By THOMAS C. TOBIN
St. Petersburg Times
July 21, 2000
CLEARWATER -- A Pinellas judge Thursday ordered that photos of
the 1995 autopsy of Lisa McPherson be released, a ruling that
closes the book on the criminal case against the Church of
Scientology.
The church's last-minute attempt to keep the photos sealed was
denied by the Second District Court of Appeal and they were
given to media outlets Thursday afternoon.
They also were made available for public inspection at the
Circuit Court Clerk's Office in Clearwater and at the Pinellas
County Sheriff's Office.
The St. Petersburg Times elected not to publish the photos in
the newspaper. Two of the 40 photos will accompany this story
on the newspaper's Internet site and users first get a warning
of what's to come.
Bob Minton, head of a Scientology watchdog group in Clearwater,
said he had no plans to publish the photos on the Internet, but
expected others would.
The ruling ends a dispute that began June 12, when State
Attorney Bernie McCabe dropped charges alleging the church
abused and illegally practiced medicine on McPherson.
McCabe's office released its investigative files but withheld
the autopsy photos while the church contested their release.
The church argued the photos could jeopardize its right to a
fair trial in a wrongful death lawsuit by McPherson's family,
still pending in Tampa.
Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Crockett Farnell released the
photos after a Times lawsuit was filed, contending the photos
were public record.
Most of the photos show McPherson, 36, on a metal gurney at the
Medical Examiner's Office on Dec. 6, 1995, the day after she
died of a blood clot in her left lung while in the care of
Scientology staffers who tried for 17 days to nurse her through
a mental breakdown.
The photos show a woman who is thin, but not skeletal. They
show a large black bruise on her lower left thigh and a number
of abrasions on her hands, arms, legs and feet.
They also show large areas of her body that are purple -- areas
that lay people might interpret as bruises but in fact are
places where a lack of circulation has caused blood to settle.
The clues left by McPherson's body have been hotly debated for
four years, a debate that continues in the wrongful death case.
Did McPherson lose 40 pounds in the 17 days of church care as
prosecutors and McPherson's family have alleged? Was she
severely dehydrated?
No, say church officials, who Thursday produced photos of
McPherson taken weeks before her death. Her build in the
autopsy photos is no different than the photos of her during
life, they say.
The church and its experts also pointed to a leg bruise. They
say sections of the bruise taken at autopsy indicate it was the
cause of a blood clot behind her left knee that traveled to her
lung, causing death. They say microscopic slides of the bruise
indicate it was caused by an auto accident she was in before
coming under Scientology's care.
Tampa lawyer Ken Dandar, who represents McPherson's family in
the lawsuit, said the leg bruise couldn't have caused the blood
clot because his medical experts say it was too fresh.
Explaining the Times' decision to present two of the photos on
its Internet site, the newspaper's editor and president Paul
Tash said: "We're in the business of providing information, and
those photos seem to reflect on the arguments made by both
sides about the cause of Lisa McPherson's death and her care in
the days before. We publish them here so that readers are not
inadvertently confronted with them but may choose to see them
if they wish."
http://www.sptimes.com/News/072100/TampaBay/Judge_releases_McPher.shtml