铊毒事件照片房子都给八出来了

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Time Line

2000: Got married. 10-year marriage up to August, 2010

2008, some time before July, their son was born.

  (It is natural to assume that they were under the stress of taking care of the 
  newborn since then.)

September, 2008, moved to Monroe (should be Monroe Township, according to
  their property address), New Jersy. 

  They purchased a house in September.
  Seven months later they started to call police due to bitter arguments.


April 2009 ~ July, 2010, More than 5 times call to police due to arguments. 

  No one was injured and no restraining orders were ever filed as a result of the 
  police visits.

  (The reasons of arguments have not been released by police.)


June, 2010, Wang moved out of the couple's home on Stanley Drive home in Monroe 
  and into a Jersey City apartment.

July, 2010, Wang, 39, filed for divorce, citing irreconcilable differences. 
  He also sought joint custody of the couple’s 2-year-old son, Isaac.

August, 2010, Li, 40, counter-sued, citing the same reason and adding there was 
  "no hope for reconciliation."

Jan. 14, 2011, the day a hearing would be held to finalize the divorce, Wang 
  admitted himself to the University Medical Center in Princeton with "virus-like" 
  symptoms. He died 12 days later from thallium poisoning, which authorities allege 
  was administered by his wife.


View Larger Map A: Stanley Dr, MONROE TOWNSHIP, Middlesex, New Jersey 08831 (Their home before separated) B: Bristol-Myers Squibb Company: U S Headquarters (The company Li worked for) Princeton University Medical Center (where Wang visited and died) is right above B. A-B: about 18 miles, 37 min driving.
View Larger Map A. Jersey City that Wang moved to in June, 2010. B. Princeton University Medical Center (where Wang visited and died). A-B: 46.4 miles, 1 hour 4 mins driving according to Google maps. Thallium poisoning typically includes loss of hair, thickened skin, severe gastrointestinal pain and loss of feeling in the extremities. Wang didn't present many of those symptoms until a few days after his arrival, Marcus said. Jan. 22 or 23, 2011, Wang lapsed into a coma. Wang did not respond to treatment and continued to worsen. At that point a nurse recalled cases of thallium poisoning in China in the 1990s and suggested Wang's urine be tested, Sewitch said. No lab in New Jersey was capable of performing the test, so Wang's urine sample was sent out of state. Twenty-four hours later, the diagnosis of thallium poisoning was confirmed and Marcus was notified. Jan. 25, 2011, around 9 p.m., Steven Marcus, the medical and executive director of New Jersey Poison Control, received a call from University Medical Center in Princeton. A doctor was on the other end of the line telling him about Wang and that thallium had been discovered in his system. ...Steven Marcus launched efforts to seek treatment... Nearly two hours after leaving his home, Marcus arrived in Princeton. The non-medical grade Prussian Blue had been administered through a gastric tube, but Wang had showed no response. In the meantime, Marcus had contacted a federal facility near Albany, N.Y., that had the purer form of the antidote, and an SUV was dispatched to Princeton. When it finally arrived five hours later, Wang was near death. The antidote would be useless. Marcus, along with a number of doctors and nurses, stood beside Wang'bed, unable to do anything more. Sometime around 3 p.m. on Jan. 26, as several detectives stood nearby, Wang's heart monitor flatlined. Jan, 26, 2011, around 3 p.m., Wang died. Jan, 28, 2011, Li was initially charged with hindering her own apprehension after she made false statements to investigators on Jan. 28, two days after her hu*****and died, The Star-Ledger reported. The New Jersey State Police and Middlesex County Hazardous Materials Units conducted a search of the Wang's Middlesex County home and concluded that no one else had been exposed to the toxic metal. According to the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office, Li obtained an undetermined amount Thallium and fed it to her hu*****and sometime in December 2010 or January 2011. Nicholas Sewitch, deputy assistant Middlesex County prosecutor, declined to release specifics on how Li allegedly poisoned Wang. At room temperature, Thallium is a very pliant, dissolvable metal you can cut with a knife. It is easily absorbed through the skin by inhalation, or ingested orally. Thallium dissolves quickly in liquids so if one were to use it as a poison; its salts are colorless, odorless and tasteless, therefore making it undetectable in food or soft drinks. Thallium poisoning takes several days to manifest so one would not know they have been poisoned right away. Dr. Anil Aggrawal, professor of Forensic Medicine and Editor-in-Chief of the Internet Journal of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology said the amount of Thallium needed to kill a human being would be about 0.6 to 0.7g, considered the somewhat less than the average dose, and death would likely occur within 11 to 16 days. Feb. 8, 2011. Hearing in which Li was charged with the murder of Xiaoye Wang, 39. Tianle Li, 40, dressed in green jail garb and wearing gold glasses, calmly listened as Superior Court Judge Michael Toto explained her rights and what legal procedures would follow today's hearing. Li remained at the Middlesex County jail in North Brunswick today in lieu of $4.15 million bail, charged with murder and hindering her own apprehension by "lying to police" when they began investigating Wang's death, Sewitch said. Her attorney, Steven Altman, said his client denies having anything to do with her hu*****and's death. Feb. 10, 2011, the divorce hearing, which was postponed due to his illness, had been rescheduled for today. Note: The information was from the published articles quoted on the bottom of this post.

