Physicians at Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton have deduced that General Eric M. Smith was struck by a projectile moments before he had a heart attack a week ago Sunday, sources in the general’s office told Real Raw News.
Directly after the event, Marines at Walter Reed stood guard over the general as physicians friendly to the cause examined him, performed bloodwork, and administered EKG and EGG tests. The heart attack, our source said, stymied them because Gen. Smith was deemed a pillar of health and an exercise enthusiast who had twice placed first in the Marine Corps Commander’s Cup. His previous physical was in September, and his blood pressure, cholesterol, and triglycerides fell within established norms. He had no history of Covid-19 vaccinations, and his blood was free of spike proteins.
Once stable, the general was taken to Pendleton for further evaluation. There, the general’s atypical myocardial infarction baffled the bevy of cardiologists and neurologists who, too, tested and retested him in hopes of rationalizing his collapse. They paid sedulous attention to the results but found nothing suggesting the general was a heart attack candidate.
A more thorough exam, however, revealed a small, circular bruise and a shallow puncture wound on the general’s inner calf, as well as a glass splinter embedded in his skin.
The general reportedly said bruises and bumps “come with the territory,” but he couldn’t explain the puncture wound. He did say he felt as if a “horse fly” bit him while he was jogging before the heart attack.
Medical technicians did another blood draw, this time checking for exotic toxins, and found traces of paralytic shellfish poison, which in concentrated doses shuts down the cardiovascular system and spreads to the victim’s heart, mimicking a heart attack and causing death within minutes.
Physicians concluded that Gen. Smith had been hit with a glass pellet that shattered on impact and delivered the poison into his bloodstream.
“Whoever made the shot is a skilled marksman,” our source said. “Gen. Smith was wearing shorts and a t-shirt, so the shooter wanted to hit bare skin. Hitting the backside of a man’s calf ain’t an easy feat. Right now, we have ballistic experts working to trace the trajectory and hopefully find out where the shot came from. Gen. Smith is lucky to have survived.”