Mind of a Serial Killer - The Teacup Poisoner: Graham Young
Episode Date: February 3, 2025Known as the "Teacup Poisoner," Graham Young was a British serial killer who claimed his first victim at 14 years when he murdered his stepmother with poisoned tea. But even a long stint in a mental h...ospital did little to quiet his urges. Once he got out, Graham continued to poison and kill...and nobody suspected a thing. Mind of a Serial Killer is a Crime House Original. Follow us on Instagram and TikTok @crimehouse for more true crime content. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is Crime House.
Everyone has some kind of talent.
For many, it feels like their true calling.
It becomes a cornerstone of their identity, their greatest passion.
And in some cases, their talent brings fame and fortune.
It doesn't always work out that way, of course.
Sometimes a person's talent isn't financially viable.
Sometimes they aren't given the means to develop their abilities.
And sometimes the talent itself is the problem.
That was the case with Graham Young.
As a skilled chemist, he could have used his abilities to change the world.
But instead, he used his talent to kill.
The human mind is fascinating. It controls how we think, how we feel, how we love, and how we hate.
And sometimes the mind drives us to do something truly unspeakable.
This is Mind of a Serial Killer, a Crime House original.
Every Monday we'll be taking deep dives
into the minds of history's most notorious serial killers and violent offenders.
This is a special one-part episode on Graham Young, known as the Tea Cup Poisoner.
Between 1961 and 1971, Graham murdered at least three people and attempted to kill many
others using his encyclopedic knowledge of poisons. on podcasts, your feedback truly matters. And to enhance your mind of a serial killer listening
experience, subscribe to Crime House Plus on Apple podcasts. You'll get every episode ad free,
and for special one-part episodes like this one, you'll get access three days before its wide
release, plus exciting bonus content. I'm Vanessa Richardson.
And I'm Dr. Tristan Engels. As Vanessa takes you through our subject stories,
I'll be helping her dive into these killers' minds
as we try to understand how someone
can do such horrible things.
Before we get into the story, you
should know it contains descriptions
of murder and violent crime.
Listener discretion is advised.
Now join us as we dive into the life of Graham Young, examine his mind, and, as always, ask
the question, what makes a serial killer?
Graham Frederick Young came into a tumultuous world. He was born in London in 1947, two years after the end of World War II.
The UK was still rebuilding, leaving people uncertain about their futures.
Graham's first few years of life were similarly fraught.
When he was only 14 weeks old, his mother, Bessie, died of tuberculosis. His father, Frederick, couldn't handle caring
for Graham and his eight-year-old sister, Winifred. They were sent to live with other
relatives until 1950, when Graham was three. That year, Frederick remarried to a woman
named Molly and their family reunited. But for Graham, irreparable damage
may have already been done.
I don't think there is enough time for me
to cover all the ways in which bonding
during the first three years of a child's life
is critical to their overall development.
But let's start here.
Within the first two years of life,
an infant is undergoing rapid brain development
and neuron pruning.
Neuron pruning helps improve the efficiency of synapses and neural transmission, which
is essentially the way in which the brain transmits information to the central nervous
system.
Without this, our ability to perform any basic function is greatly impacted.
There's also some correlation with poor neural pruning and autism, though research on that
is still ongoing.
Bonding with their caregiver is essential for this wiring to occur because it helps
to ensure millions of new connections are made in the brain.
Those connections, or neural pathways, are necessary to form memories, to develop logic
and reasoning, and form attachments.
There's a lot of research in the field of developmental psychology that indicates that
neglect, parental inconsistency, and an overall lack of love can lead to long-term mental
health problems as well.
So Graham lost his mother as an infant and then was essentially abandoned by his father
to relatives.
That does not mean that Graham can't form a bond with these other relatives, because
he certainly can, but if that bond is nurturing, then these essential developmental needs can
occur.
But at three years old, he's now being taken away from the caregivers that he likely may
have had a bond with and placed
into a family he's never known.
With a parent he doesn't know, and a step-parent now as well.
Provided how nurturing this new family system is, this could greatly impact his development.
Well, after moving back in with his dad, Graham actually started to struggle.
Between the ages of four and eight, his arms and legs often twitched involuntarily.
He also experienced what doctors called monotonous thoughts that made it difficult for him to
concentrate.
So, monotonous thinking or monotonous thoughts tells me that Graham lacks variation and that
he has repetitive patterns.
So, if there are deviations in these repetitive patterns, it can cause
him to have some impairment in his ability to focus or adapt.
Is that like repetitive thoughts that we have sometimes if you get a song stuck in your
head or something like that? Is that the same type of monotonous thinking or is that something
different?
It's more of like rigidity, like a rigidity, right? Like the pattern, routine, and order, what made him sort of cope with
all of these broken attachments and sort of, you know, the earlier development was maintaining
rigid pattern and routine that gave him comfort. So outside of that, like the ability to be
creative is probably not something he can likely do because he's so rigid in his thinking,
or imaginative play, things like that.
Yeah, well that makes sense because at school,
word problems and creative thinking
were especially difficult for him.
Doctors at the time chalked up these issues
to the lasting effects of a severe ear infection
Graham had when he was a baby.
So I'm not a medical doctor,
but I can certainly understand how long-term impairment
from a severe ear infection might cause word problems because there could be some impairment in
phonetic and auditory processing, but I don't necessarily see how this could cause problems
in creativity.
I think that would be better explained by developmental delays.
Frederick, his dad, worried about him, but by the time Graham was nine, his verbal skills
had progressed considerably. The strange limb movements all but disappeared. But even though
Graham seemed to be physically and intellectually fine, he still struggled emotionally. Around
his schoolmates, he was quiet and solitary. He was never interested in the things that
other boys his age loved. Instead, he found himself obsessed with one subject in particular, chemistry.
One day in 1956, when Graham was nine, his stepmother, Molly, found something odd in
the laundry.
Graham's pants were stuffed with bottles of nail varnish, acid, and a common anesthetic
called ether.
When she asked him about it, Graham confessed that he was using the chemicals for unspecified
scientific experiments.
He'd gotten hold of them by scavenging them from a pharmacy's dumpster.
On one hand, Molly was impressed with her stepson's resourcefulness.
On the other, she was obviously terrified at the idea of Graham playing with dangerous chemicals.
She decided to do a thorough search of Graham's room, and found out he had other disturbing interests.
It turned out Graham had checked out a lot of books from the local library that he'd hidden from Frederick and Molly,
along with gargantuan chemistry textbooks.
There were books on the occult, black magic,
and most concerning of all, the Nazi Party.
So I want to circle back to the delays he had in verbal skills until age nine, because
the delay in language, that need for routine like we talked about, the monotony, poor emotional
regulation, his lack of interest and reciprocity in his peers,
the disinterest in imaginative play with his peers, and a highly specific fixed interest on
chemistry, all by age nine, would warrant an evaluation for autism spectrum disorder.
But since this is 1956, I don't think that these evaluations were as routinely done as they are now.
Autism is a spectrum, so individuals who exhibit more mild symptoms are higher functioning
and they often get overlooked, especially back then.
Autism was first described by Austrian-American psychiatrist Leo Kanner in 1943, and incidentally,
he described it as an anxiously obsessive desire for maintenance
of the same, which tracks with Graham's monotony.
All this to say, he is definitely showing signs of autism, but autism does not cause
someone to become a serial killer.
