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Cyanide killings can confound investigators

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The body of Urooj Khan is transported in a hearse to the Medical Examiner's Office from Rosehill Cemetery, January 18, 2013, in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — CHICAGO — It could be weeks before investigators know what, if any, clues were buried with Urooj Khan in Rosehill Cemetery six months ago after the million-dollar lottery winner died of cyanide poisoning.

Police find themselves in largely uncharted territory investigating such a rare method for murder, though Chicago, of course, is home to the nation’s most infamous cyanide case — the 1982 Tylenol killings, which remain unsolved.

But in a handful of other cases across the country, detectives and prosecutors have embarked on probes of cyanide homicides that were each intriguing in their own way and provide perhaps a glimpse of what’s going on inside Chicago’s investigation into Khan’s death.

There is the literal made-for-TV movie story of a University of Wisconsin biochemistry major from Park Ridge who killed at least one man she was involved with. A decade ago, a teenager in Baltimore dissolved cyanide into a friend’s soda, sending him into a seizure before he died several days later. In Ohio’s Cuyahoga County seven years ago, an emergency room doctor added the toxic poison to a calcium pill and nearly got away with the perfect murder of his wife.

“Whoever it is, is a cunning person,” Detective Sgt. Dennis Matejcic, who investigated the Cuyahoga County murder, said of Khan’s killer. “To be a poisoner is a diabolical thing. It is a really crafty thing. It’s not a fit of anger. It’s not a crime where you pull out a gun and shoot someone. You have to plan it. You have to think it out.”

The weapon of choice in a murder is an obvious, early question for detectives. But when the weapon is cyanide, it’s not always easy to detect, as was clear in the case of Wisconsin’s notorious Barbara Hoffman, whose stunning story was turned into a book and movie, both titled “Winter of Frozen Dreams.”

Hoffman was charged with slaying two clients she met while working as a masseuse. A jury convicted her in only one of the slayings.

The first victim, Harold Berge, was found in 1977 buried in a snow bank and appeared to have been badly beaten, recalled Jim Doyle, the county prosecutor at that time who later was elected governor of Wisconsin.

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