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Woman accused of adding Viagra to colleagues’ instant�coffee

Coffee is the worlds most popular beverage with around two billion cups of Joe consumed every single day. However, this week, a bizarre court case from the UK went viral after a 62-year-old woman was accused of adding Viagra to her colleagues instant coffee. She was later cleared and found not guilty after ‘spilling the beans’ to a UK jury.

Espresso Coffee Stock Photos
A glass of espresso coffee is sitting on a wooden surface. (Photo by Nikos Pekiaridis/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Woman cleared of spiking coffee with Viagra

Karen Beale, a 62-year-old factory cleaner, was accused of lacing two jars of instant Nescaf� coffee with ground-up Viagra tablets in an attempt to poison her colleagues.

Not what you would expect to be in Nescaf�, lead prosecutor Matthew Hodgetts told the Canterbury Crown court this week.

Complaints started to be raised about the coffee Beale was making when the firms accountant Katrina Gravenor fell ill with a mysterious ailment that puzzled her doctors  a hidden camera was then set up and pointed directly at the coffee jars.

This week, the jury was reportedly shown at least two video clips from a hidden camera which showed Beales suspicious activity surrounding the jaw of Nescafe instant coffee.

The first showed the cleaner allegedly handling a coffee jar in latex gloves, shaking the containers, pouring out some of its contents, and conspicuously placing them back on the shelf.

In the second clip, Beale was seen handling the jars with her sleeves pulled up over her hand, which the prosecution alleged was done in an attempt to ensure no fingerprints were left at the crime scene.

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JOHANNESBURG, CAMBRIDGESHIRE – MAY 15: Viagra drugs made by Pfizer are displayed in a Pharmacy on May 15, 2014 in Johannesburg, South Africa. The proposed takeover by American pharmaceutical giant Pfizer of its British rival AstraZeneca has led to the UK Business Secretary Vince Cable addressing Parliament to affirm the government’s commitment to securing British science jobs. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

After being alerted, police found two of the coffee jars (one in Gravenors office, the other in company secretary Jean Smiths office) contained trace amounts of sildenafil, an erectile dysfunction medication also known as Viagra, as well as a type of medication used to treat high cholesterol.

She was intending that there would be some effect on those two women by putting it in their coffee. Thats why the prosecution say she was attempting to poison.

The prosecution also noted that whilst neither of the substances were likely to cause serious harm to either Gravenor or Smith, Beale had been hoping and intending it would have some effect and, at the very least, some annoyance.

Beale denied the charges and reportedly told the police that she was the victim of malicious allegations, adding that the footage shows her only inspecting the jars. On Thursday, January 25th, she was cleared of any charges and found not guilty by a jury of seven men.

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TOPSHOT – Law enforcement officers secure the area where they allegedly arrested terror suspect Ahmad Khan Rahami following a shootout in Linden, New Jersey, on September 19, 2016.16 – An “armed and dangerous” Afghan-born suspect wanted in the weekend bomb attacks in New York and New Jersey was wounded Monday in a shootout with police and taken into custody. Federal investigators released a mugshot of 28-year-old Ahmad Khan Rahami, who has brown hair, brown eyes and a brown beard, saying he was last known to live in Elizabeth, a town adjacent to Newark International Airport. (Photo by Jewel SAMAD / AFP) (Photo by JEWEL SAMAD/AFP via Getty Images)