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RPT: TED WILLIAMS' FROZEN HEAD USED FOR BATTING PRACTICE!! | Print |  E-mail
Friday, 02 October 2009

 

 

NY DAILY NEWS

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA

 

Head of Ted Williams was abused by employees at Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Scottsdale, Ariz., whistleblower says.
Topping/Reuters
Head of Ted Williams was abused by employees at Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Scottsdale, Ariz., whistleblower says.
Ted Williams, who spent his entire career with the Red Sox, died in 2002 at the age of 83.
AP
Ted Williams, who spent his entire career with the Red Sox, died in 2002 at the age of 83.
'Frozen,' by former Alcor exec Larry Johnson, makes shocking claims about how employees treated Ted Williams' frozen head.
'Frozen,' by former Alcor exec Larry Johnson, makes shocking claims about how employees treated Ted Williams' frozen head.

Workers at an Arizona cryonics facility mutilated the frozen head of baseball legend Ted Williams - even using it for a bizarre batting practice, a new tell-all book claims.

In "Frozen," Larry Johnson, a former exec at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Scottsdale, Ariz., graphically describes how The Splendid Splinter" was beheaded, his head frozen and repeatedly abused.

The book, out Tuesday from Vanguard Press, tells how Williams' corpse became "Alcorian A-1949" at the facility, where bodies are kept suspended in liquid nitrogen in case future generations learn how to revive them.

Johnson writes that in July 2002, shortly after the Red Sox slugger died at age 83, technicians with no medical certification gleefully photographed and used crude equipment to decapitate the majors' last .400 hitter.

Williams' severed head was then frozen, and even used for batting practice by a technician trying to dislodge it from a tuna fish can.

The chief operating officer of Alcor for eight months before becoming a whistleblower in 2003, Johnson wrote his book while in hiding, fearful for his life.

He told the Daily News then he had received death threats and was moving from safehouse to safehouse. Johnson plans to come out of the shadows Tuesday, with his book and an appearance on ABC's "Nightline."

Johnson said he wired himself with an audio recorder for his last three months at Alcor, stole internal records and took gruesome photographs that are reproduced in the book.

The book describes other atrocities at Alcor's facility in Arizona, including the dismembering of live dogs that were injected with chemicals in experiments, and a situation in which human blood and toxic chemicals were dumped into a parking lot sewer drain.

It also also details suspicious circumstances involving the bodies of two people who are frozen in steel cylinders at Alcor: gay rights activist John Dentinger and Dora Kent, an elderly woman whose son, Saul Dent, gave Alcor lots of money.

Nothing in the book is as gruesome as Johnson's descriptions of what happened to Williams' body after it was sent to Alcor at the direction of the Williams' son John Henry Williams, who died of leukemia in 2004.

In 2003, The News reported that Buzz Hamon, the ballplayer's close friend and former director of the Ted Williams Museum in Hernando, Fla., sneaked into Alcor with the help of a mortician friend.

Hamon said he was "appalled" by the conditions there, where Williams' body and more than 50 others were stored in steel tanks alongside cardboard boxes and junk. Hamon died in 2004, reportedly committing suicide.



 

Comments (6)add feed
Ron: ...
Is anybody surprised? If the truth were known about
funeral directors and embalmers, it'd probably pale
in comparison to the pecadilloes of Catholic priests.

And, a lot of us who've entrusted loved ones to
the 'good graces' of perverts would be doing hard time.

That's a bet I think I'd win. Wanna take that wager??
1

October 02, 2009
FLdeputy34: ...
Ron, that's why when I die, my Will will specifically state that I be disposed of in the cheapest legal means possible. Any jerk who trys to upsell a copper reinforced and asian silk lined deluxe model casket to some poor old lady with limited income on the premise of "Wouldn't you want your loving husband to rest in the most peaceful environment possible..." should be castrated. Those who profit off the misery and emotional hurting of others are truly among the lowest of humanity.
2

October 03, 2009
88pdx: ...
Good gracious. Arizona and this whole cryogenics thing is just creepy!! I would hate to have their karma and eternal fate, what awaits them is hotter than a steroided out Louisville Slugger!
smilies/undecided.gif
3

October 04, 2009
BaileyF: TED Williams
I would never do that cryonic thing or never would I be involve in such activity. The Alcor Life Extension Foundation is a company that specializes in a relatively young science known as cryonics. Cryonics is where a sample of an organic tissue is frozen for preservation in the hopes that it can be thawed, and if once living tissue, reanimated. In other words, you can have your body frozen and then brought back to life on the long term bet that scientists will eventually figure out how to cure…death! (Note – from what is known about animals on earth, including humans, it isn't a good bet that they will.) One famous – resident – of the Alcor Life Extension facility is baseball legend Ted Williams, whose frozen remains were abused according to a tell all memoir from former COO Larry Johnson. These guys are going to need payday loans for a lawyer; this is the stuff of epic lawsuits.
4

October 09, 2009
BaileyF: ...
October 09, 2009
Gknight: Sad state of death... : http://youtube.com/jesusloveministries
Physical death is inevitable eternal death is optional. I pray more will turn to Christ for forgiveness and life. "For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord." Rom 6:23 Repent, believe, and avoid the deep freeze! smilies/wink.gif
6

October 10, 2009
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