A 27-year-old Brazilian woman, Fernanda Silva Valoz da Cruz Pinto, was walking through the city center of Maceió when an elderly woman stopped her and offered to read her palm. The fortune teller told her she only had “a few days to live,” then handed her a packaged chocolate before they parted ways. Fernanda was hungry, the chocolate looked ordinary, and she ate it.
A 27-year-old Brazilian woman, Fernanda Silva Valoz da Cruz Pinto, was walking through the city center of Maceió when an elderly woman stopped her and offered to read her palm. The fortune teller told her she only had “a few days to live,” then handed her a packaged chocolate before they parted ways. Fernanda was hungry, the chocolate looked ordinary, and she ate it. Within hours, she was texting her family in a panic. “My heart is racing. I’ve thrown up. There’s this bitter taste in my mouth. My vision is blurry. I’m so weak.” Her last text read: “Because I accepted a chocolate in the city centre. I ate it. After that, I felt sick. At the time, it didn’t even cross my mind. She was an old lady.” She died the next morning. Two months later, toxicology confirmed she had been poisoned with lethal concentrations of two agricultural pesticides — sulfotep and terbufos. The fortune teller hadn’t predicted her death. She had planned it. By the time police opened a homic...