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Poisoned candy myths

Poisoned candy myths are urban legends about malevolent strangers intentionally hiding poisons, drugs, or sharp objects such as razor blades in candy, which they then distribute with the intent of harming random children, especially during Halloween trick-or-treating. These myths, originating in the United States, serve as modern cautionary tales to children and parents and repeat two themes that are common in urban legends: danger to children and contamination of food.[1]

Apples and homemade treats were common gifts to trick-or-treating children in the earlier parts of 20th century. Over time, parents preferred individually wrapped, store-bought candy.

No cases of strangers killing or permanently injuring children this way have been proven.[2] Commonly, the story appears in the media when a young child dies suddenly after Halloween. Medical investigations into the actual cause of death have always shown that these children did not die from eating candy given to them by strangers. However, in rare cases, adult family members have spread this story to cover up filicide or accidental deaths. In other incidents, a child who has been told about poisoned candy places a dangerous object or substance in a pile of candy and pretends that it was the work of a stranger. This behavior is called the copycat effect. Folklorists, scholars, and law enforcement experts say that the story that strangers put poison into candy and give that candy to trick-or-treating children has been "thoroughly debunked".[3][2]

Worries that candy from strangers might be poisoned have led to the rise of alternative events to trick-or-treating, such as events held at Christian churches, police and fire stations, community centers, and retail stores.[4][5] The primary risk to children's health and safety on Halloween is being killed by a car.[2]

History edit

Claims that candy was poisoned or adulterated gained general credence during the Industrial Revolution, when food production moved out of the home or local area, where it was made in familiar ways by known and trusted people, to strangers using unknown ingredients and unfamiliar machines and processes.[6] Some doctors publicly claimed that they were treating children poisoned by candy every day. If a child became ill and had eaten candy, the candy was widely assumed to be the cause. However, no cases of illness or death were ever substantiated.

In the 1890s and 1900s, the US Bureau of Chemistry, in conjunction with state agencies, tested hundreds of kinds of candy and found no evidence of poisons or adulteration.[7] These tests revealed that inexpensive glucose (from corn syrup) was in common use for cheap candies, that some candies contained trace amounts of copper from uncoated copper cooking pans, and that coal tar dyes were being used for coloring, but there was no evidence of the many types of poison, industrial waste, garbage, or other adulterants alleged to be present. Eventually, the claims that children were being sickened by candy were put down to indigestion due to overeating, or to other causes, including food poisoning due to improper cooking, hygiene, or storage of meat and other foods.[6]

Social causes edit

The prevalence and persistence of these myths during the 1960s and 1970s, a time of social upheaval, greater racial integration, and improved status for women, reflected societal questions about who was trustworthy.[8] Because society was struggling with questions about whether to trust neighbors in newly integrated neighborhoods, or young women who were publicly rejecting the subservient, motherhood-focused roles previously assigned to women, these stories about unidentifiable neighbors allegedly harming random, innocent children during an event intended to bring happiness to these children caught and retained the public imagination in a way that accurate stories about a judgmental neighbor, an abusive parent, or an adult carelessly leaving harmful chemicals where children can reach them, would not have.[8] An academic view sees this as an example of a rumor panic, with Halloween developing as a carnival-like folk institution – meant to release social tensions – losing its functionality as neighborhoods themselves break down (for various reasons).[9]

Effects edit

 
An automobile trunk at a trunk-or-treat event at a church in Illinois

Due to their fears, parents and communities restricted trick-or-treating and developed alternative "safe" events, such as trunk-or-treat events held at Christian churches.[5] This collective fear also served as the impetus for the "safe" trick-or-treating offered by many local malls.[10]

This story also promoted the sale of individually wrapped, brand-name candies and discouraged people from giving homemade treats to children.[8]

The myth may also distract parents from the primary safety risk on Halloween, which is children being killed by cars. In the US, young children ages 4 to 8 are ten times as likely to be killed by a car on Halloween than on any other day of the year.[11][12] Children of all ages (age 0 to 17) are three times as likely to be killed by a vehicle on Halloween than during the rest of the year.[11][13]

Candy-tampering myth edit

Development of the modern candy-tampering myth edit

Several events in the late 20th century fostered the modern-day candy tampering myth.

