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Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him

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Question:

On Sat, 17 May 2003 04:54:04 GMT, sunshine…@law.com (sunshine666) prounounced a fatwah thus: >May 16, 2003 >Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him >By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS >JENSEN BEACH, Fla. (AP) — When Lynda Taylor put on perfume and lit >scented candles around the house, it wasn’t romance she had on her >mind. >It was spite, police say. >Taylor, 36, was arrested last week on charges she tried to seriously >injure her chemically sensitive husband.

I’m sensitive to bitching, moaning, blaming, and long periods of silence.  D’you think I can get my wife arrested? – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->In addition to using the perfume and candles, Taylor sprayed the house >with bug killer and Lysol disinfectant, plugged in scented air >fresheners, and emptied lavender sachets around the home, her husband >says. >David Taylor, 46, says the fragrances caused him to swoon — and not >in the hearts-and-flowers sense, either. He says he fell into a stupor >that left him too feeble even to call for help. >“This extreme exposure made me very ill with severe brain fog, >headache, numbness and trembling and pain throughout my body so severe >I could barely move,” he wrote in his complaint. >His wife denies using fragrances to torment her husband and suggests >he is faking his sensitivity to chemicals. She says she often dabbed >on perfume and it never affected him before during their three-year >marriage. >“He takes a little bit of the truth and twists it into full-blown >lies,” she says. >Taylor’s husband claims to suffer from a rare disorder called multiple >chemical sensitivity, an allergic reaction to perfumes and other >scents that he says can be fatal. >The couple had been feuding over a $150,000 workers’ compensation >settlement that the husband received in March for his illness. Taylor >says he and his wife were talking about splitting up, and his wife >became hostile when he refused to give her half the money and the >house. >He says his wife, with help from his stepdaughter, subjected him to >three days of torment in early April. She started with perfume, then >moved on to other scents after police came to the couple’s home and >said it wasn’t a crime to wear fragrance, he says. >“They thought the effect it had on me was hilarious,” he wrote in >his complaint. >Finally, after Taylor’s doctor supplied a letter to verify his >sensitivity to scents, police arrested the wife. She was released >after being charged with aggravated battery, which carries up to 15 >years in prison. >“When everything comes out, the facts will show that it’s a lot more >serious than just spraying perfume,” says Jennifer Thomas, a >prosecutor. “Her actions went further than just simply being a pest. >She crossed over a line when she actually put someone’s life in >danger.” >During his three days of misery, Taylor says, his wife had call block >installed on their phone so he could not reach his doctor and took >their computer apart so he could not use e-mail. >The cause of multiple chemical sensitivity is unknown, and some >authorities question whether it even really exists. Taylor traces his >illness to toxic mold and cleaning chemicals in the county courthouse >where he worked more than 10 years ago. >Before his wife’s arrest, Taylor got a restraining order against her >last month, but a judge dissolved it 10 days later after Lynda >Taylor’s attorney argued David Taylor was exaggerating his illness. >Attorney Karen Steger showed photographs of Taylor gardening and >exposing himself to chemicals and other substances without any ill >effects. Steger also called friends of the couple to testify that they >have worn cologne during visits to the Taylor home without bothering >David Taylor. >“We’ve already proven him to be a fraud,” Steger says. >^—— >On the Net: >Chemical Injury information Network: http://ciin.org >National Institute of Environmental Health Science: >http://www.niehs.nih.gov

Response:

