MrBallen’s Medical Mysteries - Fan Favorite | Needle in a Haystack
Episode Date: August 28, 2025Following the epic crossover between MrBallen’s Medical Mysteries and Redacted: Declassified Mysteries, hosted by Luke Lamana, we’re revisiting some of our favorite episodes where the lin...e between medical mystery and dark conspiracy becomes blurred.A little girl falls prey to a disease so deadly and rare, the CDC fears it might be an act of bioterrorism. Investigators scramble to find the source, but the answer comes from somewhere nobody was expecting.Be the first to know about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterFollow MrBallen's Medical Mysteries on Amazon Music, the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes publish for free every Tuesday. Prime members can listen to new episodes early and ad-free on Amazon Music. Or, you can listen episodes early and ad-free on Wondery+. Start your free trial in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, Spotify or by visiting https://wondery.com/links/mrballens-medical-mysteries/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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In August of 2021, a young woman in Georgia stood on the street watching an amazement as people in white hazmat suits carried dozens of items out of her house inside a plastic Ziploc bag.
It looked like her beloved home was now being used as the set for a science fiction film.
But the woman knew that the unfolding disaster in front of her was all too real.
Her daughter had recently become infected by a deadly, mysterious bacteria, and nobody had any idea where it had come from.
So not only were this woman and her family at risk, but thousands of other people could be too.
That's why, on this warm summer afternoon, officials from the Centers for Disease Control, or CDC,
for short, were scouring this woman's property, gathering samples of soil, plants, food, and
other household items for their laboratories to analyze. As the woman stood in front of her house
out on the road, she closed her eyes and prayed that the CDC's search of her home would be
successful. Something in her house had already nearly killed her daughter. If they couldn't find
the source of the bacteria, her home would continue to be a danger to the people she loved the most.
It's your man, Nick Cannon, I'm here to bring you my new podcast, Nick Cannon at night.
Every week, I'm bringing out some of my celebrity friends and the best experts in the business to answer your most intimate relationship questions.
So don't be shy. Join the conversation and head over to YouTube to watch Nick Cannon at night or subscribe on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcast.
What if I told you that the crime of the century is happening right now?
From coast to coast, people are fleeing flames, wind and water.
Nature is telling us, I can't take this anymore.
These are the stories we need to be telling about our changing planet.
Stories of scams, murders, and cover-ups,
and the things we're doing to either protect the Earth or destroy it.
This is Lawless Planet.
Follow Lawless Planet on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts.
From Ballin Studios and Wondry, I'm Mr.
And this is Mr. Ballin's medical mysteries, where every week we will explore a new baffling mystery
originating from the one place we all can't escape, our own bodies.
So if you like today's story, the next time the follow button is not home,
release a family of wild raccoons into their attic.
This episode is called Needle in a Haystack.
Josie Baker smiled as she watched her four-year-old daughter Lila hunt for frogs near the stream behind their house.
Josie's other daughter, one-year-old Adelaide, gripped her mother's hand as she wobbled forward to see what her big sister was up to.
On this sunny afternoon in late March of 2021, the 24-year-old mother felt like her dreams were actually coming true.
Just over a year ago, Josie had moved into this small house in the farmlands north of Dallas, Texas with her family.
They all loved the fresh air and wide open space, and little Lila had become close friends
with the cows that grazed in the pasture next door.
Josie shared her daughter's love of animals.
She actually worked as a veterinary assistant in a local animal hospital, and the family
had even taken in a pet raccoon named Jinks.
Josie checked her watch and realized her husband, Dustin, would be home soon from his job as
a firefighter and paramedic, and so she needed to start fixing dinner.
She called out to Lila and scooped up Baby Adelaide,
then the whole crew headed for the back door of their house.
But the moment Josie stepped inside the house,
she was overwhelmed by a strong floral smell,
like someone nearby was wearing way too much perfume.
Josie held her nose and peeked inside the kitchen.
And it was a total mess.
Cabinet doors were wide open,
and it looked like the food inside had been hurled across the room.
Boxes of cereal and bags of chips were ripped open
and spilled all over the counter and the floor,
The cabinet under the kitchen sink was also open
and broken bottles of dishwashing detergent
and other cleaning supplies were spread out all over the place.