In 1959, a California dentist, William Shyne, gave candy-coated laxative pills to trick-or-treaters. He was charged with outrage of public decency and unlawful dispensing of drugs.[8]

In 1964, a disgruntled Long Island, New York woman gave out packages of inedible objects to children who she believed were too old to be trick-or-treating. The packages contained items such as steel wool, dog biscuits, and ant buttons (which were clearly labeled with the word "poison"). Though nobody was injured, she was prosecuted and pleaded guilty to endangering children. The same year saw media reports of lye-filled bubble gum being handed out in Detroit and rat poison being given in Philadelphia, although these media reports were never substantiated to be actual events.[14]

Another notable milestone in the spread of the candy tampering myths was an article published in The New York Times in 1970. This article claimed that "Those Halloween goodies that children collect this weekend on their rounds of 'trick or treating' may bring them more horror than happiness" and provided specific examples of potential tampering.[15]

Reports and copycat incidents peaked shortly after the Chicago Tylenol murders, which were first reported one month before Halloween and continued into October 1982, further contributing to the myth of candy tampering.[16] The Chicago Tylenol murders involved an unidentified murderer who tampered with and added poison to a few bottles of over-the-counter medication after the medication had been delivered to stores, resulting in the deaths of several people who then ingested the medication.

Debunking the myths edit

Joel Best, a sociologist at the University of Delaware, specializes in the scholarly study of candy-tampering legends. He collected newspaper reports from 1958 to 1983 in search of evidence of candy tampering.[16] Fewer than 90 instances might have qualified as actual candy tampering. In none of the cases does he attribute the events to "random attempts to harm children" during the Halloween holiday. Instead, most cases were attempts by adults to gain financial compensation or, far more commonly, by children to get attention.[1][17] Best found five child deaths that were initially thought by local authorities to be caused by homicidal strangers, but none of those were sustained by investigation.[1]

Fabrications by children are particularly common. Children sometimes copy or act out the stories about tampered candy that they overhear, by adding pins to or pouring household cleaners on their candy and then reporting the now-unsafe candy to their parents.[8] In these incidents, the children have not been harmed; they know that the dangerous item is present and that it would be unsafe to eat the candy.

Far more prevalent during the same period were reports of vandalism, racist incidents, or children being injured in pedestrian–vehicle collisions on Halloween.[16]

Misattributed deaths edit

The deaths of five children were initially blamed on stranger poisoning. A key quality of the poisoned candy myths is that the poisoner is a stranger who is indiscriminately murdering children, rather than dying from an unrelated medical condition or being poisoned by a family member. All of these claims were proven false upon investigation; none of them were poisonings by strangers.

  • Accidental death: In 1970, Kevin Toston, a five-year-old boy from the Detroit area, died after finding and eating his uncle's heroin. The family attempted to protect the uncle by claiming the drug had been sprinkled in the child's Halloween candy.[18]
  • Murdered by father: In a 1974 case, an 8-year-old boy in Deer Park, Texas, died after eating a cyanide-laced package of Pixy Stix that his father had planted in his trick-or-treat pile. The father, Ronald Clark O'Bryan, also gave out poisoned candy to other children in an attempt to cover up the murder, though no other children consumed the poisoned treats. The murderer, who had wanted to claim life insurance money, was executed in 1984.[8] Because the poisoned candy myth describes random or indiscriminate murders by strangers, rather than murder of a son by his own father, this is not technically an example of a poisoned candy myth.[8]
  • Natural death unrelated to candy: In 1978, Patrick Wiederhold, a two-year-old boy from Flint, Michigan died after eating Halloween candy. However, toxicology tests found no evidence of poison, and his death was determined to be due to natural causes.[19]
  • Natural death due to pre-existing medical condition: In 1990, Ariel Katz, a seven-year-old girl in Santa Monica, California, died while trick-or-treating. Early press reports blamed poisoned candy, despite her parents telling the police that she had previously been diagnosed with a serious medical condition, an enlarged heart, which was the actual cause of death.[19]
  • Natural death due to infection: In 2001, a four-year-old girl in Vancouver, British Columbia died after eating some Halloween candy. However, there was no evidence of poisoned candy, and she died of a streptococcus infection.[19]

