In 1976 a murder occurred on the street where I lived. I was 12 years old at the time and one of the 3 victims was just a year older than me. His name was Michael Columbo and he and his parents were killed by his sister and his sisters boyfriend. Patty Columbo is still in prison for the murders and Frank Deluca died in prison earlier this year. Michael Columbo would have turned 60 this year.
In 1979 John Wayne Gacy was arrested for a series of brutal murders rapes mutilations of young men my age and living in suburbs near mine. He received the death penalty some 15 years later.
Both these cases changed my view of the world a little. When a brutal murder occurs on the street where you live, in a house that would later be on your newspaper delivery route it's going to effect you. When boys your age are being abducted in neighboring suburbs and being raped, murdered and buried it is more than unnerving. It makes you wonder if you are truly safe.
In 1982 when I was still in high school the unspeakable hit close to home again. When I say close to home, I am not exaggerating at all. Tylenol capsules filled with potassium cyanide were sold at two grocery stores, one in Arlington Heights which neighbors my home town of Elk Grove Village and the other in Elk Grove 4 blocks from my house. This was in my senior year of high school and occurred at a store my family had been buying groceries, including Tylenol my entire life.
A 12 year old girl from my hometown was one of the seven who died. She stayed home from school because of a stomach ache was given one Tylenol and died within hours.
As heinous as the first two crimes, they Tylenol murders to me was equally as perverse. Especially when you consider the crime has still not been solved more than 40 years later. Also the randomness of the victims, anyone who bought products from either of those grocery store was a potential victim, which means I was a potential victim. It is one thing to think that I was a target demographic of Gacy, but another thing entirely to realize that I was buying groceries at that store when there were tainted Tylenol available for purchase. It is chilling.
This case also singlehandedly changed how products are manufactured. Johnson & Johnson, the manufacturers of Tylenol, not only responded to the crisis by recalling 31 million bottles of their product, but also introduced tamperproof packaging and child-proof caps. They lost quite a bit of money in the process but received well deserved praise with how they handled the situation.
Evil (read about any of these cases and the word evil, will come up again and again) is an age old problem. Encountering it on my street, in my town, and near my town isn't unusual, as it exists everywhere. But seeing such extreme examples of evil , may have been one reason why I was always on the lookout for good.
2 comments:
Thanks for your clear explanations and effort in creating meaningful content.
Very thhoughtful blog
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