The Court of Public Opinion found that sunshine666 expressed the following opinions: – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> May 16, 2003 > Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him > By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS > JENSEN BEACH, Fla. (AP) — When Lynda Taylor put on perfume and lit > scented candles around the house, it wasn’t romance she had on her > mind. > It was spite, police say. > Taylor, 36, was arrested last week on charges she tried to seriously > injure her chemically sensitive husband. > In addition to using the perfume and candles, Taylor sprayed the house > with bug killer and Lysol disinfectant, plugged in scented air > fresheners, and emptied lavender sachets around the home, her husband > says. > David Taylor, 46, says the fragrances caused him to swoon — and not > in the hearts-and-flowers sense, either. He says he fell into a stupor > that left him too feeble even to call for help. > “This extreme exposure made me very ill with severe brain fog, > headache, numbness and trembling and pain throughout my body so severe > I could barely move,” he wrote in his complaint. > His wife denies using fragrances to torment her husband and suggests > he is faking his sensitivity to chemicals. She says she often dabbed > on perfume and it never affected him before during their three-year > marriage. > “He takes a little bit of the truth and twists it into full-blown > lies,” she says. > Taylor’s husband claims to suffer from a rare disorder called multiple > chemical sensitivity, an allergic reaction to perfumes and other > scents that he says can be fatal. > The couple had been feuding over a $150,000 workers’ compensation > settlement that the husband received in March for his illness. Taylor > says he and his wife were talking about splitting up, and his wife > became hostile when he refused to give her half the money and the > house. > He says his wife, with help from his stepdaughter, subjected him to > three days of torment in early April. She started with perfume, then > moved on to other scents after police came to the couple’s home and > said it wasn’t a crime to wear fragrance, he says. > “They thought the effect it had on me was hilarious,” he wrote in > his complaint. > Finally, after Taylor’s doctor supplied a letter to verify his > sensitivity to scents, police arrested the wife. She was released > after being charged with aggravated battery, which carries up to 15 > years in prison. > “When everything comes out, the facts will show that it’s a lot more > serious than just spraying perfume,” says Jennifer Thomas, a > prosecutor. “Her actions went further than just simply being a pest. > She crossed over a line when she actually put someone’s life in > danger.” > During his three days of misery, Taylor says, his wife had call block > installed on their phone so he could not reach his doctor and took > their computer apart so he could not use e-mail. > The cause of multiple chemical sensitivity is unknown, and some > authorities question whether it even really exists. Taylor traces his > illness to toxic mold and cleaning chemicals in the county courthouse > where he worked more than 10 years ago. > Before his wife’s arrest, Taylor got a restraining order against her > last month, but a judge dissolved it 10 days later after Lynda > Taylor’s attorney argued David Taylor was exaggerating his illness. > Attorney Karen Steger showed photographs of Taylor gardening and > exposing himself to chemicals and other substances without any ill > effects. Steger also called friends of the couple to testify that they > have worn cologne during visits to the Taylor home without bothering > David Taylor. > “We’ve already proven him to be a fraud,” Steger says. > ^—— > On the Net: > Chemical Injury information Network: http://ciin.org > National Institute of Environmental Health Science: > http://www.niehs.nih.gov

Let me see if i got this right… HE gets awarded $150,000 workers’ compensation settlement because of a claim HE has that limits HIS job choices and SHE wants half of it? Bwahahahahaha!!!! And she is willing to nearly kill him for it. There is just no end to this bullshit is there? — ~wd~ I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.                                               —— Socrates

Response:

- Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -Lance Delacroix <lance_delacr…@fastmail.fm> wrote in message <news:[email protected]>… > On Sat, 17 May 2003 04:54:04 GMT, sunshine…@law.com (sunshine666) > prounounced a fatwah thus: > >May 16, 2003 > >Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him > >By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS > >JENSEN BEACH, Fla. (AP) — When Lynda Taylor put on perfume and lit > >scented candles around the house, it wasn’t romance she had on her > >mind. > >It was spite, police say. > >Taylor, 36, was arrested last week on charges she tried to seriously > >injure her chemically sensitive husband. > I’m sensitive to bitching, moaning, blaming, and long periods of > silence.  D’you think I can get my wife arrested?

All of these things are frequently identified as domestic violence.  Go for it. [snip]

Response:

Patricia wrote: > Both of these are favorites of mine too. They light and pleasant. > I think part of the problem  with any kind of scent is how much….. > Some people seem to bathe in it. (G) Church seems to be a favorite spot for > scent fans. > It’s pure torture for me to get on an  airplane from Florida north….so > many older people have either lost their sense of smell or it has become > impaired. > It’s splashed on with great abandon  and the mixture of smells, plus close > quarters is almost unbearable.  If you have asthma or other breathing > problems it can create a medical problem for you.