I want to make that very clear.
There's no causation there, and I don't want to stigmatize individuals with
autism. Also, since it's 1956, it's only a little over a decade since the end of World War II,
so his interest in Nazi Germany doesn't necessarily alarm me. At least now. He could
be learning about this in school, or hearing his peers talking about it, it's still very fresh.
What is concerning, however, is how he is obtaining the books, how he's obtaining these
chemicals and the fact that he's doing it secretively.
I would want to explore why he feels he needs to conceal this in the way he is and based
on what that response would be from him, determine how to best address it from there.
But the secrecy tells me he knows that there might be something
maladaptive about this.
It was definitely fresh and Molly,
his stepmom was thoroughly disturbed by what she found in Graham's room,
probably because he was so young and resourceful. Exactly.
She actually spoke to him about it. He told her he loved reading young and resourceful. Exactly. She actually spoke to
him about it. He told her he loved reading about the Nazis most of all. He was born two
years after Hitler's defeat and he remarked that it was a pity he was only a baby at the
time so he couldn't enjoy the war. Okay, this is a concerning statement for a nine-year-old.
He is likely too young to fully understand the complexities of the war.
So what is he glorifying and why?
Molly and Graham's father, Frederick,
started to keep a much closer eye on him after that.
They hoped Graham was simply going
through a strange phase that would pass sooner or later.
But Graham noticed them watching him
and reacted by becoming more secretive and withdrawn.
He scoured medical texts for information on obscure poisons and zoned out in class while
doodling, filling endless pages with sketches of vampires, gravestones, and swastikas.
The one thing he did tell his parents about was his love of science.
And when Graham was 11, Frederick tried to
encourage that passion by gifting his son a chemistry set. Graham loved it, but he didn't
use the chemistry set to perform typical schoolboy experiments like combining baking soda and vinegar.
One day, Molly found Graham holding a dead rat by the tail. He said he was going to perform an autopsy on it.
Molly said, absolutely not, and ordered
Graham to throw the rat away.
I would want to know where he got this rat.
Was it alive when he found it?
Did he kill it himself?
And more importantly, how many has come before this one?
This would be crucial to finding out
if there has been a pattern of any kind of animal cruelty here.
Yes, and well, Graham was furious at this whole thing.
The next morning, he left a drawing in the hall
featuring a tombstone with the inscription
in hateful memory of Molly Young.
This is unnerving for an 11-year-old,
especially because it appears directed at a stepmother
right after he did not get his way.
However, this is also an age where children are learning to cope with emotions like anger,
in addition to hormonal changes.
But we learn to cope and self-soothe through modeling and nurturance from our caregivers,
and we already know he has had a series of broken attachments beginning as an infant. So I'm wondering if this might be playing a part in that.
In retrospect, it was a dangerous omen. But at the time, Graham's father didn't really
punish him. In fact, Frederick was never very harsh with his son, maybe because he was trying
to make up for abandoning Graham when he was little, that guilt. But even if Frederick had done more to discipline his son, he wouldn't have been able to stop
Graham's experiments.
Graham was an exceptionally talented student, and his science teacher gave him special permission
to use the school laboratory.
Graham was able to conduct his experiments unsupervised, and he used that freedom to
push his ideas to terrifying limits.
He liked to inject rats he caught around his neighborhood with a variety of chemicals,
meticulously observing their effects.
But the result was always the same.
The death of his subjects.
Now, Dr. Engels, we touched on this earlier.
We hear a lot about serial killers having a penchant for animal cruelty when they're
young, or that animal cruelty is a warning sign in children of future criminal behavior.
How common is this in reality?
Does it always indicate a dangerous personality?
It doesn't always indicate a dangerous personality.
In fact, there's upwards to like 30% of children who've engaged in some kind of animal abuse
just out of
curiosity and learning limit testing and boundaries. Bringing it back to Graham though, now we know where he's getting these rats. He's actually going out hunting for them himself. On the surface,
Graham's actions could seem relatively benign since it appears to be masked as scientific curiosity.
However, he's going a great length to hide this.
Like we talked about before, this secretiveness.
This is very akin to Jeffrey Dahmer,
if you remember when we covered Jeffrey Dahmer.
Yes.
That in and of itself indicates that he is aware
that if his parents knew, they would put an end to this.
And by what you're describing, Vanessa,
this goes beyond curiosity.
I think he is getting
some form of gratification from this as it's giving him a feel of dominance or power. And in
addition to his uninvolvement in conventional social activities, these are risk markers for
future violence at this point. Just like you said, through these dark, secretive tests that he was doing, Graham built a deep
knowledge of chemistry.
Over the next year or two, his reputation spread around school until even the headmaster
was predicting that he was destined for great things.
And Graham wholeheartedly agreed.
Once he got into a lively discussion with his schoolmates about their future ambitions,
Graham stunned them when he declared he was going to be a famous poisoner.
His hero was William Barner, a notorious 19th century serial killer who poisoned his victims.
Graham's friends didn't really know what to make of it.
After a moment of silence, they laughed awkwardly and moved on. The comments
earned him a reputation at school for being a jokester with a weird sense of humor. The
kids had no idea how serious he really was.
By 1961, 13-year-old Graham had only become more set on a future as a Poisoner. As he
entered his teenage years, he decided to add a new dimension to his experiments.
Graham was no longer content to run tests on rats and mice.
He was ready to observe the effects of poison on human subjects.
And he already had subjects in mind.
His family.
In January 1961, 13-year-old Graham Young went to visit a local chemist in London.
Graham was trying to buy a poison called antimony, a slow-acting toxin which can be lethal over
long periods of exposure.
But antimony was on the restricted list of chemicals, which meant you had to be at least
17 to buy it.
Graham got lucky though.
Instead of asking for his ID, the chemist first asked Graham what he needed the antimony
for.
Graham launched into a lengthy, prepared speech describing several experiments he wanted to perform,
presumably non-lethal ones.
The level of detail surprised the chemist.
Anyone with that level of knowledge had to be at least 17.
So he figured Graham just looked young for his age and sold him the antimony.
This is clearly a cognitive bias that caused this chemist to neglect checking his identification
simply because he seemed intelligent.
And over the next few weeks, Graham made visits to chemists all over town, growing his stock
of poisons.
He began carrying a vial of antimony at school, which he called his little friend.
He kept bottles of poisons in his desk and showed them to his classmates.
Some students started whispering that he was crazy.
So this is more data to suggest
that he is a power-oriented killer in the making.
He is getting gratification from showing this
to his classmates and maybe even a thrill.
This is interesting.
Graham didn't pay too much attention
to what others thought of him
as long as they left him alone to do his experiments.
He started viewing other people as potential test subjects rather than fellow human beings.
And now that he had a vast collection of poisons at his disposal, Graham was ready to take
the next step.
However, Graham wasn't going to use them on just anybody.
He wanted to observe the effects of his experiments first-hand.
So he decided to start with someone he saw every day.
His stepmother, Molly.
In January of 1961, around the same time he visited the chemist, Graham began regularly
poisoning Molly's tea with the
antimony he'd purchased. After he mixed the powder in her tea, the toxin caused her to vomit
and gave her terrible stomach cramps. It was so bad she couldn't get out of bed for hours.
But nobody suspected she was being poisoned. She couldn't taste the antimony in her tea,
and her symptoms could have been caused by many different illnesses.
