Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

CIA Cancer

Download as txt, pdf, or txt
Download as txt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2

JFK_ASSN National Echo (1:101/505) JFK_ASSN

Msg : 21 of 23
From : Richard Bartholomew 1:382/29 Fri 17 Mar 95 21:35
To : Michael Swanson 1:101/505 Mon 20 Mar 95 04:16
Subj : Cancer

12-Mar-95 22:06 Michael Swanson to Linda Watson:


MS> Is it even possible to inject something into someone to
MS> get cancer? If it is, was this available when Ruby died?
-
According to Philip H. Melanson ("High Tech Mysterious Deaths", *Critique*, Vol.
3,4, Issue No. 15/16, Fall/Winter '84/'85):
"During the 1950s the CIA developed cancer-causing drugs for use in political
assassination - drugs that would produce what appeared to be 'natural' death. A
1952 agency memo reports on the cancer-inducing uses of beryllium: 'This is
certainly the most toxic inorganic element and it produces a peculiar fibrotic
tumor at the site of local application. The amount necessary to produce these
tumors is a few micrograms.' The same memo talks of the possibility of
developing techniques for getting beryllium into the victim's lungs by having it
inhaled in small doses." According to Edward T. Haslam ("Mary, Ferrie, and the
Monkey Virus", *Conference Abstracts*, Wash. DC: Coalition on Political
Assassinations, 1994, p. 18.): "... Jim Garrison discovered an underground
medical laboratory which induced cancer into animals. The lab was run by ...
David Ferrie and several New Orleans doctors. One of the doctors was Mary
Sherman, a nationally prominent cancer researcher who was brutally murdered in
1964. Newly released HSCA documents show that Ferrie possessed laboratory
techniques capable of inducing cancer, including the use of cell-free extracts
and chemical carcinogens. Garrison considered arresting another doctor, Alton
Ochsner, as an accessory-after-the-fact to the Oswald murder. Ochsner was
Sherman's employer. Ochsner also founded INCA, the Information Council of the
Americas, an anti-communist propaganda organization which exposed Oswald's
defection to the USSR during his pre-assassination radio debate. INCA members
owned the television station which filmed Oswald's pamphleting, the radio
station which broadcasted Oswald's radio debate, and the coffee company which
employed Oswald. The files of Guy Banister, considered by many to be Oswald's
handler, were found in INCA after Banister's death. FBI files show that over the
years Ochsner conducted medical research for the War Dept., consulted for the US
Army and the US Air Force, worked with and for the FBI, and was cleared for a
'Sensitive Position' for an undisclosed government agency in October 1959." Ruby
was taken to Parkland Hospital, whose sister hospital was Woodlawn. The two
comprised the Dallas County Hospital District. The director of Woodlawn at the
time of the assassination was Dr. Charles A. LeMaistre, an associate professor
at the University of Texas (UT) Southwestern Medical School. His fellow teachers
there were the doctors who treated Kennedy, Connally, Tippit, and Oswald. Two
months before the assassination, Governor Connally had appointed LeMaistre to
chair the state committee on tuberculosis. LeMaistre went on to become the
Chancellor of the UT System, its most powerful office. He replaced former Army
Air Force intelligence officer Harry Huntt Ransom, who held that office from
1961 until his death in 1976. Ransom had close, personal ties to the OSS, CIA,
Secretary of the Air Force and to the JFK assassination. In 1978, LeMaistre
became director of the UT Cancer Center, the site of a bizarre homicide case
around 1989-90. A staff member was charged with attempted murder when it was
determined he was trying to kill a co-worker by injecting him with cancer cells
- despite the conventional wisdom that this is impossible. (Richard Bartholomew,
*Possible Discovery of an Automobile Used In the JFK Conspiracy*, self published
manuscript, 1993, pp. 140-41). Ruby's chief council, while he was receiving
shots in jail, was Hubert Winston Smith, a law professor at UT. Prior to
teaching at UT, Smith was at a Tulane University department specializing in
medical law. The head of that department from 1949 to 1950 was Alton Ochsner.
--- QuickBBS 2.80 (Zeta-1)
* Origin: JimNet - Austin, TX (512)837-0953 (1:382/29)

You might also like