Death in Small Doses
One night, Nancy Lyon awakes in pain and dies shortly after--poisoned with arsenic. Her family immediately suspects her husband Richard, who left her temporarily the year before because of an affair. Especially Nancy's brother is keen on getting the children away from the suspected murderer. All evidence points against Richard, but in court Richard surprisingly presents proof that his wife had depression, so perhaps she killed herself. Or is this 'proof' just fake? Depicts an authentic case.
1945, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
2 March 1950, Queens, New York, USA
15 August 1950, Mammoth Spring, Arkansas, USA
31 July 1958, Dallas, Texas, USA
30 January 1951, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
16 November 1931, Brooklyn, New York, New York, USA
27 June 1953, Griffin, Georgia, USA
29 January 1936, Jersey City, New Jersey, USA
3 March 1968, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA
9 June 1953, Terre Haute, Indiana, USA
13 June 1951, New York City, New York, USA
19 November 1955, Merrick, Long Island, New York, USA
17 October 1965, Valdosta, Georgia, USA
28 December 1983, Greensboro, North Carolina, USA
9 October 1950, Spokane, Washington, USA
27 December 1927, Concord, North Carolina, USA
4 February 1935, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
7 September 1987, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA
30 September 1959, Weston, West Virginia, USA