Media and the myth edit

Despite these claims of poisoned candy being eventually proved false, the news media promoted the story continuously throughout the 1980s, with local news stations featuring frequent coverage. During this time cases of poisoning were repeatedly reported based on unsubstantiated claims or before a full investigation could be completed and often never followed up on. This one-sided coverage contributed to the overall panic and caused rival media outlets to issue reports of candy tampering as well. However, Joel Best says that the spread of the myth cannot be blamed solely on the media and that it must have been transmitted via word of mouth as well.[1]

By 1985, the media had driven the hysteria about candy poisonings to such a point that an ABC News/Washington Post poll that found 60% of parents feared that their children would be injured or killed because of Halloween candy sabotage.[20]

Advice columnists entered the fray during the 1980s and 1990s with both Ask Ann Landers and Dear Abby warning parents of the horrors of candy tampering:

"In recent years, there have been reports of people with twisted minds putting razor blades and poison in taffy apples and Halloween candy. It is no longer safe to let your child eat treats that come from strangers." –Ann Landers in 1995[21]

"Somebody's child will become violently ill or die after eating poisoned candy or an apple containing a razor blade." –Dear Abby in 1983[22]

Candy tampering by friends and family edit

Almost all tampering cases—at a rate of one or two per year—involve a friend or family member, usually as a prank.[23] Almost all of those involved sharp objects, rather than poisoning.[23] Three-quarters of them resulted in no injuries, and the rest resulted in only minor injuries.[23] No child has ever been killed by eating a Halloween candy from a stranger.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Best, Joel; Gerald T. Horiuchi (1985). "The Razor Blade in the Apple: The Social Construction of Urban Legends". Social Problems. 32 (5): 488–99. doi:10.2307/800777. JSTOR 800777.
  2. ^ a b c Skenazy, Lenore (2023-10-25). "Meth-laced Halloween candy is a very unlikely danger for kids". Reason.com. Retrieved 2023-10-25.
  3. ^ Brunvand, Jan Harold (2012-01-01). Encyclopedia of Urban Legends. ABC-CLIO. p. 288. ISBN 9781598847208.
  4. ^ Pitts, Jonathan M. (30 October 2015). "For better and worse, Halloween activities reflect grown-up fears". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 26 October 2018. Police departments issue safety tips. Churches bill "trunk-or-treat" events as "safe" ways to enjoy the holiday. A chain of medical clinics in the region offers to X-ray children's candy. ... Halloween is the night each year when children thrill to the spookier dimensions of life. But a combination of real hazards and urban legends has made the holiday scary for adults as well.Trunk-or-treating involves parents decorating their cars, lining them up in a school or church parking lot, and handing out candy from the trunks. It has gained popularity as an alternative to letting children walk neighborhoods at night.
  5. ^ a b Sharos, David (29 October 2017). "Trunk or Treat event offers safe alternative for Aurora-area residents". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  6. ^ a b Kawash, Samira (2013). Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure. New York: Faber & Faber, Incorporated. pp. 27–72. ISBN 9780865477568.
  7. ^ Kawash, Samira (2013). Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure. New York: Faber & Faber, Incorporated. pp. 64–66. ISBN 9780865477568.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Kawash, Samira (2013). Candy: A Century of Panic and Pleasure. New York: Faber & Faber, Incorporated. pp. 272–276. ISBN 9780865477568.
  9. ^ Davis, Adam Brooke (2005). . Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  10. ^ Bick, Julie (October 20, 2006). "This Halloween, Superheroes Will Head to the Mall". New York Times. Retrieved November 2, 2012.
  11. ^ a b Akhtar, Muizz (2022-10-31). "Forget tainted candy: The scariest thing on Halloween is parked in your driveway". Vox. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
  12. ^ Staples, John A.; Yip, Candace; Redelmeier, Donald A. (2019-01-01). "Pedestrian Fatalities Associated With Halloween in the United States". JAMA Pediatrics. 173 (1): 101–103. doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.4052. ISSN 2168-6203. PMC 6583441. PMID 30383129.
  13. ^ Ingraham, Christopher. "Here's why Halloween is the deadliest day of the year for child pedestrians". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-11-06.
  14. ^ "Deadly 'Tricks' Given Children in 3 States". The Milwaukee Journal. United Press International. November 2, 1964. p. A18.
  15. ^ Klemesrud, Judy (October 28, 1970). "Those Treats May Be Tricks". The New York Times. p. 56.
  16. ^ a b c Best, Joel (1993). Threatened Children: Rhetoric and Concern about Child-victims. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226044262.
  17. ^ Adams, Guy (28 October 2012). "The Halloween poisoner has US in his grip: A new study casts doubt on an urban legend, but the myth of the deadly candy refuses to die". The Independent. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  18. ^ Carroll, Aaron & Rachel Vreeman (2009). Don't Swallow Your Gum!: Myths, Half-Truths, and Outright Lies about Your Body and Health. Macmillan. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-312-53387-8.
  19. ^ a b c Best, Joel. "Halloween Sadism: The Evidence". University of Delaware Faculty Pages. Retrieved October 27, 2014. Revised 2008 and 2011.
  20. ^ Colin, Chris (1999-06-21). "Fighting fear with fear". Salon. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  21. ^ Landers, Ann (October 31, 1995). "Twisted Minds Make Halloween a Dangerous Time". The Sunday Courier. p. 7B. Retrieved November 2, 2009.
  22. ^ Van Buren, Abigail (October 31, 1983). "A Night of Treats, Not Tricks". The Gainesville Sun. p. 13A. Retrieved November 2, 2009.
  23. ^ a b c d "The Men Who Murdered Halloween". Psychology Today. Retrieved 2018-12-30.