It was going just as 13-year-old Graham planned.
He kept poisoning Molly's tea for months.
While she was sick, he acted like a good, attentive son.
Graham regularly checked in on his stepmother to see how she was doing and made her cups
of tea. The whole time he was keeping a close eye on her symptoms and recording his observations
in his diary.
Let's talk about the psychology about a poisoning serial killer.
Statistically, women serial killers are more likely to poison their victims and their motives
were generally for profit of some kind.
The method of poisoning had been theorized for women
to be more common because it was effective,
efficient, and easier to conceal, especially back then,
and it didn't require physical overpowering or violence.
Graham is not interested in profit.
He was also idolizing Victorian poisoner William Palmer.
From what I understand about William Palmer, he also appeared to be financially motivated
because he poisoned his brother, mother-in-law, and four of his children and collected life
insurance money.
He also defrauded his wealthy mother out of a large sum of money.
But Graham is 13, and so far there's been no indication
that he's motivated at all for financial gain.
So at this point, since his first victim was a stepmother
and he had some degree of animosity toward her,
it's clear he was motivated by having power over her life
and got a thrill as he watched her slowly suffer.
This is particularly sadistic since death
by poisoning is slow and therefore it's prolonging his own amusement and he's taking notes as
she suffers.
Kaitlin Luna As we mentioned before, he can watch her,
he can keep an eye on her and write down all of her symptoms and the progress of the poison
and it just seems, in my opinion, just pure evil. It's very sadistic. He's getting way too much psychological gratification.
Well, eventually, Graham decided that just experimenting on Molly wasn't enough. In
May of 1961, 13-year-old Graham started poisoning his 21-year-old sister Winifred along with
his dad, Frederick. To the family, it seemed like some mysterious
virus was tearing its way through their house. One by one, they all became weak and sickly.
And unbeknownst to Graham's father and stepmother, the illness made its way outside their home, too.
It started when Graham noticed his only friend at school, Christopher Williams, was spending more time with another classmate.
Graham felt scorned, and he challenged Christopher to a fistfight.
This is interesting because for most of his adolescence, he was disinterested in conventional social relationships,
and now he's feeling rejected because he perceives that his only friend is distancing himself.
This speaks to how his early attachment deficits have shaped him, and statistically, peer rejection
has a significant long-term impact on the development of interpersonal relationships.
He is no stranger to peer rejection, but this is the rejection of someone he may have felt
an attachment to.
Well, he ended up fighting with his friend, Christopher, but it didn't last long.
Christopher was bigger than Graham and laid him out in a matter of seconds.
Afterward, Graham staggered to his feet and told Christopher he would kill him.
But just a week later, the emotions died down.
Christopher and Graham buried the hatchet by sharing a sandwich at
lunch or so it seemed, because a few hours after they shared that sandwich, Christopher
vomited all over his desk.
Christopher had a few more instances of vomiting like that throughout 1961, until it got to
the point where he had to be hospitalized for several days to recover.
The repeated bouts of sickness concerned Christopher's parents, but they couldn't figure out what
was going wrong. These events took place weeks or months apart. And even though Graham was
known to be interested in poisons, most of his peers didn't really think he had access
to them. They thought the vials he kept hidden in his desk were fake, and he only pretended to keep poison with him to seem edgy.
So instead of suspecting poison, Christopher's parents thought he might be allergic to something.
They started packing his lunch and closely monitoring his diet. Ironically, this only
made it easier for Graham to continue tormenting his friend. Christopher's meals were rigidly scheduled,
so Graham knew exactly what his friend would be eating
on any given day.
That made it easy for him to prepare
an identical poisoned sandwich
and swap the two of them out.
The amount of planning that Graham is doing,
not just to collect the plants and create the poisons,
but to find ways to ensure that they are ingested,
really speaks to his criminal versatility
and chameleon-like tendencies,
especially at such a young age.
This is really starting to resemble psychopathic traits.
The feeling of control over another person's life
intoxicated Graham.
He loved having that secret dominance
over the people closest to him.
This need to have power and control over the people close to him really indicates to me that
there is a lot of unresolved anger. I would go so far as to say that due to his history of broken
attachments, losing his mother, being suddenly thrust back into family life again after being
essentially given up,
that he might not understand what it means to value someone.
We know that there's resentment towards his stepmother.
He's kind of already shown it with that note,
with how he reacts to her.
And so far, it sounds like his father was somewhat uninvolved
and almost permissive,
because certainly he's not punishing him.
So does he know what it's like to be valued by someone else?
I used to assess juveniles for criminal courts and in the short time I did that, I only had
to assess for juvenile psychopathy once.
There is a screening measurement normed for ages 12 to 18.
Graham being 13 is exhibiting signs of psychopathy that you don't commonly see at a very young
age.
Well, for the rest of 1961, Graham Young was able to make his loved ones sick
without trying too hard to hide what he was doing.
But sometime soon after Christopher was hospitalized,
Graham's stepmother, Molly,
found a bottle of antimony in Graham's room.
It was simply labeled poison. The fact that he quite literally made this identifiable
by labeling it so blatantly speaks to the grandiosity,
the lack of remorse.
Those are traits of psychopathy.
He simply did not fear the consequences
if it was discovered and likely, by the sounds of it,
felt he was superior to his parents' authority.
Graham's father was absolutely furious.
Frederick banned Graham from bringing toxic chemicals into the house and tracked down
the chemist who originally sold Graham the antimony.
Still, the Youngs never connected Graham's poison with their lingering sickness or his
friends.
They only wanted to keep the chemicals out of the house to prevent an accident.
But the ban on poison didn't hinder Graham much. He had other chemists to supply him
with the ingredients he needed and hid them better in his room.
Over the next few weeks, his family's illnesses only got worse. Molly and Frederick had back-to-back vomiting attacks. Graham's sister, Winifred,
now 21 or 22, had to take sick days from her office job. Then one morning later in 1961,
Winifred noticed a strange sour taste in her tea. She didn't finish the cup, but she still felt
dizzy and lightheaded on the train to work. She ended up at an eagle-eyed doctor who finally saw what no one else could.
He diagnosed her with belladonna poisoning.
Belladonna, also known as nightshade, is a deadly berry plant native to West Asia and
Europe.
In safe doses, belladonna has medical uses, but it's also a powerful poison.
Exposure can cause anything from muscle spasms to blurred vision, seizures, coma, and death.
Thankfully, Winifred's dose wasn't lethal.
The doctor treated her poisoning, and she returned home that evening, absolutely enraged
at her little brother.
She still didn't think Graham had
tried to harm her, but she believed he'd accidentally contaminated her tea after doing
one of his experiments. Their father was displeased with Graham as well, although he also didn't
think Graham had poisoned Winifred on purpose. In a strange compromise, Frederick sent his son to bed early and conducted a
full search of the house for more poison, excluding Graham's room. Needless to say,
he didn't find any.
So this is another example of Frederick being a little bit more passive in his parenting.
Now would have been a great time to really instill consequences
instead of enabling psychopathic behavior, but Frederick clearly was not able to do that.
His dad is clearly in denial, and he intentionally did not search the one room he would be more
likely to find more poison, and we already know poison was found in there when Molly
found it. And this is because it threatens that denial. Denial is a
defense mechanism, which tells me that Frederick was deeply uncomfortable or anxious with accepting
what his son was capable of. Without having met Frederick and from the little we know about him,
this denial seems driven by guilt over how he abandoned his children with family when he lost
his first wife unexpectedly and the long-term effects that seemingly had on Graham.
