|
Justice for General Flynn – and Our
Country
We welcome the Justice
Department’s decision to dismiss charges against former National Security
Adviser, Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, an American hero who was
victimized by the Obama administration and the Deep State. The targeting of
General Flynn was a key part of the Obama/Clinton/Deep State coup against
President Trump.
We commend the heroic work of General Flynn’s legal team, led by Sidney
Powell, which exposed the criminal conduct by FBI and DOJ officials behind
Flynn’s illicit prosecution. This corruption, as we have exposed from the
get-go, is the tip of the iceberg. The required next step for justice is
the prosecution of the coup cabal who tried to destroy General Flynn and
overthrow our president.
To see my interview with Lou Dobbs about this story, click
here.
Judicial Watch Filed a Lawsuit for Fauci and WHO
Records
In March 2020, Dr. Anthony Fauci, a prominent member of the president’s
coronavirus task force, praised the
work of the World Health Organization (WHO) and its chairman, Dr. Tedros
Adhanom Ghebreyesus. Fauci said: “Tedros is really an outstanding person
… I mean, obviously, over the years anyone who says that the WHO has not
had problems has not been watching the WHO. But I think under his
leadership they’ve done very well.”
In April, however, President Trump announced a halt to U.S. funding of
WHO. According to the president, the WHO put “political correctness over
lifesaving measures.” Additionally, President Trump said: “The WHO
failed in this duty, and must be held accountable,” adding that the WHO
ignored “credible information” in December 2019 that the virus could be
transmitted from human to human.
We want to have a closer look at the Fauci/WHO connection, so we have filed
a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit on behalf of the Daily Caller
News Foundation (DNCF) against the U.S. Department of Health & Human
Services (HHS) for communications and other records of National Institute
of Allergies and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci and Deputy
Director H. Clifford Lane with and about WHO concerning the novel
coronavirus ( Daily
Caller News Foundation v. U.S. Department Justice (No.
1:20-cv-01149)).
We sued after HHS failed to respond to our April 1, 2020, FOIA request
seeking:
- Communications between Dr. Fauci and Deputy Director Lane and World
Health Organization officials concerning the novel coronavirus.
- Communications of Dr. Fauci and Deputy Director Lane concerning WHO,
WHO official Bruce Aylward, WHO Director General Tedros Anhanom, and
China.
We are requesting communications from January 1, 2020, to April 1,
2020. The DCNF was granted expedited processing of its request.
“This virus has killed hundreds of thousands of people and turned the
whole world upside down,” Daily Caller News Foundation Co-Founder and
President Neil Patel said. “We know that China and WHO could have done a
lot more to prevent or reduce this catastrophe. We therefore have a
legitimate and urgent news purpose for seeking these documents regarding
U.S. officials' communications with WHO and demand that the agencies in
question stop stalling and start following the law that entitles us to this
vital information.”
It is urgent that the NIH follow transparency law during the coronavirus
crisis. It is of significant public interest to learn what WHO was telling
our top medical officials about the coronavirus that originated in
China.
Court Allows Newsom to Give Cash to Illegal Aliens, But It’s
Likely Illegal
Several of our left-leaning governors have used the coronavirus emergency
to test the boundaries of emergency powers. As we might have expected,
California’s governor is even trying to hand out cash to people in the
state and country illegally. No law allows him to do this.
So we asked the court for a temporary
restraining order (TRO) against Governor Gavin Newsom and his
Director of the California Department of Social Services, Kim Johnson, to
restrain them from spending $79.8 million dollars of taxpayers’ money to
provide direct cash benefits to unlawfully present aliens ( Crest
et al. v. Newsom et al. (No. 20STCV16321)).
The court has now issued a bizarre ruling.
Though it found that we were likely to succeed on the merits (that Newsom
had no authority under law to spend the money), the court found that there
was a public interest in sending tax money to illegal aliens during the
coronavirus crisis.
It is astonishing that a court would allow a public official to ignore the
law and spend tax money with no legal authority. Simply put, as the court
seems to acknowledge, the governor has no independent legal authority to
spend state taxpayer money for cash payments to illegal aliens. We will
appeal the court’s manifest error.
Newsom announced his executive initiative on April 15, 2020. The initiative
plans to spend $75 million to provide direct cash payments to illegal
aliens and cost an estimated additional $4.8 million to administer. The
Disaster Relief Assistance for Immigrants Project plans to provide one-time
cash benefits of $500 per adult / $1,000 per household to 150,000
unlawfully present aliens in California.