Good points, some of our hospitals and doctors offices now have a "no scent" policy posted. The airlines and the economy will suffer if they don’t also consider such. JMO J  news:alt.support.mcs

Response:

Dog3 wrote: > "Ignoramus18915" <ignoramus18…@NOSPAM.18915.invalid> wrote in message > news:[email protected]… > > I hate fragrances also, this poisonous chemical shit that plugs into > > electrical outlets. Fortunately I was able to convince my spouse to > > stop using them. > What do you do when you get into a crowded elevator?  When I lived in the > city I lived in a high rise and worked on the 14th floor of the office > building.  In the morning you could smell cologne, after shave, deodorant, > shampoo etc.

My friend lives on a main floor of a building.  She has hepa filters and has to plug up along the bottom of her door. The scents from the laundry room are a major hazard for her asthma J – news:alt.support.mcs

Response:

sunshine666 wrote: > May 16, 2003 > Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him > By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS > [] > On the Net: > Chemical Injury information Network: http://ciin.org > National Institute of Environmental Health Science: > http://www.niehs.nih.gov

Thanks <http://www.familypractice.com/journal/abfpjournal_frame.htm?main=/jou…> <http://Kosmoi.com/Nature/Health/Perfume/> <http://www.immuneweb.org/articles/perfume.html> news:alt.support.mcs J

Response:

Ignoramus18915 wrote: > I hate fragrances also, this poisonous chemical shit that plugs into > electrical outlets. Fortunately I was able to convince my spouse to > stop using them.

Please continue speaking out (in retail, public even at work). I believe the ADA (in the US) recognizes the problem J news:alt.support.mcs

Response:

"Jaytee" <blueberr…@hotmail.com> wrote in message

news:uWIxa.428$[email protected]… – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -> "Sharon B" <sha…@lart.com> wrote in message > news:[email protected]… > > Um….you missed the part about neighbors testifying to visiting his > > home wearing cologne and seeing him out in the yard gardening and > > working with all kinds of chemicals, wd > > Ever smell malathion or sevin? > People with chem sensitivities/allergies are not necessarily sensitive to > ALL chemicals.  Even particular brands of, eg, hair colourant will cause a > problem and others won’t.  I react badly to many chemicals but can zap the > odd garden weed without ill effect – obviously with usual precautions. And > ever try telling the odd drop-in neighbour to leave your premises > immediately cos they’ve used too much deoderant?  You will do it if the > overwhelming chemical smell is disabling, but with the windows open & not > sitting too close to the person you might be able to get by.

I once worked with a woman that claimed to be sensitive to certain colognes and other types of chemicals.  She claimed it would send her into some type of reaction.  I can not tell you the number of times she was taken to the ER because someone wandered by her office with a liberal dose of Polo on.  Polo seemed to be the biggest irritant. Michael

Response:

"Sharon B" <sha…@lart.com> wrote in message

news:[email protected]… > Um….you missed the part about neighbors testifying to visiting his > home wearing cologne and seeing him out in the yard gardening and > working with all kinds of chemicals, wd > Ever smell malathion or sevin?

People with chem sensitivities/allergies are not necessarily sensitive to ALL chemicals.  Even particular brands of, eg, hair colourant will cause a problem and others won’t.  I react badly to many chemicals but can zap the odd garden weed without ill effect – obviously with usual precautions.   And ever try telling the odd drop-in neighbour to leave your premises immediately cos they’ve used too much deoderant?  You will do it if the overwhelming chemical smell is disabling, but with the windows open & not sitting too close to the person you might be able to get by.

Response:

Yeah, and the misandrist, callous title given to this piece by foxnews.com: The Sweet Smell of Revenge.

