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German may have killed 21 by lacing their food with heavy metals over long period.
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2018-06-30 at 4:24 PM UTC
Police said they had arrested a 56-year-old man suspected of attempting to kill a colleague at the company in the town of Schloss Holte-Stukenbrock.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/06/27/german-police-investigate-21-deaths-employee-caught-poisoning/
They did not identify the firm, the suspect or the alleged victim.
The victim had noticed something suspicious in his lunch and notified his bosses and the authorities, police said.
Video footage revealed the suspect spreading a powdery substance on the victim's food.
Tests showed it was a poison that could have caused severe organ damage.
During a search of the suspect's apartment, police found toxic chemicals such as mercury, lead, and cadmium, they said.
Further investigation uncovered 21 cases, dating back to 2000, of employees at the same company who had died of heart attacks or cancer shortly before retiring.
Experts concluded that heavy metal poisoning could have been the cause of the illnesses that led to those deaths.
The suspect's motive was not clear because he remained silent about the allegations, the police said.
TLDR it was a metal working firm in Germany, and the poisons were heavy metals. Metal workers in general have higher mortality due to cancer and the like, as hot metal and the fumes from it are bad for you. In fact any sort of real world engineering or hands on science has higher mortality. -
2018-06-30 at 4:30 PM UTCthen how do you explain this
"Dibble left and I hired George Llewellyn. We had a tremendous order
for methyl iodide. I made it by day, with George's help, and in the evening
Max Revelise and I worked on some articles for the Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia
of Chemical Technology. The chapter on methyl iodide turned out to have
special significance.
I am a reader of the classics and during one particular evening I was
re-reading Thomas Hardy's The Return of the Native. Closing my eyes I
could see the sheep daubed with Diggory Venn's riddle, beautiful against
the Devon meadows. I opened my eyes and the color was still there. In a
panic I cut on all the lights. The room was alive with strange colors which
gradually paled. I was shaken. There was unearthly music. I took two
phenobarbitals and was unconscious, but this was no restful sleep but a
phantasmagoria of bad dream, color and sound. The next morning I woke
up to a full orchestra. The music was pleasant but it came from within and
could not be cut off. That very day I was supposed to sail in Charleston
with Dr. George Smith. The trip down to the sea was hectic and I rigged
the boat to a celestial accompanyment. I told George about this. He was
disturbed and could offer no explanation.
I did not go to the doctor, not just then. I was sure that Monday would
find me symptom free, and sure enough the music died away early in the
morning. I hurried to the plant where we were racing the production of methyl
iodide, always troublesome in hot weather. Standing on a little stool to
observe the temperature of a distillation in number 1 column, the upper half
of the room gradually turned white, then vision faded and I saw only the
blank screen of a theatre. I gave a harried yell and my grandfather, Mr.
Revelise, came immediately. He did not know what had happened but helped
me to a chair and got my mother and Jules and they drove me to see Dr.
Alion. On the ride partial vision returned but everything was double and
blurred at the periphera. Alion told me that I was 12 pounds lighter and
observed that I could not stand alone.
We had friends coming in that evening, Al and Dot Rosenburg, and I
told CIive to call them and tell them I was not well. They insisted on coming
anyhow. Al was in charge of the steroid lab at Georgia Medical University.
I had taken a bath and was attempting to read the afternoon newspaper. The
double vision made this difficult. I performed for the visitors a number of
experiments with myself as actor. I could not stand erect, could not walk in a
straight line nor negotiate a corner. My voice was fuzzy and I had trouble
making myself understood. I could not write my name. On top of this I had
no memory from one minute to the next.