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Cyanide killings can confound investigators

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Matejcic said he and his partner never figured out how Essa obtained the cyanide despite their extensive efforts to do so.

Cyanide — commonly used by jewelers in plating and often found in college laboratories — is easy to buy online, said Matejcic, who did just that as part of the investigation.

“We posed as people in the metal business,” he said. “We had it drop-shipped right to the door.”

The pop can-sized jar cost less than $100.

Matejcic and his partner also took tours of university hospital labs to see how easy it would be for Essa, a doctor, to steal the poison. They investigated a former jewelry business that Essa owned with a brother.

“We looked at these people. We did search warrants on their businesses,” he said. “The thing is, it was kind of like finding a needle in a haystack.”

Matejcic said the murder was solved by old-fashioned detective work. They followed the money to learn that Essa would have lost a bundle in a divorce, and they learned of his girlfriends, he said. And they came to understand, with the help of FBI profilers, that he had the personality for the crime.

“He was a highly intelligent guy,” Matejcic said. “He thought he was smarter than the rest.”

As Matejcic did, Chicago detectives will likely chase several leads to try to determine how Khan’s killer obtained cynanide.

But the tragic killing of Maryland teenager Benjamin Vassiliev, who was poisoned by a friend in love with Vassiliev’s girlfriend, proves how easily it can be done.

Ryan Furlough, 19, was convicted in 2004 of slipping the poison into Vassiliev’s soda while the two played video games.

Howard County Circuit Judge Timothy McCrone, who prosecuted the case, said investigators were able to solve the homicide after seizing evidence from Furlough’s computer that detailed his search for and purchases of cyanide.

Ultimately, Furlough used his mother’s credit card to buy the cyanide from a chemical supply company, according to an Associated Press report in 2003. The teen told the company he planned to use the substance for metal plating.

Furlough is serving life in prison for the murder.

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