Response:

"Ignoramus18915" <ignoramus18…@NOSPAM.18915.invalid> wrote in message

news:[email protected]… > I hate fragrances also, this poisonous chemical shit that plugs into > electrical outlets. Fortunately I was able to convince my spouse to > stop using them. > i

What do you do when you get into a crowded elevator?  When I lived in the city I lived in a high rise and worked on the 14th floor of the office building.  In the morning you could smell cologne, after shave, deodorant, shampoo etc. Michael <- thinks Grey Flannel is suffocating

Response:

"Dog3" <furb…@claquedot.net> wrote in message

news:mmtxa.1519$[email protected]… > "Ignoramus18915" <ignoramus18…@NOSPAM.18915.invalid> wrote in message > news:[email protected]… > > I hate fragrances also, this poisonous chemical shit that plugs into > > electrical outlets. Fortunately I was able to convince my spouse to > > stop using them. > > i > What do you do when you get into a crowded elevator?  When I lived in the > city I lived in a high rise and worked on the 14th floor of the office > building.  In the morning you could smell cologne, after shave, deodorant, > shampoo etc. > Michael <- thinks Grey Flannel is suffocating

What about Nina Ricci…..  ’Llair du temps’ ??  Not sure of the spelling on that one, sorry, but it’s my favorite. stargazer – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text –

Response:

in article sauxa.60778$dc5.35…@fe09.atl2.webusenet.com, stargazer at starga…@hotmail.com wrote on 5/17/03 1:28 PM: > What about Nina Ricci…..  ’Llair du temps’ ??  Not sure of the spelling on > that one, sorry, but it’s my favorite. > stargazer

======== Both of these are favorites of mine too. They light and pleasant. I think part of the problem  with any kind of scent is how much….. Some people seem to bathe in it. (G) Church seems to be a favorite spot for scent fans. It’s pure torture for me to get on an  airplane from Florida north….so many older people have either lost their sense of smell or it has become impaired. It’s splashed on with great abandon  and the mixture of smells, plus close quarters is almost unbearable.  If you have asthma or other breathing problems it can create a medical problem for you.

Response:

I hate fragrances also, this poisonous chemical shit that plugs into electrical outlets. Fortunately I was able to convince my spouse to stop using them. i – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -In article <3ec5bfe9.13805…@news.io.com>, sunshine666 wrote: >  May 16, 2003 >  Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him >  By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS >  JENSEN BEACH, Fla. (AP) — When Lynda Taylor put on perfume and lit >  scented candles around the house, it wasn’t romance she had on her >  mind. >  It was spite, police say. >  Taylor, 36, was arrested last week on charges she tried to seriously >  injure her chemically sensitive husband. >  In addition to using the perfume and candles, Taylor sprayed the house >  with bug killer and Lysol disinfectant, plugged in scented air >  fresheners, and emptied lavender sachets around the home, her husband >  says. >  David Taylor, 46, says the fragrances caused him to swoon — and not >  in the hearts-and-flowers sense, either. He says he fell into a stupor >  that left him too feeble even to call for help. >  “This extreme exposure made me very ill with severe brain fog, >  headache, numbness and trembling and pain throughout my body so severe >  I could barely move,” he wrote in his complaint. >  His wife denies using fragrances to torment her husband and suggests >  he is faking his sensitivity to chemicals. She says she often dabbed >  on perfume and it never affected him before during their three-year >  marriage. >  “He takes a little bit of the truth and twists it into full-blown >  lies,” she says. >  Taylor’s husband claims to suffer from a rare disorder called multiple >  chemical sensitivity, an allergic reaction to perfumes and other >  scents that he says can be fatal. >  The couple had been feuding over a $150,000 workers’ compensation >  settlement that the husband received in March for his illness. Taylor >  says he and his wife were talking about splitting up, and his wife >  became hostile when he refused to give her half the money and the >  house. >  He says his wife, with help from his stepdaughter, subjected him to >  three days of torment in early April. She started with perfume, then >  moved on to other scents after police came to the couple’s home and >  said it wasn’t a crime to wear fragrance, he says. >  “They thought the effect it had on me was hilarious,” he wrote in >  his complaint. >  Finally, after Taylor’s doctor supplied a letter to verify his >  sensitivity to scents, police arrested the wife. She was released >  after being charged with aggravated battery, which carries up to 15 >  years in prison. >  “When everything comes out, the facts will show that it’s a lot more >  serious than just spraying perfume,” says Jennifer Thomas, a >  prosecutor. “Her actions went further than just simply being a pest. >  She crossed over a line when she actually put someone’s life in >  danger.” >  During his three days of misery, Taylor says, his wife had call block >  installed on their phone so he could not reach his doctor and took >  their computer apart so he could not use e-mail. >  The cause of multiple chemical sensitivity is unknown, and some >  authorities question whether it even really exists. Taylor traces his >  illness to toxic mold and cleaning chemicals in the county courthouse >  where he worked more than 10 years ago. >  Before his wife’s arrest, Taylor got a restraining order against her >  last month, but a judge dissolved it 10 days later after Lynda >  Taylor’s attorney argued David Taylor was exaggerating his illness. >  Attorney Karen Steger showed photographs of Taylor gardening and >  exposing himself to chemicals and other substances without any ill >  effects. Steger also called friends of the couple to testify that they >  have worn cologne during visits to the Taylor home without bothering >  David Taylor. >  “We’ve already proven him to be a fraud,” Steger says. >  ^—— >  On the Net: >  Chemical Injury information Network: http://ciin.org >  National Institute of Environmental Health Science: >  http://www.niehs.nih.gov