And when Josie looked closely, she saw something else,
tiny animal footprints tracking the mess out of the room.
Now Josie knew exactly what had happened to her kitchen.
Jinks, their raccoon, had ransacked it.
Jinks was supposed to live in an enclosure in the living room,
but clearly he'd escaped and decided to have some fun in the kitchen.
Josie ultimately found Jinks hiding under the bed in Lila's bedroom
and while she was mad, she couldn't really stay mad at him as he stared out at her with his little
black cute eyes. And so Josie coaxed him out with some food before picking him up and returning
him to his pen. As she swept up the broken glass in the kitchen, Josie felt like she actually
had kind of dodged a bullet here. Because, you know, this could have been a whole lot worse if maybe
her girls had come into the house ahead of her and maybe got cut on all the shards of glass lying
around. And so as she dumped the trash into a wastebasket, she had to admit to herself that
all in all, the whole scene in front of her was actually kind of funny. You know, while the house
may be a total mess and a total pain to clean up, one thing was certain, their little raccoon jinks,
after breaking into all the cleaning supplies, was now the sweetest smelling raccoon in the state
of Texas. Two weeks later, after tucking in the girls for the night, Josie walked back out
to the living room to snuggle up on the couch with her husband Dustin.
But when she stepped into the room, she found Dustin standing in the corner,
staring into Jinks's enclosure.
Josie was curious, and so she walked over to see what he was looking at,
and when she looked down, she gasped.
Jinks was acting so weird.
The raccoon swayed and staggered as he walked around his enclosure,
almost like he was drunk.
He also kept bumping into objects and walls,
which made Josie think maybe his vision was impaired.
Because of her job as a veterinary technician, Josie had been around plenty of sick animals,
but Jinx's condition was something she'd actually never seen before in any other animal.
So she told Dustin that she would bring Jinks with her to the animal hospital first thing in the morning.
The next morning, Josie stood by while one of the vets at her hospital examined her raccoon.
But after a few minutes, the vet turned to Josie and admitted that they too were totally.
stumped by whatever was bothering Jinks. They didn't understand what it was.
Josie agreed that the best course of action now would be to keep Jinks under observation at the
hospital and run some additional tests. But over the course of his stay, nothing that
veterinarians did seemed to help Jinks, and in fact, Jinks just seemed to get sicker and sicker
until he basically just lay in his cage panting with his tongue out. And then two days
after he had come to the hospital, Jinks died. Josie was devastated.
But she was far more concerned about how her daughter Lila would react to Jinks's passing.
She was going to be absolutely heartbroken.
The day after Jinks's death, the Baker family walked solemnly down the path behind their house towards the stream,
and they buried Jinks under a tree.
At the end of the service, Josie kneeled down and helped a very sad Lila plant flowers
atop her beloved pet's final resting place.
A few weeks later, on the afternoon of May 29,
Josie sat on her living room couch right next to Lila, who for the past couple of days
had been vomiting and running a fever. Her pediatrician had said that it was probably just the
stomach flu and recommended rest and fluids. So Josie had pulled together all these pillows and
blankets and put them on the couch to let her daughter relax and watch TV while she recuperated.
However, as Josie looked at her sleeping daughter beside her, she felt increasingly worried.
Josie had been carefully following the doctor's instructions, but Lila's fever really hadn't
broken yet, and she was still struggling to keep her food down. Lila had been sleeping for a
couple of hours now, so Josie gently placed her hand on Lila's forehead and whispered to her
to wake up so she could drink some water. But as Lila slowly opened her eyes, Josie could see
that they looked glazed over and unfocused. Josie tried to help Lila sit up, but the little
girl could barely lift her head. Josie immediately wrapped her daughter in a blanket and carried
her to the car. Her barely conscious four-year-old needed to see a doctor right away.
Later that day, Josie climbed out of an ambulance outside of the Children's Hospital in Dallas, Texas,
while orderlies ran to help unload Lila from the back. The doctor at their local hospital,
where Josie had gone first, had told Josie that based on her daughter's condition,
you know, this local hospital could not help her. They needed specialized care.