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http://bbs.wenxuecity.com/myhouse/1653693.html

 谁个8一8为啥老婆投毒害老公 俺先提点信息

来源: hhhh2011-02-09 06:37:20 [档案] [博客] 旧帖] [转至博客] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:1001次

几天前在法坛看过求助贴,估计就是这事。

 

急!兄弟在美国被毒死,他老婆正在被调查。大侠们,该怎么办?

 

http://bbs.wenxuecity.com/law/118218.html

 

(关于两人的背景,性格,网上多有传闻,但不知道真假,案情刚展开也没定论, 故不再包括在本贴里。)

http://bohuamei.blog.163.com/blog/static/9036403420111935647538/

http://bbs.wenxuecity.com/rdzn/1543129.html

http://www.cnd.org/my/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php%3Ftopic_id=71122&forum=1

http://bbs.wenxuecity.com/myhouse/1653598.html

http://bbs.wenxuecity.com/myhouse/1653197.html

一些以前的照片:

http://bbs.wenxuecity.com/rdzn/1549813.html

 

 涉嫌以铊毒死丈夫的李女今日首次开庭露面(组图) 文学城综合新闻

 

 

 

李天乐(译音) "Heidi" 图左, 被控以谋杀罪出庭.                  死者王晓业
图右Steve Altman李的律师, 在法庭聆听助理检察官指控的情形.

 

<文学城综合新闻报导>被控在上个月以有毒重金属铊谋杀丈夫的嫌犯李天乐今日下午在新泽西密德塞斯郡法院首次出庭,40岁的嫌犯李天乐今天身穿绿色的囚服戴着金框眼镜在律师陪同下,表情看似镇静的在庭上聆听高等法院法官Michael Toto 向他解释她的权利以及法庭审理的程序。

 

美国新泽西州40岁女华裔化学师李天乐(Tianle Li),被密德塞斯郡(Middlesex County)检察官办公室指控,以具有强烈毒性的放射物质铊(thallium)谋杀39岁丈夫王晓业(Xiaoye Wang,译音)。王晓业已于1月26日死亡,李天乐否认毒杀丈夫,并准以415万美金保释,案件于2月9日在新布朗士维克高等法院首次开庭。

 

担任软件工程师的王晓业在1月14日因感冒症状前往普林斯顿大学医疗中心检查,经过两个星期的治疗,情况未好转并趋于严重,因而进行一连串的测试检验,25日检验报告证实王晓业铊中毒,院方立即举报,联邦调查局及有关当局便开始介入调查。26日王晓业被院方宣布不治身亡。两天后,其太太李天乐遭逮捕。

 