Response:

On Sat, 17 May 2003 03:20:48 -0500, "~wd" <Bus…@TrollBusters.Com> wrote in <vcbremdiahi…@corp.supernews.com>: – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text ->The Court of Public Opinion found that sunshine666 expressed the following opinions: >> May 16, 2003 >> Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him >> By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS >> JENSEN BEACH, Fla. (AP) — When Lynda Taylor put on perfume and lit >> scented candles around the house, it wasn’t romance she had on her >> mind. >> It was spite, police say. >> Taylor, 36, was arrested last week on charges she tried to seriously >> injure her chemically sensitive husband. >> In addition to using the perfume and candles, Taylor sprayed the house >> with bug killer and Lysol disinfectant, plugged in scented air >> fresheners, and emptied lavender sachets around the home, her husband >> says. >> David Taylor, 46, says the fragrances caused him to swoon — and not >> in the hearts-and-flowers sense, either. He says he fell into a stupor >> that left him too feeble even to call for help. >> “This extreme exposure made me very ill with severe brain fog, >> headache, numbness and trembling and pain throughout my body so severe >> I could barely move,” he wrote in his complaint. >> His wife denies using fragrances to torment her husband and suggests >> he is faking his sensitivity to chemicals. She says she often dabbed >> on perfume and it never affected him before during their three-year >> marriage. >> “He takes a little bit of the truth and twists it into full-blown >> lies,” she says. >> Taylor’s husband claims to suffer from a rare disorder called multiple >> chemical sensitivity, an allergic reaction to perfumes and other >> scents that he says can be fatal. >> The couple had been feuding over a $150,000 workers’ compensation >> settlement that the husband received in March for his illness. Taylor >> says he and his wife were talking about splitting up, and his wife >> became hostile when he refused to give her half the money and the >> house. >> He says his wife, with help from his stepdaughter, subjected him to >> three days of torment in early April. She started with perfume, then >> moved on to other scents after police came to the couple’s home and >> said it wasn’t a crime to wear fragrance, he says. >> “They thought the effect it had on me was hilarious,” he wrote in >> his complaint. >> Finally, after Taylor’s doctor supplied a letter to verify his >> sensitivity to scents, police arrested the wife. She was released >> after being charged with aggravated battery, which carries up to 15 >> years in prison. >> “When everything comes out, the facts will show that it’s a lot more >> serious than just spraying perfume,” says Jennifer Thomas, a >> prosecutor. “Her actions went further than just simply being a pest. >> She crossed over a line when she actually put someone’s life in >> danger.” >> During his three days of misery, Taylor says, his wife had call block >> installed on their phone so he could not reach his doctor and took >> their computer apart so he could not use e-mail. >> The cause of multiple chemical sensitivity is unknown, and some >> authorities question whether it even really exists. Taylor traces his >> illness to toxic mold and cleaning chemicals in the county courthouse >> where he worked more than 10 years ago. >> Before his wife’s arrest, Taylor got a restraining order against her >> last month, but a judge dissolved it 10 days later after Lynda >> Taylor’s attorney argued David Taylor was exaggerating his illness. >> Attorney Karen Steger showed photographs of Taylor gardening and >> exposing himself to chemicals and other substances without any ill >> effects. Steger also called friends of the couple to testify that they >> have worn cologne during visits to the Taylor home without bothering >> David Taylor. >> “We’ve already proven him to be a fraud,” Steger says. >> ^—— >> On the Net: >> Chemical Injury information Network: http://ciin.org >> National Institute of Environmental Health Science: >> http://www.niehs.nih.gov >Let me see if i got this right… >HE gets awarded $150,000 workers’ compensation settlement because >of a claim HE has that limits HIS job choices and SHE wants half >of it? >Bwahahahahaha!!!! >And she is willing to nearly kill him for it. >There is just no end to this bullshit is there?

