1982 Tylenol murders

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Tylenol murders
Type poisoning, black marketing
Type social scare, fear, money scam
Type Fakeology
Technology Research
Type Glossary
Type Media fakery
Type Science fakery
Year 1982
Date 09/29
Place Chicago, Illinois
Numbers 9, 11
Perp James Lewis
Topics
Narrative management Logic of PsyOps
Information
Fakeologist [ab 1]
Hoaxbusters [HB 1]
Cluesforum [CF 1]

In September 1982,[1] seven people in Illinois died after taking potassium cyanide-laced Tylenol capsules. Johnson & Johnson’s CCO Larry Foster and advisor Harold Burson counseled CEO James Burke through the crisis. Working with the police, FDA and media, they issued a nationwide recall, delivered warnings and created new tamper-proof packaging. Johnson & Johnson’s handling of the tragedy set a standard and remains a model for effective crisis response and corporate responsibility[2].

Clues

  • The story shows a cooperation between state and market institutions which is in these dimensions new.
  • The story runs in the media as medical mystery[3].
  • The reporting does not show much interest for the alleged victims of the poisoning.
  • The reporting shows much more interest in the crisis management that the Coorporation Johnson & Johnson performed together with police, Federal Drug Administration and media.
  • The story went down in PR curricula as model for crisis communication and is till today presented as that.[4]
  • The fakeological hypothesis is, that this event was designed to test the cooperation between market and state institutions, in order to expand the field for psyops, which was officialy under the control of the military apparatus.
  • The event leads to a change in the legal frame for medics sales.
  • The event is reused in later psyops.[5]
  • Tylenol-maker Johnson & Johnson will be best known for his strong, decisive leadership and what has widely been recognized as a model of exceptional corporate crisis management. Fortune magazine named him one of history’s 10 greatest CEOs because of his handling of the Tylenol scare.[6]


See also


References

Fakeologist

  1. [ ]

Cluesforum

  1. [ ]

Hoaxbusters

  1. [ ]

Other