So Lila had been rushed in an ambulance to a major pediatric hospital instead.
Once Lila was unloaded from the ambulance, she was immediately taken up to the intensive care unit.
At the same time, a doctor named Catherine Meryl met with Josie in the hallway to explain
what they were going to do to treat her daughter.
Dr. Meryl said that Lila's white blood cell count was very high, which was a strong indicator
that Lila was fighting off an infection.
Josie listened carefully as the doctor laid out the range of tests they planned to run
to try to figure out where this infection came from
and where it was located in Lila's body.
Dr. Meryl also explained that while the testing was in progress,
they would also be administering antibiotics to Lila
to help her fight off whatever this infection was.
As they talked, Josie could hear her daughter throwing up again,
so Josie quickly thanked the doctor and rushed back to her.
her daughter's bedside.
Over the next couple of days, the doctors and nurses and medical team ran dozens of tests
on Lila, but unfortunately, the results of those tests didn't really tell them anything.
All the tests could confirm was that whatever was going on with Lila was not one of the
common suspects, like bacterial meningitis or a foodborne disease like Salmonella.
And as each test came back basically showing nothing, Dr.
Meryl became more and more confused. Meanwhile, Lila's condition grew even worse. Her frequent
vomiting caused her to have trouble breathing, which led to low oxygen levels in her blood. So Dr. Meryl
decided to insert a breathing tube through Lila's nose and down her windpipe, requiring the
little girl to be heavily sedated. Lila's illness consumed the entire family, as first Josie
and then Dustin, took leave from their jobs so they could spend more time at the hospital with their
girl. But day after day, no new information came in and Lila kept getting worse. Not only was she
completely incapable of holding her head up now, she couldn't even walk or speak. And so it wasn't
long before Josie and Dustin began to fear the worst that they might never get their sweet
energetic four-year-old back. One night in June, nearly two weeks after Lila got sick,
Dr. Merrill entered Lila's hospital room and found her parents at her bedside as usual.
After giving Lila an extensive examination, Dr. Meryl thought that this infection was actually
attacking Lila's brain and nervous system.
In order to find out for sure, Lila's doctors would perform a brain biopsy,
which meant they would cut a small opening in Lila's skull to acquire tiny samples of her brain
tissue. Josie thought that sounded like a very intense operation for such a young girl in such a
weakened state already, but the brain biopsy was also their best remaining hope to find out what was
going on with her. So Josie and Dustin looked at each other for a moment and it was clear they
both understood they didn't really have a choice here. They had to do this. So they told Dr. Merrill
to go ahead with the procedure.
A few days later, Josie sat by Lila's hospital bed and read to her from her favorite book
while Dustin napped nearby in a chair. Lila was still not able to speak or walk, but she had
made it through the brain biopsy just fine and was actually starting to show small signs
of improvement. And so Josie was actually feeling optimistic for the first time in a while.
But moments later, Dr. Merrill entered and pulled up a chair to speak with the parents. The results
had come back from the brain biopsy, and there was finally an answer to what was ailing their
daughter. But the answer was not a good one. Dr. Merrill said that Lila was suffering from a rare
and potentially deadly bacterial infection known as meliodosis. The doctor explained that
once this bacteria invades a person's system, it causes pus-filled abscesses in whatever
tissue it reaches, which is why nearly 40% of melioidosis patients die. And in Lysol,
Lila's case, the bacteria had entered her brain and nervous system, which was why she was having
so much trouble moving and speaking, and seemed very disoriented. All of this was obviously
totally devastating to Josie and Dustin, but the doctor told the very upset parents that there
actually was reason for hope. Now that they actually knew which bacteria was making their
daughter sick, they could give her the right antibiotics to help Lila try to defeat the infection
once and for all.
Two weeks after Lila's brain biopsy,
a woman in her 20s named Julia Petrus
arrived at the Centers for Disease Control,
or CDC for short, in Atlanta, Georgia,
for her first day as an epidemic intelligence officer.
For years, Julia had worked as a nurse
providing health services to refugees in Bangladesh and Uganda.
More recently, she provided medical care
for homeless people in Santa Barbara, California,
in the early stages of the COVID pandemic.