So instead of being a parent and imposing consequences and ensuring safety, he's essentially
enabling because he wants to make up for this regret and this guilt and to avoid the obvious.
If I were Molly, provided she too is in denial, I would have searched his room myself
and then brought that evidence to Frederick.
I would also have had the bottle tested
and brought those results to him as well,
if that was possible.
But when confronting anyone in denial like Frederick,
it's especially important to do so
without shaming or blaming them,
since those are the very things
that are driving the denial.
Those are the feelings that he's trying to avoid. It's a very delicate balance, but it's so important to really dig in.
And I can understand not wanting to believe it was intentional, but that still doesn't take away
the risk. The risk was severe. It's enough to warrant tearing up the house to find anything
and everything and then imposing, for lack of a better word, punishments. I don't really like
using that term, but boundaries, rules, regulations, consequences.
Well, by 1962, when Graham was 14, the family's symptoms had worsened
considerably. All except Graham, of course. But his parents linked their medical issues to their age.
So they never found it odd that Graham was the only one who never got sick.
As for Graham's friend, Christopher Williams, he actually managed to recover.
It seemed like Graham gave up on poisoning him, likely because he couldn't watch Christopher
closely enough.
Instead, Graham focused on those closest to him.
Graham's stepmom, Molly, had it the worst. The nausea ruined her appetite,
and she lost weight. She had such bad joint and back pain that she walked with a hunch.
And on Easter Sunday, 1962, she woke up feeling even more awful than usual. Her neck was tight,
her back was killing her, and she felt a strange tingling in her hands and feet.
Unbeknownst to Molly, the night before, Graham had decided slowly poisoning her with antimony
wasn't enough. So he put powdered thallium into her dinner. Thallium is a soft, bluish-white metal.
As a powder, it has no smell or taste, making it easy for
Graham to add to food without being detected. There are a few practical
medical uses for thallium, but up until the 70s, it was most commonly found in
rat poison. When used on humans, large concentrated doses of thallium can cause
temporary hair loss, vomiting, diarrhea, and death.
Even so, Molly managed to crawl out of bed that morning and get some groceries for the
family.
She was still feeling sick when she got back, so she stepped outside for some fresh air.
Graham made her a fresh cup of tea and watched through the window as she drank it on the
porch.
His dad happened to get home right as Molly
was having a seizure. To his shock, Frederick saw Graham watching on dispassionately as Molly
convulsed and thrashed in pain. Frederick called an ambulance, but there was nothing the doctors
could do. Molly died the following afternoon before they could figure out what was wrong with
her, which meant that at just 14 years old, Graham Young was officially a murderer.
On April 21, 1962, 14-year-old Graham Young murdered his stepmother, Molly, after poisoning
her slowly for over a year. The loss crushed his father, Frederick, who now had to bury
a second wife and take care of Graham all on his own. His son didn't exactly make the
grieving process any easier. In the days following Molly's death, Graham repeatedly insisted that she should be cremated.
He claimed it was more hygienic than burial.
Unbeknownst to Frederick, it was actually because Graham wanted Molly's body destroyed
so that the evidence of the poisoning would be lost forever.
Graham's knowledge on how to conceal poison for his victims and then conceal the evidence
even after their death is truly shocking for a 14-year-old, especially when you consider
that this predates the internet.
So his research was all done openly and in libraries.
Well in the end, Graham got what he wanted.
She did get cremated, but likely because of Molly's final wishes rather than any persuasion
on his part.
It was all the same to him, though.
At the funeral, Graham was over the moon.
Knowing he'd gotten away with murder gave him an incredible sense of power.
And that left him wanting more.
There are different types of serial killers,
and each type is driven by different motives.
But the desire to continue killing
is driven by thrill and gratification,
especially when they have already gotten away with it
without any suspicion, which is the case here for Graham,
even though I feel like it's been
blatantly in everyone's faces, which is alarming in this case,
given that he really made no effort to hide his interests
or his methods from any of his victims.
Only a few days after Molly's funeral,
Graham planned his second murder.
This time, he targeted his dad.
He figured that if Frederick died next,
people would be likely to blame it on the shock
and grief of Molly's death.
But Graham didn't want to kill him just yet.
So instead of using thallium like he had on Molly, he decided to go back to using antimony.
One afternoon, Frederick came home for lunch.
He opened a can of corned beef before deciding he wanted some fries to go with it.
So he ran out for a few minutes, leaving Graham alone in the house.
Frederick got the fries, ate his lunch, and went back to work.
An hour later, pain exploded in his stomach.
He vomited again and again.
He'd never had an attack that intense in his life.
He thought he was going to die.
He went home from work early,
and over the next few hours, the agony subsided. By dinnertime, he was almost back to normal.
But a couple of weeks after that, the same thing happened again. This time, Frederick
collapsed and he was sent to the hospital. The doctor there told Frederick he was suffering
from either arsenic or antimony poisoning.
He'd gotten to the hospital in the nick of time.
His liver was permanently damaged, and they believed that one or more dose of poison would
have been enough to kill him.
As the doctor filed out of the room, Graham's family passed worried whispers amongst themselves.
Most of them had never even heard of antimony before.
Luckily, they had an expert among them.
Graham got excited and chimed in to explain
the differences between the two poisons to them.
He just couldn't help himself.
Even if it blew his cover, he had to show off.
Psychopathy is a measurement of traits.
Inflated sense of self, impulsivity, Psychopathy is a measurement of traits.
Inflated sense of self, impulsivity, callousness, and lack of remorse are among those traits.
So is being superficially charming and glib.
And glibness is essentially the portrayal of confidence that is thoughtless.
And this moment, when he bragged about his knowledge of poison, certainly showcases that
trait, in addition to the others I mentioned. But more importantly, he said this right after the doctors identified that Graham's father had been poisoned.
And we know that Graham idolized William Palmer, the doctor who also poisoned. These doctors
identifying the poison might have felt like an acknowledgement for Graham, almost a sense of pride
that someone in the field that he idolizes was able to identify it. It's really hard to say, but it's definitely
egocentric.
Well, shockingly, despite Graham's odd behavior and explaining what these chemicals were,
Frederick still didn't think his son was responsible for poisoning him. He wrote it
off as some kind of accident
or coincidence.
I feel like denial is a baseline state for Frederick at this point.
While Frederick refused to suspect his son, not everyone was so steeped in denial. Lately,
Graham's science teacher had become more suspicious of the boy. He probably didn't
know Graham was experimenting on live rats. but he was aware that his star student was working with dangerous chemicals.
After Frederick was hospitalized, the teacher searched Graham's desk looking for the notebook
his star student used for his experiments. Inside, he found meticulous analyses of poisons
accompanied by reams of tables charting their effects.
He also came across the bottles of illegal poisons Graham had stashed away, along with
drawings and poems about death and destruction.
That's when the science teacher remembered Graham's friend, Christopher Williams, and
his mysterious bouts of vomiting.
He took the circumstantial evidence to the school's headmaster.
They both agreed that they shouldn't go to the police yet.
They didn't want to potentially ruin a bright student's life without knowing he was guilty.
Instead, the two came up with a scheme to trick Graham.
