Seven people took ordinary medicine and died, leaving behind a panic that changed every bottle on every shelf.
Tylenol Murders revisits the 1982 Chicago cyanide killings, when capsules laced with poison killed victims including Mary Kellerman, Adam Janus, Stanley Janus, Theresa Janus, Mary “Lynn” Reiner, Mary McFarland and Paula Prince. This episode follows Tylenol Murders through the unsolved poisoning case, the public fear, the Johnson & Johnson recall and the birth of tamper-proof packaging.
We examine James Lewis, the investigation, the cyanide poisoning symptoms, the product safety crisis and the unanswered question people still search for: who was behind the Tylenol murders? Tylenol Murders became one of the most important true crime cases in American consumer history because the killer vanished while the consequences remained everywhere.
For listeners of a true crime podcast, documentary podcast stories, cold case podcast episodes, unsolved mysteries and what really happened cases, this is a chilling story of pharmaceutical crime, corporate crisis management and the reason medicine packaging no longer looks the way it did in 1982.
Resources and Further Reading
- The Chicago Tylenol-Cyanide Murders of 1982 - History Defined
- James Lewis, suspect in the 1982 Tylenol murders, dies at 76 - PBS NewsHour
- How the Tylenol murders of 1982 changed the way we consume medication - PBS NewsHour
- Chicago Tylenol murders - Wikipedia
- Cold Case: The Tylenol Murders (2025) - Netflix
- The Tylenol Killer: Chicago's 1980s Cyanide Spree - Biographics (Youtube)
Host & Show Info
- Hosts: Kyle Risi & Adam Cox
- Intro Music: Alice in dark Wonderland
Community & Calls to Action
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- Website: thecompendiumpodcast.com
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