And now she was excited to take on a new challenge.
As an epidemic intelligence officer,
Julia was now basically a disease detective,
who would investigate mysterious outbreaks
and do her best to prevent the spread of infections.
As Julia sat down at her desk and checked her email inbox for the first time,
she could see that she was already invited to a Zoom meeting
that was starting in just a few minutes.
CDC officials would be briefing the FDC.
officials would be briefing the FBI about a recent outbreak of meliodosis, a very rare bacterial infection.
Julia was familiar with meliodosis, but she didn't understand why this disease would involve the
FBI, an agency that investigates crimes. But regardless, moments later, Julia clicked the link on her
calendar and logged into the Zoom meeting. After a quick round of introductions, a CDC official
began the briefing with a discussion of the case of four-year-old Lila Baker,
who was still in the Dallas Children's Hospital suffering from melioidosis.
Julia also learned from this meeting that two other cases of malioidosis
had been reported in the U.S. in the last four months.
There was a woman in Kansas who died nine days after being admitted to the hospital,
and a man in Minnesota who was still fighting his symptoms.
But there was something strange about all three of these cases.
Malioidosis was caused by a bacteria that, for all intents and purposes, did not exist in the
United States. The bacteria was mostly found in Southeast Asia and Northern Australia.
Usually, the only way a person in the United States got meliodosis was by traveling to a region
of the world where the bacteria was present. But none of these three patients had traveled
outside the United States any time recently. Julia could understand why the CDC wanted to get to
the bottom of this mystery, it obviously was in their purview, but she still wasn't sure why the FBI
was on this call with them. And it was at this point that one of her colleagues reminded the other
attendees on the meeting that this bacteria was so toxic that it was classified as a tier one
select agent, and the federal government viewed it as a potential weapon if it got into the wrong
hands. And so at this point, the official said the CDC could not rule out the possibility that this
meliodosis bacteria had been released into the United States intentionally. Meaning this could potentially
be an act of bioterrorism, which is why the FBI was now being briefed up on the situation.
Julia was absolutely shocked at this revelation. This was quite an assignment for her first day on the job,
and it wasn't even lunchtime.
Before her wild first day at the CDC was over, Julia had ordered DNA analysis from the bacteria
that was collected from the three patients. And within days, the results confirmed exactly
what the CDC had feared. The three samples were genetically identical, meaning they had all come
from the same place. And further investigation revealed to Julia and her colleagues that this
particular strain of bacteria could be traced to Southern Asia. Julia's next question was how did
the bacteria move all the way from Asia to three separate households in the United States? Had it come
here on an infected plant or animal and soil or a commercial product? Or could it actually have been
spread by a bioterrorist who just wanted to hurt people? There were literally thousands of
possibilities and Julia knew that the only way to narrow them down was to find out what
the three victim households had in common. So she picked up the phone and started calling all the
families of the victims. She needed to let them know that the CDC was going to go to their homes
and search them. The town of Agda in France is famous for sun, sand, sea and sex. But lately,
life on the coast has taken a strange turn. The town's mayor, a respected pillar of the community,
arrested for corruption.
His wife claims he's been bewitched by a beautiful clairvoyant.
Then there's a mysterious phone calls that local people have been getting.
I am the Archangel Michael.
The whole town has been thrown into chaos.
As the mayor is unable to carry out his duties,
I would like to address you all.
Legal proceedings have been initiated.
Join me, Anna Richardson and journalist Leo Schick for the Mystic and the Mayor,
as we investigate a story of power, corruption, and magic.
Binge all episodes of The Mystic and the Mayor exclusively and ad-free right now on Wondry Plus.
Start your free trial in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or the Wondry app.
It's all a lighthearted nightmare on our podcast, Morbid.
We're your hosts. I'm Alina Urquhart.
And I'm Ash Kelly.
And our show is part true crime, part spooky, and part comedy.