They brought in a psychiatrist and introduced him to Graham as a career counselor.
He investigated Graham's knowledge of poison by pretending the questions were part of an
aptitude test. Clearly, it didn't take much for Graham to open up.
This is perplexing to me. Firstly, I don't understand why the science teacher didn't
just ask Graham himself or speak to him himself. They have a bond.
He believes Graham is a star student.
He would likely be able to elicit information from Graham
or at least try.
I suppose there's always a risk that Graham would be too scared
of losing his science lab privileges if he's honest.
So I could see why maybe that would have been why he avoided it.
But I really don't like that they arranged
this secret interview to trick him because not only does it sound like they weaponized
the profession of psychology or psychiatry, but there is nothing secretive about meeting
with a mental health provider. And by that I mean there must be informed consent. And
given that this is a minor, there must be consent by the parents in most
cases, and that varies by state. That just didn't happen. At least that's how this is these days,
and I'm not sure what the laws and ethics were specifically in 1962, but there cannot be a secret
interview like this nowadays. Informed consent is always required, regardless, and otherwise it's
considered coercive and unethical much
like this sounds like even if it did do what it was intended to do even if we
did get the information needed to secure Graham and reduce harm it was not an
ethical way of going about it. Well interestingly enough obviously
unbeknownst to Graham, the interview sealed his fate.
The discussion unsettled the psychiatrist so much that he went straight from the school
to the police.
Which is exactly what his science teacher could have done all from the beginning.
The next day, May 21, 1962, Detective Inspector Edward Crabb knocked on the young family's
door.
He ransacked Graham's bedroom and found the hidden supply of poison, enough to kill
dozens of people.
When Graham came home from school, he was carrying three additional bottles of poison
in his pockets.
The detective hauled Graham off to jail and subjected the 14-year-old to an overnight
interrogation.
Despite the pressure, Graham denied any part in Molly's death, but there was no getting
out of it.
He'd been caught red-handed.
The morning after his overnight interrogation, Graham freely confessed to poisoning his stepmother
Molly with antimony, though he didn't say anything about the fatal dose of thallium
he'd given her.
Graham also detailed how he'd been steadily poisoning his father, sister, and his friend
Christopher for over a year.
When the detectives told Graham's family what he'd done, they could hardly believe
it.
The entire time he was poisoning them, he didn't seem angry at all. And that's
because he wasn't. Though he resented his parents for hindering his experiments, and
had a petty squabble with his friend, Graham likely didn't poison them out of malice.
It seems like he did it because they were the easiest people for him to observe while
the poison took effect. I disagree with this, actually.
Presentment definitely exists, but so does anger.
If he simply was interested in just observing, then he would not have moved from Antimony
to Thallium with his stepmother and only her.
Instigating a fist fight also is a demonstration of anger.
Only after realizing he would not win a
physical fight with his friend Christopher did he start poisoning him,
almost like these acts were a form of punishment. So I think they were
definitely the easiest people for him to target so that he can observe the
effects, but I do also think that there was anger. Both of these things appear
true to me. Well, Graham was held at the courthouse while he awaited his trial.
Ultimately, he was only charged with poisoning his father, sister, and friend,
since there was no evidence of how his stepmother had died.
On July 6, 1962, Graham pleaded guilty to all counts.
However, he wasn't sent to prison.
Considering his apparent mental distress, Graham was sentenced to 15 years in Broadmoor,
a high-security psychiatric hospital.
It seemed like Graham's terrifying poison spree was at an end.
But in reality, it was only beginning.
In August 1962, a few weeks after beginning his 15-year sentence at Broadmoor Psychiatric
Hospital, 14-year-old Graham Young was examined by several psychiatrists.
The head doctor diagnosed him with sadism, psychopathic disorder,
and schizoid tendencies. Another doctor agreed that he had schizophrenia, while a third diagnosed
him with neurotically engendered psychopathic disorder. I don't know what they were doing back
in 1962. Yes, so different. Neurotically engendered psychopathic disorder. I don't even know
what they're trying to accomplish with that. Nowadays, psychopathy isn't a
diagnosis. Actually, the diagnosis would be antisocial personality disorder.
Psychopathy is a measurement of traits in which antisocial personality disorder
is very severe. So that being said, I definitely agree that he has
psychopathy and I also agree that he has sadistic personalities or sadistic
tendencies. I think I outlined why that is pretty thoroughly so far. I've been
trying to address these traits as we go through the story. Schizoid personality
disorder is a condition
that begins in early adulthood,
and it's characterized by a lack of desire for,
or enjoyment of, close relationships, even with family.
Individuals with this disorder are more aloof,
solitary, disengaged, with limited emotional range,
and are often viewed as eccentric,
all of which definitely seem consistent with Graham.
Though we have seen him as expressive
when he felt scorned by his best friend
and anytime his family threatened his access
to anything related to chemistry,
he is clearly capable of expressing his resentment
and his anger and even pride,
like we saw when he was with his father in the hospital
and his doctor had declared
that he had been poisoned.
However, Graham also had developmental delays, and I wonder if the evaluating psychologists
knew about this.
A rule out nowadays of autism was definitely needed if it wasn't done.
He had delayed speech and language, he had a need for a monotony or repetition, he had
rigid cognitive patterns,
his fixation on his special interests in chemistry and the occult, and his disinterest in imaginative
play with his peers are suggestive of autism, and I think because of the time that was overlooked.
Simply saying he had schizoid tendencies tells me that he didn't fully meet criteria for
that diagnosis, otherwise it would have been schizoid personality disorder.
This also tells me that they didn't consider autism
as a better explanation for his social eccentricities.
But again, autism is not the cause of his poisoning other people.
It is not the cause of him being a serial killer.
That is explained by his sadism and his psychopathy. That being said, I don't see
anything here that supports a diagnosis of schizophrenia. There has been no mention of
hallucinations or delusions, and overall, from what we know, he is functioning well. He was the star
student, according to his science teacher. We see just how resourceful he is in obtaining knowledge,
plants, chemicals.
There's been no mention of a lack of goal-directed activity
or poor self-care.
In the absence of psychopathic tendencies,
I don't see psychosis, but I do agree that there is sadism
and that there is psychopathy.
Luckily, Graham was kept in what was called Ward 1, the highest security wing in the hospital,
although he did have some small freedoms.
He was allowed to decorate his room and plastered the walls with pictures of infamous Nazis,
his second-greatest obsession after chemistry.
He painted a skull and crossbones on his tea pot and
wrote the chemical formulas of poisons on his food containers.
Nowadays, there is no way he would have been allowed to decorate his room with anything
related to Nazi or Nazi Germany. That would be strictly prohibited.
Graham also had unrestricted access to the hospital's library, where he was able to
expand his knowledge of poisons.
When he was bored, he entertained himself by trying to frighten the other patients.
He liked to tell them how he could extract cyanide from the laurel plants in the hospital's
yard.
So firstly, him wanting to frighten other patients is him again seeking psychological
gratification and thrills and causing harm and fear in other people.
So that is still ongoing.
But also it seems that no matter what he does
or where he goes, every environment is enabling
his interest in poison.
Yes, he seeks it out.
He finds it, he's, yeah.
He finds it and it just allows it to continue.
His behavior certainly didn't win him any friends
at Broadmoor, and he didn't have many visitors either.