根据郡检察官Nicholas Sewitch的说明指称,当死者王晓业在普林斯顿大学医疗中心检查和治疗的过程中怀疑可能是铊中毒的原因是由于当时在普林斯顿大学医疗中心就职的一名护士在这过程中提出了一个质疑,该名护士提到了她是因为想起了在90年代在中国发生一起铊中毒杀人事件才提醒医生检测王晓业体内的铊含量。

 

在必治妥施贵宝制药公司(Bristol-Myers Squibb)担任化学师十年的李天乐,近月数次向公司申请取得铊。经过侦讯,检方表示李天乐在2010年12月至 2011年1月之间,对她的丈夫王晓业使用了部分铊,至于如何使用,用量多少,检方以仍在侦查阶段不愿透露。

 

李天乐坚持自己是无辜的,其辩护律师艾特曼说:“我的客户坚决否认涉入她丈夫的死亡,她没有原因或动机要他死”。他表示,李天乐与王晓业的离婚手续已经趋于完成阶段,且协议书中列明王晓业必须负担儿子的学费及抚养费,因此没有合理的杀人动机。艾特曼表示,李天乐在美国没有其它家人,被捕后,她的儿子即被当局带走,由新州青年与家庭服务处监护,并安置到寄养家庭,目前正等待她的家人从中国来美,帮助照顾这个孩子。

 

李天乐和王晓业皆来自中国,据消息来源指出,李毕业于北京大学,王毕业于清华大学,两人育有一名两岁男童。2008年搬入位于新泽西州孟洛镇的史坦利街居处,次年婚姻开始出现问题,正在办理离婚手续。一位邻居表示,2010年每星期警察都会接获报案到他们家中勘查1至2次;另一位住在对街的邻居则表示,经常听到争吵声,且太太的声音比丈夫大又尖锐。附近邻居皆表示,很少与王李夫妇打交道,与他们不熟识,但都知道他们感情不好,时常吵架。


李天乐出庭照片(十张)

来源: 看好戏2011-02-09 15:48:02 [档案] [博客] 旧帖] [转至博客] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:1263次

 

从2002到2011的巨变

来源: 乡吾宁2011-02-09 15:05:41 [档案] [博客] 旧帖] [转至博客] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:1933次

 

Bristol-Myers Squibb chemist Tianle Li accused of using thallium to kill hu*****and

http://www.newjerseynewsroom.com/state/bristol-myers-squibb-chemist-tianle-li-accused-of-using-thallium-to-kill-hu*****and
lab021011_opt BY ALICIA CRUZ
NEWJERSEYNEWSROOM.COM

A Bristol-Myers Squibb chemist has been charged with fatally poisoning her estranged hu*****and using an extremely toxic compound, the Associated Press reported Wednesday.

Tianle Li, 40, did not appear in New Brunswick, N.J. Superior Court Wednesday, instead her attorney entered a not guilty plea on her behalf.

Investigators say Li, who goes by the name Heidi, was charged with murder after an autopsy confirmed the presence of Thallium, a chemical element commonly used in the pharmaceutical and electronics industries as well as glass manufacturing. Thallium, considered highly toxic, was used in rat and ant poisons during the 1970s.

Li's hu*****and, Xiaoye Wang, fell ill with flu-like symptoms in January and was admitted to University Medical Center in Princeton, N.J.. For two weeks, Wang baffled doctors when his condition failed to improve. On January 25, a series of tests returned showing Wang had been poisoned by Thallium.

The 39-year-old computer engineer died January 26, and special agents from Newark's FBI office and the State Police launched a thorough investigation to find out who poisoned the Monroe Township man and why.

The trail led to his wife who was in the process of divorcing Wang. She was initially charged with hindering her own apprehension after she made false statements to investigators on Jan. 28, two days after her hu*****and died, The Star-Ledger reported.

The New Jersey State Police and Middlesex County Hazardous Materials Units conducted a search of the Wang's Middlesex County home and concluded that no one else had been exposed to the toxic metal.