The stories we cover are well-research of the 880 men who survived.
the attack, around 400 would eventually find their way to one another and merge into one larger
group. With a touch of humor. Shout out to her. Shout out to all my therapist out there's been like
eight of them. A dash of sarcasm and just garnished a bit with a little bit of cursing. That mother
f***er is not real. And if you're a weirdo like us and love to cozy up to a creepy tail of
the paranormal. Or you love to hop in the way back machine and dissect the details of some of history's
most notorious crimes. You should tune in to our podcast. Morbid. Follow Morbid on the Wondry app or
wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to episodes early and ad-free by joining Wondery
Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
A few days later, Julia drove through the wide-open farmlands of Northern Texas on her way
to the home of the Baker family. The day before, she had spoken with Josie and Dustin Baker
about the need for her to come and collect samples from their property. Other CDC officers
were going to scour the homes of the patients from Kansas and Minnesota
with the same goal, finding meliodosis bacteria.
As Julia pulled her car into the gravel driveway in front of the Baker's home,
a woman came out and introduced herself as Josie's sister.
She said that Josie and Dustin were still at the hospital with Lila,
but she was here now to let Julia know that she had free reign
to collect whatever material she thought was relevant to her investigation.
Julia thanked her, then started searching every inch of the baker property for anything that
looked like it could have come from Asia. She collected samples of food and cleaning products
and placed them in plastic bags, then she scraped algae from an empty aquarium she found behind
the house, since there had been cases where imported tropical fish carried the deadly
bacteria. Finally, Julia took soil samples from the bank of the stream near the house, as well as
from the plants. As Julia waved to the sister and drove away from the baker's home,
she felt she had been very thorough in her investigation. Although she was still new to this job,
she felt like it was very possible to her that the bacteria they were looking for was hidden
inside one of the bags and bottles in the trunk of her car right now.
A couple of weeks later, in late July, Julia sat in a conference room with the other CDC
investigators on her team. Julia scrolled to her.
the pages of laboratory results on her laptop, but she admitted to her colleagues that she was
totally stumped. Investigators had gathered hundreds of samples from the three locations where
people got sick, but none of them contained any trace of the bacteria. But before Julia
could start to discuss next steps, one of her colleagues cleared his throat and asked for everyone's
attention. Then he read out loud from an email that had just come in on his phone. And as he read,
Julia grew even more troubled. The CDC had just gotten word of a fourth case of meliodosis. This one was
in Georgia. The patient was a five-year-old boy who, like the other three patients, had never traveled to
any region of the world where of this bacteria was present. DNA analysis showed that the bacteria
that infected him was identical to the samples from the other three patients. So he'd most likely gotten it
from the same source as all the other patients.
Julia closed her eyes as she thought about this new information.
The news from Georgia was obviously distressing,
but the fact that only one new case had emerged over the course of the last month
was probably good news.
If terrorists were trying to use the bacteria as a weapon,
wouldn't there be many more victims by now?
Julia was beginning to think that this outbreak couldn't be an act of bioterrorism.
But if this outbreak wasn't bioterrorism,
then what was it? Something was causing people to get sick all across the country, and the CDC
had no idea what it was. As Julia walked back to her office, lost and thought, she suddenly felt
resolved. Their investigation had indeed been thorough and comprehensive, but clearly they had to do more.
A few weeks later, on a warm evening in the middle of August 2021, Josie Baker stood by Lila,
as her daughter's wheelchair was lowered from a van to the ground outside their home.
Friends and family were gathered by the front door, clapping and cheering.
After two and a half months in the hospital, Lila was finally home.
Josie was overwhelmed with emotion as she carefully pushed her daughter up a ramp
that had been installed outside their house just a week prior.
Lila's physical condition had stabilized and she was now breathing on her own,
but as Josie watched Dustin lift Lila out of her wheelchair and gently lay her on her bed,
Josie also knew that there was a long and challenging road ahead of them. Lila had still not regained
her ability to speak or walk. Even holding her head upright continued to be a challenge.
Josie had to accept a painful truth. There was a good possibility that her daughter had suffered
permanent damage to her nervous system. And Josie had another worry. She still had no idea how or
where Lila had picked up the bacteria. CDC investigators had not found the bacteria on their
property, but it still seemed possible to Josie that it could still be lurking somewhere in their
house. So she couldn't shake the idea that if they continued to live in this house, at some point
somebody else in the family was going to get this disease as well. Later that same month in one of
the conference rooms for the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, Julia picked up a dry erase pen
and started drawing on a whiteboard. Julia had been on the case for almost two months and the agency still
had no clue how the four patients had contracted this bacteria. Julia knew time was running out to
solve this puzzle. The more time passed, the greater the chance that the source of the bacteria
might be spread to other locations. So Julia thought, you know, maybe if she just wrote down
everything they knew on this whiteboard that maybe somehow it would help her connect all the dots.
