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- <text id=93TT1948>
- <title>
- June 28, 1993: A Weird Case, Baby? Uh Huh!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 28, 1993 Fatherhood
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 41
- A Weird Case, Baby? Uh Huh!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Pepsi tampering scare appears to be nothing more than the
- first fad of summer, but what motivates bogus allegations?
- </p>
- <p>By ANASTASIA TOUFEXIS--With reporting by Alice Park/New York
- </p>
- <p> The wizards who market soft drinks know that America is a fad-happy
- nation, and Pepsi has long been adroit at catching or creating
- the latest wave. But there is sometimes a dark side to the national
- thirst to be part of a trend. Jangling deep in the psyche of
- some souls, it appears, is an irresistible urge to be certified
- on the 5 o'clock news as a victim, a stoic survivor of sinister
- forces. Last week Pepsi found itself at the center of one of
- the weirdest such ripples of the media age, first as alleged
- victimizer, then as stoic victim.
- </p>
- <p> It began when Earl and Mary Triplett returned from a 61st wedding
- anniversary vacation in Alaska to their home near Tacoma, Washington,
- popped open a Diet Pepsi, and then trundled off to bed. The
- next morning Earl picked up the container, which had been left
- overnight on a table, heard a rattle and was surprised to find
- a syringe inside. The couple called their lawyer, who called
- the press and local health officials, who alerted the police.
- And thus a frenzy was born.
- </p>
- <p> Within days, similar reports poured in from around the country:
- more than 50 complaints in 23 states. In New York City, a man
- claimed that he accidentally swallowed two pins that were in
- a Pepsi bottle. In Beach City, Ohio, a woman said she found
- a sewing needle in a can of the soft drink. And in Jacksonville,
- Florida, a man discovered a screw in his beverage container.
- Pepsi's chief executive Craig A. Weatherup scurried from Nightline
- to MacNeil/Lehrer to the morning network shows, looking concerned
- and attempting damage control.
- </p>
- <p> But even as cases mounted, many were being exposed as hoaxes.
- By week's end more than a dozen people had been arrested for
- making false reports. Among them were a Colorado woman and South
- Carolina man who were captured on video by store security cameras
- putting objects in cans; others were admitting they lied. The
- Pepsi scare fizzled as fast as an open can of cola on a hot
- picnic table.
- </p>
- <p> That comes as no surprise to experts who have studied product
- tampering since it first exploded in 1982, when seven people
- in the Chicago area died after taking cyanide-laced Extra-Strength
- Tylenol. Waves of tampering complaints have since swept the
- nation. But for all the hysteria, true tampering--deliberately
- altering a product to endanger random victims--remains a rare
- crime. "More than 90% of reports of product tampering turn out
- to be false alarms," notes forensic psychiatrist Park Dietz
- of Newport Beach, California, who is a consultant to the FBI.
- </p>
- <p> Genuine cases of product tampering, while shocking, usually
- have clear motives, according to forensic experts. Perpetrators
- are typically driven by profit, publicity and, in the case of
- disgruntled workers, revenge. The classic tamperer is an angry,
- antisocial person who "gets a real sense of power from devising
- a plan and seeing it blossom in the media," says psychologist
- N.G. Berrill of the New York Forensic Mental Health Group.
- </p>
- <p> But how to explain the rash of faked complaints and scams in
- the Pepsi scare? Such bogus reports often break out after an
- initial believable case is given wide publicity. Sometimes it's
- a simple craving for attention or a prank. A 21-year-old man
- arrested last week in Branson, Missouri, admitted that he'd
- lied about finding a hypodermic needle in a Pepsi can "to see
- what the police department would do." A 62-year-old California
- woman confessed to police that she fabricated a similar story
- as a joke on her daughter.
- </p>
- <p> Money is also a lure. "Scam artists see the opportunity for
- personal-injury compensation," says Berrill, who notes that
- "many Americans are generally angry at large conglomerates and
- believe that a corporation can afford to pay a few injury claims."
- The quest for money can become unfathomably ugly. To promote
- their claims of finding ground class in Gerber baby food during
- the 1986 scare, some parents purposely fed slivers of glass
- to their children and even cut their kids' bottoms with shards.
- </p>
- <p> For others, the motives are more unusual. "Security guards have
- placed foreign objects in products, such as a razor blade in
- a tomato, to impress supervisors with their vigilance," reports
- Dietz. "They're similar to the volunteer fireman who sets a
- fire and then discovers it." The strangest motive, though, may
- be the need to gain sympathy as a victim. "Just as some people
- induce signs of illness in themselves to enjoy the benefits
- of the patient's role, others fake tampering to enjoy the benefits--emotional support, nurturing--of the victim's role. Such
- people will also stage their own robberies, burglaries or rapes."
- </p>
- <p> "Each nationally publicized incident generates on average 30
- more seriously disruptive crimes," declares Dietz, who would
- like to see news organizations limit their coverage of tampering.
- He points out that the initial Pepsi report occurred while Washington
- was saturated with news accounts of the June 8 sentencing of
- Joseph Meling, who was convicted of putting cyanide in cold
- capsules in an attempt to kill his wife; she survived but two
- others died.
- </p>
- <p> With the case fresh in mind, police and the public might have
- jumped too quickly to the conclusion that the hypodermic found
- in the Tripletts' Pepsi can was the result of tampering. Late
- last week investigators were looking into the possibility that
- someone had innocently disposed of an insulin syringe by dropping
- it into the empty can.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-