Unofficial sources suggest 2nd letter key in nabbing of 'cyanide blackmailer'
For the quiet village of Pysely, near Prague, the news must have come as a shock: police taking a 30 year-old local resident into custody, suspected of being the so-called 'cyanide blackmailer' He, it is believed, led authorities on a three-week chase, in an attempt to extort 300 million crowns. Those who were under threat: random patients at Prague hospitals the anonymous assailant had warned would be poisoned, unless his demands were met.
What is known is that it was the anonymous assailant's calls that gave officials at least some first clues: from the calls using the public 158 emergency line, authorities were able to deduce the assailant was indeed a Czech national and that he had a central-Bohemian accent. Unofficial sources have also reported that it was a 2nd warning letter that was key: examined by graphologists, the letter is believed to have been written by the suspect's own hand, something that will still have to be proven.
For the moment, police have a suspect in custody, and it remains to be seen how the case will develop. The three-week long hunt, as well as a very real warning in early May - in which the anonymous caller left vials of cyanide in a Prague maternity ward kitchen, as well as in a Prague phone booth - made the threat to Prague hospitals tangible enough. Now, a court of law will have to find if the man is guilty as charged: a confirmation of his role as the cyanide blackmailer would carry a sentence of up to twelve years in prison.