Mary Sherman
Mary Sherman (researcher, JFK/Assassination/Premature death) | |
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Born | Mary Stults April 21, 1913 Evanston, Illinois, USA |
Died | July 21, 1964 (Age 51) New Orleans, Louisiana |
Cause of death | stabbing, burns |
Alma mater | Northwestern University, University of Chicago |
Spouse | Thomas Sherman |
Victim of | murder |
Interests | cancer |
Cancer researcher interested in the JFK Assassination. In 1964 she was stabbed in the heart, arm, leg and stomach and her mattress had been set on fire. |
Mary Stults Sherman was an American orthopedic surgeon and cancer researcher in New Orleans, Louisiana, who was interested in the JFK Assassination.
Murder
"Mary Sherman was murdered on 21st July, 1964. She had been stabbed in the heart, arm, leg and stomach. Her mattress had been set on fire, but her massive burns could not have come from the smoking mattress. The crime has never been solved. Sherman's death occurred on the day the Warren Commission came to her city (New Orleans) to obtain testimony about the assassination of John F. Kennedy."[1]
Sherman's murder remains unsolved.[2]
Biological research
In 2007 Edward Haslam published Dr. Mary's Monkey, an updated account on the death of Mary Sherman. Haslam believes that Sherman was involved in carrying out secret research into developing a vaccine to prevent an epidemic of soft-tissue cancers caused by polio vaccine contaminated with SV-40.
Haslam argues that Sherman had an accident while using the linear particle accelerator. This explains why her body was so badly burnt. In an attempt to cover-up her secret research, Sherman was stabbed in the heart and then moved under cover of darkness to her apartment. A small fire was then started in an attempt to explain the burns on her body.[3]