Kim Prosser, whose son died by suicide  after using a chemical sold by Kenneth Law, speaks to media outside the court in  Newmarket, Canada.—Reuters
Kim Prosser, whose son died by suicide after using a chemical sold by Kenneth Law, speaks to media outside the court in Newmarket, Canada.—Reuters

NEWMARKET: A Canadian man accused of selling a legal but potentially deadly chemical and other items online to dozens of people who took their own lives pleaded guilty on Friday to aiding suicide, ending the prospect of a murder trial after prosecutors said a recent appellate ruling made murder charges untenable.

Kenneth Law, 60, appeared at the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Newmarket, north of Toronto. Wearing tan pants, a white shirt and dark suit jacket, Law showed no emotion as he stood in a prisoner’s box and pleaded guilty to aiding the suicide of 14 Ontario residents, aged 16 to 36. He will be sentenced in September.

Law also admitted that 79 people in Britain died as a result of consuming or using products he sold, according to an agreed statement of facts spanning more than 60 pages, which took around three hours to read out in court.

Prosecutor Peter Westgate told Justice Michelle Fuerst that prosecutors would ask that 14 first-degree murder charges Law was also facing be withdrawn after his sentencing.

Family members of victims inside the courtroom were visibly upset, with some wiping their eyes with tissues, as prosecutor Cheryl Nadler read out the circumstances of each victim’s death.

Salt in high concentration

According to the statement, Law operated four companies with websites through which he marketed and sold sodium nitrite and other items, including masks, hoods and regulators, which could be used by the purchasers to take their own lives.

Sodium nitrite, a salt used in low concentration as a food additive to cure processed meats, can be deadly when ingested in high concentrations.

Law sent 1,209 packages of the salt and other goods to customers in 41 countries between Jan 2021 and April 2023, the court heard. The shipments included 330 sent to addresses in Britain, 431 to the United States and 157 within Canada.

The statement described victims who vomited, collapsed in their parents’ arms, were found unresponsive in bed by family members or friends, or who died alone in hotel rooms and vehicles after consuming or using products shipped by Law.

Financial records showed more than $296,000 Canadian dollars was deposited into Law’s bank account from Shopify and PayPal accounts.

Law’s case has drawn global attention because of its international reach. Authorities in Britain, Ireland and other countries have opened investigations into whether the products were responsible for deaths in their jurisdictions.

Published in Dawn, May 30th, 2026

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