Hamilton County, Tenn., medical examiner Dr. James Metcalfe is the only watchdog over experimental jab deaths or injuries in the county in Southeast Tennessee. Your state probably has the same or similar office on the county level.
By David Tulis / NoogaRadio 96.9 FM
In Tennessee law, his job is as follows:
“Any physician, undertaker, law enforcement officer, or other person having knowledge of the death of any person from sudden violence or by casualty or by suicide, or suddenly when in apparent health, or when found dead, or in prison, or in any suspicious, unusual, or unnatural manner, or where the body is to be cremated shall immediately notify the county medical examiner or the district attorney general, the local police, or the county sheriff, who in turn shall notify the county medical examiner.”
Tenn. Code Ann. § 38-7-108(a)(1)
Deaths in licensed health care facilities (e.g., hospitals or nursing homes) need not be reported unless there are suspicious, unusual or unexpected circumstances. Is a year-old experimental inoculation program with suspicious, unusual or a possible source of unexpected deaths?
The statute puts Dr. Metcalfe on his guard, in the interest of public health.
Scientific evidence is mounting of the harm of the yearlong county project upon 200,000 who got their shots from county government with no regard to liability an no regard to harm and dealing with the unexpected.. “We herewith present scientific evidence that calls for an immediate stop of the use of gene-based COVID-19 vaccines. We first lay out why the agents cannot protect against viral infection. While no positive effects can be expected, we show that the vaccines can trigger self-destructive processes that
lead to debilitating illness and death,” say two experts, as follows.
Dr. Sucharit Bhakdi has spent his life practicing, teaching and researching medical microbiology and infectious diseases. He chaired the Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene at the Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Germany, from 1990 until his retirement in 2012. He has published over 300 research articles in the fields of immunology, bacteriology, virology and parasitology, and served from 1990 to 2012 as Editor-in-Chief of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, one of the first scientific journals of this field that was founded by Robert Koch in 1887.
Dr. Arne Burkhardt is a pathologist who has taught at the Universities of Hamburg, Berne and Tübingen. He was invited for visiting professorships/study visits in Japan (Nihon University), the United States (Brookhaven National Institute), Korea, Sweden, Malaysia and Turkey. He headed the Institute of Pathology in Reutlingen for 18 years. Subsequently, he worked as an independent practicing pathologist with consulting contracts with laboratories in the US. Burkhardt has published more than 150 scientific articles in German and international scientific journals as well as contributions to handbooks in German, English and Japanese. Over many years he has audited and certified institutes of pathology in Germany.
Dead jabbed persons’ organs prove autoimmune attack