These benefits are not to be provided to U.S. citizens or legal aliens
residing in the state, according to an April 17 fact sheet issued by the
California Department of Social Services, the “Disaster Relief Assistance
for Immigrants Fact Sheet,” which reiterates that only unlawfully present
aliens are eligible for direct assistance.
Our lawsuit argued that the California State Legislature has not enacted
any law that affirmatively provides that unlawfully present aliens are
eligible for the $75 million of cash public benefits announced by
Newsom.
Well, it is California.
Feds Give $23 Million to ‘Community Organizations’ in Virus
Fight
The Obama Administration discovered that it could fund
its favorite leftist organizations through all manner of community
programs, and the swamp creatures embedded in the DC bureaucracies are at
it again. Our Corruption Chronicles blog reports.
Dealing with a devastated economy and the worst unemployment crisis in
history, the U.S. government is quietly spending $23 million on
“culturally and linguistically diverse” COVID-19 outreach and education
in racial and ethnic minority and disadvantaged communities. The goal is to
develop a national and statewide network of public and community-based
organizations that will help mitigate the virus’s disproportionate impact
among that demographic, according to one of the recently published grant announcements.
A separate allocation will revive an Obama-era program that gave leftist
groups tens of millions of dollars to help poor, minority and indigenous
communities attain “environmental justice.” Under that project the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will reopen
the State Environmental Justice Cooperative Agreement Program (SEJCA) to
help “underserved communities” and “vulnerable populations” deal
with COVID-19.
The biggest chunk of money, $22 million, will come from the Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS), which just launched a National
Infrastructure for Mitigating the Impact of COVID-19 within Racial and
Ethnic Minority Communities. The agency’s Office of Minority Health
(OMH) will dole out the cash to “community-based organizations” that
are considered “trusted and usual information sources for racial and
ethnic minority, rural and disadvantaged communities.” The organizations,
most likely leftist groups, will use the taxpayer dollars to “disseminate
effective response, recovery and resilience strategies and ensure service
linkages for racial and ethnic minority, rural and disadvantaged
communities hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic.” This includes
identifying areas with minority and disadvantaged people at substantially
greater risk of contracting the virus and adverse outcomes due to
prevalence of underlying health conditions such as hypertension, heart
disease, diabetes, obesity, asthma, and COPD/lung disease as well as
structural and systemic barriers to physical distancing and challenges to
accessing healthcare and social services. The money will flow for up to
three years so the community groups can document and distribute “lessons
learned” and other findings.
Here is why HHS, whose mission is to enhance and protect the health
and well-being of all Americans, is dedicating tens of millions of dollars
to this new venture: “Emerging data suggests racial and ethnic minority
populations are experiencing disproportionate impact and worse health
outcomes from COVID-19,” according to the grant document. “Past public
health crises, like the H1N1 pandemic and Zika epidemic, have demonstrated
and amplified the vulnerability of these populations. Specifically, when
combined with a greater baseline prevalence of underlying health
conditions, a public health crisis like COVID-19 further exacerbates the
higher morbidity and mortality for racial and ethnic minority communities.
Due to lack of resources and limited capacity to provide healthcare and
social services, rural communities are also vulnerable to adverse COVID-19
outcomes in the immediate and long term.”
The EPA will dedicate $1 million to the coronavirus minority cause by
bringing back Obama’s wasteful environmental justice initiative that
filled the coffers of numerous leftist groups, including those that help illegal
immigrants. Under the new project, nonprofits will work with
underserved communities to understand, promote and integrate approaches to
provide meaningful and measurable improvements to public health. The agency
identifies underserved community as those with “environmental justice
concerns and/or vulnerable populations, including minority, low income,
rural, tribal, indigenous, and homeless populations.” In a document
attached to the grant announcement, the EPA goes into tremendous detail
about its new initiative to address the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on
urban and rural low-income and minority communities.
Examples of eligible projects related to COVID-19 include the
development of outreach programs to educate underserved and vulnerable
populations about EPA-approved disinfectants and how to properly use them
as well as managing trash removal within communities; “Healthy Homes”
campaigns to share information about in-home environmental and health
hazards that may increase vulnerability due to extended periods indoors
resulting from local stay-at-home orders; other activities that educate,
raise public knowledge and awareness toward achieving behavioral changes
that improve health or prevent environmental pollution. To encourage
participation the government will offer childcare, free disinfectants,
translation services and material in “appropriate literacy levels for the
impacted communities with environmental justice concerns.”