According to the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office, Li obtained an undetermined amount Thallium and fed it to her hu*****and sometime in December 2010 or January 2011. Nicholas Sewitch, deputy assistant Middlesex County prosecutor, declined to release specifics on how Li allegedly poisoned Wang.

At room temperature, Thallium is a very pliant, dissolvable metal you can cut with a knife. It is easily absorbed through the skin by inhalation, or ingested orally. Thallium dissolves quickly in liquids so if one were to use it as a poison; its salts are colorless, odorless and tasteless, therefore making it undetectable in food or soft drinks. Thallium poisoning takes several days to manifest so one would not know they have been poisoned right away.

Dr. Anil Aggrawal, professor of Forensic Medicine and Editor-in-Chief of the Internet Journal of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology said the amount of Thallium needed to kill a human being would be about 0.6 to 0.7g, considered the somewhat less than the average dose, and death would likely occur within 11 to 16 days.

Some of the corollary effects of thallium poisoning include lethargy, diarrhea, vomiting, severe pain, hair loss, and damage to peripheral nerves. Poisoning can affect multiple organs including the heart, lungs, kidneys, and liver. A person poisoned by Thallium can live up to two weeks or more with medical treatment (antidote Prussian blue), but any damages to their organs would be permanent, said Dr. Aggrawal. Doctors test hair follicles to determine poisoning by Thallium.

Doctors administer Thallium stress tests to check for heart disease or to see how well blood is flowing to the heart muscle, and where the heart muscle may not be getting a normal blood supply.

Bruce Kaplan, the Middlesex County prosecutor, said in a press release that the Wangs marriage became onerous a year after the Chinese natives had a son and moved into their Monroe Township home in 2008. Kaplan also said there were several domestic disturbance calls made from the Stanley Drive home in 2009.

"My client adamantly denies any involvement in her hu*****and's death," Li's attorney Steve Altman told The Courier Post. Altman said Li, employed at the New York based biopharmaceutical company since 2001, and Wang had recently come to an agreement on a property settlement related to their divorce and Wang was paying for support of his son.

"She has no reason or motive to want him dead," said Altman. A representative at Bristol-Meyers Squibb, which has research sites in Princeton, Hopewell and New Brunswick, refused to make any comment to NewJerseyNewsroom.com concerning Li's arrest.

Li was arraigned around 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, and is currently being held at the Middlesex County Adult Correction Center in New Brunswick in lieu of $4.15 million bail. Superior Court judge Bradley Ferencz set Li's hindering apprehension bail at $150,000 and $4 million for the murder charge.

When Li was arrested, her 2-year-old son was given to the state Division of Youth and Family Services and placed in a foster home, the NJ Press Media reported.

"She [Li] has no family in the United States,'' said Altman. "We're waiting for family to come from China to help with the child.''

Anyone with further details on this case should call Sgt. Jason Grosser of the Monroe Township Police Department at 732-521-0222 or Investigator Jeffrey Temple of the Middlesex County Prosecutor's office at 732-745-3373.

People who have used Thallium to kill

Poisoning by Thallium

Last Updated ( Thursday, 10 February 2011 11:18 )  

 

Monroe woman pleads not guilty to fatally poisoning hu*****and

Published: Wednesday, February 09, 2011, 2:49 PM     Updated: Wednesday, February 09, 2011, 3:31 PM
http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/02/monroe_woman_pleads_not_guilty.html
poison-tianle-li.JPG
 
Tianle "Heidi" Li of Monroe, left, is arraigned on murder charges. Li and her attorney Steve Altman , right, listen to the assistant prosector. She is accused of murdering her estranged hu*****and, Xiaoye Wang, by poisoning him with thallium.

MONROE — A Monroe Township woman entered a plea of not guilty this afternoon to charges she poisoned her hu*****and, who died last month, with thallium, a highly toxic metal.

Tianle Li, 40, dressed in green jail garb and wearing gold glasses, calmly listened as Superior Court Judge Michael Toto explained her rights and what legal procedures would follow today's hearing.

