N
NotWhatIExpected
.
- Jan 27, 2020
- 403
I generally lifted these from my comments on another thread, so the writing my seem a little clunky or out of place in some places
"9 Hurt After Student's Apparent Suicide by Cyanide
BY STEVE BALL
OCT. 13, 1998
Toxic fumes produced when a college student from Orange County died of an apparent suicide Monday forced the evacuation of an Iowa dormitory and the hospitalization of nine people, authorities said.
Carl T. Grimm, 20, a sophomore from Placentia, ingested potassium cyanide about 7:30 a.m. in his dormitory room at Grinnell College, a private liberal arts school about 50 miles east of Des Moines, Iowa, Grinnell Fire Chief Jerry Barns said.
Four paramedics who responded to the call at Younkers Hall came in contact with fumes from the poison, as did two college staff members and three other students.
Grimm was taken to Grinnell Regional Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.
ADVERTISEMENT
Fredrick N. Grimm, Carl's father, remembered the young man Monday as "a wonderful son, intelligent and sensitive."
"He was bright, a National Merit Scholar" at El Dorado High School, the elder Grimm said. "But he had his difficulties," including attention deficit disorder. Still, he said, "his death came as a complete shock."
The others who became ill on the Iowa campus were treated and released from the hospital.
"When potassium cyanide is mixed with water or mixed with acid, it creates hydrogen cyanide gas, which is quite toxic. Eighty percent of the body is made of water," said Mickey Munley, the college's director of public relations.
ADVERTISEMENT
Potassium cyanide is a respiratory poison that prevents oxygen from reaching the cells. When ingested, it causes death almost immediately.
Firefighters sent to the dormitory evacuated the three-story structure until the Des Moines Hazardous Materials Unit arrived to ventilate the building.
Authorities could not say immediately where or how Grimm acquired the potassium cyanide."
This other article says something different though in a similar scenario:
https://www.theeagle.com/news/local...cle_705bbe23-f442-5cd2-9fac-2675b7725398.html
"Rudder Plaza returned to normal Thursday, a day after hazardous materials crews roped off the area while treating a Texas A&M student who had reportedly ingested sodium cyanide.
The 20-year-old man remained in critical condition at St. Joseph hospital Thursday evening after going through a decontamination process in the hospital parking lot the night before and receiving an antidote to inactivate the poison.
Addressing the attention the case garnered after the public saw responders in hazardous materials suits, Dr. Brandon Lewis, medical director of emergency services at St. Joseph hospital, said emergency personnel responded with an abundance of caution, choosing to "overreact rather than underreact."
Edit- But then 4 years later the school came out with another article that said this:
https://www.theeagle.com/news/local...cle_529260e0-af4a-5c5f-bb4f-81bd3ccec74a.html
"Arriving on the scene near Rudder Tower that afternoon, officers detected a chemical odor that "caused our mouths to burn" and reported seeing Taylor on the ground near a bench surrounded by paper, personal items and a bottle of sodium cyanide inside a Starbucks cup with Taylor's name on it"
Idk what to believe about it exactly
"According to an incident reports from the LPD and LFD, the man was found conscious, alert and clothed inside the vehicle, and had apparently vomited inside of his car. A "vapor cloud" was also noted inside the vehicle, and responders established a perimeter and called for a HazMat team, which removed the man from his vehicle, the fire department report said.
//
The HazMat scene posed an immediate danger only to the first-responders, and the threat to them was potentially lessened because the man actually ingested the chemicals, rather than inhaling them through his car, Wilson said."
Weird story, I'm not sure if dangerous fumes really are released from potassium cyanide and other "solid" cyanides if you vomit, but they'll probably treat it as such and it'll be in the public eye as such
"Authorities evacuated eight other residents at Larrimer's 1242 Neil Ave. apartment complex, a few blocks south of campus. A small portion of the road was blocked off for several hours after the body was discovered because of the potential of deadly fumes inside, said Sgt. Brent Mull of the Columbus Division of Police.
"Cyanide, when mixed with acid, is dangerous," Smith said. "With the acid in his stomach, if any air was released from his stomach, it could have been toxic."
Still somewhat ambiguous
//
Last one on this thread, sorry:
https://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20120223/NEWS/120229874
"They backed out of the room and called Monroe County Emergency Services, which contacted a hazardous materials response team in Old Forge. Environmental Products and Services tested the containers and confirmed the substance is cyanide. The hazardous response team, dressed in protective gear, tested and confirmed the air was safe to breathe. They carried the body out of the room into a hallway after investigators completed examination of the room and victim."
So in this case it seems like the hazmat approach wasn't necessary
9 Hurt After Student's Apparent Suicide by Cyanide
Toxic fumes produced when a college student from Orange County died of an apparent suicide Monday forced the evacuation of an Iowa dormitory and the hospitalization of nine people, authorities said.
www.google.com
"9 Hurt After Student's Apparent Suicide by Cyanide
BY STEVE BALL
OCT. 13, 1998
Toxic fumes produced when a college student from Orange County died of an apparent suicide Monday forced the evacuation of an Iowa dormitory and the hospitalization of nine people, authorities said.
