Search Results for: Fresh alaska pollack
hair, either generally or in patches. the hair shafts may also store certain poisons for years, even decades, after death. in the case of col. lafayette baker, who died july , , use of an atomic absorption spectrophotometer showed the man was killed by white arsenic . the prime suspect was wally pollack
, baker's brother-in-law. according to dr. ray a. neff, pollack had laced baker's beer with it over a period of months, and a century or so later minute traces of arsenic showed up in the dead man's hair. mrs. baker's diary seems to confirm that it was indeed arsenic, as she writes of how she found some...
https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Hair