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In 2004, Lewis was charged with kidnapping and raping a woman. He was jailed for three years while awaiting trial, but prosecutors dropped the charges after the victim refused to testify. His wife runs her own accounting firm. In 2001, she and her business partner won the "New Member of the Year" award from the Cambridge Chamber of Commerce. Lewis is listed as a partner in a Web design and programming company called Cyberlewis. On its Web site, he complains about being known as "the Tylenol Man." "Somehow, after a quarter of a century, I surmise only a select few with critical minds will believe anything I have to say," he says in an audio clip. "Many people look for hidden agendas, for secret double entendre, and ignore the literal meanings I convey. Many enjoy twisting and contorting what I say into something ominous and dreadful which I do not intend. "That my friends is the curse of being labelled the Tylenol Man. Be that as it may, I can NOT change human proclivities. I shant try. Listen as you like." Roger Nicholson, who hosts a local cable TV show in Cambridge, spent hours interviewing Lewis in 2007 and let him stay at his house for several days after Lewis told him his wife had kicked him out. "He told me he was sleeping by the Charles River in a tent," Nicholson said. "The last talk I had with him he was talking about how he couldn't get hired and how no one would give him a job because he was the Tylenol man." Lewis appears to be writing a novel titled "The Doctor's Dilemma." "This is a novel about courage and integrity," he writes on a Web site registered at the address that was searched Wednesday by the FBI. "Dr. Rivers is driven to protect individuals from man made environmental dangers. But in the biggest case in his life, Dr. Rivers discovers something dark in his own family's past which could destroy him if he continues digging." Retired FBI agent Grey Steed, who worked on the extortion probe, said Thursday that he had been contacted by investigators to discuss the case. "It wouldn't surprise me if they weren't looking for something in the way of memoirs or some type of journal he was keeping," Steed said.
[Associated
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