Carl T. Grimm, 20, a sophomore from Placentia, ingested potassium cyanide about 7:30 a.m. in his dormitory room at Grinnell College, a private liberal arts school about 50 miles east of Des Moines, Iowa, Grinnell Fire Chief Jerry Barns said.
Four paramedics who responded to the call at Younkers Hall came in contact with fumes from the poison, as did two college staff members and three other students.
Grimm was taken to Grinnell Regional Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.
ADVERTISEMENT
Fredrick N. Grimm, Carl's father, remembered the young man Monday as "a wonderful son, intelligent and sensitive."
"He was bright, a National Merit Scholar" at El Dorado High School, the elder Grimm said. "But he had his difficulties," including attention deficit disorder. Still, he said, "his death came as a complete shock."
The others who became ill on the Iowa campus were treated and released from the hospital.
"When potassium cyanide is mixed with water or mixed with acid, it creates hydrogen cyanide gas, which is quite toxic. Eighty percent of the body is made of water," said Mickey Munley, the college's director of public relations.
ADVERTISEMENT
Potassium cyanide is a respiratory poison that prevents oxygen from reaching the cells. When ingested, it causes death almost immediately.
Firefighters sent to the dormitory evacuated the three-story structure until the Des Moines Hazardous Materials Unit arrived to ventilate the building.
Authorities could not say immediately where or how Grimm acquired the potassium cyanide."
This other article says something different though in a similar scenario:
https://www.theeagle.com/news/local...cle_705bbe23-f442-5cd2-9fac-2675b7725398.html
"Rudder Plaza returned to normal Thursday, a day after hazardous materials crews roped off the area while treating a Texas A&M student who had reportedly ingested sodium cyanide.
The 20-year-old man remained in critical condition at St. Joseph hospital Thursday evening after going through a decontamination process in the hospital parking lot the night before and receiving an antidote to inactivate the poison.
Addressing the attention the case garnered after the public saw responders in hazardous materials suits, Dr. Brandon Lewis, medical director of emergency services at St. Joseph hospital, said emergency personnel responded with an abundance of caution, choosing to "overreact rather than underreact."
Edit- But then 4 years later the school came out with another article that said this:
https://www.theeagle.com/news/local...cle_529260e0-af4a-5c5f-bb4f-81bd3ccec74a.html
"Arriving on the scene near Rudder Tower that afternoon, officers detected a chemical odor that "caused our mouths to burn" and reported seeing Taylor on the ground near a bench surrounded by paper, personal items and a bottle of sodium cyanide inside a Starbucks cup with Taylor's name on it"
Idk what to believe about it exactly
Officials Explain HazMat Response to Suicide Attempt on Maguire Road
Chemical-aided suicide attempts could be an emerging issue internationally, but the May 4 incident was the first of its kind in Lexington, fire officials said.
patch.com
"According to an incident reports from the LPD and LFD, the man was found conscious, alert and clothed inside the vehicle, and had apparently vomited inside of his car. A "vapor cloud" was also noted inside the vehicle, and responders established a perimeter and called for a HazMat team, which removed the man from his vehicle, the fire department report said.
//
The HazMat scene posed an immediate danger only to the first-responders, and the threat to them was potentially lessened because the man actually ingested the chemicals, rather than inhaling them through his car, Wilson said."
Weird story, I'm not sure if dangerous fumes really are released from potassium cyanide and other "solid" cyanides if you vomit, but they'll probably treat it as such and it'll be in the public eye as such
OSU student found dead; suicide likely cause of death
A 23-year-old Ohio State student reportedly drank a fatal dose of sodium cyanide mixed with water Friday, hours after he dropped out of his winter quarter classes. Jonathan Jay Larrimer, a mechanical engineering major, was found dead by his mother Tuesday after she received a delayed e-mailed...
www.thelantern.com
"Authorities evacuated eight other residents at Larrimer's 1242 Neil Ave. apartment complex, a few blocks south of campus. A small portion of the road was blocked off for several hours after the body was discovered because of the potential of deadly fumes inside, said Sgt. Brent Mull of the Columbus Division of Police.
"Cyanide, when mixed with acid, is dangerous," Smith said. "With the acid in his stomach, if any air was released from his stomach, it could have been toxic."
Still somewhat ambiguous
//
Last one on this thread, sorry:
https://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20120223/NEWS/120229874
"They backed out of the room and called Monroe County Emergency Services, which contacted a hazardous materials response team in Old Forge. Environmental Products and Services tested the containers and confirmed the substance is cyanide. The hazardous response team, dressed in protective gear, tested and confirmed the air was safe to breathe. They carried the body out of the room into a hallway after investigators completed examination of the room and victim."
So in this case it seems like the hazmat approach wasn't necessary
If I ever get reproached for writing about this, I would just like to say that I'm very depressed, and distressed at the way much of life and death occurs in most or all of the world, and I'm just worried and I think there should be a better wayI generally lifted these from my comments on another thread, so the writing my seem a little clunky or out of place in some places
9 Hurt After Student's Apparent Suicide by Cyanide
Toxic fumes produced when a college student from Orange County died of an apparent suicide Monday forced the evacuation of an Iowa dormitory and the hospitalization of nine people, authorities said.www.google.com
"9 Hurt After Student's Apparent Suicide by Cyanide
BY STEVE BALL
OCT. 13, 1998
Toxic fumes produced when a college student from Orange County died of an apparent suicide Monday forced the evacuation of an Iowa dormitory and the hospitalization of nine people, authorities said.
