Book: the Tylenol Mafia

jrsfan

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That's really really interesting. Thank you for posting it. I remember well the panic that ensued with the contaminated Tylenol and the story of the roaming perpetrator...I suppose the only good thing to come out of that was the idea of tamper resistant bottles...I was hoping someone would say why now, the FBI is going after Ted K...Why him?
Definitely chilling to see all the tentacles of power intertwining. One hand washes the other, doesn't it?
 
That's really really interesting. Thank you for posting it. I remember well the panic that ensued with the contaminated Tylenol and the story of the roaming perpetrator...I suppose the only good thing to come out of that was the idea of tamper resistant bottles...I was hoping someone would say why now, the FBI is going after Ted K...Why him?
Definitely chilling to see all the tentacles of power intertwining. One hand washes the other, doesn't it?


There is this article that is interesting:

Unabomber Ted Kaczynski's DNA Wanted By FBI For 1982 Poison Tylenol Case

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CHICAGO -- The FBI has requested a DNA sample from "Unabomber" Ted Kaczynski as part of its investigation into the 1982 deaths of seven Chicago-area people who took cyanide-laced Tylenol from packages that had been tampered with, officials said Thursday.
Kaczynski, who pleaded guilty in 1998 to setting 16 explosions that killed three people and is serving a life sentence in federal prison, has declined to voluntarily provide a DNA sample.
Chicago FBI spokeswoman Cynthia Yates said the FBI is seeking DNA from Kaczynski and "numerous individuals," although she wouldn't provide details about any of the others. She declined to say whether the agency would try to compel Kaczynski to give a sample, but in a motion filed in California court, Kaczynski said he was told the FBI would try to force his hand.
John Balasz, Kaczynski's attorney, said he thinks the FBI is wants Kaczynski's DNA simply to rule him out as a suspect in the Tylenol case.
"You've got to ask the FBI how serious they are. I think it's probably more that they want to exclude him," he said.
Balasz said he's "completely convinced" that Kaczynski had no involvement in the case.
The U.S. Marshals Service is currently auctioning off items seized from Kaczynski's home. Ahead of that auction, he filed the court motion in California asking the court to order the government to keep certain items taken from his cabin in 1996, including journals that could prove his whereabouts in 1982 and other evidence that could clear him in the Tylenol case.
In a response filed Monday, federal prosecutors said the courts lack the jurisdiction to enter such an order. They also noted that Kaczynski hasn't been indicted in connection with the Tylenol investigation "and no such federal prosecution is currently planned."
Kaczynski, who's in federal prison in Colorado, said in his motion that the officials who notified him of the FBI's request said the agency was prepared to get a court order to compel him to provide a DNA sample. He said he would provide one "if the FBI would satisfy a certain condition that is not relevant here," but doesn't elaborate.


Balasz said he's told the government they'll have to get a court order to get the DNA sample.
The Tylenol case involved the use of potassium cyanide and resulted in a mass recall. Kaczynski said he has "never even possessed any potassium cyanide."
In a space of three days beginning Sept. 29, 1982, seven people who took cyanide-laced Tylenol in Chicago and four suburbs died. The deaths triggered a national scare and a huge recall, and eventually led to the widespread adoption of tamperproof packaging for over-the-counter drugs.
In 2009, federal agents searched the Boston home of James W. Lewis, who served more than 12 years in prison for sending an extortion note to Tylenol maker Johnson & Johnson demanding $1 million to "stop the killing." Lewis has denied involvement in the poisonings.
The Tylenol poisonings case has stymied investigators for all of its nearly 30 years, and no charges have ever been filed in the deaths.
Helen Jensen, a former nurse who accompanied investigators to the home of one of the victims, said she hopes this latest news isn't a dead end like so many before.
"It sure would be nice to finally get some end to the whole thing, for the people that are survivors," she said, adding that she still occasionally talks to the grandmother of a 12-year-old girl who died. "It's all very tragic; her whole family was destroyed by it."
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Apparently, they are getting other people's DNA samples also.

Possible Tylenol-poisoning suspect Ted Kaczynski and his anti-technology manifesto

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May 19, 2011 | 12:50 pm

It's a strange combination: a government auction, the unsolved Tylenol poisonings case, the FBI, a revised and re-revised manifesto and the DNA of Theodore Kaczynski, better known as the Unabomber.
The FBI had sought DNA from Kaczynski and others in connection with the still-unsolved case of poisoned Tylenol. In 1982, seven Chicago residents died after injesting Tylenol that had been laced with cyanide.
The news of the request came from Kaczynski himself, in documents filed in U.S. District Court in Sacramento. The Sacramento Bee reports:
Kaczynski revealed that prison officials in Colorado visited him three weeks ago with a request from the FBI in Chicago for samples of his DNA.
Kaczynski, 69, who is serving a life sentence at a "supermax" prison in Florence, Colo., wrote that "the FBI wanted a sample of my DNA to compare with some partial DNA profiles connected with a 1982 event in which someone put potassium cyanide in Tylenol.... I have never even possessed any potassium cyanide."
The FBI could have his DNA, Kaczynski said, if the government canceled a planned auction of his belongings.
The auction is being held to raise part of the $15 million in restitution that Kaczynski owes the victims of his bombings and their families. The online auction opened Wednesday as planned. "Not only are we helping out the victims and their families," governmental auction administrator Shyam Reddy told the Bee. "We're also using the very technology that the Unabomber railed against in his 18-year bombing campaign."
Included in the auction is Kaczynski's original handwritten manifesto, listed as the "Unabomb Mainfesto" (also called the "Unabomber Manifesto" and "Industrial Society and Its Future"). It is written on lined three-hole paper; the current high bid is more than $14,000. Kaczynski's later draft, a typed version, is selling for about $2,500. The manifesto and its contents aren't secret: In September 1995, after four bombings in two years resulted in two fatalities, it was printed in the New York Times and the Washington Post.
Although there was much controversy surrounding the initial printing, Ted Kaczynski's brother David read the published manifesto and recognized at. He contacted authorities, ultimately leading to Ted Kaczynski's arrest.
As Ted Kaczynski has always been a prolific writer -- his manifesto was 30,000 words long -- it should come as no surprise that he has continued to write behind bars, where he has been held since his 1996 arrest. In 1998 he was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.
In 2010, Feral House published a new collection of Kaczynski's writings, including correspondence through 2006 and a 2001 interview, assembled by Kaczynski and David Skrbina of the University of Michigan, Dearborn. "Technology, above all else, is responsible for the current condition of the world and will control its future development," Kaczynski wrote in an article he titled "Hit Where It Hurts." "Thus, the 'bulldozer' that we have to destroy is modern technology itself."
The Feral House collection, "Technological Slavery: The Collected Writings of Theodore J. Kaczynski, a.k.a. 'The Unabomber' " includes a revised version of his Unabomber Manifesto -- and it retails for just $22.95.
-- Carolyn Kellogg
 
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