The Antifreeze Wife: How One Crystal Proved Two Murders
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A single polarized-light photo of kidney tissue lit up like shattered glass: those crystals form only after ethylene glycol poisoning, and that image turned two closed "natural cause" deaths into a criminal case. What happened when a decimal point, a life insurance payout of $150,000, and one woman's calm courtroom demeanor converged on the same name?
In this episode, we lay out the timeline from Glenn Turner's sudden death at 31 to Randy Thompson's nearly identical collapse, and how family suspicion, a reporter's persistence, and a corrected toxicology figure forced investigators to revisit both cases. Could one lab slice and one journalist be the difference between a burial and a murder charge?
Person: Glenn Turner
Age: 31
Location: Marietta, Georgia
Event: Vomiting, treated in hospital, died in bed
Status: Initial ruling "natural causes" (cardiac dysrhythmia)
Person: Lynn Turner (legal name Julia Lynn Womack Turner)
Event: Collected roughly $150,000 in life insurance and Glenn's pension
Location: Moved to Forsyth County after Glenn's death
Person: Randy Thompson
Age: 32
Location: Cumming, Forsyth County, Georgia
Event: Vomiting and severe head pain after dinner, treated and sent home, found dead alone
Toxicology: Reported ethylene glycol 38 mg/L, actual level 380 mg/L after error
Reporter: Jane Hansen, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, pulled autopsy reports and raised concerns
- Glenn Turner vomited repeatedly for three days before death and had a hospital visit for fluid loss.
- Lynn and Glenn married on August 21 at Marietta Baptist Church; Glenn worked for Cobb County Police.
- Lynn later worked as a secretary in the Forsyth County District Attorney's office and for a judge.
- Randy Thompson went to dinner at Longhorn Steakhouse with Lynn and the children the night before his decline.
- A decimal point error changed ethylene glycol from 380 mg/L (lethal) to 38 mg/L (dismissed as contamination).
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