A onetime Mayo Clinic physician with a troubled marriage fatally poisoned his wife and soon afterward told a woman that he was expecting a huge life insurance payout, according to a criminal complaint.
Connor F. Bowman, 30, of Rochester, was arrested Friday and charged Monday in Olmsted County District Court with second-degree intentional murder in connection with the death of 32-year-old Betty Jo Bowman on Aug. 20.
Bowman appeared in court Monday and remains jailed in lieu of $2 million bail ahead of a second court appearance on Nov. 1. His attorney, Michael Schatz, declined Tuesday to respond to the allegations leveled against his client.
The Southeast Medical Examiner's Office determined that Betty Bowman was poisoned with colchicine, a drug used to treat gout and not one she was prescribed.
Connor Bowman was also working for the University of Kansas in early August, fielding calls as a poison specialist, the complaint read. During that time, he used university-issued devices to search for the drug, but did not field any calls related to colchicine, the complaint continued.
As his wife was being treated at the hospital, Connor Bowman suggested that she was suffering from hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), a rare illness that attacks the body's immune system, the complaint read. Tests for HLH were inconclusive.
He then told the Medical Examiner's Office after her death that the autopsy should be halted and the body cremated immediately, according to the allegations. Neither request was granted.
Mayo spokeswoman Amanda Dyslin said Bowman's residency training at the clinic ended "earlier this month." She declined to be more specific.