnected with the manufacturer
- tampered with the drug; by their reasoning, the killer bought
- Extra-Strength Tylenol over the counter, inserted cyanide in
- some of the capsules, then returned the bottles to store
- shelves. Illinois Attorney General Tyrone Fahner suggests that
- a "a disgruntled employee in the production chain" was the more
- likely culprit. Whatever the method and motive, the killer
- clearly knew what he was doing. In each case, the red half of
- he contaminated capsule was discolored and slightly swollen.
- When opened, the capsules emitted the telltale almond odor of
- cyanide; the poison was present in quantities thousands of
- times the usual fatal dose. Says Police Chief Carl Sostak of
- Winfield, Ill., home of one victim: "Apparently a very
- sophisticated and very malicious person is at large who had to
- spend a lot of time and a lot of effort on this terrible plan."
- </p>
- <p> Twelve-year-old Mary Kellerman of Elk Grove Village took Extra-
- Strength Tylenol to ward off a cold that had been dogging her.
- Mary Reiner, 27, of Winfield, who was poisoned on Thursday, had
- recently given birth to her fourth child. Paula Prince, 35, a
- United Airlines stewardess, was found dead in her Chicago
- apartment, an open bottle of Extra-Strength Tylenol near by in
- the bathroom. Says Dr. Kim: "The victims never had a chance.
- Death was certain within minutes."
- </p>
- <p> The link to Tylenol was first noted by two off-duty firemen in
- the area who were monitoring their police radios at home.
- Philip Cappiteli and Richard Keyworth compared notes over the
- telephone and were struck by the fact that the painkiller had
- been mentioned in two of the reports. "This is a wild stab, but
- maybe it's Tylenol," Keyworth speculated. They mentioned their
- hunch to their superiors.
- </p>
- <p> The nation was alerted to the danger of the suspect drug as soon
- as the connection was made. Police cruisers, rolling through
- Chicago streets Thursday afternoon and evening, blared warnings
- over loudspeakers. All three national television networks
- carried stories about the contaminated drug on the
- Thursday-evening news. On Friday, the FDA belatedly advised
- consumers to "avoid in prudence" all bottles of the capsules.
- By then it was virtually impossible to obtain Extra-Strength
- Tylenol anywhere in the Chicago area or indeed in many locations
- around the country. Two Midwestern retail chains, Jewel and
- Walgreen, withdrew all bottles of the pain reliever from their
- stores.
- </p>
- <p> The publicity caused a nationwide scare. One Chicago hospital
- received 700 calls about Tylenol in one day. People in
- Pittsburgh, Cleveland and other cities were hospitalized on
- suspicion of cyanide poisoning. Dr. William Robertson, director
- of the Poison Control Center in Seattle, offered some grim words
- of reassurance: "If it was going to be a lethal dose, you
- wouldn't have time to call."
- </p>
- <p> Johnson & Johnson, whose McNeil Consumer Products subsidiary
- manufactures the painkiller, immediately recalled bottles with
- lot number 1801 MA, MC 2880 or 1910 MD, which were among the
- batches found in the victims' homes, and sent out half a million
- warning messages to physicians, hospitals and distributors.
- McNeil agreed to turn over all of the company's distribution
- records to the Illinois department of law enforcement and to
- bear the cost of collecting unused and unsold Tylenol, an
- expense that could reach into the millions of dollars.
- </p>
- <p> Until now, Tylenol enjoyed a solid reputation and healthy
- sales. Analysts estimate that Johnson & Johnson sells between
- $300 million and $400 million worth of the analgesic a year. An
- $85 million advertising campaign has helped the company increase
- its share of the pain-reliever market from 4% to 37% since 1976.
- But the cyanide scare may do damage to the company's product.
- Says one stockbroker in Chicago: "The name Tylenol is now
- linked with poison in people's minds."
- </p>
- <p> At week's end authorities could only hope that more victims
- would not turn up. They were worried, too, that the cyanide
- murders would encourage a new, over-the-counter terrorism that
- could be aimed at companies or random individuals. Already this
- year, someone tampered with eyedrops and nasal sprays sold in
- Los Angeles; at least ten people suffered burns, but no one
- died. The frightening truth, says FDA Deputy Commissioner Mark
- Novitch, is that there is no way to protect the public from
- people who do such things.
- </p>
- <p>-- By Susan Tifft. Reported by Lee Griggs/Chicago
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-