Who would want to kill scientist Joseph Morrissey, who enjoyed an international reputation for his pioneering research into the use of radio frequency waves in cancer treatment?
That’s the question friends and colleagues were asking late Tuesday after Morrissey, 46, an assistant professor of pharmaceutical sciences at Nova Southeastern University, was fatally shot during what police say was a home invasion robbery.
Morrissey was “very well-liked,” said Andres Malave, dean of NSU’s College of Pharmacy.
Just after midnight Monday, an intruder burst into his Plantation home, bound him and his wife, and set fire to the house in the 600 block of NW 75th Terrace, according to police.
A neighbor told WFOR-Ch. 4 that during the ordeal the robber also abducted the couple, took them to a nearby bank and forced them to make a cash withdrawal.
Morrissey’s wife Linda, 48, and the couple’s young son, who was asleep at the time, later escaped from the house and were not injured.
“This is very disturbing,” said Appu Rathinavelu, a fellow scientist who has known Morrissey for 15 years. “I am not able to believe it when I heard the news. It’s like a dream.”
First to respond to the scene were Plantation firefighters, who extinguished a blaze accelerated by gasoline, according to Detective Robert Rettig.
Plantation Fire-Rescue Battalion Chief Joel Gordon said firefighters were met by a woman, apparently Morrissey’s wife, and directed to his body in a patio area.
The investigation, quickly joined by officials from the State Fire Marshal’s office, continued well into the afternoon Tuesday.
Access to the quiet suburban street in a neighborhood called Secluded Gardens was blocked to all but residents for much of the day, and yellow crime scene tape surrounded the turquoise-colored house.
Any fire damage to the house was not visible from the outside.
During the day two cars belonging to the Morrisseys were towed away.
Police said the suspected robber was a man, but provided no additional details.
While Morrissey was not teaching classes this semester, he still kept a rigorous schedule in the lab.
Malave said Morrissey customarily arrived at his lab by 7 a.m., and often returned to his work the late afternoon after picking up his son from school at 4 p.m.
“He was very focused on his research,” Malave said. “We will miss him as a friend at the college.”