Carl T. Grimm, 20, a sophomore from Placentia, ingested potassium cyanide about 7:30 a.m. in his dormitory room at Grinnell College, a private liberal arts school about 50 miles east of Des Moines, Iowa, Grinnell Fire Chief Jerry Barns said.
Four paramedics who responded to the call at Younkers Hall came in contact with fumes from the poison, as did two college staff members and three other students.
Grimm was taken to Grinnell Regional Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.
ADVERTISEMENT
Fredrick N. Grimm, Carl's father, remembered the young man Monday as "a wonderful son, intelligent and sensitive."
"He was bright, a National Merit Scholar" at El Dorado High School, the elder Grimm said. "But he had his difficulties," including attention deficit disorder. Still, he said, "his death came as a complete shock."
The others who became ill on the Iowa campus were treated and released from the hospital.
"When potassium cyanide is mixed with water or mixed with acid, it creates hydrogen cyanide gas, which is quite toxic. Eighty percent of the body is made of water," said Mickey Munley, the college's director of public relations.
ADVERTISEMENT
Potassium cyanide is a respiratory poison that prevents oxygen from reaching the cells. When ingested, it causes death almost immediately.
Firefighters sent to the dormitory evacuated the three-story structure until the Des Moines Hazardous Materials Unit arrived to ventilate the building.
Authorities could not say immediately where or how Grimm acquired the potassium cyanide."
This other article says something different though in a similar scenario:
https://www.theeagle.com/news/local...cle_705bbe23-f442-5cd2-9fac-2675b7725398.html
"Rudder Plaza returned to normal Thursday, a day after hazardous materials crews roped off the area while treating a Texas A&M student who had reportedly ingested sodium cyanide.
The 20-year-old man remained in critical condition at St. Joseph hospital Thursday evening after going through a decontamination process in the hospital parking lot the night before and receiving an antidote to inactivate the poison.
Addressing the attention the case garnered after the public saw responders in hazardous materials suits, Dr. Brandon Lewis, medical director of emergency services at St. Joseph hospital, said emergency personnel responded with an abundance of caution, choosing to "overreact rather than underreact."
Edit- But then 4 years later the school came out with another article that said this:
https://www.theeagle.com/news/local...cle_529260e0-af4a-5c5f-bb4f-81bd3ccec74a.html
"Arriving on the scene near Rudder Tower that afternoon, officers detected a chemical odor that "caused our mouths to burn" and reported seeing Taylor on the ground near a bench surrounded by paper, personal items and a bottle of sodium cyanide inside a Starbucks cup with Taylor's name on it"
Idk what to believe about it exactly
Officials Explain HazMat Response to Suicide Attempt on Maguire Road
Chemical-aided suicide attempts could be an emerging issue internationally, but the May 4 incident was the first of its kind in Lexington, fire officials said.patch.com
"According to an incident reports from the LPD and LFD, the man was found conscious, alert and clothed inside the vehicle, and had apparently vomited inside of his car. A "vapor cloud" was also noted inside the vehicle, and responders established a perimeter and called for a HazMat team, which removed the man from his vehicle, the fire department report said.
//
The HazMat scene posed an immediate danger only to the first-responders, and the threat to them was potentially lessened because the man actually ingested the chemicals, rather than inhaling them through his car, Wilson said."
Weird story, I'm not sure if dangerous fumes really are released from potassium cyanide and other "solid" cyanides if you vomit, but they'll probably treat it as such and it'll be in the public eye as such
OSU student found dead; suicide likely cause of death
A 23-year-old Ohio State student reportedly drank a fatal dose of sodium cyanide mixed with water Friday, hours after he dropped out of his winter quarter classes. Jonathan Jay Larrimer, a mechanical engineering major, was found dead by his mother Tuesday after she received a delayed e-mailed...www.thelantern.com
"Authorities evacuated eight other residents at Larrimer's 1242 Neil Ave. apartment complex, a few blocks south of campus. A small portion of the road was blocked off for several hours after the body was discovered because of the potential of deadly fumes inside, said Sgt. Brent Mull of the Columbus Division of Police.
"Cyanide, when mixed with acid, is dangerous," Smith said. "With the acid in his stomach, if any air was released from his stomach, it could have been toxic."
Still somewhat ambiguous
//
Last one on this thread, sorry:
https://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20120223/NEWS/120229874
"They backed out of the room and called Monroe County Emergency Services, which contacted a hazardous materials response team in Old Forge. Environmental Products and Services tested the containers and confirmed the substance is cyanide. The hazardous response team, dressed in protective gear, tested and confirmed the air was safe to breathe. They carried the body out of the room into a hallway after investigators completed examination of the room and victim."
So in this case it seems like the hazmat approach wasn't necessary
Last edited: