
George Marquardt is an old man. He’s 69, balding, with a grey moustache. He kind of looks like a less well-kept version of Dr Phil.
He was a science whizz as a child at school in Milwaukee. He was also fascinated by an anti-drug video involving a mouse on LSD chasing a cat. Newsweek reported that when he was 19 he stole lab equipment from the University of Wisconsin and that he tricked a Milwaukee College into believing he was a lecturer in physics.
A scientist told a Milwaukee paper in 1965 that he should go to college but “he seems to be convinced he is too smart for that”. A school mate described him as someone who was going to either win the Nobel Prize or “end up in jail”.
Marquardt did end up in jail. The second time for manufacturing fentanyl, which requires an extremely laborious, risky and skilled chemical procedure. Fentanyl is used in operations as a powerful anaesthetic and the U.S. is currently in the grips of an epidemic. Last year in New Hampshire alone, 28 people died from overdosing on pure heroin yet 253 overdosed and died on fentanyl or fentanyl laced heroin according to Fusion.
Watch the full video on George Marquardt from Fusion below. Post continues after video.
On the street, often the drug is mixed with other opiates, sometimes it is sold on its own, but just a few grains of it can kill a person and in the 1990s it is estimated around 300 died from overdosing on Marquardt’s various batches. The Hartford Chronicle reported that DEA administrator Robert C. Bonner dubbed the batch of Marquardt’s fentanyl “the serial killer” of the drug world.