One day, Urooj Khan jumped for joy after scoring a $1 million winner on
an Illinois lottery scratch ticket. The next month, he was dead. The
lottery winner ‘woke up screaming from fatal cyanide poisoning ONE DAY
after receiving a check for his $1million ticket. Investigators
initially ruled Khan’s manner of death natural.
But after being prompted by a relative, the medical examiner’s office in
Cook County, Illinois, revisited the case and eventually determined
there was a lethal amount of cyanide in Khan’s system. “That … led us to
issue an amended death certificate that (established) cyanide toxicity
as the cause of death, and the manner of death as homicide,” Chief
Medical Examiner Dr. Steve Cina said Monday. Why did Khan, an Indian
immigrant who was described as a well-liked, hardworking and successful
businessman, die? And who is responsible?
No arrests
have been made. “We are investigating it as a murder, and we’re working
closely with the medical examiner’s office,” Chicago police spokeswoman
Melissa Stratton said Monday. On June 26, Khan was all smiles at a
7-Eleven in the Rogers Park section of Chicago. Surrounded by his wife,
daughter and friends, he held an oversized $1 million check and recalled
his joy upon playing the “$3 million Cash Jackpot!” game, where tickets
sell for $30 apiece. “I scratched the ticket, then I kept saying, ‘I
hit a million!’ over and over again,” the 46-year-old Khan said,
according to a press release from the Illinois Lottery.
“I jumped two feet in the air, then ran back into the store and tipped
the clerk $100.” The plan, he explained, was to use the money for his
mortgage, paying off bills, a donation to St. Jude Children’s Research
Hospital and investing more in his dry cleaning businesses.
“Winning the lottery means everything to me,” Khan said. He would have
to wait a few weeks to collect his actual winnings, which amounted after
taxes to about $425,000.
According to CNN affiliate WGN, that check was issued July 19, but Khan
never got to spend it. The next night, Khan came home, ate dinner and
went to bed, according to an internal police department document
obtained by the Chicago Tribune. His family later heard him screaming
and took him to a local hospital, where he was later pronounced dead,
the paper reported, citing the document. That’s where the Cook County
medical examiner’s office came in, investigating Khan’s death because it
was “sudden and unexpected,” Cina said. At the time, there were no
allegations of foul play or evidence of trauma. So, following the
office’s policy, Khan’s body underwent what Cina described as an
“external examination (and) basic toxicology testing,” neither of which
turned up anything abnormal.
So the medical examiner ruled that Khan had died of arterial scler*tic
cardiovascular disease — which encompasses incidents like heart attacks,
strokes and aortic ruptures — and that his manner of death was natural,
according to Cina. A few days later, a family member approached the
doctor who had examined the body “and said they felt uncomfortable that
it was being ruled a natural and they suggested that we look into it
further,” the chief medical examiner said. “So we did that,” he added.
“Forensics is not a static field. If new evidence comes to light, we’ll
revisit cases.”
That meant more in-depth toxicology tests. In early September, new
screening results came back indicating cyanide in Khan’s blood. With
that, the official manner of death was changed from natural to pending,
Cina said, and Chicago police got involved. In late November, a more
detailed blood analysis came back showing “a lethal level of cyanide,”
and Khan’s death became a murder case. Chicago police haven’t offered
details, including a possible motive, about what they call an “ongoing
investigation.”
Talking briefly with CNN affiliate WBBM and the Tribune, Khan’s widow
described her husband as kind and exemplary. Jimmy Goreel, who runs the
7-Eleven where the winning lottery ticket was sold, offered similarly
glowing comments about Khan. “I would never think that anybody … would
hurt him,” Goreel told WGN. “(He was a) nice person, very hopeful and
gentle (and) very hardworking.”
No comments:
Post a Comment