
Former FBI profiler, John Douglas, was involved in a 1982 case that got national attention and spawned a few copy cats. He describes the case in Mind Hunter. In the
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The police eventually discovered the connection: the victims had all purchased a bottle of Extra Strength Tylenol and had consumed capsules that had been laced with cyanide. That meant a sudden death—especially since none of the victims knew what they had taken. Apparently the killer had placed the substance by opening the Tylenol capsules and inserting it.
The Tylenol manufacturer, Johnson & Johnson, immediately recalled all packages of their product around the country, at great cost to them. The country was witnessing a form of terrorism—someone, somewhere, could contaminate almost anything they bought and they would innocently consume it and die. People wanted this perpetrator found.
In the FBI code language,
The problem that faced them, he adds, was the random nature of the product tampering. No specific person had been targeted, or any specific store, and there appeared to be no motive. No one was using it to blackmail a company into paying a ransom.
He had likely experienced some stressful event around the time when the first deaths had occurred late in September. He would also be talkative about the news to anyone who would listen.
Douglas suggested articles that humanized the victims and he thought it might be wise to hold graveside vigils at night for at least a week, in case the perpetrator wanted to venture close to relive his sense of power.
Despite all efforts, the identity of the Tylenol Killer was never revealed. To this day he remains unidentified and unapprehended. Yet as suddenly as they had begun, the cyanide poisonings stopped (though other cases of product tampering occurred in other places).

According to Trestrail in Criminal Poisoning, this case changed forever the manner in which over-the-counter drugs were sold in this country. Now we have tamper-proof seals and warnings of all kinds not to take drugs in which the seals have been broken.
Some drugs are still difficult to detect, but sometimes forensic science catches up in ways a murderer does not expect.



