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Post by peteetongman on Oct 12, 2013 11:56:27 GMT -5
back in 1982 I went to an October keg party at a friend's house. When they tapped the keg the beer came out red. We didn't know WTF was going on. Remember now, this is right about the time of the Tylenol poisonings, so nobody was eager to be the guinea pig. Finally, being thirsty as hell (and full of piss and vinegar at the age of 25) I grabbed a cup full and drank it down. Tasted fine, but I called the store anyway. When I told the clerk what was going on, she covered up the mouthpiece of the phone but I clearly heard her shout to her colleagues, "I found the red keg!"
Obviously it was colored red for a Halloween party
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Post by peteetongman on Oct 12, 2013 12:08:19 GMT -5
Theory re Tylenol poisonings::: In a book published in 2011,[10] Scott Bartz, a former Johnson & Johnson employee, argues that the poisoned Tylenol was introduced not, as the media reported, in retail stores but in a distributor's warehouse in the Chicago area. He believes that Johnson & Johnson knew this but intentionally suppressed evidence leading to this conclusion.[11] In November of 2012 Bartz gave his second interview to investigative reporter Gary Franchi. The interview aired on Next News Network's WHDT World News, in it he made the case for his book. During the 25-minute interview he stated, "My research showed the tampering occurred within the distribution network for Tylenol and of course Johnson & Johnson, to avoid liability would not want to be associated with distributing this Tylenol."[12] On September 24, 2013, Michelle Rosen, daughter of victim Mary Reiner, appeared on WHDT to provide testimony of her mother's ingestion of the laced Tylenol.[13] According to Rosen, Mary Reiner had given birth 6 days prior and received her Tylenol from the hospital pharmacy. Bartz's investigation into Reiner's ingestion is believed, by Rosen, to be the "smoking gun" because she concluded the culprit presented by authorities could not have gained access to a secure hospital pharmacy. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Tylenol_murders
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