Li was charged Tuesday with the murder of Xiaoye Wang, 39, who died Jan. 26 at University Medical Center in Princeton. He brought himself to the hospital Jan. 14 with what authorities now call "virus-like" symptoms.

After the hearing, Nicholas Sewitch, deputy first assistant Middlesex County prosecutor, said Wang received a "lethal, massive dose of thallium," but said he could not comment on how it was administered or whether it was all given at once or over a period of time.

"There are additional toxicological tests being run on the victim's tissues and bodily fluids that will give us more information about that," Sewitch said.

Sewitch said it was a nurse at the hospital who, remembering a case of thallium poisoning in the 1990s in China, suggested doctors include a test for thallium when Wang did not respond to treatment and continued to worsen. He said Wang lapsed into a coma Jan. 22 or 23.

He said Li, who was a research chemist in the Lawrenceville office of Bristol-Myers Squib, had access to thallium at work, but he would not comment on whether or not that's where she may have allegedly obtained it.

Sewitch said the estranged couple, who were living together in the home they purchased in September 2008, were due to have their divorce finalized on Jan. 14, the day Wang took himself to the hospital.

Steven Altman, Li's attorney, said his client denies having anything to do with her hu*****and's death.

Neither Altman nor Sewitch would comment on why police were called to the couple's home several times, beginning in April 2009, for "domestic disturbances."

Sewitch did say no one was injured and no restraining orders were ever filed as a result of the police visits.

Li was remanded to the Middlesex County jail in lieu of $4.15 million bail and is also charged with hindering her own apprehension by "lying to police" when they began investigating Wang's death, Sewitch said.

 

 

Doctors, scientists searched for antidote for Monroe man dying from thallium poisoning

Published: Thursday, February 10, 2011, 7:15 AM     Updated: Thursday, February 10, 2011, 8:40 AM

 

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/02/doctors_scientists_led_heroic.html


tianle.JPG
 
Tianle "Heidi" Li of Monroe enters the courtroom in New Brunswick on Wednesday to be arraigned on murder charges. She is accused of murdering her estranged hu*****and, Xiaoye Wang, by poisoning him with thallium.

MONROE — Dressed in green jail garb and with her hands cuffed in front of her, 40-year-old chemist Tianle Li stood before a judge in New Brunswick on Wednesday and listened with quiet composure as she was charged with murdering her hu*****and by dosing him with a rare lethal drug.

Li’s lawyer, Steven Altman, entered a plea of not guilty, and a few minutes later, the hearing was over.

But while the legal part of this story was sorting itself out, startling details were emerging about a frantic, heroic attempt by doctors, scientists, and federal and state agencies to save the dying hu*****and as he lay in a hospital, slipping away from thallium poisoning.

The scramble to save 39-year-old Xiaoye Wang began around 9 p.m. on Jan. 25, when Steven Marcus, the medical and executive director of New Jersey Poison Control, received a call from University Medical Center in Princeton. A doctor was on the other end of the line telling him about Wang and that thallium had been discovered in his system.

Marcus couldn’t believe what he was hearing. This was only the second time in his 43-year medical career that he’d come across a case of thallium poisoning. The physician at the Princeton hospital knew little about the deadly chemical and even less about how to treat it.

"It’s either attempted suicide," Marcus told the doctor, "or homicide."

There was silence on the other end of the phone, Marcus said.

Then he told the physician there was only one way to save Wang’s life — an antidote called Prussian Blue — and only one company in the United States manufactured it.

Thallium is tasteless and odorless and was used in rat poisoning and insecticides until it was banned in the United States in the 1980s because of its toxicity. It is still used in small doses in glass-making, mirror circuits and certain medical tests.

Marcus, who says his nickname is "House," a reference to the television character because he’s often called about perplexing medical cases, said his first thought was to contact everyone he could think of who might be able to help.

One of the first he reached out to was a former colleague at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. Marcus had taken a course there 10 or 15 years earlier and remembered asking at the time if the lab kept antidotes on hand for thallium.

A year or so prior to that he had been contacted by doctors treating a New Jersey schoolteacher for thallium poisoning. The woman eventually recovered and no one was ever arrested, but the unusual case had stayed with him.

