UK & World News

  • 28 May 2012, 19:03

Addict Jailed For Tampering With Nurofen

A codeine addict who contaminated packets of Nurofen Plus in a ruse to fund his habit has been jailed for 18 months.

Christopher McGuire cost the manufacturers £2.5m and saved himself just £7 by placing strips of an anti-psychotic drug in empty packets of the painkiller and swapping them for new packets at pharmacies.

A judge jailed him at Southwark Crown Court for the "carefully thought out and skilfully executed" scheme, which created a "good deal of public fear and anxiety".

The court has heard how McGuire's scheme involved asking for Nurofen Plus at a pharmacy counter and then attempting to pay for it with a card he knew would be declined.

This created enough of a distraction that he could discreetly swap the contaminated packet for the fresh one and walk away.

McGuire, who went to university at the age of 16, took 32 tablets of the drug each day to feed his secret addiction. But after losing his job he struggled to pay for it.

Instead, the 31-year-old replaced empty packets with the Seroquel he was being prescribed for schizophrenia, and the contaminated packs ended up in the hands of unsuspecting members of the public.

Two men took the anti-psychotic drugs in error, believing them to be Nurofen Plus, and were left feeling unwell.

Two other pharmacy customers realised the Nurofen Plus they had bought contained Seroquel, but did not swallow any.

An overdose of Seroquel can cause coma, rapid heart rate and high blood pressure, the court heard.

McGuire, of Edzell Drive in Glasgow, was tracked down to his landlady's home in Swanley, Kent, on September 23 after the origins of the Seroquel were traced. He admitted his actions and was later charged with causing a public nuisance.

Passing sentence, judge Alistair McCreath told McGuire: "Your acts caused very considerable financial harm, amounting to well over £2m.

"The costs included recalling the product, destroying suspect stock, investigating the problem which you caused, returning new products to the market and handling the reputational damage caused by you.

"In short, the harm you actually caused or might have caused by your acts was very high."

The judge said the sentence would have been longer if not for substantial mitigation offered by McGuire's legal team, who said he had been "reckless and stupid" but his mind had been addled at the time.

Update:

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what do you think?

8 comments

Arthur Hancock

2:33pm on 28/5/2012

Ahh, poor fellow, he didn't mean any P harm I see.

Score: 11
1 reply

Andrea Hill

5:26pm on 28/5/2012

Selfish druggie pig

Score: 4

Name witheld

2:56pm on 28/5/2012

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Andrew Shingleton

3:34pm on 28/5/2012

He should have faced up to his addiction in th first place, before doing something so wrong.

Score: 5

ffreem200

4:00pm on 28/5/2012

What a diddy

Score: 6

David Wragg

5:23pm on 28/5/2012

Pitifully inadequate sentence.

Score: 4

Roberta Grieve

5:24pm on 28/5/2012

Shouda been 18 years

Score: 4

Read Mind

8:51pm on 28/5/2012

How did this sicko survive OD-ing on 32 Nurofen Plus a day? How come it survived an overdose of the ibuprofen? This kind of thing is very scary. Anything can be tampered with. We don't realise sometimes how much trust we put in things. Best to check everything thoroughly and pray for the best, Deo volente.

Score: 3

Raymond Castle

1:35pm on 29/5/2012

Notice that he was jailed because of the inconvenience to the company, nothing about the possible consequences to the people who bought the packs!

Score: 2
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