Further reading edit

  • Lewis, Dan (October 6, 2013). "Where Did the Fear of Poisoned Halloween Candy Come From?". Smithsonian.
  • Belam, Martin (October 31, 2017). "Drugs or poison in the sweets? The Halloween urban legends that don't die". The Guardian.

External links edit

  • Halloween Non-Poisonings at Snopes.com
  • Pins and Needles at Snopes.com

poisoned, candy, myths, urban, legends, about, malevolent, strangers, intentionally, hiding, poisons, drugs, sharp, objects, such, razor, blades, candy, which, they, then, distribute, with, intent, harming, random, children, especially, during, halloween, tric. Poisoned candy myths are urban legends about malevolent strangers intentionally hiding poisons drugs or sharp objects such as razor blades in candy which they then distribute with the intent of harming random children especially during Halloween trick or treating These myths originating in the United States serve as modern cautionary tales to children and parents and repeat two themes that are common in urban legends danger to children and contamination of food 1 Apples and homemade treats were common gifts to trick or treating children in the earlier parts of 20th century Over time parents preferred individually wrapped store bought candy No cases of strangers killing or permanently injuring children this way have been proven 2 Commonly the story appears in the media when a young child dies suddenly after Halloween Medical investigations into the actual cause of death have always shown that these children did not die from eating candy given to them by strangers However in rare cases adult family members have spread this story to cover up filicide or accidental deaths In other incidents a child who has been told about poisoned candy places a dangerous object or substance in a pile of candy and pretends that it was the work of a stranger This behavior is called the copycat effect Folklorists scholars and law enforcement experts say that the story that strangers put poison into candy and give that candy to trick or treating children has been thoroughly debunked 3 2 Worries that candy from strangers might be poisoned have led to the rise of alternative events to trick or treating such as events held at Christian churches police and fire stations community centers and retail stores 4 5 The primary risk to children s health and safety on Halloween is being killed by a car 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Social causes 1 2 Effects 2 Candy tampering myth 2 1 Development of the modern candy tampering myth 2 2 Debunking the myths 2 3 Misattributed deaths 2 4 Media and the myth 3 Candy tampering by friends and family 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editClaims that candy was poisoned or adulterated gained general credence during the Industrial Revolution when food production moved out of the home or local area where it was made in familiar ways by known and trusted people to strangers using unknown ingredients and unfamiliar machines and processes 6 Some doctors publicly claimed that they were treating children poisoned by candy every day If a child became ill and had eaten candy the candy was widely assumed to be the cause However no cases of illness or death were ever substantiated In the 1890s and 1900s the US Bureau of Chemistry in conjunction with state agencies tested hundreds of kinds of candy and found no evidence of poisons or adulteration 7 These tests revealed that inexpensive glucose from corn syrup was in common use for cheap candies that some candies contained trace amounts of copper from uncoated copper cooking pans and that coal tar dyes were being used for coloring but there was no evidence of the many types of poison industrial waste garbage or other adulterants alleged to be present Eventually the claims that children were being sickened by candy were put down to indigestion due to overeating or to other causes including food poisoning due to improper cooking hygiene or storage of meat and other foods 6 Social causes edit The prevalence and persistence of these myths during the 1960s and 1970s a time of social upheaval greater racial integration and improved status for women reflected societal questions about who was trustworthy 8 Because society was struggling with questions about whether to trust neighbors in newly integrated neighborhoods