After what he did to his father and sister,
Frederick and Winifred refused to come see him,
understandably, but Graham wasn't completely alone.
He had an elderly uncle who came by
to see him from time to time.
However, Graham spent his time with him
by constantly discussing his off-putting interests. Uns, Graham spent his time with him by constantly discussing his
off-putting interests. Unsurprisingly, his uncle eventually decided to stay away as well.
It seemed to be the right decision. Only a month after Graham was admitted to Broadmoor,
another patient, John Barrage, suddenly collapsed and started convulsing. He died soon afterward,
and the coroner determined the cause to be cyanide
poisoning. Considering Graham's history and his obsession with cyanide, he was immediately linked
to John's death. However, the police never found any direct evidence he was responsible.
Even so, there were plenty of rumors that he'd killed John Barrage. Graham became a sort of boogeyman.
The nurses reportedly joked with patients that they'd let Graham brew their tea if they
misbehaved.
Graham didn't mind being the butt of their jokes.
In fact, he barely registered the people around him.
Instead, he filled his time by learning German so he could read books about Nazis in their
original language.
He started talking to himself, impersonating Hitler and going on long, unhinged rants.
He made a brass swastika in the craft room and wore it around his neck 24-7.
His behavior was particularly turbulent throughout 1962, his first year at the hospital.
But after about a year at
Broadmoor, Graham began to feel more at home and settled down a bit. He became
friendly with a couple of the nurses. They let their guard down so much, they
let him make their coffee a few times.
What? Once again, he is being underestimated and that superficial charm
and glibness has worked
yet again.
Yep, huge mistake.
Graham allegedly laced the brew with Harpick, a toilet cleaner that contains hydrochloric
acid.
Luckily, the nurses didn't suffer any major injuries, likely because they immediately
vomited after drinking the poisoned coffee.
But even though they suspected Graham did it, it doesn't seem like he was punished.
Shortly afterward, his case came up for review for the first time, almost like a parole hearing.
A tribunal convened to discuss his possible release, and his father, Frederick, even drove
down to attend the meeting. It was the first time Graham had seen his dad in over a year, but it wasn't a happy
reunion.
Frederick only made the trip to argue passionately against his son's release.
He told the doctors he didn't think his son should ever be allowed out of Broadmoor.
Unsurprisingly, Graham's petition for release was denied.
When anyone is being assessed for discharge,
whether it's a hospital discharge like this
or even a discharge from incarceration
on parole or probation, we are doing risk assessments.
We are looking to see what progress has been made
since they've been detained,
how they maximize their time during their detainment,
how they participated in treatment
or any rehabilitation efforts,
and what their plans are if they're released.
And from there, we assess what risk they still have
that they can pose to the public.
Past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior,
especially when it comes to risk assessment.
And since Graham has been detained, he's continuing to fixate on poisons.
He continues his fixation on Nazis by decorating, reading about it, learning German,
and he tried to poison nurses while he was there.
This suggests, very obviously, that he not only hasn't learned anything, but that
he is not amenable to consequences. He lacks remorse. He has done very little to reduce
his risk factors for future violence and therefore would not be considered a candidate for discharge.
If I had assessed him and I knew about all this, there's absolutely no way I would ever
feel comfortable co-signing a discharge. We have an obligation to make sure that they are not a
danger to others or the public, and if they are, we have to do what's necessary to maintain public
safety. So his denial was absolutely appropriate. Despite all of that, Graham seemed legitimately stunned that he
wasn't released. The tribunal, I think, was a major wake-up call for him, and for
the first time he realized he'd be stuck in Broadmoor for 14 more years if he
didn't straighten up. And so this is how he becomes more versatile and more
chameleon-like. This is how he learns.
In order to get what I want, I have to play the part.
This is where he's going to learn this.
So after that, his behavior completely changed.
He stopped impersonating Hitler and talked less about poisons.
In fact, he went days without speaking at all.
He did become more open with his psychologists, however.
Overall, the changes seemed to be
for the better. About eight years into his sentence, the doctors at Broadmoor believed
he'd been fully rehabilitated. So he's now in his early 20s. He spoke more optimistically
about his future, and they believed his obsession with poison had diminished. Given his natural
intelligence, the doctors hoped he might
soon be ready to leave the hospital and go to college. With that in mind, the hospital granted
him a supervised, week-long release in 1970 when Graham was 23. His older sister Winifred was in
her early 30s at the time and was married with two kids. Unlike Graham's father, Winifred decided to forgive her brother and let him stay with
her family.
Clearly he was on his best behavior, and at the end of the week Winifred gave the doctors
a positive report.
She said Graham behaved normally and seemed capable of handling everyday tasks on his
own.
With Winifred's endorsement, Graham finally got his wish.
A year later, in February of 1971, the 23-year-old was officially released from Broadmoor.
Not everyone agreed with the hospital's decision, though.
The nurses still remembered Graham's attempt to poison them.
One of them even claimed she overheard him vowing to
kill one person for every year he'd spent in Broadmoor. But they never reported their concerns
to the doctors. Although the nurses thought Graham would go back to poisoning people,
they didn't think he'd try to kill. Once again, they'd underestimated Graham,
and he'd soon show the world just how dangerous
he really was.
After being released from England's Broadmoor Asylum in February 1971, 23-year-old Graham
Young got to work making up for lost time.
During the week, he lived with his older sister Winifred and her family and attended a training
program designed to help him find employment.
On weekends, he stayed with his aunt and uncle in London.
Their house was less full and Graham enjoyed the extra privacy.
It didn't take him long to familiarize himself with the area, especially the nearby pharmacies.
But getting restricted chemicals was more of a headache than before.
Although he was old enough to buy them now, Graham also needed a signed letter from a
registered authority, like a university.
Graham didn't let that stop him, though.
It's not clear how, but he managed to
swipe some stationery with the local college's letterhead on top. He reportedly used the paper
to forge a letter of permission. And just like that, he could get almost any poison his heart desired.
So this again just shows the psychopathic traits that he has because this shows cunning,
it shows manipulativeness, it shows versatility, it shows his ability to be like a chameleon.
This is what's driving this behavior.
And this is, he's also got the fixation on poisons, which is a special interest that
I think started at a, because of a very young age that was more related to autism,
but the psychopathy and the sadistic side of him
is what's driving this.
He has just become much more of a versatile criminal.
I mean, look at the resourcefulness he has.
Look how well he is able to find any workaround
to any barrier to getting what he wants.
It just really speaks to the level
of psychopathy here.
I'm sure Graham was tempted to poison his sister again, but eight years in a psychiatric
hospital had taught him to be more cautious. Instead, he befriended a man in his training
program named Trevor Sparks. The two of them started going to a pub together and spent long nights chatting in Trevor's room
over bottles of wine.
Graham usually handled pouring the glasses
and it wasn't too long before Trevor got sick.
First it was abdominal pain and vomiting.
A week later, diarrhea and groin pain
were added to the list.
Finally, his limbs started twitching erratically during
a soccer game, and he was rushed to the doctor. Trevor saw specialist after specialist, but
none of them could figure out what was wrong with him. His condition continued to deteriorate
for weeks, but he was eventually saved by pure chance.
In April 1971, three months after Graham's release, he scored
a job in a nearby village called Bovington and moved away. Trevor's life
was spared, although the poison had left him so weak he never played soccer again.