At 5 a.m. on Jan. 26, as scientists at Oak Ridge tried to figure out how to get Prussian Blue to New Jersey in the middle of a snowstorm, Marcus shoveled his driveway in North Jersey, then headed to Princeton, continuing to make calls the entire way — to the state Health Department, to New York City poison control, to anyone who might have Prussian Blue in stock and was closer than Tennessee.

No one did, but Christopher Rinn, the assistant commissioner of New Jersey’s Department of Health and Senior Services, told Marcus the agency was at his disposal.

"He said, ‘Whatever you need. Let’s cut through this bureaucracy,’" Marcus recalled.

By this time, however, Wang was unconscious. He had come to the hospital in Princeton on his own on Jan. 14, the same day he and Li were due in court to finalize their divorce, said Middlesex County Assistant Prosecutor Nicholas Sewitch, who confirmed after Li’s arraignment Wednesday that Wang was administered a "lethal, massive" dose of thallium.

 

A neighbor living near the couple’s home in Monroe Township, who identified herself only by her last name, Patel, said the two were "not friendly. We didn’t talk ... We knew they were having problems. We saw the cops there all the time."

Sewitch was unable to say how the thallium was administered or whether it was given in several small doses over time, or in one dose. All he would confirm is that the drug was ingested in December or January. He also would not comment on where Li allegedly obtained the thallium, but did say it would have been available to her at Bristol-Myers Squibb in Lawrenceville, where she’s worked since 2001 as a research chemist.

When Wang first arrived at the hospital on Jan. 14, Wang was experiencing "flu-like" symptoms, Sewitch said.

Thallium poisoning typically includes loss of hair, thickened skin, severe gastrointestinal pain and loss of feeling in the extremities. Wang didn’t present many of those symptoms until a few days after his arrival, Marcus said.

At that point a nurse recalled cases of thallium poisoning in China in the 1990s and suggested Wang’s urine be tested, Sewitch said. No lab in New Jersey was capable of performing the test, so Wang’s urine sample was sent out of state.

Twenty-four hours later, the diagnosis of thallium poisoning was confirmed and Marcus was notified.

"If someone at the hospital had not guessed it might be thallium and tested for it, it might have gone undetected," Marcus said.

With time running out, Marcus suggested to a pharmacist at the Princeton hospital that she contact chemical supply companies in the area to try and obtain a less pure dose of Prussian Blue, which is also used to dye clothes as well as microscopic specimens in biological research.

A dose of the non-medical grade was found in a matter of hours and rushed to Princeton the medical center, but Marcus and the other doctors realized they had no idea how much of it to administer.

Still traveling through snow and ice, Marcus suggested diluting the bright blue powder in water and simply doubling the recommended dose.

Nearly two hours after leaving his home, Marcus arrived in Princeton. The non-medical grade Prussian Blue had been administered through a gastric tube, but Wang had showed no response.

In the meantime, Marcus had contacted a federal facility near Albany, N.Y., that had the purer form of the antidote, and an SUV was dispatched to Princeton. When it finally arrived five hours later, Wang was near death.

The antidote would be useless. Marcus, along with a number of doctors and nurses, stood beside Wang’s bed, unable to do anything more.

Sometime around 3 p.m. on Jan. 26, as several detectives stood nearby, Wang’s heart monitor flatlined.

"There was remarkable cooperation between the hospital, poison control, the police, the state health department, the Centers for Disease Control and the nuclear energy department in Tennessee — all to get this antidote to the hospital in snow in a matter of a few hours," Marcus said. "Unfortunately it was too late."

By Amy Ellis Nutt and Sue Epstein/The Star-Ledger

Staff writer Amy Brittain contributed to this report.