or young women who were publicly rejecting the subservient motherhood focused roles previously assigned to women these stories about unidentifiable neighbors allegedly harming random innocent children during an event intended to bring happiness to these children caught and retained the public imagination in a way that accurate stories about a judgmental neighbor an abusive parent or an adult carelessly leaving harmful chemicals where children can reach them would not have 8 An academic view sees this as an example of a rumor panic with Halloween developing as a carnival like folk institution meant to release social tensions losing its functionality as neighborhoods themselves break down for various reasons 9 Effects edit nbsp An automobile trunk at a trunk or treat event at a church in IllinoisDue to their fears parents and communities restricted trick or treating and developed alternative safe events such as trunk or treat events held at Christian churches 5 This collective fear also served as the impetus for the safe trick or treating offered by many local malls 10 This story also promoted the sale of individually wrapped brand name candies and discouraged people from giving homemade treats to children 8 The myth may also distract parents from the primary safety risk on Halloween which is children being killed by cars In the US young children ages 4 to 8 are ten times as likely to be killed by a car on Halloween than on any other day of the year 11 12 Children of all ages age 0 to 17 are three times as likely to be killed by a vehicle on Halloween than during the rest of the year 11 13 Candy tampering myth editDevelopment of the modern candy tampering myth edit Several events in the late 20th century fostered the modern day candy tampering myth In 1959 a California dentist William Shyne gave candy coated laxative pills to trick or treaters He was charged with outrage of public decency and unlawful dispensing of drugs 8 In 1964 a disgruntled Long Island New York woman gave out packages of inedible objects to children who she believed were too old to be trick or treating The packages contained items such as steel wool dog biscuits and ant buttons which were clearly labeled with the word poison Though nobody was injured she was prosecuted and pleaded guilty to endangering children The same year saw media reports of lye filled bubble gum being handed out in Detroit and rat poison being given in Philadelphia although these media reports were never substantiated to be actual events 14 Another notable milestone in the spread of the candy tampering myths was an article published in The New York Times in 1970 This article claimed that Those Halloween goodies that children collect this weekend on their rounds of trick or treating may bring them more horror than happiness and provided specific examples of potential tampering 15 Reports and copycat incidents peaked shortly after the Chicago Tylenol murders which were first reported one month before Halloween and continued into October 1982 further contributing to the myth of candy tampering 16 The Chicago Tylenol murders involved an unidentified murderer who tampered with and added poison to a few bottles of over the counter medication after the medication had been delivered to stores resulting in the deaths of several people who then ingested the medication Debunking the myths edit Joel Best a sociologist at the University of Delaware specializes in the scholarly study of candy tampering legends He collected newspaper reports from 1958 to 1983 in search of evidence of candy tampering 16 Fewer than 90 instances might have qualified as actual candy tampering In none of the cases does he attribute the events to random attempts to harm children during the Halloween holiday Instead most cases were attempts by adults to gain financial compensation or far more commonly by children to get attention 1 17 Best found five child deaths that were initially thought by local authorities to be caused by homicidal strangers but none of those were sustained by investigation 1 Fabrications by children are particularly common Children sometimes copy or act out the stories about tampered candy that they overhear by adding pins to or pouring household cleaners on their candy and then reporting the now unsafe candy to their parents 8 In these incidents the children have not been