From: cultxpt@primenet.com (Jeff Jacobsen)
Date: Wed, 15 Dec 1999 17:49:49 GMT
Message-ID: <3857d410.3550692@news.primenet.com>
Below is the first public mention of Lisa McPherson's story. Before
this everyone outside Scientology, including Lisa's family, thought
Lisa had simply died of a fast-acting disease.
Mystery surrounds Scientologist's death
By CHERYL WALDRIP of The Tampa Tribune
December 15, 1996
CLEARWATER - After spending half her life as a member of the Church of
Scientology, Lisa McPherson told friends she was ready to get out.
At 36, she yearned to reunite with her mom and old friends and start a
new life in Dallas.
She hoped to visit them at Thanksgiving and vowed to be home for good
by last Christmas.
``She said she couldn't get into it over the phone but she said she
had a lot to talk about,'' said Kelly Davis, her friend since
childhood. ``She said she would explain when she got here.''
To Davis, her friend sounded ``like the old Lisa,'' not the distant
stranger she had been for a decade. The women laughed and talked as
they had before McPherson joined Scientology after her high school
graduation 18 years earlier.
``She had made the decision to get out and come back here and she
seemed happy,'' Davis said.
But on Thanksgiving a couple of weeks later, McPherson was not at
home. Instead, she was at the Fort Harrison Hotel, Scientology's world
spiritual headquarters.
She was taken there Nov. 18 by Scientologists for ``rest and
relaxation.''
Seventeen days later, she was dead.
An autopsy by the Pinellas-Pasco Medical Examiner's Office showed
McPherson's 5-foot-9, 108-pound body was severely dehydrated, her arms
and legs were bruised, her skin was cracked and scaling. Her left
pulmonary artery was blocked by a fatal blood clot brought on by
dehydration and ``bed rest.''
``The Clearwater Police Department doesn't think she died of natural
causes,'' said spokesman Wayne Shelor.
People who attended the wake in Dallas say Scientologists told them
McPherson died of ``spinal meningitis.''
Tampa attorney Robert Johnson who represents Scientology said church
members initially suspected meningitis and only later learned that was
not the case.
``No one knew what had happened to her,'' Johnson said. He said they
now believe McPherson had a strep infection. Authorities have no
indication of that.
Police have questions about McPherson's death. Detectives wanted to
talk with Scientology employees Suzanne Schnuremberger, Ildiko
Cannovas and Laura Arrunada, but were told by the church that all
three had left the country. They are still being sought for
questioning.
Johnson said those people no longer work for the church and
Scientology doesn't know how to locate them.
Clearwater Police Detective Sgt. Wayne Andrews said he thinks
Schnuremberger is in Switzerland or Germany, Cannovas is probably in
Hungary and Arrunada may be working in the medical field in Mexico. He
recently asked for help locating them by posting a request for
information on the Internet.
The three former employees ``worked in an office that would have had
control over her'' during her stay, Andrews said.
Church of Scientology spokesman Brian Anderson said that is false. He
said the three have no connection to McPherson's death and the
investigation is nothing more than a harassment campaign against the
church by police.
He also disputed that McPherson wanted to leave Scientology. ``She
wasn't thinking of leaving the church,'' he said.
On the evening of Nov. 18, 1995, McPherson was driving her Jeep
Cherokee on South Fort Harrison Avenue. A motorcycle accident had
stopped traffic and McPherson smacked into a boat trailer being towed
by a Ford pickup.
``It was a minor accident, but paramedics at the scene said she was
wild-eyed,'' Detective Andrews said. ``She was walking down the street
and removed all of her clothes. The paramedics put her in an
ambulance, and although she had no physical injuries, took her to the
Morton Plant [Hospital] emergency room.''
A psychiatric nurse was called, Andrews said. He said church members
showed up at the hospital, said they didn't believe in psychiatry and
insisted on witnessing the interview.
``There was nothing physical wrong with her, but the doctor wanted to
keep her there,'' Andrews said. ``She signed out against medical
advice and left with several church members.''