 

Before Monroe man's fatal poisoning, couple had history of domestic disputes

Published: Thursday, February 10, 2011, 9:45 PM     Updated: Friday, February 11, 2011, 5:31 AM

 

poison-tianle-li.JPG
 
Tianle "Heidi" Li of Monroe, left, is arraigned on murder charges Wednesday. Li and her attorney Steve Altman , right, listen to the assistant prosector. She is accused of murdering her estranged hu*****and, Xiaoye Wang, by poisoning him with thallium.

MONROE — Xiaoye Wang’s marriage to Tianle Li saw bitter arguments that frequently brought police to the couple’s home in Monroe Township.

"There were a fair number of calls (to police)," Middlesex County Assistant Prosecutor Nicholas Sewitch said today. "More than five."

Things got so bad that Wang, 39, filed for divorce in July, citing irreconcilable differences. He also sought joint custody of the couple’s 2-year-old son, Isaac.

Li, 40, counter-sued a month later, citing the same reason and adding there was "no hope for reconciliation."

The couple’s 10-year marriage appeared to be over.

But on Jan. 14, the day a hearing would be held to finalize the divorce, Wang admitted himself to the University Medical Center in Princeton with "virus-like" symptoms. He died 12 days later from thallium poisoning, which authorities allege was administered by his wife.

Li remained at the Middlesex County jail in North Brunswick today in lieu of $4.15 million bail, charged with murder and hindering her own apprehension. Her attorney, Steven Altman, said his client denies having anything to do with her hu*****and’s death.

Records indicate Wang moved out of the couple’s home on Stanley Drive home in Monroe sometime in June and into a Jersey City apartment.

Preceding the legal steps to end their marriage were calls to police, starting in April 2009 — about seven months after they had moved to Monroe.

 

Sewitch said none of the calls resulted in charges because there was never any sign of violence or injury to either Li or Wang. While Sewitch would not comment on the origin of the couple’s disputes, neighbors said they often heard them arguing and witnessed frequent visits by police officers.

Wang worked as a computer software engineer in New York City, while Li is a research chemist at the Lawrenceville offices of Bristol-Myers Squibb, the pharmaceutical giant.

After Wang admitted himself into the hospital, his condition progressively deteriorated until he died Jan. 26, the day after doctors finally determined he was suffering from thallium poisoning. After much searching, an antidote was found but by the time it arrived at the hospital, Wang was near death and nothing could be done to save him.

The divorce hearing, which was postponed due to his illness, had been rescheduled for today.

Thallium is a highly toxic heavy metal that is tasteless and odorless. It was once used in rat poison and insecticides, but was banned for that use in the United States and other counties in the 1980s. It is still used in glass and electronics manufacturing and medicinally in stress tests to help diagnose coronary artery disease.

Sewitch has not said how the thallium was administered, nor whether it was given in several small doses over time or in one dose. All he would confirm was that it was ingested in December or January. He also would not comment on where Li allegedly obtained the thallium, though he did say it would have been available to her at Bristol-Myers, where she’s worked since 2001.

 

关于铊:

http://wenwen.soso.com/z/q804178.htm

铊无色、无味 ,一般人不易取得 ,毒性强烈。一般认为 ,铊对成人最小致死量约为 12mg/kg ,
5~ 7. 5mg/kg的剂量即可引起儿童死亡。

临床表现 :
铊中毒的主要表现为恶心、呕吐、腹部绞痛、腹泻等 ,严重者有肠道出血 ,继而出现四肢感觉过敏、针刺感 ,
下肢无力 ,脚跟疼痛 ,甚至瘫痪。中枢神经受损时 ,可出现神志不清、谵语、抽搐、休克等 ,中毒者多因呼吸
循环功能衰竭而死亡。上述表现与感染性多发性神经炎相似 ,易误诊。脱发是铊中毒的特殊症状 ,
常于第二周开始 ,重症可全部脱落 ,一般脱后能再生、皮肤干燥、脱屑 ,可出现皮疹、痤疮、皮肤色素沉着、
手掌及足跖部角化过度 ,指甲和趾甲于第 4周可出现白色横纹。部分患者有肝、肾、心肌损害的临床表现。

