Orientation for new readers - American Domestic Bioterrorism Program - Tools for dismantling kill box anti-law
Memo
and Draft Discovery re: No dosing limits for EUA drugs, devices and
biologics under NIH protocols, to facilitate intentional poisoning in
hospitals (hospital homicide) (PDF)
Analysis
Most Covid-era hospital and nursing home homicide, medical malpractice cases are dismissed long before discovery.
Hospital
and nursing home defendants defend their actions through the PREP Act
declarations and the classification of most of the products (drugs and
devices) they used/use, as having EUA status from the HHS-FDA, to exempt
themselves from medical malpractice and other civil and criminal
liability.
Because
the PHE-PREP+EUA system is set up, intentionally, to provide
license-to-kill for "covered persons" (health care
workers/nurses/doctors/pharmacists) using "covered countermeasures," my
current understanding is that there is no legal limit to the volume, concentration and/or dose of poisons
classified as EUA drugs and biological products, or volume/rate
settings on ventilation machines classified as EUA devices, that may
legally be administered to a targeted victim.
In
other words, the public health emergency (PHE) declarations by HHS
Secretary, Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) classifications by FDA
Commissioner and other FDA officers (as HHS Secretary delegates) and
treatment protocols promulgated by NIH, are broadly written to
facilitate health care provider (HCP) use of any mixture of EUA-covered
poisons, and to provide legal immunity from civil and criminal
prosecution for any HCP who uses any EUA-covered poisons, even if he or
she also uses non-EUA products and even if he or she administers EUA
products in volumes that exceed what would, under non-emergency
conditions, violate typical standards of care.
Supporting documents include:
Aug.
8, 2022 - Blood Money in U.S. Healthcare Financial Incentives: The Use
of “Covered Countermeasures (AJ DePriest, TN Liberty Network) [July 8, 2022 version]
Aug.
10, 2023 - Blood Money in U.S. Healthcare Financial Incentives: The Use
of “Covered Countermeasures” (AJ DePriest, TN Liberty Network)
April 21, 2020 through Feb 11, 2024 - NIH COVID-19 Treatment Guidelines (roughly 60 versions, website to be closed Aug. 16, 2024)
April
17, 2020 - HHS Office of General Counsel Advisory Opinion [20-01] on
the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness (PREP) Act; and the
March 10, 2020 Declaration Under The Act
May
19, 2020 - HHS-OGC Advisory Opinion 20-02 on the Public Readiness and
Emergency Preparedness Act; Secretary’s Declaration under the Act
Oct.
22, 2020 - HHS-OGC Advisory Opinion 20-03 on the Public Readiness and
Emergency Preparedness Act; Secretary’s Declaration under the Act
Oct.
23, 2020 - HHS-OGC Advisory Opinion 20-04 on the Public Readiness and
Emergency Preparedness Act; Secretary’s Declaration under the Act
Jan.
8, 2021 - HHS-OGC Advisory Opinion 21-01 on the Public Readiness and
Emergency Preparedness Act: Scope of Preemption Provision
Jan.
12, 2021 - HHS-OGC Advisory Opinion 21-02 on the Public Readiness and
Emergency Preparedness Act; Secretary’s Declaration under the Act
Draft Discovery for Hospital Homicide/NIH Protocol Cases
Requests for Admission (Yes-No questions)
Under
the NIH Covid-19 Treatment Guidelines in use at [name of
hospital/nursing home] during the time period [date/month/year to
date/month/year] when deceased was treated by [hospital] staff, was
there a legal upper or lower limit to the dose
volume/concentration/frequency of [each medication or device]
administered to deceased?
Note:
If
the hospital/nursing home defendants were required to answer, and
answered "No," then it would be clear to the judge that hospital
employees were instructed, by NIH through hospital administrators, to
continue pushing EUA poisons, while suppressing breathing and
withholding water, food and non-EUA medications (i.e., vitamins,
antibiotics, anti-inflammatory medications), until patients died or
escaped from the hospital or nursing home.
If
the hospital were required to answer, and answered "Yes," then
plaintiffs would have opportunity to request further information about
what those limits were, how the limits were conveyed to hospital staff,
and whether the medical records for deceased show that the hospital
staff gave or withheld doses outside the upper and lower limits.
