Posted on 09/24/2007 5:49:59 PM PDT by qam1
Its a Chicago area cold case that frightened the entire nation -- seven people died from taking Tylenol. This week, we mark the 25th anniversary of the Tylenol murders. Someone replaced the medicine in that popular pain reliever with poison. The incident sparked a massive investigation that brought together a city, state and suburban police departments and the FBI. The killer has never been found.
One the morning of Sept. 29, 1982, an emergency call was made to the Arlington Heights Fire Department.
There was nothing paramedics could do when they got to Adam Janus home.
"The fellas came back after an hour and a half and told us they lost a relatively healthy 27-year-old man that had just died, said Chuck Kramer, a former Arlington Heights firefighter.
At first, it was thought Janus had a heart attack. That night, his grieving brother, Stanley, and other family members gathered at Adams house to make funeral arrangements. There, Stanley took a few steps and dropped to the floor.
Once again, paramedics were called to the same address. Kramer was alarmed.
"Especially when it was a man down in the morning and he's dead and now I have another man down, same address, six hours later," he said.
Stanley Janus died, so did his wife Teresa three members of one family gone.
What could have happened? Was there a gas leak at the house? Hours later, at the hospital, health department nurse Helen Jensen interviewed the Janus family. She gleaned one bit of information that proved crucial.
Kramer witnessed the interview.
"The only thing these three people have in common - other than they're relatives - they don't live in the place -- is that they took Tylenol, Kramer said.
It was Tylenol that had been on a counter in Adam Janus home. Firefighters Kramer, Richard Keyworth, and Phil Cappitelli all good friends started comparing notes.
Cappitelli told them about a 12-year-old girl, Mary Kellerman, who had also died suddenly that same day in Elk Grove Village.
Keyworth discovered she too had taken Tylenol. The firefighters alerted investigators who discovered the medicine had been tainted with cyanide.
"Somehow or another we connected this thing, Keyworth said. If there were other tainted capsules, we saved lives at that point. We had no idea how big this thing was going to get."
Four others, all over the Chicago area, would die after taking what they thought was a safe pain reliever. 31 million Tylenol capsules were pulled from store shelves across the country and local governments and the media warned consumers.
Some 200 investigators from various law enforcement agencies went to work. One member, John Fellman, then an Arlington Heights detective, says they interviewed thousands.
"The first six weeks, there wasn't a day off, Fellman said. It was seven days a week. We were working 12-, 14-, 16-hour days."
Investigators concluded someone had taken Tylenol home, replaced the medicine with cyanide and put the boxes back on store shelves.
One man, James Lewis, went to prison for writing an extortion letter to the maker of Tylenol, claiming her would continue the poisoning unless he got $11 million. But he was never charged with the murders themselves. In 1987, Lewis talked to CBS 2s Mike Parker and denied that he committed the murders.
Today, when leads come in, they are pursued. But the 25-year-old Tylenol case is cold.
"We have seven homicides that still sit out there unsolved, Fellman said.
"I wish I could get five minutes with him, because I saw what he did, Kramer said.
As Robert Grant, the head of the Chicago FBI office told CBS 2, sometimes tragedy leads to action. After the Tylenol murders, the federal government passed anti-tampering laws and drug companies now put safety seals on their over-the-counter products. Today, when someone opens them, you know it.
I always wonder when the description says “may cause liver damage” just how much and how bad?
I have watched the cold case files type show on television. Super refined techniques re fingerprinting and indeed DNA have sometimes cracked long ago cases. I would suppose that the capsules would also be long gone. Too much to hope for, but a long shot- if forensics still had the items.
I remember us throwing out our Tylenol & swearing we’d never use it again. They did a great job with their public relations for years after this happened.
Tylenol in high doses is extremely harmful on the liver --especially for people who consume a lot of alcohol.
I've known people who drink Nyquil to get a buzz. What they don't realize is that each cap of Nyquil contains something like 800-1000mg of Tylenol. Thus, getting "high" from Nyquil will really screw up your liver due to the huge doses of Tylenol.
I still remember the panic. People lost another measure of innocence and trust in fellow human beings.
Doesn't Hildebeast hail from the Chicagoland area?
I remember it didn't take long at all for tamper-resistant packaging to hit the shelves. Only a matter of a couple of weeks, IIRC. People were really scared of any product that could be tampered with and the industry responded immediately.
All this stuff - tylenol and advil - is very dangerous in certain conditions that are not widely known.
Our friend drank moderately but took Tylenol regularly. The coroner said her liver was worse than someone that drank a qt of hard liquor a day.
Another friend - just last week - developed a flu like condition and did not eat for 3 days but took several advil, nyquil, etc. HIS KIDNEYS SHUT DOWN and the Dr said it was the OTC drugs on an empty stomach.
Did they ever track it to Bush’s involvement?
Did he look like the Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad?
Maybe he was just a sick little opportunist.
In one of my college marketing classes we studied Tylenol’s damage control efforts. It was masterfully done.
Seven dead, and no one knows who the intended victim was, nor the motive.
I have always believed this to be the perfect crime. The tainted Tylenol killed the intended victim. Other tainted Tylenol killed random, unrelated people in unrelated places.
If I remember, they took all of their products off the shelves across the country. They stopped selling the openable capsules and began selling the solid pill version. Then they started doing the sealing of the caps. I also remember a bunch of "copycat" tamperings that then occured. One guy had his eyedrops replaced with some kind of glue or acid.
Even without the cyanide, Tylenol will still mess you up. Sorry, I need my liver, what remains left from it at least ROFL.
That is horrible. Best of luck to him. However, I will stick to my policy of mixing Darvocet and beer at night, on an empty stomach. I had a mishap on my mtn bike and abraded off a good chunk of skin, and it's the only thing that lets me get a good night's sleep. (because in addition to the throbbing pain, my wound sticks to the sheets and wakes me up.)
Darvocet is a narcotic? I am not sure you’ll have any kidney/liver issues - just dependency ones.
For a few days, it should not be any problem.
Darvocet contains acetomenophen...
Interestingly, I have a POI about whom I’m getting ready to approach the Chicago police. Whether anything comes of it will depend on how much information they’ve withheld from the public over the years. I understand they’ve got a videotape of one victim purchasing the Tylenol that killed her, with a strange, bearded man watching her movements.
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