Julia's colleagues watched as she divided the board into four columns, one for each of the patients.
Under each column, Julia listed key details, including dates, medical symptoms, and environmental
factors that could be relevant. As the board began to fill up, the team searched for any common
factors that could help narrow their search for the source of the bacteria. At some point,
Julia had written a ton on this board and just stepped back and looked at it, and when she did,
she saw it. Three of the four patients showed signs that the infection had entered their brains,
including the patients in Texas, Georgia, and Minnesota.
Julia realized that this common thread could be an important clue
as to how the bacteria entered the bodies of these patients.
If their brains were infected,
the bacteria most likely entered their body through their noses
rather than through a cut or something they ate or drank,
because the quickest route to the brain was through the nasal cavity,
meaning there was a very good chance that in all of these cases,
the bacteria was somehow inhaled.
Julia felt re-energized.
Even though CDC investigators had now made multiple trips to the victim's homes to collect samples,
Julia knew now that they had this information about inhaling the bacteria,
that they would have to visit all of them one more time.
Minutes later, Julia left and headed back to her apartment and began to pack her suitcase.
Hey listeners, Mr. Ballin here.
We're used to exploring mysterious illnesses and unexplained.
medical phenomena. What if I told you some of today's most baffling health crises are connected
to what might be the biggest crime of our generation? I've discovered a new podcast called Lawless
Planet that investigates exactly that. Host Zach Goldbaum uncover shocking stories of unexplained
illnesses in small towns, mysterious deaths, and environmental disasters that are creating
real medical mysteries across the globe. From toxic spills being covered up by powerful
corporations to entire communities falling sick without explanation,
These aren't just environmental stories.
They're medical thrillers about the devastating health impacts of planetary destruction and the people fighting to expose the truth.
If you like Mr. Ballin's medical mysteries, then you are going to love Lawless Planet.
Follow Lawless Planet on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to new episodes of Lawless Planet early and ad-free right now by joining Wondry Plus.
How hard is it to kill a planet?
Maybe all it takes is a little drilling, some mining,
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When you see what's left, it starts to look like a crime scene.
Are we really safe? Is our water safe?
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And crimes like that, they don't just happen.
We call things accidents. There is no accident.
This was 100% preventable.
They're the result of choices by people.
Ruthless oil tycoons, corrupt politicians, even organized crime.
These are the stories we need to be telling about our changing plans.
Stories of scams, murders, and cover-ups that are about us and the things we're doing to either protect the Earth or destroy it.
Follow Lawless Planet on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to new episodes of Lawless Planet early and ad-free right now by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
Over the weeks that followed, Julia and her colleagues returned to the homes of all four patients and retrieved more serious.
samples for testing. They collected anything and everything they could find that could possibly
be inhaled, regardless of whether it could have come from Asia. Julia and her colleagues knew
they were ultimately searching for a needle in a haystack, but they had to try. And so by
September, Julia and the rest of the CDC team had sent hundreds of additional specimens
to their laboratory for analysis. And finally, in October of 2021, Julia received a call from a
microbiologist who was assigned to this case. The search was finally over. A sample retrieve from
the Georgia site contained traces of the meliodosis bacteria. And so after hearing this,
it didn't take long for Julia and her team to figure out how the bacteria actually made the trip
from Asia to America, causing four Americans to be attacked by a bacteria so toxic that the government
considered it a potential bioweapon. But in the case of four-year-old Lila Baker, the spread of
the bacteria actually got an assist from a very unusual accomplice.