Hospitals
and nursing homes will likely not be required to answer the discovery
questions, but there's still value in writing them, organizing them, and
getting them into the hands of the general public, private lawyers,
judges, lawmakers and public prosecutors, to help more people understand
the death protocols and keep themselves and their loved ones away from
hospitals and nursing homes where the intentional killing has been done,
is still being done, and will continue to be done.
Requests for Production of Documents
Copies
of the NIH Covid-19 Treatment Guidelines in use in the hospital during
hospitalization/nursing home residency of deceased [insert dates].
Copies
of all written hospital records directing hospital staff about how to
use NIH Covid-19 Treatment Guidelines between Jan. 1, 2020 and the
present.
Minutes
and meeting notes, slide decks, handouts, etc. for all hospital staff
meetings held between Jan. 1, 2020 and the present, at which hospital
staff were given instructions, directions, and/or orders pertaining to
NIH Covid-19 Treatment Guidelines, including but not limited to
information provided to hospital staff relating to legal exposure for
medical license revocation and/or medical malpractice claims related to
use or non-use of NIH Covid-19 Treatment Guidelines and/or EUA products
listed in NIH Covid-19 Treatment Guidelines, and relating to financial
implications for the hospital related to use or non-use of NIH Covid-19
Treatment Guidelines.
Financial
records of all HHS Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
payments and reimbursements received by [name of hospital or nursing
home] between Jan. 1, 2020 and the present, relating to treatment of
decedent and all other patients (names may be redacted) identified by
ICD-10 and/or previous and/or subsequent disease classification code as
Covid-19 patients.
Interrogatories
Which
version of the NIH Covid-19 Treatment Guidelines governed the treatment
plans during the time that the deceased was hospitalized?
Under
non-emergency conditions, are there clinical (medical) and/or legal
limits to dose volume for [medication identified by name] administered
to deceased, in numerical terms? For example, milligrams per pound of
body weight per time interval. [Ask the same question for each
medication identified in medical records of deceased.]
If
there are clinical or legal limits to dose volume for [medication]
under non-emergency conditions, what are those limits, in numerical
terms? For example, milligrams per pound of body weight? [Ask the same
question for each medication identified in medical records of deceased.]
Under
PHE emergency conditions, are there clinical (medical) and/or legal
limits to dose volume for [medication identified by name] administered
to deceased, in numerical terms? For example, milligrams per pound of
body weight per time interval. [Ask the same question for each
medication identified in medical records of deceased.]
If yes, what are those limits, for each medication administered?
Under non-emergency conditions, are there clinical (medical) or legal limits to ventilation volume and rate settings?
If yes, what are those limits?
Under PHE emergency conditions, are there clinical (medical) or legal limits to ventilation volume and rate settings?
If so, what are those limits?
Other
questions and document requests could be developed to elicit
information about and discrepancies between standard of care, dosing,
etc., for provision of water (hydration), food (nutrition), and non-EUA
medications under non-emergency conditions as compared to public health
emergency conditions.
Related
July 24, 2022 - Why
do local law enforcement officers side with hospitals and nursing homes
in conflicts with patients, patients’ family members and pastoral care
providers?
April 28, 2023 - Draft discovery materials for civil and criminal cases.
Useful for promoting understanding that the factual record of events
since January 2020 supports the legal conclusion that products labeled
'vaccines' are presumptive injectable [nasal spray; microneedle patch]
biochemical weapons.
Sept. 9, 2023 - Highland Hospital, Rochester NY, Attempted to Kill My Family Member With Covid Protocol in August 2023 (Sasha Latypova)- “…The
way HHS ensures that the weaponry is properly used is by providing the
shield ONLY to those who operate the machinery precisely according to
the HHS instructions. If you administer the poisons supplied, as
instructed, and lie to/gaslight the targets as instructed, then no
matter how many of them you harm and kill, you are a “covered” person
under the PREP Act…”
Oct. 23, 2023 - On civil suits against Pfizer for “contamination” of Covid-19 biochemical weapons. “PREP Act is a legal tunnel to trap health care workers and turn them into criminals.”
June 5, 2024 - On hospital and nursing home death protocols.
Dormition of St. Ephrem of Syria. Cretan, 15th century, Byzantine museum
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