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Cyanide killings can confound investigators

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Detectives were led to Hoffman soon enough because she had taken a life insurance policy out on Berge, said Doyle, now an attorney in private practice.

It was not until the second victim — whom Hoffman also had a life insurance policy on — was found several months later that things got complicated for investigators.

Gerald Davies was found dead in his bathtub, an empty bottle of Valium nearby but no apparent signs of struggle, Doyle said.

“Now we were in trouble,” Doyle said. “We don’t have a witness. All we’ve got is this life insurance policy. We don’t have anything that ties her to the body.”

The search for Davies’ cause of death was launched.

Cyanide is often not found during initial medical exams for a couple of reasons. The poison is not typically screened for in an initial toxicology test. And though cyanide has a distinct bitter, almondlike scent that can be detected with close contact from a corpse, only about half of the population can smell it.

“Some people cannot smell almonds,” Doyle said. “If we had, we probably would have known right there.”

As a result of a persistent detective — who has since died — the lab techs kept trying to find what could have killed Davies, recalled Kenneth Kempfert, an analyst at the Wisconsin state laboratory at the time.

“He kept coming back,” Kempfert said of Detective Chuck Lulling. “I had already gone through everything I could think of. And I started talking to a lot of people. One of my colleagues said, ‘Did you check for cyanide?’ He had worked in law enforcement a long, long time. I don’t know why he suggested it, but thank God he did.”

Since Hoffman was an honors chemistry student, investigators had assumed that she got her hands on the cyanide in a lab. But they later found a FedEx receipt showing that Davies had ordered the poison from a chemical company, Doyle said.

Doyle said he wasn’t certain exactly how the two victims ingested the cyanide.

“These were two very lonely men that met this woman in a massage parlor,” Doyle said. “(She) had them very much under her spell. I think we assumed ... they ate something together. But she was meticulous in how she cleaned up those apartments.”

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