Not that Graham seemed to care. He was overjoyed to be starting a new life in
Bovington. He would be working at a store owned by the local camera manufacturer.
The company, called John Hadland Laboratories, made high-grade camera lenses.
One of the chemicals used to make the lenses was his favorite poison, thallium.
But for Graham, the most exciting part of this new chapter was the room he was able to rent.
For the first time in his life, the 23-year-old had a place to himself and was completely
unsupervised.
In no time, his shelves were lined with bottles of deadly poisons.
Any spare wall space was filled with posters of Nazis.
He started work in May of 1971. His new co-workers tried to get to know
him, but Graham was hard to read. Some days he bantered with them like a close friend
and even bordered on charming. On other days, he barely spoke at all. Overall, he was usually
standoffish unless they got him talking about chemistry or World War II. OK, the fact that he's renting a room alarms me because that, to me,
I'm picturing that he's living with another family, but just in a room,
which means whoever he's living among is now at risk.
But this hot and cold pattern here with his colleagues
is that push and pull between psychopathy and possible autism.
On the one hand, he has always been socially awkward since he was a young boy and unsure how to relate to his peers unless,
of course, it was regarding his special interests. But on the other hand, his psychopathic traits
allow him to be charming and glib for secondary gain. It wouldn't surprise me that they get the charming side of
him when he wants something from them, whether it's conversation or help at
work, but then get the more aloof side of him when he doesn't have anything that
he wants from them. And he knows, like again, he learns more chameleon-like
tendencies when he was in Broadmoor. He knew that he had to play a certain part
in order to be released, in order to be looked at asmoor. He knew that he had to play a certain part in order to be released,
in order to be looked at as rehabilitated.
He knew he had to play that same part
with his sister and her family.
He knows how to play the part when he needs to.
And he strengthened that while he was there.
Graham didn't get too close to anyone at his new job,
but he did strike up a casual friendship
with his supervisor,
59-year-old Bob Eggle. Bob had served in the British military, and Graham relentlessly hounded
him for war stories. The two of them started spending more time together, and Bob became
Graham's next target. His first attack of stomach pains and diarrhea occurred about a month after Graham started work. It went on and off for a few days, until it got so bad, Bob decided
to take a vacation.
A few weeks later, on June 28, 1971, Bob returned from his time off, feeling much better. But
the next day, after only a few hours at the store, he took a sudden turn
for the worse. The ends of his fingers started to go numb, and Bob went home in a panic.
His wife took him for a walk, hoping some fresh air would do him good. But Bob couldn't
even make it down the street. By the next day, it felt like someone was jamming nails
directly into his spine. Bob was rushed to the hospital.
Unfortunately, the doctors there couldn't figure out what was wrong.
Paralysis spread from Bob's fingers down his entire body.
Though he was completely conscious and could understand others, he lost his ability to
speak.
Graham watched his new friend's health decline as much as he could.
From the outside, his interest looked like concern.
He pestered the photography store's owner almost every day for updates on Bob's condition.
He phoned the hospital several times, trying to glean as much information as he could.
He even tried to talk to Bob's doctor directly. Throughout it all, Graham was careful to make his inquiries look like innocent compassion.
But when he heard that Bob died after a week or so in the hospital, Graham was euphoric.
Up to that point, he'd poisoned plenty of people, but he'd only outright killed his
stepmother and possibly the other inmate at Broadmoor.
So after Bob's death, for the first time in ten years, Graham felt a familiar rush
of power.
The best part for him was that no one suspected him.
Even a team of trained medical professionals couldn't figure Graham out.
They believed Bob had died from a natural neurological condition.
Upon hearing that, Graham must have felt like a genius.
The pride that he's feeling and that he believes he outsmarted the very people around him directly
stems from his psychopathy yet again. It speaks to that grandiosity, that inflated sense of self-worth, and how accomplished he feels in his
cunningness and his manipulative effort.
When Graham learned about Bob's death, the reason why he was euphoric is because it gave him his ultimate thrill.
It was a success. It was an accomplishment. It was another way to stroke his ego and
believe in his own sense of brilliance.
And Bob Eggles' death was more than just a personal triumph for Graham. After Bob's
passing, Graham got his job as the photography store's supervisor.
Now he's being promoted. Everyone is overlooking and underestimating this man.
I don't understand it." The calm lasted for a few months, but in late September 1971, another employee named Fred
Biggs had to leave work early due to vicious stomach pains. A few weeks later, he was hospitalized.
He wasn't the only one. Around the same time, two of Graham's other co-workers suddenly came down with a mysterious
illness.
That made three employees in the hospital.
By this point, word of the unexplained illnesses had spread throughout Hadland Laboratories.
Concerned about the health of its employees, the firm's managing director called in a
medical officer to help.
Finally, someone would be looking into what the employees had started calling the Bovingdon
Bug.
The only question was whether they could do anything about it.
And if they could figure out, Graham Young was the culprit. In November of 1971, a local medical officer named Dr. Robert Hind began his investigation
of the Bovingdon Bug plaguing Hadland Laboratories.
He had two initial theories.
Either the water supply was polluted, or that work at a nearby airfield had spread radiation
poisoning.
After conducting some interviews, Dr. Hind noticed that all of the victims experienced
their first attack following a drink of either tea or coffee.
That made him favor his first theory.
There was something wrong with the water. While Dr. Hines started running tests, 24-year-old Graham Young was monitoring the victims he'd sent to the hospital.
This urge to watch his victims suffer again is his pathology speaking.
He is thrill-seeking and he's power-oriented and he has sadism. He doesn't derive physical or sexual gratification
from his actions, he derives psychological gratification. And for most of his life,
he was able to get away with this, with many of the people around him underestimating him,
like we've been talking about, or minimizing what he was doing. This started with the chemist,
who thought because he was so smart, he had to be of age to purchase the chemicals and didn't even ID him.
Then it was his own family who despite all evidence in front of them remained
in denial and enabled this behavior. When he was at Broadmoor he was allowed to
continue fixating on his interest with unrestricted access and even the nurses
underestimated him. Then his own sister chose to forgive him and believe he had changed and was no longer a threat.
All of this just reinforces that grandiosity
and strengthens his arrogance.
And poisoning all of these people at once
was just amplifying the thrill for him.
He has now unsupervised and not contained.
Yes, it's just all of that is just building up this arrogance.
And even his prying seems very arrogant, finding out how things were going and how his victims
were affected.
But he got up to speed on how his victims were doing.
And the two who'd gone to the hospital after Fred Biggs were starting to feel better, but
they were still in extreme pain and had permanent nerve damage.
However, Fred was too far gone. Chest pains and trouble walking evolved into a total
central nervous system shutdown. Sadly, Fred's doctors weren't able to counteract the poison,
and he passed away. That made him Graham's third confirmed murder victim.
That made him Graham's third confirmed murder victim. The news of his death sparked more panic at the laboratory.
After exhaustive testing to find the cause of the Bovington Bug, Dr. Hind was left scratching
his head.
He couldn't find any trace of pollution in the water, nor could he detect any radiation
coming from the airfield.
He also considered the correct cause heavy metal
poisoning, but he didn't think the victims were being deliberately dosed with it, and
since they all had different job duties, he couldn't think of a way that they'd all
be exposed at the same time.
The other workers at Hadlands started to lose their patience with the lack of progress.
Many of them threatened to quit.
