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In 1978, an outbreak of smallpox in the United Kingdom resulted in the death of Janet Parker, a British medical photographer, who became the last recorded person to die from the disease. Her illness and death, which was connected to the deaths of two other people, led to the Shooter Inquiry, an official investigation by government-appointed ...
The chief investigating officer in 2015, Peter Beirne, stated, "[M]y working hypothesis at the moment is that it was a burglar, or burglars, who weren't particularly proficient. They came across Janet, they had control of her because they handcuffed her, and I think she was bludgeoned to death when she pressed the panic alarm." [34]
She used to be a junior staff at the Birmingham, England labs which held the smallpox virus samples back in 1978. She was held responsible for the death of a scientist due to exposure to smallpox. She began plotting her revenge by splicing monkeypox with smallpox, just so she can take her revenge. She died 21 days after she was arrested.
Janet England, revered former broadcaster for WBTV and WSOC, one of the city’s first female news anchors, died last week at 72.
Janet Gee, 62, perished in the Feb. 20 fire at her home at 7 Century Lane. An online fundraiser created on behalf of the family by the Greg Hill Foundation has raised more than $63,000 as of Monday.
Janet Lesley Stewart, 15, was stabbed to death on New Year's Eve 1974 and buried in a shallow grave in Newton Heath, North Manchester. [1] Wanda Skala, 17, was murdered on 19 July 1975 on Lightbowne Road, Moston while walking home from the hotel where she worked as a barmaid.
In 'Still Pictures: On Photography and Memory,' Janet Malcolm, who died in 2021, produced a tragically semi-revealing homage to her personal history.
The Enfield poltergeist was a claim of supernatural activity at 284 Green Street, a council house in Brimsdown, Enfield, London, England, between 1977 and 1979.The alleged poltergeist activity was centred on sisters Janet, aged 11, and Margaret Hodgson, aged 13.