• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
SSRI Stories

SSRI Stories

Antidepressant Nightmares

  • Home
  • About
  • All Stories
  • Lessons
    • How do SSRIs (and other medications) cause violence, and why don’t people spot the connection?
    • Anecdotal Evidence of the SSRI-Violence Connection
    • How do SSRIs cause violence and suicide?
    • How is SSRI-Related Violence Different?
    • What Does Research Tell Us About the Connection between SSRIs and Violence?
  • SSRIs

Die, My Love: A True Story of Revenge, Murder, and Two Texas Sisters — (Harper)

October 30, 2004

 To view the book on Amazon click here

Harper

This book states that Piper Rountree Jablin had been taking Prozac and Adderal for ten years up to 2004, the year of the murder.

The book chronicles her long descent into mood swings, emotional lability and mania caused by the Prozac.  The book says her husband stated to a friend before the murder that he “no longer knew who she was”.

Fred Jablin was a prominent professor in communications at the University of Richmond in Virginia.


Die, My Love: A True Story of Revenge, Murder, and Two Texas Sisters (Mass Market Paperback)
by Kathryn Casey (Author)

Book Description:  The day before Halloween 2004 was the last day on Earth for respected, well-liked college professor Fred Jablin. That morning, a neighbor discovered his body lying in a pool of blood in the driveway of Jablin’s Virginia home. Police immediately turned their attentions to the victim’s ex-wife, Piper, a petite, pretty Texas lawyer who had lost a bitter custody battle and would do anything to get her kids back. But Piper was in Houston, one thousand miles away, at the time of the slaying and couldn’t possibly have been the killer . . . could she?

So began an investigation into one of the most bizarre cases Virginia and Texas law enforcement agencies had ever encountered: a twisted conspiracy of lies, rage, paranoia, manipulation, and savage murder that would ensnare an entire family­including two lethally close look-alike sisters­and reveal the shocking depravities possible when a dangerously disordered mind slips into madness.

Filed Under: Aggression, Argumentativeness, Atypical behaviour, Emotional instability/mood swings, Homicide, Irritable/angry, Loss of empathy/feelings for others, Loss of judgment, Lying, Misleading information, North America, Paranoia, Personality Change, Prozac (fluoxetine), Rage, Thought disturbance, United States of America, Virginia (VA)

Primary Sidebar

Categories

Drugs

  • Brintellix/Trintellix (vortioxetine)
  • Celexa (citalopram)
  • Cymbalta (duloxetine)
  • Effexor (venlafaxine)
  • Lexapro (escitalopram)
  • Luvox (fluvoxamine)
  • Other antidepressant/anxiety/sleep medication
  • Paxil (paroxetine)
  • Pristiq (desmethylvenlafaxine)
  • Prozac (fluoxetine)
  • Remeron (mirtazapine)
  • Trazodone
  • Tricyclic antidepressants
  • Unspecified antidepressant
  • Viibryd (vilazodone)
  • Wellbutrin (bupropion)
  • Zoloft (sertraline)

Footer

Contact

Terms | Privacy

Copyright as to indexing © 2023 · Data Based Medicine Global Ltd.