Mugshot Mysteries
Some stories are solved. Most aren’t.
The interesting ones refuse to stay buried.
Mugshot Mysteries is a deep-dive podcast hosted by Kathryn and Gabriel, exploring true crime, conspiracies, paranormal encounters, cults, historical disasters, government cover-ups, and the stories that keep people awake long after the episode ends.
Every episode blends immersive storytelling, psychological analysis, dark humor, and the kind of rabbit holes that make you question whether history is telling the full truth.
One week it’s serial killers. The next it’s MKUltra, haunted hospitals, vanished ships, UFO encounters, or deaths that still don’t make sense decades later.
Kathryn brings the research. Gabriel brings the questions, the theories, and occasionally a comment so out of pocket it completely derails the conversation.
Expect deep dives, unexpected tangents, and at least one moment where Kathryn has to stop and say, “Wow. Wow wow wow.”
If it’s disturbing, unexplained, historically strange, or impossible to forget… it belongs in the lineup.
New episodes every week.
Mugshot Mysteries
Chicago Tylenol Murders 1982: Sealed for Your Protection
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September 29, 1982. A twelve-year-old girl takes one Tylenol for a sore throat and never wakes up. Six more strangers die across Chicago suburbs in three days. Same brand. Different stores. No connection except a bottle on a shelf.
Someone replaced acetaminophen with potassium cyanide at three times the lethal dose and returned the capsules to store shelves. No manifesto. No motive ever proven. No arrest. No conviction. One of America's most infamous unsolved cold cases.
Every tamper-evident seal in America exists because of this crime. The Federal Anti-Tampering Act. The Johnson and Johnson recall. The complete redesign of consumer product packaging.
Kathryn and Gabriel investigate all three suspects: Ted Kaczynski, whose early bombings hit the same Chicago suburbs. Roger Arnold, the warehouse worker whose life imploded under suspicion until he shot an innocent man dead. And James William Lewis, the prime suspect who demanded a million dollars to stop the Tylenol poisonings and died in 2023 without ever being charged.
The case is officially open. The primary suspect is dead. Every time you fight with a tamper-evident seal, you are holding the scar.
SOURCES: FBI Chicago Division. Tylenol Murders Investigation Files, 1982-2009. FBI Records: The Vault. Federal Anti-Tampering Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1365, enacted 1983. FDA Tamper-Resistant Packaging Regulations, 21 CFR § 211.132, 1989. Beck, Ulrich. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. Sage Publications, 1986. Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. Viking Press, 1963. Bauman, Zygmunt. Liquid Fear. Polity Press, 2006. Mullainathan, Sendhil and Shafir, Eldar. Scarcity. Henry Holt, 2013. Douglas, John. Mindhunter. Scribner, 1995. Cold Case: The Tylenol Murders. Netflix docuseries, 2025. State v. Stella Nickell. Western District of Washington, 1988. Illinois v. Roger Arnold. Cook County Circuit Court, 1983. Johnson & Johnson Corporate Crisis Response Documentation, 1982-1983. Chicago Tribune. Tylenol murder coverage and investigative reporting, 1982-2023.
DISCLAIMER: This episode discusses the poisoning deaths of seven people including a twelve-year-old child, criminal investigation methodology, product tampering, dismemberment, axe assault, sexual assault allegations, extortion, and wrongful suspicion resulting in an unrelated homicide. Three suspects are examined. James William Lewis was convicted of extortion only and maintained his innocence until his death in 2023. Ted Kaczynski and Roger Arnold are discussed as persons of interest only and no individual is definitively identified as the Tylenol killer. Roger Arnold was convicted of the unrelated murder of John Stanisha. Discussion of Reagan-era economic policy, the War on Drugs, Cold War anxiety, and corporate regulatory failure reflects the historical record only. Views expressed are solely those of the hosts and do not constitute legal conclusions, forensic findings, or professional analysis. Educational and entertainment purposes only. Listener discretion strongly advised.
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