Um….you missed the part about neighbors testifying to visiting his home wearing cologne and seeing him out in the yard gardening and working with all kinds of chemicals, wd Ever smell malathion or sevin?

Response:

May 16, 2003 Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS JENSEN BEACH, Fla. (AP) — When Lynda Taylor put on perfume and lit scented candles around the house, it wasn’t romance she had on her mind. It was spite, police say. Taylor, 36, was arrested last week on charges she tried to seriously injure her chemically sensitive husband. In addition to using the perfume and candles, Taylor sprayed the house with bug killer and Lysol disinfectant, plugged in scented air fresheners, and emptied lavender sachets around the home, her husband says. David Taylor, 46, says the fragrances caused him to swoon — and not in the hearts-and-flowers sense, either. He says he fell into a stupor that left him too feeble even to call for help. “This extreme exposure made me very ill with severe brain fog, headache, numbness and trembling and pain throughout my body so severe I could barely move,” he wrote in his complaint. His wife denies using fragrances to torment her husband and suggests he is faking his sensitivity to chemicals. She says she often dabbed on perfume and it never affected him before during their three-year marriage. “He takes a little bit of the truth and twists it into full-blown lies,” she says. Taylor’s husband claims to suffer from a rare disorder called multiple chemical sensitivity, an allergic reaction to perfumes and other scents that he says can be fatal. The couple had been feuding over a $150,000 workers’ compensation settlement that the husband received in March for his illness. Taylor says he and his wife were talking about splitting up, and his wife became hostile when he refused to give her half the money and the house. He says his wife, with help from his stepdaughter, subjected him to three days of torment in early April. She started with perfume, then moved on to other scents after police came to the couple’s home and said it wasn’t a crime to wear fragrance, he says. “They thought the effect it had on me was hilarious,” he wrote in his complaint. Finally, after Taylor’s doctor supplied a letter to verify his sensitivity to scents, police arrested the wife. She was released after being charged with aggravated battery, which carries up to 15 years in prison. “When everything comes out, the facts will show that it’s a lot more serious than just spraying perfume,” says Jennifer Thomas, a prosecutor. “Her actions went further than just simply being a pest. She crossed over a line when she actually put someone’s life in danger.” During his three days of misery, Taylor says, his wife had call block installed on their phone so he could not reach his doctor and took their computer apart so he could not use e-mail. The cause of multiple chemical sensitivity is unknown, and some authorities question whether it even really exists. Taylor traces his illness to toxic mold and cleaning chemicals in the county courthouse where he worked more than 10 years ago. Before his wife’s arrest, Taylor got a restraining order against her last month, but a judge dissolved it 10 days later after Lynda Taylor’s attorney argued David Taylor was exaggerating his illness. Attorney Karen Steger showed photographs of Taylor gardening and exposing himself to chemicals and other substances without any ill effects. Steger also called friends of the couple to testify that they have worn cologne during visits to the Taylor home without bothering David Taylor. “We’ve already proven him to be a fraud,” Steger says. ^—— On the Net: Chemical Injury information Network: http://ciin.org National Institute of Environmental Health Science: http://www.niehs.nih.gov

Response:

Crossposted by some dumbass to 5 groups: alt.support.marriage,alt.love,soc.men,alt.true-crime,alt.med.allergy TROLL ALERT! – Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -sunshine666 wrote: > May 16, 2003 > Man: Wife Used Fragrances to Torment Him > By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS > JENSEN BEACH, Fla. (AP) — When Lynda Taylor put on perfume and lit > scented candles around the house, it wasn’t romance she had on her > mind. > It was spite, police say.

Response:

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