Details, Explanation and Meaning About Graham Frederick Young

Graham Frederick Young Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Graham Frederick Young (September 7 1947 - August 1 1990) was a British serial killer who poisoned a total of three people: his stepmother, and then years later two work colleagues, Bob Egle and Fred Biggs, as well as administering smaller doses to scores of others. He became fascinated with poisons and their effects on the human body at a young age. In 1961 (at the age of 14) he started to test poisons out on his family, not in lethal doses, but enough to make them nauseous. He managed to purchase a large quantity of poison by frequently buying small amounts of antimonium and digitalis, saying that they were for science experiments at school.

In 1962 Young poisoned his stepmother. He also attempted to kill his father, sister, and a friend. Young's aunt Winnie had become suspicious of him because she was aware of his fascination with chemistry and poisons. He might have escaped suspicion if no one knew of his interests because he regularly suffered the same nausea and sicknesses as the rest of his family, often because he forgot which foods he had laced. He was sent to see a psychiatrist who was concerned enough to recommend contacting the police. Young was arrested on May 23 1962 (at the age of 14). He confessed to the attempted murders of his father, sister and friend, and tried to commit suicide in prison while awaiting trial. The remains of his stepmother could not be analysed as she had been cremated.

Young was sentenced to 15 years in Broadmoor Hospital, an institution for mentally unstable criminals. He was released after 9 years, when he was found to have recovered. Young had put those years to good use however, studying medical texts and improving his knowledge of the effects of poisons on the human body.

He managed to find a job in Bovingdon, Hertfordshire after his release in 1971. Soon after he began work, his foreman Bob Egle sickened and died. Young had obligingly been making tea laced with poisons like antimonium and thallium for his workmates. A sickness had swept through his workplace and was nicknamed the Bovingdon Bug. Of course, all these cases of nausea and illness, sometimes severe enough to require hospitalisation, could be attributed to Young and his tea.

Young poisoned around 70 people during the next few months, none fatally. Bob Eagle's successor sickened soon after starting work there, but decided to quit. That decision probably saved his life. A few months after Bob Eagle's death, another of Young's workmates, Fred Biggs, sickened and was admitted to the London National Hospital for Nervous Diseases. Unfortunately it was too late to save him, and he became Young's third and final victim.

At this point, it was evident that a proper investigation into the sicknesses and deaths was necessary. Young asked one police officer if they had considered thallium poisoning as a cause of the symptoms. He had also told one of his colleagues that his hobby was to study toxic chemicals. This man went to the police who immediately checked Young's background and were astounded to uncover his criminal record.

Young was arrested November 21 1971. Police found thallium in his pocket, and antimonium, thallium and aconitine in his flat. They also discovered a meticulously detailed diary that Young had kept noting all the doses of poisons he had administered, their effects, and whether he was going to allow each person to live or die.

At his trial at St Albans Crown Court, which started June 19 1972 and lasted for ten days, Young pleaded not guilty, and explained the diary away as mere fantasy and something he was planning to base a novel on in the future. Unsurprisingly, in light of the evidence, Young was found guilty, and was sentenced to life in prison (not an institution for the criminally insane this time). He was dubbed The Teacup Poisoner, although he apparently wanted to be remembered as the World's poisoner.

Young had a heart attack and died in his cell at Parkhurst prison at the age of 42.

A film called The Young Poisoner's Handbook (1995) is loosely based on Young's life.

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