CAMBRIDGE, Mass. 鈥 The suspect in the 1982 Tylenol poisonings that killed seven people in the Chicago area, triggered a nationwide panic, and led to an overhaul in the safety of over-the-counter medication packaging, has died, police said on Monday.
Officers, firefighters and EMTs responding to a report of an unresponsive person at about 4 p.m. Sunday found James W. Lewis dead in his Cambridge, Massachusetts, home, Cambridge Police Superintendent Frederick Cabral said in a statement. He was 76, police said.
鈥淔ollowing an investigation, Lewis鈥 death was determined to be not suspicious,鈥 the statement says.
No one was ever charged in the deaths of seven people who took the over-the-counter painkillers laced with cyanide. Lewis served more than 12 years in prison for sending an extortion note to manufacturer Johnson & Johnson, demanding $1 million to 鈥渟top the killing.鈥 He and his wife moved to Massachusetts in 1995 following his release. Listed numbers for his wife were not in service.
When Lewis was arrested in New York City in 1982 after a nationwide manhunt, he gave investigators a detailed account of how the killer might have operated. Lewis later admitted sending the letter and demanding the money, but he said he never intended to collect it. He said he wanted to embarrass his wife鈥檚 former employer by having the money sent to the employer鈥檚 bank account.
Lewis, who had a history of trouble with the law, always denied any role in the Tylenol deaths, but remained a suspect and in 2010 gave DNA samples to the FBI. He even created a website in which he said he was framed. Although the couple lived briefly in Chicago in the early 1980s, Lewis said they were in New York City at the time of the poisonings.
In a 1992 interview with The Associated Press, Lewis explained that the account he gave authorities was simply his way of explaining the killer鈥檚 actions.
鈥淚 was doing like I would have done for a corporate client, making a list of possible scenarios,鈥 said Lewis. He called the killer 鈥渁 heinous, cold-blooded killer, a cruel monster.鈥
The FBI seized a computer and other items from Lewis鈥 home in February 2009 after Illinois authorities renewed the investigation.
The FBI鈥檚 Chicago office at the time cited 鈥渁dvances in forensic technology鈥 and said it, along with the Illinois State Police and local police departments, was conducting a 鈥渃omplete review of all evidence developed in connection" with the killings.
In a span of three days beginning Sept. 29, 1982, seven people 鈥 including a 12-year-old girl 鈥 who took cyanide-laced Tylenol in the Chicago area died, triggering a nationwide recall of the product. The poisonings led to the adoption of tamperproof packaging for over-the-counter medications.
Helen Jensen, a nurse who helped treat the first victims at a suburban Chicago hospital, said in a phone interview Monday with the AP she hoped Lewis鈥 death would be a final coda to a tragedy that has haunted her for four decades. She also hoped it would bring victims鈥 families some closure.
鈥淗is death is a conclusion. Not necessarily the conclusion everyone wanted,鈥 said Jensen, who is retired. 鈥淏ut it is an end. I鈥檓 86 now. And I am glad I got to see the end before I die.鈥
Jensen said she was the first to figure out that a bottle had been tampered with. Investigators laughed at her.
鈥淚 was a woman and I was a nurse,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 understood the attitudes of that time. But I was proven right by the next day.鈥
Jensen said Lewis, who she accepts was responsible, 鈥渃hanged the world because of what he did.鈥
鈥淲e lost our innocence,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have become less trusting of everyone else. We can blame it all on him. 鈥 He was a terrorist and we have suffered from his terror for 40 years.鈥
Lewis had prior run-ins with the law.
In 1978, he was charged in Kansas City, Missouri, with the dismemberment murder of Raymond West, 72, who had hired Lewis as an accountant. The charges were dismissed because West鈥檚 cause of death was not determined and some evidence had been illegally obtained.
He was convicted of six counts of mail fraud in a 1981 credit card scheme in Kansas City, accused of using the name and background of a former tax client to obtain 13 credit cards.
Lewis was charged in 2004 with rape, kidnapping and other offenses for an alleged attack on a woman in Cambridge. He was jailed for three years while awaiting trial, but prosecutors dismissed the charges on the day his trial was scheduled to begin after the victim refused to testify, the Middlesex County District Attorney鈥檚 Office said at the time.
Police in 1983 described Lewis as a 鈥渃hameleon鈥 who lived in several states, used at least 20 aliases and held many jobs, including computer specialist, tax accountant, importer of Indian tapestries and salesman of jewelry, pharmaceutical machinery and real estate.
The lack of accountability in the case has long frustrated victims' families.
Monica Janus, who was 8 years old when three members of her family died after taking the tainted medication, told CBS Chicago in 2022 that she thought the investigation was 鈥渞eally sloppy.鈥
Lewis' wife was out of town and contacted a neighbor when she could not get a hold of her husband, and the neighbor contacted police, Cabral said.
___
Associated Press Writer Michael Tarm in Chicago contributed to this report.
Mark Pratt, The Associated Press