I'm posting this because it involves the sudden death of the wife of someone in the MSM. The wife of Frank Phillips, the politically connected Boston Globe State House bureau chief has reportedly drowned.
She lived in Concord, MA, which happens to be where Susan "THE UNMASKER" Powers lives with her husband, Cass Sunstein.
It's the Boston Globe hack who's saying this lady drowned, and I'm surprised that in all of his presumed grief this MSM hack was able to help write such a detailed tribute to his wife.
As in, maybe the Boston Globe guy contributed to the obituary some time ago? Just a thought.
The dead woman, Jenny Phillips, worked as a therapist and as a documentarian. Crumbs, crumbs, crumbs.
WIFE OF BOSTON GLOBE REPORTER DROWNS OFF NANTUCKET COAST
Sauce: https:// patch.com/massachusetts/barnstable-hyannis/wife-boston-globe-reporter-drowns-cape-cod
Additional Sauce:
https:// www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2018/07/10/accomplished-filmmaker-and-therapist-from-concord-dies-apparent-drowning-nantucket/w97e7Yn8F510P0s0ps5CrM/story.html
NANTUCKET, MA – A documentary filmmaker and wife of a Boston Globe reporter drowned Monday off the coast of Nantucket, according to her husband. Jenny Phillips, 76, died after jumping from her boat to swim to shore.
Her husband, Boston Globe State House bureau chief Frank Phillips, said she was an experienced swimmer and it was not a rare move for her. Her body was found on a beach in Wauwinet around 6:30 or 7 p.m., he told the Globe.
Phillips and her husband were married for over 50 years and have two children and two grandchildren. The couple lived in Concord and had a summer house on Nantucket.
The Boston Globe article linked above says"
“She was full of energy,” said her husband, the Globe’s State House bureau chief since 1991. “She was driven by her passions.”
Those passions included human rights and racial justice, which were reflected in her work as a documentary filmmaker.
One of her films, “The Dhamma Brothers,” looked at the changes a meditation program triggered at a maximum-security prison in Alabama.
Another of her films, “Beyond the Wall,” followed a group of formerly incarcerated men who try to rebuild their lives outside prison; much of the filming for that project took place in Lowell and Lawrence.
Retirement wasn’t something that interested Phillips, who was 76, according to her husband.
She still saw patients on a part-time basis as a therapist in Concord, and she was in the middle of working on another film project focusing on programs that have reduced recidivism rates in Louisiana. She was working while on vacation in Nantucket, said Phillips, showing him clips of outtakes from the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola.
THERE ARE LOTS OF CRUMBS IN THE BOSTON GLOBE STORY, LINKED BELOW, SO I TRIED TO ARCHIVE IT HERE BUT IT MUST BE ARCHIVED BETTER (see link; this sucks):
http://archive.is/urxsc