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Chemical Suicide

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Toxicologist: Sodium Azide Readily Available Online

According to a Northeastern University professor, the chemical that may have been used by a 25-year-old Boston University graduate student to take her own life Monday is easy to find.

The toxic substance that officials say may have been ingested by a Boston University doctoral student when she apparently took her own life at her South End brownstone is inexpensive and readily available online, according to a toxicologist. According to a report in the Boston Herald, Roger W. Glese, a professor of chemistry and biomedical science at Northeastern University, said sodium azide is in the “same class” as the cyanide concoctions that have been responsible for similar incidents in recent years. “It’s easy to obtain,” Giese told the Herald. “It’s inexpensive, it’s water soluble. It’s salt, like sodium chloride ... And it doesn’t take very much” to be lethal, he said. The chemical is used as a preservative in laboratories, and …

Youaresheeple

12:16 pm on Sunday, January 27, 2013

We should ban the internet, spoons, and sharp objects too. She wanted to kill herself, she had the knowledege to use a chemical, if not she would've used something else...I am really getting tired of fake journalism...senastionalist...she was a doctoral student...she couldve thought of a lot of things to kill herself...ban doctors too...they know too much.   more ›

Father of Apparent Suicide Victim Says Daughter was Working to Help Elderly

She was working to eradicate diseases such as Alzheimer's that afflict the elderly.

The Boston University graduate student who apparently took her own life by ingesting a toxic substance in her South End apartment Monday night was working to eradicate diseases that afflict the elderly, her grieving father told the Boston Globe Tuesday. “Some of her older family members had diseases of the aged, like Alzheimer’s, and she was trying to contribute to society” by wiping out such conditions, said Jeffrey Brown, 58, of Virginia, the father of Carolyn Brown, 25, to the Globe. A doctoral candidate in pharmacology at Boston University, Carolyn Brown ingested a toxic chemical in her first-floor apartment at 676 Massachusetts Ave. at around 9 p.m. on Monday, officials said. She was later pronounced dead at Boston Medical Center, …

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