harmed they know that the dangerous item is present and that it would be unsafe to eat the candy Far more prevalent during the same period were reports of vandalism racist incidents or children being injured in pedestrian vehicle collisions on Halloween 16 Misattributed deaths edit The deaths of five children were initially blamed on stranger poisoning A key quality of the poisoned candy myths is that the poisoner is a stranger who is indiscriminately murdering children rather than dying from an unrelated medical condition or being poisoned by a family member All of these claims were proven false upon investigation none of them were poisonings by strangers Accidental death In 1970 Kevin Toston a five year old boy from the Detroit area died after finding and eating his uncle s heroin The family attempted to protect the uncle by claiming the drug had been sprinkled in the child s Halloween candy 18 Murdered by father In a 1974 case an 8 year old boy in Deer Park Texas died after eating a cyanide laced package of Pixy Stix that his father had planted in his trick or treat pile The father Ronald Clark O Bryan also gave out poisoned candy to other children in an attempt to cover up the murder though no other children consumed the poisoned treats The murderer who had wanted to claim life insurance money was executed in 1984 8 Because the poisoned candy myth describes random or indiscriminate murders by strangers rather than murder of a son by his own father this is not technically an example of a poisoned candy myth 8 Natural death unrelated to candy In 1978 Patrick Wiederhold a two year old boy from Flint Michigan died after eating Halloween candy However toxicology tests found no evidence of poison and his death was determined to be due to natural causes 19 Natural death due to pre existing medical condition In 1990 Ariel Katz a seven year old girl in Santa Monica California died while trick or treating Early press reports blamed poisoned candy despite her parents telling the police that she had previously been diagnosed with a serious medical condition an enlarged heart which was the actual cause of death 19 Natural death due to infection In 2001 a four year old girl in Vancouver British Columbia died after eating some Halloween candy However there was no evidence of poisoned candy and she died of a streptococcus infection 19 Media and the myth edit Despite these claims of poisoned candy being eventually proved false the news media promoted the story continuously throughout the 1980s with local news stations featuring frequent coverage During this time cases of poisoning were repeatedly reported based on unsubstantiated claims or before a full investigation could be completed and often never followed up on This one sided coverage contributed to the overall panic and caused rival media outlets to issue reports of candy tampering as well However Joel Best says that the spread of the myth cannot be blamed solely on the media and that it must have been transmitted via word of mouth as well 1 By 1985 the media had driven the hysteria about candy poisonings to such a point that an ABC News Washington Post poll that found 60 of parents feared that their children would be injured or killed because of Halloween candy sabotage 20 Advice columnists entered the fray during the 1980s and 1990s with both Ask Ann Landers and Dear Abby warning parents of the horrors of candy tampering In recent years there have been reports of people with twisted minds putting razor blades and poison in taffy apples and Halloween candy It is no longer safe to let your child eat treats that come from strangers Ann Landers in 1995 21 Somebody s child will become violently ill or die after eating poisoned candy or an apple containing a razor blade Dear Abby in 1983 22 Candy tampering by friends and family editAlmost all tampering cases at a rate of one or two per year involve a friend or family member usually as a prank 23 Almost all of those involved sharp objects rather than poisoning 23 Three quarters of them resulted in no injuries and the rest resulted in only minor injuries 23 No child has ever been killed by eating a Halloween candy from a stranger 23 See also edit2018 Australian strawberry contamination sewing needles put in fresh fruit Caraga candy poisonings accidental contamination with bacteria causing food poisoning 1858 