The 1982 Tylenol murders continue to baffle investigators and those from in and around the area. The unsolved poisonings of seven victims, including that of a 12-year-old girl, feature on Paramount+’s Painkiller: The Tylenol Murders. The documentary premiered on the streaming service earlier today, i.e., October 10, 2023.
In a span of three days starting on September 29, 1982, multiple people in the Chicago area started dying under strange circumstances. They had only one thing in common – each one had consumed/ingested the over-the-counter pain medicine prior to their deaths. Medical examiners revealed that their medications had been laced with deadly amounts of cyanide.
So far, investigators have failed to charge the individual(s) responsible for spiking the Tylenol bottles. However, they did have a primary suspect, James Lewis, who died earlier this year after serving 12 years in prison for extortion.
Why Did Investigators Consider James Lewis a Suspect in the 1982 Tylenol Murders?
According to NBC News, investigators as well as other people targeted Lewis as the primary suspect in the Chicago-area poisonings from 1982. However, he never faced charges for the seven murders. The 76-year-old died earlier this year in July at his suburban Boston home after serving a dozen years in prison for extortion.
Shortly after the deaths, Lewis, then in his 30s, sent a ransom note to the company that manufactured Tylenol – Johnson & Johnson. In the note, he claimed to be the killer and demanded $1 million to stop the killings. For this, he was convicted of extortion and sentenced to 12 years in prison.
The outlet further reported that former Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeremy Margolis, who served as the prosecutor in the suspect’s extortion case, reportedly expressed his regrets after learning of James Lewis’ death, “not because he’s dead, but because he didn’t die in prison.” The killings remain unsolved to date.
Painkiller: The Tylenol Murders is now streaming on Paramount+.