Seven months earlier, in March of 2021, while Josie was watching Lila hunt for frogs
near the stream behind their house, the family's beloved pet raccoon, Jinks, was busy ransacking
their kitchen. Jinks was on a hunt for food, and he had made a huge mess as he opened every
cabinet and drawer, ripping open boxes and bags in search of a tasty snack. Jinks eventually climbed
onto the counter near the sink, and he saw a small bottle of liquid. The raccoon soon knocked
the bottle off the counter, causing it to break open and spill onto the kitchen floor, releasing that
very strong floral aroma into the kitchen. And then when Josie and the kids entered the house,
Jinks made a run for it. Hopping into that puddle and tracking that floral-smelling liquid throughout the
house as he ran away to hide.
The bottle that Jinks knocked off the shelf was a United States branded product
that Josie bought at Walmart a few weeks earlier.
And that same product had been purchased by all four of the households that had been
struck by Malioidosis.
What Josie and the other families did not realize is that while they had all bought this
American product at a local American store, it was actually manufactured and bottled
at a factory near the southern tip of India.
The bacteria that causes maloidosis was known to thrive in the wetter environments of this particular region of India.
And somehow, in the process of manufacturing thousands of bottles of this air freshener,
known as Better Homes and Gardens, lavender and chamomile, essential oil-infused aromatherapy room spray,
the bacteria got into the liquid inside.
The bottles were then shipped to Walmart stores all across the United States.
When customers use the product inside their home,
particles of the meliodosis bacteria were sprayed into the air, where they were all inhaled by the
people who lived there. Now, most of the people who inhaled the bacteria were healthy enough to
fight off the bacteria, and they did not get seriously ill, but the victims in Kansas and Minnesota
had other conditions that made them more vulnerable to this infection. And Lila and the young
boy in Georgia were just so young that their immature immune systems were unable to fight off
the bacteria before serious damage was done to their body.
As soon as the source of this bacteria was identified, the CDC alerted Walmart, and Walmart
quickly discontinued sale of the product and withdrew it from the market. Consumers who purchased
the spray were told not to throw it away or pour it down the drain, since that could increase
the risk of spreading the bacteria. Instead, they were directed to put the bottle inside of two
Ziploc bags, then place it inside of a cardboard box, and then physically return it to a Walmart
store. But that was not quite the end of this story. CDC investigator, Julia Petrus, eventually learned
of a fifth potential victim of the strain of the meliodosis bacteria. Jinks, the Baker family's
beloved pet raccoon, who died shortly after breaking the bottle that contained the contaminated air freshener.
Julia hated the idea of disturbing Jinx's grave in the Baker's backyard, but there was a chance that
the meliodosis bacteria had actually spread into the environment after he was buried. And so on April 19th,
2022, Julia and other CDC officials returned to the Baker's home in Texas and dug up Jinx's body.
But after doing some analysis, Julia and the Baker family were relieved to discover that although
jinks had died of melioidosis, no additional bacteria was detected in the soil or vegetation surrounding
Jinx's grave. As of late 2023, Lila Baker has not regained her ability to speak her walk.
Josie quit her job at the animal hospital and devoted herself full-time to the care of her daughter.
Sadly, the little boy in Georgia died from the infection. However, the other two human patients did make
full recoveries.
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From Ballin Studios and Wondry, this is Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries hosted by me, Mr. Ballin.
A quick note about our stories, we use aliases sometimes because we don't know the names of the real people in the story.
And also, in most cases, we can't know exactly what was said, but everything is based on a lot of research.
And a reminder, the content in this episode is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice,
diagnosis or treatment.
This episode was written by Matt Olmos.
Our editor is Heather Dundas.
Sound design is by Ryan Patesta.
Our coordinating producer is Taylor Sniffin,
and our managing producer is Sophia Martins.
Our senior producer is Alex Benadon.
Our associate producers and researchers are Sarah Baitak and Tasia Pelaconda.
Fact-checking was done by Sheila Patterson.
For Ballin Studios, our head of production is Zach Leavitt.
Script editing is by Scott Allen and Evan Allen.
Our coordinating producer is Metub Zaire.
Executive producers are myself, Mr. Ballin, and Nick Witters.
For Wondry, our head of sound is Marcellino Villapondo.
Senior producers are Laura Donna Palavota and Dave Schilling.
Senior managing producer is Ryan Lour.
Our executive producers are Aaron O'Flaherty and Marshall Louis for Wondry.
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