Scientology
Doctors paid by 'church' give defense
A former member of O.J. Simpson's "dream team" defense says Lisa
McPherson's death was accidental.
© By THOMAS C. TOBIN
Drs. Michael M. Baden and Cyril H. Wecht also suggested their
work is so conclusive the case should be dropped.
Their primary conclusion: McPherson, 36, died suddenly and
unpredictably of a blood clot in her left lung that originated
from a knee bruise she suffered in a minor auto accident 17
days earlier.
"This is Forensic Pathology 101," said Baden, once part of O.J.
Simpson's "dream team" defense. "This is not complicated."
Wecht said the area behind McPherson's left knee, where the
clot formed, is a common site for blood clots to develop. He
said it traveled into McPherson's heart and lodged in her left
lung.
"This is a very common cause of death in America," he said. "It
remains a major problem in medicine."
Baden and Wecht said medical evidence proves McPherson did not
die from anything done by staffers at Scientology's Fort
Harrison Hotel, who, after the auto accident, tried for 17 days
to nurse McPherson through a severe mental breakdown.
Prosecutors have questioned some of the methods of the
Scientology staff, including forcing food and medication down
McPherson's throat and giving her prescription medication and
injections without medical licenses. But Wecht and Baden
dismissed these as the harmless actions of people trying to
help. They said they did not warrant criminal prosecution.
The doctors, hired two years ago by Scientology, also asserted
there is no evidence that McPherson was dehydrated or
malnourished.
Their statements at a news conference Monday come at an unusual
juncture in a case that finds Scientology's Clearwater entity
charged with two felonies in McPherson's death -- abuse of a
disabled adult and practicing medicine without a license.
Prosecutors are reviewing whether the case will hold up after
Medical Examiner Joan Wood revised her opinion on Feb. 16 by
changing the manner of death from "undetermined" to "accident."
Baden and Wecht said they flew to Clearwater to respond to a
recent St. Petersburg Times editorial about the case. In doing
so, the two doctors provided insight into the size and scope of
the church's defense team. Wecht said six additional forensic
pathologists had independently reached the same conclusions he
and Baden reached.
But their words also seemed directed at the office of State
Attorney Bernie McCabe. Wecht said McCabe's office would be
"irresponsible" and "less than meticulous" to ignore the
doctors' work.
Doug Crow, one of McCabe's top assistants, said if someone
wants to present information about the case, "I don't think
we'd ever refuse that type of information."
He said the office was continuing its review, but noted that
Wood's revised autopsy "still made a finding of severe
dehydration."
The church also must contend with testimony from one of its own
members, Dr. David Minkoff, who told prosecutors in 1998 that
McPherson was "severely dehydrated" when he pronounced her dead.
In 1996, Wood said the blood clot that caused McPherson's death
was due to "bed rest and severe dehydration." She has since
removed that phrase and listed "severe dehydration" as one of
several "final anatomical diagnoses."
She has not explained her decision.
Baden, a former chief medical examiner in New York City, has
played roles in some of the country's most celebrated death
cases. He participated in the re-autopsy of civil rights leader
Medgar Evers. He led the 1979 congressional re-examination of
evidence in the assassination of President Kennedy, and worked
on the autopsies of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., actor John
Belushi and former baseball manager Billy Martin.
Wecht, a lawyer and the county coroner in Pittsburgh, also
worked on the 1979 Kennedy assassination commission and is a
frequent commentator on major death cases.
Both doctors said they spoke Monday because of a March 3 Times
editorial that said the church's experts put pressure on Wood
to change her findings. It also called for Wood to explain her
revision and encouraged McCabe to continue the prosecution.
Jack Reed, who edits Times editorials in north Pinellas, said
the editorial board "is the newspaper's voice on public issues."
"Our editorial position is that a jury should weigh the
evidence and arrive at a verdict," Reed said.
Wecht said no church expert had any discussion with Wood. He
said medical examiners review their findings all the time, and
it would be "intellectually arrogant" to do otherwise.
"It is not done in any kind of surreptitious or clandestine
fashion," he said.
www.sptimes.com/News/030700/TampaBay/Doctors_paid_by_churc.shtml
St. Petersburg Times
March 7, 2000
CLEARWATER -- As prosecutors consider whether to proceed with
criminal charges in the death of Scientologist Lisa McPherson,
the Church of Scientology on Monday presented two nationally
known pathologists who said they have scientific evidence that
the 1995 death was accidental.