The ever-sensitive Jesse is beside himself, and he calls Walt for help. (Oy, always a mistake.) Walt, who in fact has the real ricin vial, creates a fake ricin cigarette that he then plants and “finds” in Jesse's house.
Season 2. The first time Walt created ricin, it was intended to kill Tuco Salamanca. Walt carried a packet of meth mixed with the poison hoping that Tuco would snort it.
To ease Jesse's mind, Walt made a fake ricin capsule and planted it in Jesse's Roomba, where he soon found it. Jesse was relieved, and so was Walt—he had already concealed the real ricin capsule behind an electrical outlet in his bedroom.
Firstly, Walt really wants to steal the ricin from Jesse in the fifth season. Why ? Jesse was ready to disappear with the misterious guy. It appears that the fat black guy stole the pack with the ricin cigarette in it and his pot.
Looking at the cigarette pack and thinking about the missing weed, Jesse has an epiphany. Jesse thinks back to the action of Episode 412 and 413 , when he thought that his girlfriend Andrea's young son Brock was poisoned by the Ricin cigarette that Walt had made and gave Jesse to poison Gus Fring.
As Saul goes to grab his gun, Jesse reaches it first and points it at the bloodied lawyer. He wants him to admit that he stole the ricin cigarette to help Walt. Saul pleads with Jesse.
Jesse figuring out Walt poisoned Brock | Fandom. For me Jesse figuring out that Walt had gotten Saul to steal the Ricin from him so that he would think Gus had stolen it to poison Brock from noticing his weed was no longer in his pocket was really pushing the limits of believability for me.
Right now, there is no antidote for ricin, but the symptoms of ricin poisoning can be treated. Treatment will depend on how the patient was exposed to the poison, but may include help in breathing, as well as fluids and medications given through a vein.
1. Brock obviously recognized and was scared of him when he went to Andrea's house in the last season, but based on his actual reaction to Walt, I don't think Brock knew for certain that Walt had been the one who poisoned him. Otherwise he would have reacted much more violently to Walt's presence in his home.
So in the end, Walt did poison Lydia, the woman to whom he'd left his blue meth empire at the end of the first half of Breaking Bad's fifth season, solving the much-debated mystery about who the ricin was for.
In the final scene, Hank figures out that Walt is Heisenberg while perusing Walt's copy of “Leaves of Grass” on the toilet. The book is inscribed: “To my other favorite W.W. It's an honor working with you.
Walt had at one point cooked up an extremely strong poison called Ricin. He wanted Jesse to poison Gus with it. Jesse hid it in his cigarette pack, waiting for a moment to slip it in Gus's food but he kept balking. Walt asked Saul Goodman to get the poison cig.
Walt took up smoking when he was a young man overseas as a driver for the Red Cross in France. Like young men in the military when they were confronted by long periods of boredom broken by brief, unexpected moments of intense activity, Walt turned to cigarettes, especially since they were easily available.
While Walt is trying to wake Jesse, he inadvertently and unknowingly knocks Jane onto her back; she starts to choke on her own vomit. Walt rushes to help, but after hesitating for a moment, lets her die, in order to protect Jesse from their eventual overdose, and for self-preservation since she threatened to expose him ...
Breaking Bad's Brock Poisoning Explained
The writers of Breaking Bad referred to the incident as Walt becoming the "Evil Juice Box Man," imagining him injecting the poison into Brock's juice box. Off-camera, Walt had somehow planted the juice box in Brock's lunch at school, making sure only he came in contact with it.
But he also knew that the risk of Brock dying was real, especially if he was not diagnosed in time. Moreover, it is Jesse who immediately directs the doctors towards a poisoning. Perhaps without this, the diagnosis would have been too late.
Long story short, Walt killed Lydia to protect Skyler and the kids. She was presumably the only Madrigal employee still working on the meth operation.
This also still provides Walt with way too much deniability when Jesse confronts him: Yes, I took the ricin back from you, but I didn't do anything to Brock, and you certainly can't prove that I did.
In Breaking Bad Season 4, Gus was aware that something might be wrong with his car because Walter had told him that he would bomb the car.
Inhalation: Within a few hours of inhaling significant amounts of ricin, the likely symptoms would be respiratory distress (difficulty breathing), fever, cough, nausea, and tightness in the chest. Heavy sweating may follow as well as fluid building up in the lungs (pulmonary edema).
Castor oil is not considered very toxic, but allergic reactions are possible. Call the poison control center for treatment information.
Jesse, who has arguably suffered more abuse from Walt than even Skyler. Every time he's tried to form a significant connection outside of Walt – Jane, Andrea, Brock, Mike – Walt has taken every single one of them away, either through direct or indirect means.
Jesse Went To The DEA
He wanted to bring Walt to justice, even if it meant he has to confess to everything he had done up until that point as well. As a response to this betrayal, Walt put a hit out on Jesse's head.
Walt does care for Jesse in his unusual way
Walt may not respect Jesse as a peer, but he does come to genuinely care about him in a semi-familial sense.