Mayo Clinic doc who allegedly poisoned wife’s drink as marriage deteriorated indicted for first-degree murder

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Mayo Clinic doc who allegedly poisoned wife’s drink as marriage deteriorated indicted for first-degree murder

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Law & Crime

DAVID HARRIS | Jan 7th, 2024, 2:09 pm
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The Mayo Clinic doctor who authorities say killed his wife after he spiked her smoothie with gout medicine has been indicted for first-degree murder.

Dr. Connor Bowman was previously charged with second-degree murder in the death of Betty Jo Bowman, but a grand jury tacked on the first-degree murder charge in the Jan. 4 indictment, Minnesota court records show. Connor Bowman faces life in prison if convicted of the most serious charge.

Betty Bowman died at a hospital on Aug. 20 following a four-day stay for what doctors initially thought was food poisoning. Her condition “deteriorated rapidly” from the time of her admission and she began to experience cardiac issues, fluid in her lungs, and organ failure. Betty Bowman was considered a healthy person before her hospital admission, investigators said.

Arrest affidavit

Her husband suggested to others and in her obituary that she suffered from hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis or “HLH,” which is a rare illness where certain blood cells build up and damage organs. But investigators learned she had no previous symptoms of HLH.

The day after she died, the Southeast Minnesota Medical Examiner’s Office alerted the Rochester Police Department about a suspicious death. The office had prevented a cremation from taking place due to the unusual circumstances, according to documents.

Connor Bowman had asked the medical examiner’s office that his wife should be “cremated immediately” because her death was natural, authorities said. But according to the medical examiner, they received a call from a woman who knew the Bowmans who said the couple was having marital issues and “talking about a divorce following infidelity and a deteriorating relationship,” a probable cause arrest affidavit reviewed by Law&Crime said.

Defendant Bowman emailed death investigators at the medical examiner’s office asking if toxicology reports that were being completed were more “thorough” than what would typically be done at a hospital, the affidavit said. He also asked for a list of what would be tested.

Connor Bowman had attended pharmacy school and worked in poison control in Kansas and was currently in medical school. A spokesperson from the Mayo Clinic said in a statement to Law&Crime that his residency at the hospital had just finished in October.

“We are aware of the recent arrest of a former Mayo Clinic resident on charges unrelated to his Mayo Clinic responsibilities,” the statement said. The hospital would not comment further.

Betty Bowman had recently told others that her husband was in debt so they kept separate bank accounts. Connor Bowman told a friend he was going to receive a $500,000 life insurance policy as a result of his wife’s death. Investigators found a check for nearly $500,000 from an insurance company in the Bowman home.

In Rochester Police Department applications for search warrants reviewed by Law&Crime, friends of the couple depict a marriage on the rocks because of financial troubles and infidelity. Though the Bowmans were in an “open relationship,” the couple agreed they would not become emotionally attached to their other partners. However, Connor Bowman became infatuated with his new girlfriend, friends told detectives. Betty Bowman allegedly confronted her husband about the woman and suggested they start divorce proceedings. One friend said she went to see Connor Bowman at his home three days after the death to find the girlfriend there with him and his wife’s photos taken down, the warrant said.

Another pal said she was visiting with Betty Bowman 10 days before her death when she gave her a smoothie her husband had made for her in a Lilo & Stich cup. It “tasted very bad,” and the friend thought it was strange Connor Bowman had made a smoothie for his wife because he “never made anything for anybody,” according to the warrant.

“[The friend] said jokingly at the time that Connor must be trying to poison her, but didn’t think much of it at the time. Betty even joked that she had considered it at the time and said she didn’t think that would happen but decided to not drink the smoothie anyway and threw it out,” the warrant said. The friend became suspicious when Betty Bowman suddenly became ill and died.

Connor Bowman also was not acting like a grieving husband typically would in the days following his wife’s death, the friends said. He seemed “stoic and calm,” even going out for drinks where he “appeared to be happy or at least indifferent” about his wife’s death two days after the fact.

Friends told detectives the doctor would have the means and know-how to poison his wife as he had just completed their pharmacist residency at the Mayo Clinic and also worked as a poison control specialist. The friends, many of whom are medical professionals, grew wary as her condition deteriorated so quickly with little explanation.

One of Betty Bowman’s boyfriends told detectives that Betty Bowman, on Aug. 14, told him she “had a few days off work and was looking to spend some time with him.” The two saw each other the next day and texted later that night while she was drinking with her husband at home.

On Aug. 16, she told him she was so sick she could not sleep at all. She said she thought it may have been an alcoholic drink that she had that caused her illness because it was mixed in a large smoothie, the probable cause arrest affidavit said.

Investigators claim that Connor Bowman used his Mayo Clinic email address to buy the the drug colchicine, the drug used to treat gout that investigators believe he used to poison his wife. He tried to blame her for buying the drug that killed her, saying she “fraudulently” bought the drug under his name, authorities said.

A judge will arraign Connor Bowman on the new charges on Jan. 16.
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