A dentist in Colorado, USA has been arrested after allegedly poisoning his wife's morning protein shakes with arsenic.
James
Toliver Craig, a 45-year-old practicing dentist, was arrested on Sunday
morning, March 19 for what police called a ‘heinous, complex, and
calculated murder’ of his wife Angela Craig, 43.
Angela, who
was also the mother of his six children, was admitted to Parker
Adventist Hospital on March 6, complaining of abdominal pain,
dehydration, vomiting, diarrhea, an altered mental state, and organ
failure.

Before she was admitted, James and Angela worked out in their home gym.
‘Before
the workout, James made Angela a protein shake or pre-workout shake in
which James gave her extra protein because she was feeling sluggish,’ an
arrest warrant affidavit against James states. ‘After the workout,
Angela became faint and dizzy, and ultimately James took Angela to the
hospital.’

She was released the same day, but was hospitalized again at University Hospital Anschutz in Aurora on March 15.
Her
condition worsened as she began to suffer from severe seizures. She was
eventually put on life support, but lost brain activity and was
pronounced brain dead later that day.

After a while, James’s employees and business partners at his dental practice suspected foul play. An office manager at his practice opened a personal package bought from Amazon addressed to James on March 13, and found it contained potassium cyanide.
Another employee noticed that James had been acting suspiciously in previous days. James used a computer for work in an unoccupied exam room, instead of his personal computer in his office.
When police investigators searched the computer in the exam room, they found that James was using an alternate email address.
On
February 27, James used the Google account associated with the secret
email address to search for the phrases: ‘how many grams of pure arsenic
will kill a human’ and ‘is arsenic detectable in autopsy?’
James
also searched for poisons on YouTube. His search history on the site
included the videos: ‘Top 5 Undetectable Poisons That Show No Signs of
Foul Play,’ ‘how to make poison,’ and ‘The Top 10 Deadliest Plants (They
Can Kill You).’
Using the same account, Craig then ordered 10 grams of arsenic off Amazon. The entire purchase cost $13.
According
to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), arsenic poisoning can cause
‘nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea to dehydration and shock’ in victims
symptoms similar to what Angela experienced in her first
hospitalization.
After the first order investigators found he then ordered potassium cyanide.
After
placing the order, an employee of the company he was buying it from
followed up with him to ask about his need for the poison, and asked him
to sign a Restricted Item Usage Statement before it could be shipped.
In
the usage statement, James said he was a surgeon performing
craniofacial reconstructions. He wanted to use the cyanide to help with
the ‘layering of alternative metals.’ If the experiment was successful,
he stated that he would be publishing the results with the National
Institutes of Health.
This package of potassium cyanide was
eventually delivered to him at his practice, but was opened by the
office manager. When the employee questioned him about it, he
‘eventually recanted and admitted the package contained potassium
cyanide, but claimed that Angela asked him to order it,’ his arrest
warrant states.
James told investigators he thought his wife
was severely depressed intentionally trying to overdose, but at least
one investigator from Child Protective Services found this account to be
untrue.
‘None of Angela’s children mentioned their mother’s
depression nor did they mention any alleged previous suicide attempts,’
the investigator said, and ‘believed that it was improbable that this
type of event (overdose suicide attempt) could happen with no one inside
the household, except James, being aware.’
More interviews granted by friends and family members revealed that the couple’s relationship had been ‘tumultuous’ for years.
‘James
had multiple affairs with several women, told Angela he had been
addicted to pornography since he was a teenager, and drugged Angela
approximately five to six years ago,’ one person close to the family
told investigators.
The same family member told investigators that James refused to let the hospital conduct an autopsy on his wife after her death.
‘James
said he felt if they couldn’t figure out what was wrong with her when
she was alive he wouldn’t let them poke her more when she was dead.’
The
affidavit also revealed that a search of James’s cell phone showed he
was in a ‘sexually intimate relationship’ with an unidentified
orthodontist. James allegedly flew his mistress from Texas to Denver,
Colorado while his wife was in the hospital.
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