Bradford sweets poisoning accidental confusion of ingredients causing arsenic poisoning 2016 Punjab sweet poisoning intentional poisoning by an angry candymakerReferences edit a b c d Best Joel Gerald T Horiuchi 1985 The Razor Blade in the Apple The Social Construction of Urban Legends Social Problems 32 5 488 99 doi 10 2307 800777 JSTOR 800777 a b c Skenazy Lenore 2023 10 25 Meth laced Halloween candy is a very unlikely danger for kids Reason com Retrieved 2023 10 25 Brunvand Jan Harold 2012 01 01 Encyclopedia of Urban Legends ABC CLIO p 288 ISBN 9781598847208 Pitts Jonathan M 30 October 2015 For better and worse Halloween activities reflect grown up fears The Baltimore Sun Retrieved 26 October 2018 Police departments issue safety tips Churches bill trunk or treat events as safe ways to enjoy the holiday A chain of medical clinics in the region offers to X ray children s candy Halloween is the night each year when children thrill to the spookier dimensions of life But a combination of real hazards and urban legends has made the holiday scary for adults as well Trunk or treating involves parents decorating their cars lining them up in a school or church parking lot and handing out candy from the trunks It has gained popularity as an alternative to letting children walk neighborhoods at night a b Sharos David 29 October 2017 Trunk or Treat event offers safe alternative for Aurora area residents Chicago Tribune Retrieved 26 October 2018 a b Kawash Samira 2013 Candy A Century of Panic and Pleasure New York Faber amp Faber Incorporated pp 27 72 ISBN 9780865477568 Kawash Samira 2013 Candy A Century of Panic and Pleasure New York Faber amp Faber Incorporated pp 64 66 ISBN 9780865477568 a b c d e f g Kawash Samira 2013 Candy A Century of Panic and Pleasure New York Faber amp Faber Incorporated pp 272 276 ISBN 9780865477568 Davis Adam Brooke 2005 Halloween and Devil s Night the Linked Fates of Two Folk Festivals Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2018 Bick Julie October 20 2006 This Halloween Superheroes Will Head to the Mall New York Times Retrieved November 2 2012 a b Akhtar Muizz 2022 10 31 Forget tainted candy The scariest thing on Halloween is parked in your driveway Vox Retrieved 2022 11 06 Staples John A Yip Candace Redelmeier Donald A 2019 01 01 Pedestrian Fatalities Associated With Halloween in the United States JAMA Pediatrics 173 1 101 103 doi 10 1001 jamapediatrics 2018 4052 ISSN 2168 6203 PMC 6583441 PMID 30383129 Ingraham Christopher Here s why Halloween is the deadliest day of the year for child pedestrians Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2022 11 06 Deadly Tricks Given Children in 3 States The Milwaukee Journal United Press International November 2 1964 p A18 Klemesrud Judy October 28 1970 Those Treats May Be Tricks The New York Times p 56 a b c Best Joel 1993 Threatened Children Rhetoric and Concern about Child victims Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226044262 Adams Guy 28 October 2012 The Halloween poisoner has US in his grip A new study casts doubt on an urban legend but the myth of the deadly candy refuses to die The Independent Retrieved 13 October 2015 Carroll Aaron amp Rachel Vreeman 2009 Don t Swallow Your Gum Myths Half Truths and Outright Lies about Your Body and Health Macmillan p 146 ISBN 978 0 312 53387 8 a b c Best Joel Halloween Sadism The Evidence University of Delaware Faculty Pages Retrieved October 27 2014 Revised 2008 and 2011 Colin Chris 1999 06 21 Fighting fear with fear Salon Retrieved 2023 01 12 Landers Ann October 31 1995 Twisted Minds Make Halloween a Dangerous Time The Sunday Courier p 7B Retrieved November 2 2009 Van Buren Abigail October 31 1983 A Night of Treats Not Tricks The Gainesville Sun p 13A Retrieved November 2 2009 a b c d The Men Who Murdered Halloween Psychology Today Retrieved 2018 12 30 Further reading editLewis Dan October 6 2013 Where Did the Fear of Poisoned Halloween Candy Come From Smithsonian Belam Martin October 31 2017 Drugs or poison in the sweets The Halloween urban legends that don t die The Guardian External links editHalloween Non Poisonings at Snopes com Pins and Needles at Snopes com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poisoned candy myths amp oldid 1183188457, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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