``She goes to 210 South Fort Harrison for rest and relaxation and the
next time there's any indication of what's happening to her is that on
Dec. 5, 1995, she shows up at HCA Hospital in New Port Richey and
she's dead on arrival,'' Andrews said.
Scientologists took her to New Port Richey to be treated by
Scientologist physician David Minkoff, Andrews said.
Scientology spokesman Anderson disputes the detective's account of the
events. He said church members were not present for the interview at
the hospital and that McPherson did not sign out against medical
advice, but was released.
He said if she had been mentally unfit, hospital officials could have
had her committed under the Baker Act, but they did not.
Anderson said she was taken to the Fort Harrison Hotel because she
asked to go there, and there was no indication McPherson was ill until
the day of her death.
``Lisa at first didn't want to see a doctor but we talked her into
seeing a doctor,'' Anderson said. ``She knew Dr. Minkoff and he is an
expert in infectious diseases so that's why she was taken there.''
Minkoff said the medical examiner's report is incomplete.
``There are major findings as to the probable cause of death that
explain a lot about what happened,'' Minkoff said.
He declined to say what those findings are because medical records are
confidential. He said the records are available to officials through
the hospital.
If the Medical Examiner's Office looks at them, he said, its doctors
will see what caused McPherson's death.
Anderson and Johnson said Minkoff's examination determined McPherson
had a strep infection. Anderson said such infections can come on
quickly, cause skin discoloration that looks like bruising and can
dehydrate a victim. Johnson said Minkoff found the infection through a
blood test.
Larry Bedore of the Pasco-Pinellas Medical Examiner's Office, which
conducted the autopsy, said he was not aware of any blood tests being
done, or even of McPherson's blood being drawn at the hospital.
He was not aware of any strep infection.
News of McPherson's death stunned her mother, Fannie McPherson. ``It's
just been awful,'' she said. ``She was the last of my family.''
All she knew was her daughter had been under pressure in her work as a
salesperson for AMC Publishing in Clearwater. Andrews said the company
is owned by Scientologists and has Scientology as one of its
customers.
``She called me three weeks before she died and she was crying,''
Fannie McPherson said. ``She said she was having trouble with her
sales. She said, `Mother, I've let my group down.' ''
No one with AMC returned telephone calls for comment.
After her daughter's death, Fannie McPherson came to Clearwater, where
she learned of the traffic accident and the odd behavior.
She said her daughter's Scientology friends told her that, upon
arrival at the Fort Harrison on Nov. 18, Lisa McPherson was put in
``baby watch,'' which an ex-church member says is Scientology
terminology for solitary confinement.
Ex-church members say such confinement is used when a member has a
``psychotic break'' or is threatening to flee the church.
``They are put in a room with no one and nothing,'' said Dennis
Erlich, a former Scientologist who now is an activist against the
church.
Police say they cannot confirm or deny the ``baby watch'' allegations.
Anderson said there is no such thing as ``baby watch,'' and that
McPherson was never held in such a fashion. ``That's completely false
and there is liability if you print that,'' Anderson said. ``It's not
true.''
Johnson and Anderson say Erlich is not reliable. Johnson said Erlich
``has a big ax to grind.'' Anderson said Erlich was thrown out of the
church.
McPherson's body was returned to Dallas. At the visitation,
Scientologists ``hovered'' around, said friend Kelly Davis.
``Ms. Mac couldn't breathe without them on top of her,'' Davis said.
``They came to the funeral home in Dallas and they were checking us
out and hovering and listening.''
Davis said Scientologists asked to stay with Fannie McPherson at her
home, but she refused. They also insisted that Lisa McPherson wished
to be cremated.
``I never heard her say that's what she wanted, and I never would have
done it, but they convinced me that's what she wanted,'' Fannie
McPherson said.
Anderson said those claims are false.
``I was there,'' Anderson said. ``Church members were not hovering
around. I was concerned about Lisa. She had a lot of friends and we
wanted to go and pay our respects.''
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