There are cases of methanol resistance, such as that of
Michael Malloy, whom a group of acquaintances tried and failed to poison with methanol in the early 1930s. In December 2016,
78 people died in Irkutsk, Russia, from methanol poisoning after ingesting a
counterfeit body
lotion that was primarily methanol rather than ethanol as labeled. The body lotion, before the event, had been used as a cheap substitute for
vodka by the impoverished people in the region despite warnings on the lotion's bottles that it was not safe for drinking and long-standing problems with alcohol poisoning across the country. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, Iranian media reported that nearly 300 people had died and over a thousand became ill due to methanol poisoning in the belief that drinking methanol could help with the disease. In the United States, the
Food and Drug Administration discovered that several brands of
hand sanitizer manufactured in Mexico during the pandemic contained methanol, and urged the public to avoid using the affected products. In June 2025, 57 people were poisoned by tainted alcoholic beverages in
Jordan. Nine people died from the incident. Jordanian Authorities arrested 12 individuals that are linked to the factory which manufactured the contaminated alcoholic beverages. All 12 were charged with murder and attempted murder. ==See also==