The Guardian (USA)

Former Mayo Clinic resident charged with fatally poisoning wife in Minnesota

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A poison specialist and former medical resident at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota is charged with fatally poisoning his wife, a 32-year-old pharmacist who died days after she went to a hospital in August with stomach distress.

Authoritie­s say Connor Bowman, 30, tried to stop the autopsy on his wife, Betty Bowman, arguing she should be cremated immediatel­y and claiming she had a rare illness, which hospital tests did not confirm. The medical examiner’s office halted the order for cremation, citing suspicious circumstan­ces, according to a criminal complaint, and an autopsy showed Betty Bowman died from toxic effects of colchicine, a medicine used to treat gout.

Medical records indicate she was not diagnosed with gout and had not been prescribed the medicine, the complaint states, adding that Connor Bowman had been researchin­g the drug prior to his wife’s death. Six days before she was hospitaliz­ed, he had also calculated the amount of colchicine needed for a lethal dose for a person of his wife’s weight, according to the complaint.

Connor Bowman was charged on

Monday with second-degree murder. He was arrested on Friday and was still in custody as of Tuesday. His attorney did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment from the Associated Press.

Mayo Clinic spokespers­on Amanda Dyslin released a statement on Tuesday that did not identify Bowman by name, but indicated he was a resident at the hospital.

“We are aware of the recent arrest of a former Mayo Clinic resident on charges unrelated to his Mayo Clinic responsibi­lities. The resident’s training at Mayo Clinic ended earlier this month,” the statement said. Dyslin did not say why Connor Bowman’s training at Mayo Clinic ended.

Betty Bowman was also a pharmacist at the Mayo Clinic.

According to the criminal complaint, the south-east Minnesota medical examiner’s office alerted police to the “suspicious death” of Betty Bowman on 21 August, a day after she died.

She had been admitted to a hospital in Rochester on 16 August with “severe gastrointe­stinal distress and dehydratio­n where her condition deteriorat­ed rapidly”, the complaint said. Her initial symptoms were similar to food poisoning and were treated that way, but they continued to worsen. She experience­d cardiac issues, fluid in her lungs and organ failure.

While Betty Bowman was in the hospital, Connor Bowman suggested she was suffering from a rare illness called hemophagoc­ytic lymphohist­iocytosis, or HLH. Hospital tests came back inconclusi­ve for HLH, but Connor Bowman told multiple people that she died from that disease, according to the complaint.

He also told the medical examiner’s office that Betty Bowman’s death was natural and that she “did not want to be a cadaver”, and therefore the autopsy should be canceled, the complaint said. He asked an investigat­or at the medical examiner’s office if the toxicology analysis would be more thorough than the analysis done at the hospital.

The night before Betty Bowman went to the hospital, she told a man – identified as “SS” in the complaint – that she was drinking at home with Connor

Bowman. The next morning, she told SS she was sick, possibly from a drink that was mixed into a large smoothie.

Connor Bowman was a poison specialist and answered calls about poisons, using devices from the University of Kansas for his work, according to the complaint. A woman from the University of Kansas told investigat­ors that Connor Bowman had been researchin­g colchicine, the drug used to treat gout, though he had not received any calls about colchicine, nor had any other employees.

Investigat­ors found that Connor Bowman had searched “internet browsing history: can it be used in court?” and “delete amazon data police” on 5 August. He made calculatio­ns for the lethal dosage rate for colchicine on 10 August.

The Minnesota department of health found colchicine in Betty Bowman’s blood and urine samples that were taken at the hospital, and the medical examiner determined the cause of death to be toxic effects of colchicine, the complaint says.

One woman told investigat­ors that the Bowmans had been talking about divorce, and another told authoritie­s that Connor Bowman said he was going to get $500,000 in life insurance from his wife’s death, the complaint says. Authoritie­s found a receipt for a $450,000 bank deposit inside his home.

He is scheduled to appear in court on 1 November.

 ?? Photograph: Kerem Yücel/AFP/Getty Images ?? The Mayo Clinic confirmed that Bowman was a former resident at the hospital.
Photograph: Kerem Yücel/AFP/Getty Images The Mayo Clinic confirmed that Bowman was a former resident at the hospital.

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