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Officers, firefighters and EMTs responding to a report of an unresponsive person at about 4 p.m. Sunday found James W. Lewis dead in his Cambridge, Massachusetts, home, Cambridge Police ...
During the initial investigations, a man named James William Lewis was accused of sending a letter to Johnson & Johnson demanding $1 million to stop the cyanide-induced murders. Upon his arrest, Lewis told authorities how the person behind the attacks may have carried out the killings—by buying Tylenol, adding cyanide to the bottles, and ...
TYLENOL MURDERS: After a joint FBI task force was unable to pin the 1982 Tylenol murders on prime suspect James Lewis, special agent Roy Lane was coaxed out of retirement to carry out a daring ...
James W. Lewis, who died Sunday, was long the chief suspect in the Tylenol deaths. Before then, he was charged in a gruesome Kansas City murder. He was never convicted in either case.
James Paul Lewis Jr., operated one of the largest and longest running "Ponzi schemes" in United States history; James R. Lewis (scholar) (1949–2022), professional writer and academic specializing in new religious movements and New Age; James Andrew Lewis (born 1953), American security specialist; James W. Lewis, American convicted for ...
James Lewis (disambiguation), multiple people; James Paul Lewis Jr., American Ponzi schemer; Joel W. Lewis, American abolitionist and reformer; Jonathan Lewis (2006–2023), student who was beaten to death by a group of students on campus; John Lewis (Virginia colonist) (1678-1762), early settler in western Virginia
James W. Moore (1938–2019 [1]) was a bestselling author of over 40 books, Abingdon Press' top selling author. He was a preacher and pastor, an ordained elder in the United Methodist Church . He served as Senior Pastor of St. Luke's United Methodist Church –Houston (over 7,500 members) from 1984 to 2006.
James Edward Lewis (August 4, 1923 – August 9, 1997) was an African-American artist, art collector, professor, and curator in the city of Baltimore. He is best known for his role as the leading force for the creation of the James E. Lewis Museum of Art, an institution of the HBCU Morgan State University .