With no gunpowder residue on his face and no evidence that he fired a rifle on November 22, 1963, Lee Harvey Oswald was charged with killing President John F. Kennedy.
“I’m just a patsy,” he said. Two days later, he was gunned down by nightclub owner Jack Ruby in the basement of the Dallas police station.
But it goes much deeper than that.
Lee Harvey Oswald, whom Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. calls “a CIA asset,” found himself indirectly or directly involved in medical experiments in New Orleans.
At the heart of the story is Dr. Mary Sherman, a talented and respected orthopedic surgeon from Chicago. Working at the Ochsner Clinic in New Orleans, she became entangled in covert medical research on Simian Virus 40 (SV40), a contaminant found in polio vaccines distributed to millions of Americans and something known to cause cancer in laboratory animals at the time.
Eight months after JFK’s assassination, Dr. Sherman was found dead in her apartment. Her body had severe burn injuries, particularly concentrated on the right side of her body and arm. The extent and nature of these burns were perplexing, as they were inconsistent with a typical house fire or any common accident.
Digging into the story’s core, Shannon Joy has done some fantastic investigative work.
Shannon Joy, a New York State mother, wife, and podcast host, went deep into the heart of New Orleans to the CIA’s former headquarters to meet with Judyth Baker, the girlfriend and lover of Lee Harvey Oswald.
On Tuesday, October 3 at 8:00 pm EST, Shannon will reveal what she discovered in a new documentary titled Dr. Mary’s Monkey: Full Story, which pays homage to Edward T. Haslam’s Dr. Mary’s Monkey.
You won’t want to miss this.
Follow Shannon Joy on “X” and Rumble to be alerted when the documentary goes live. Join me in watching, as I’ll be tuning in Tuesday evening and pulling video clips to share on social media.
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