治疗措施 :
1.急性口服中毒患者 ,应立即给予催吐、洗胃、导泻。洗胃可用 1%的碘化钠或碘化钾溶液 ,使之形成不
溶性碘化铊。随后可口服活性炭 0. 5g/kg ,以减少铊的吸收 ,吸入中毒患者 ,应立即将患者移至空气
新鲜处 ,吸氧 ,保特呼吸道通畅。皮肤污染者立即用肥皂水清洗 ,眼部接触时用大量清水冲洗。 
2.普鲁士蓝是一种无毒色素 ,铊可置换普鲁士蓝上的钾后形成不溶性物质随粪便排出 ,对治疗经口
急慢性铊中毒有一定疗效。用量一般为每日250mg/kg ,分 4次 ,溶于 50ml的 15%甘露醇中口服。 
3.对严重中毒病例 ,可以使用血液净化疗法 ,有研究表明血液灌流有较好的效果。 
4.高钾能增加肾对铊的清除 ,可能与钾竞争性阻内的铊到细胞外 ,使血铊含量增加 ,可使临床病情加重 ,
因此要慎用。 
5.维持呼吸、循环功能 ,保护肝、肾、心等脏器 ,给予足够的B族维生素。对重度中毒者可使用肾上
腺糖皮质激素制剂。

所有跟帖: 

兴奋围观的人真多呀 -433832795028- 给 433832795028 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:25:07

用词不当 -7.5- 给 7.5 发送悄悄话 7.5 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:27:21

which one? :) -433832795028- 给 433832795028 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:49:30

never mind -7.5- 给 7.5 发送悄悄话 7.5 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:53:43

我真不忍这样下手 -紫太阳- 给 紫太阳 发送悄悄话 紫太阳 的博客首页 (112 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:35:39

估计是哪里一时短路了 -7.5- 给 7.5 发送悄悄话 7.5 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:39:49

一看就知道没读过 The Count of Monte Cristo -紫太阳- 给 紫太阳 发送悄悄话 紫太阳 的博客首页 (41 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:47:57

基督山伯爵? -7.5- 给 7.5 发送悄悄话 7.5 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:58:26

夜死,夜死,夜死,我的偶像 -紫太阳- 给 紫太阳 发送悄悄话 紫太阳 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 09:00:07

你没有跟谁有仇吧 -7.5- 给 7.5 发送悄悄话 7.5 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 09:02:19

不会,我很宽容的一个人,但是不是有人和我忧愁,我就不知啦:-) -紫太阳- 给 紫太阳 发送悄悄话 紫太阳 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 09:07:01

刚刚看看铊中毒,真是死不了活受罪~ 不知道这个凶手动机是啥 ^?^ -^3.1415926^- 给 ^3.1415926^ 发送悄悄话 (48594 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:43:15

不懂的事情真是太多了~@~ -^3.1415926^- 给 ^3.1415926^ 发送悄悄话 (86 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:45:27

本领高!5毒派掌门 -紫太阳- 给 紫太阳 发送悄悄话 紫太阳 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 08:53:38

费心了,给缺课的8公8婆补笔记 -樱桃时节- 给 樱桃时节 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 18:16:21

回复:俺确信是她杀的,但判罪几乎没可能 -chinomango- 给 chinomango 发送悄悄话 chinomango 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 20:02:49

没道理不判罪呀! -雪潇潇- 给 雪潇潇 发送悄悄话 雪潇潇 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 20:19:23

这弱女子说个狠起来灰常恐怖啊, 都有小孩子了还下的了这毒招。实在不理解 -福寿膏- 给 福寿膏 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 02/09/2011 postreply 22:11:35

受虐妇女症 -- 惨。千万别把男人太当回事。 -shandongning- 给 shandongning 发送悄悄话 shandongning 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/10/2011 postreply 04:26:01

两口子都长得不错耶,和苦呢。早离了,都可以找个合适自己的过日子,就没这事了~~~ -熊猫媳妇- 给 熊猫媳妇 发送悄悄话 熊猫媳妇 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 02/11/2011 postreply 09:32:10

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