It got so bad, another physician who worked with Dr. Hind called a full staff meeting.
He urged the workers to remain calm as the medical team worked to solve the problem.
His plea seemed to work.
After a few panicked whispers among the staff, there was a long silence.
Finally, someone spoke from the back of the room.
It was Graham Young.
He wanted to know why heavy metal poisoning was ruled out.
He insisted that it fit the situation best by far.
After months of careful planning, Graham basically blew his own cover.
What was he thinking?
Graham has this pattern of grandstanding.
He would show off his poisons to his peers at school.
He would leave it blatantly labeled at home.
Graham learned to contain this behavior like we talked about when he was at
Broadmoor. But now he's living alone without anyone
containing him. And that impulsive behavior and grandiosity has gone unchecked.
He is in a room with doctors, once again,
who ruled out heavy metal poisoning,
and this probably angered him because those doctors failed to recognize his,
and I quote, brilliance, because I'm pretty sure that's how he felt about himself.
Again, poisoning is something that is often overlooked and hard to
identify. So if anyone's going to identify it, it would be physicians, right? And if physicians,
whom are a profession that he idolizes, if they're not recognizing it, then who will?
That is his arrogance and his desire possibly for infamy and being recognized.
possibly for infamy and being recognized. We see this before with different serial killers who become reckless when they feel invincible.
Even when the doctor tried to move on, Graham refused to let the subject go.
He grilled the doctor about his co-workers' specific symptoms and repeatedly insisted
that the heavy metal poisoning explained everything.
The doctor didn't know how to respond to Graham's onslaught.
He called an abrupt end to the meeting, but caught up with Graham afterward to continue their discussion in private.
It didn't take much to convince him that Graham was suspiciously knowledgeable about poison.
As soon as they finished speaking, the doctor asked the owner of the lab, John Hadland,
about Graham's medical background.
John didn't know too much about it, but he brought the doctor's concerns to the authorities.
After looking into the matter further, the police realized that the Bovington Bug had
appeared soon after Graham was hired.
It didn't take them long to learn about Graham's stint in Broadmoor and the
reasons behind it. All of a sudden, everything made tragic, frightening sense.
Graham was arrested on November 20, 1971. As the 24-year-old was placed in handcuffs,
he reportedly asked, which one is it you're doing me for?
Clearly, he wasn't surprised by the arrest.
He almost seemed to be expecting it.
Even so, Graham initially insisted he was innocent.
But his protests rang pretty hollow, especially after the cops searched the room he was renting.
As we mentioned before, the shelves were filled to the brim with poisons.
Swastikas and books about Hitler were scattered across the floor. Scariest of all were Graham's drawings,
which depicted balding men in various stages of decay alongside sketches of poison bottles,
graveyards, and skulls.
These drawings are very significant. I would be interested to know if these men in the drawings
were of the same likeness of his actual victims and were his actual victims. Graham already has
a history of documenting the process of poisoning and the symptoms that he was observing, but that
was when he lived with his victims. So he got to see those victims all day, nearly every day,
and had access to observing their illness progression.
These are coworkers.
He doesn't have that same regular access,
especially if they were all working in different areas
or had different job duties.
So the closest thing to that would be these drawings.
It represents that part of his methods
that thrill him the most.
The observation of them, the torturing,
the thrill of that,
and everything he was putting them through.
Is it common for people with violent urges
to express their thoughts by drawing?
It feels like they need to let it out somehow.
It's sort of like he didn't really have any friends,
anyone to tell.
In a sense, I would say the most notorious serial killer that people would know who did
draw their victims was Samuel Little.
He drew them from memory and he drew them for psychological gratification, which is
the exact same thing that Graham is doing.
He wants to, again, I don't know if these pictures were of the actual victims.
I don't know if it was because he couldn't watch them.
So he was trying to mimic what he would otherwise
be observing through these drawings
as the illness progressed.
Or if it was planning of these victims,
like planning it out, seeing what it would look like
before he did it.
It's no really way to know, but if I was to guess,
I would say that this was
his way of documenting the progress of his poisoning in those very people at work. The
reason he does this is because it allows him to relive the torture, the death. It's a form
of a memento.
So all the poison bottles and jagged scrawlings painted a pretty clear picture, but they were
nothing compared to the ultimate evidence, Graham's personal diary.
It contained detailed descriptions of the poisons he used on his co-workers, alongside
precise dosages and the resulting symptoms they displayed.
Graham insisted the diary was the fictional blueprint for a novel
he planned to write that obviously didn't fly with detectives, and eventually Graham
gave up his flimsy pretense. He couldn't resist showing off to the authorities and
ended up admitting to everything.
At the end of the lengthy interrogation, a detective asked Graham the ultimate question. Why? Graham
thought for a moment before responding, I suppose I had ceased to see them as people,
at least part of me had. They were simply guinea pigs.
On July 19, 1972, 24-year-old Graham Young was charged with the murders of Bob Egel and Fred Biggs,
as well as the attempted murders of the two other co-workers.
He pleaded not guilty, but it wasn't because he thought he stood a chance of being exonerated.
It was because he wanted to draw out the trial for as long as possible so the press could
chronicle every lurid detail of his case. That was
part of his ultimate goal to become one of the most famous poisoners in history
and in order to get famous he had to be found out first. Yeah he definitely had
that desire for infamy and to understand where that desire for infamy or
notoriety came from we have to look at
what influenced and inspired him.
And the reality was he idolized William Palmer, who was a poisoner, and he took a special
interest in the Nazi party.
It seems he idolized Palmer because of his intellect and ingenuity.
And he likely idolized the Nazi party because of their notoriety, especially when he made that statement to his stepmother Molly about wishing he could have been born to enjoy World
War II.
That's right.
Graham had poor social skills since he was young and was largely rejected by his peers,
on top of which he did not know how to value others, which not only allowed him to view
people as guinea pigs, but his idols also viewed people
and reduced people to something similar, a vermin, which kind of rationalized that
for him. He craved power and control and often serial killers who are power
oriented believe that notoriety is synonymous with power. So Graham wanted
to be recognized for his chemical brilliance,
his cunning behavior, and his criminal mastermind. And to some degree, it worked because here we are
covering his case. Well, he got his notoriety. He had his day in court, got through the trial,
and eventually Graham was found guilty. The judge sentenced him to life in prison.
Thanks to the publicity that surrounded his trial, public support grew for additional
regulations on poisons.
This led to the landmark Poisons Act of 1972 in Britain, which increased the requirements
for purchasing toxic chemicals. On August 1, 1990, Graham Young passed away of a
heart attack at the age of 42. With his considerable intellect, Graham could have changed the world.
But instead of using his hard-earned knowledge to help others, Graham used it to harm them.
And sadly, the people closest to him ended up suffering for it.
Thanks so much for listening. We'll be back next Monday as we explore the mind of a new
serial killer.
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Mind of a Serial Killer, a Crime House original powered by Pave Studios, is executive produced
by Max Cutler.
This episode of Mind of a Serial Killer was produced by Ron Shapiro, directed by Stacey
Warringer, written by Terrell Wells, edited by Alex Benedon, fact-checked by Sarah Tardiff
and Hunnia Saeed, sound designed by Carey Murphy,
and included production assistance from Sarah Carroll.
Mind of a Serial Killer is hosted by Vanessa Richardson and Dr. Tristan Engels.