Mary Kellerman, 12, who lived in a Chicago suburb, awoke on the morning of Sept. 29, 1982, with a sore throat and runny nose, so her parents told her to take a Tylenol. Her father, Dennis Kellerman, heard her go into the bathroom, and then he heard something drop. “So I opened the bathroom door, and my little girl was on the floor unconscious,” he told the Chicago Tribune. “She was still in her pajamas.” Mary died that morning. It turned out that the Tylenol had been laced with cyanide. In the next few days, six more people in the Chicago area would die from using the product. As the FBI, the US Attorney’s office, and Chicago-area police investigated leads, executives at Johnson & Johnson, which made Tylenol under its McNeil division, scrambled to respond. At the time, Tylenol commanded a 37% share of the analgesic market. Keep reading on Retail Brew.—AAN |