December 29, 2008

Halloween Safety Is Always A Concern

No holiday conjures up all of America’s deepest darkest fears more than Halloween. There are many sources of Halloween terror, such as razor blades in apples, cyanide in Pixie Stix, needles in Snickers bars, sex predators lurking in dark doorways, psychos with chainsaws and kidnappers in parked vans. While the vast majority of Halloween horror stories are exaggerated and unfounded, the real dangers are fires, hand injuries caused by carving pumpkins and traffic accidents.
Since the 1970s, Halloween safety has focused on the fear of contaminated candy. In 1970, 5-year-old Kevin Toson died from a heroin overdose. A few days later, officials found that the boy hadn’t eaten heroin-laced candy, as originally believed. Rather, he had accidentally gotten into his uncle’s heroin stash and the family had sprinkled heroin in the boy’s candy afterwards to protect the uncle.
Similarly, in 1974, 8-year-old Timothy Mark O’Bryan died from cyanide poisoned Pixie Stix in Houston, Texas. However, upon closer inspection, detectives found that the boy had in fact been poisoned by his own father. Even though these poisonings were far from random, parents still feared for their kids’ safety amid
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