We will be cleaning up after the Obama Administration for years.
Virus Drug Controversy: Was Trump Right?
The legacy media seems unable to give President Trump any credit whatsoever
even if the research done by his team could be of benefit to the public.
The president and his team have been studying the coronavirus and looking
for solutions. But it is doubtful the press will ever be able to convey
this in an evenhanded manner.
Micah Morrison, our chief investigative reporter, looks
at one example of this in his Investigative Bulletin.
Controversy continues to rage over President Trump’s advocacy of the
malaria drug hydroxychloroquine (HC) to combat the coronavirus. As we reported
last month, Trump critics were shocked, shocked that the president
would dare to venture a medical opinion, but based on anecdotal evidence
from around the globe, it appeared to us that the president had placed a
bold winning bet on HC.
The blowback was fierce. The White House for a time fell silent on HC.
On Sunday, Trump jumped back into the fray with
a defense of the drug and an attack on his critics at a Fox News Town
Hall event.
Response to the Judicial Watch article was swift, particularly after
Trump retweeted journalist Paul Sperry’s tweet
about the story. We received a lot of email. Many of the comments can’t
be repeated in this family-friendly venue. Others were enlightening.
“I’ve been tracking HC treatment and outcomes all over the
world,” writes a data analyst. “Long story short, HC-treated patients
have a case fatality rate of 0.5% (5 out of 1000) whereas the worldwide
rate is 6.9% (69 out of 1000). In other words, current evidence suggests
you’re more than 12 times more likely to die if you are diagnosed with
COVID 19 and you don’t get HC treatment.”
“I am a Florida physician prescribing HC to patients,” another
reader writes. “I do hope it is a winning bet. My take is it helps early
and should be used with zinc. Shortened illness. Less lung problems.”
Hospitalized patients getting HC should be on heart monitors, this
physician warns, a nod to concerns about possible
dangerous side effects.
Another reader directed us to an AP
story about a Veterans Administration study that showed no benefit and
increased deaths from HC. The VA quickly pushed back on the story. VA
Secretary Robert Wilkie sent a letter to veterans’ organizations saying
the VA study had led to “misinformation” about treatments at VA
hospitals. Wilkie said HC was only given to patients at “highest risk”
and noted that the Food and Drug Administration had approved HC for
emergency use. (The FDA also issued a
later warning that HC could lead to dangerous heart rhythm
issues.)
In Turkey, the government has thrown HC at everyone with the
virus—more than 117,000 cases. 3000 have died, but that’s lower than
the global death rate, Turkish officials say. The “relatively low death
toll is thanks to treatment protocols in the country, which involve two
existing drugs—the controversial anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine
touted by President Trump, and Japanese antiviral favipiravir,” CBS News
reports.
“Doctors prescribe hydroxychloroquine to everyone who is tested
positive for coronavirus,” a Turkish medical official told CBS.
“Hospitalized patients may be given favipiravir as well if they encounter
breathing problems.” The drug combination seemed to “delay or eliminate
the need for intensive care for patients.”
The Turkish effort is not a clinical trial. It’s life in medical
wartime. Closer to home, that also appears to be the case at the Yale New
Haven Health hospital system, reports the website Medscape. The site is
behind a paywall but Yahoo, reporting
on the findings, noted that physicians at Yale were prescribing HC
“because it had shown potential for success.” Other hospitals also
continue to give HC to virus patients, the Yahoo report notes. That’s
what Judicial Watch is hearing from front line medical personnel in New
York as well.
The bottom line? HC is not without risks, but at hospitals and clinics
across the country, it’s life in wartime and increasingly it appears that
physicians and medical administrators are deciding that to save lives, HC
is a gamble worth taking.
Trump’s bold bet is still looking like a winner.
It’s always a shame when the media seems willing to make health care
a political football.
Until next week …
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Judicial Watch, Inc.
425 3rd St Sw Ste 800
Washington, DC 20024
|
|
202.646.5172 |
|
|
© 2017 - 2020, All Rights Reserved
Manage
Email Subscriptions |
Unsubscribe |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|