|
THE
JOHN LAVERTY-BABY CASEY FAMILY TRAGEDY
John
& M.R.--the mother of his older child--in 1998
at our family
Xmas party
|
| |
|
John
and older daughter
CC at a park in 1999
|
In November of 2000, Baby
Casey Laverty was born to a mother with a eating disorder whose prenatal
caretakers failed to properly guide her through the pregnancy, during
which time she lived on coffee, sugar and junk food, smoked, refused to
take her prenatal vitamins, and gained too little weight. The mother suffered
from symptoms of poor diet: chronic iritis and hemorrhaging after giving
birth, associated with Vitamin C deficiency; ADD and learning disabilities
linked to malnutrition or poor food choices by some experts, all of which
laid the groundwork for an infant to be born with acute or subclinical
multiple nutrition-based metabolic diseases, particularly involving the
blood, vascular system and the bones.
On the second day of her life, this fragile infant was forcibly injected
with the Hep B vaccine. The father said no. The doctor said,
"Yes--you don't have a choice. It's the law." This happened
in Washington state, which allows personal exemptions from vaccination,
based on the parent's choice. Two days later, Baby Casey stopped breathing
temporarily (apnea), her eyes rolled back in her head and she became unresponsive
and was taken to the hospital. She was diagnosed with high bilirubin and
jaundice, a blood infection (sepsis), and documented respiration and heart
rate abnormalities. There was a urine tint associated with bone resorption.
Vaccine injury was never mentioned. There is a 72-hr required reporting
period for any reactions after a vaccination. The pediatric records now
read that Baby Casey was vaccinated a day earlier and taken to the hospital
a day later than actually happened. the Hep B vaccine has a long list
of documented side effects which include hemorrhagic conditions and brain
swelling. Also death. Undocumented side effects (because they never check)
include conditions that can cause accelerated Vitamin C deficiency and
endotoxemia, which has similar symptoms.
 |
| John--Graduated from
a college program in prison. 2009 Sentenced to 16.6 years. |
Because of the initial finding of infection in the blood, Casey was
put on two dangerous antibiotics by IV for three days. The list of documented
known side effects is long and scary, and includes endotoxemia which has
no treatment or cure, and vitamin deficiency, including C and K, which
means a hemorrhagic condition that can be caused by a blood-clotting disorder
and/or overly fragile "pipes" (the vascular system). Baby Casey
went downhill from there.
Casey ended up back in the hospital. By an extraordinary turn of
events involving altered medical records and falsified reports, this infant
who was "alert and vigorous" when admitted was eventually diagnosed
by a "hospital expert" (according to DSHS records) as having
"Shaken Baby Syndrome" (SBS) which was listed as "Non-Accidental
Trauma" possibly because even in 2000 doctors knew that the triad
of symptoms used to diagnose SBS weren't caused by shaking, at least by
the methods described by so--called SBS experts. While it's possible to
cause the symptoms by damaging the brainstem in the neck which might cause
brain swelling and bleeding, but not without structural damage to the
neck and spine almost never seen in these cases.
Shaken Baby Syndrome began as an unproven hypothesis in 1972. This
in spite of injury
|
Casey:at
3 1/2 months, two months after being falsely diagnosed with SBS. |
|
The horror of medical misdiagnosis
and legal injustice can happen to
any family, anywhere.
|
biomechanical primate studies in the later 1960's which proved humans
can't shake an infant hard enough to cause bleeding in the brain, which
has been further demonstrated by a number of other studies over the next
few decades to the present. Baby Casey wasn't shaken or battered. All
of the signs and symptoms point to medical causes misdiagnosed as abuse,
with supporting evidence that medical and legal fraud was committed intentionally
to hide the truth.
******************************************
John Laverty had two daughters,
CC, born in 1999, and Casey, born in 2000, 16 months apart. He was one
of those rare men who just loves babies, dotes on them. and wasn't put
off by dirty diapers, late hours with a sick baby, vomit, runny noses,
crying, or sleepless nights.
He met the mother, M.R. (my
daughter) of his first-born child in 1998 when they were both teenagers
(photos on left). They planned to marry, but she was volatile where he
was quieter and accommodating, and she admitted she was so "hormonal"
after getting pregnant that their relationship suffered.
About a week before CC was
born, John brought home a girl he met while working at a selling job after
he was temporarily laid off from his trucking company. Melissa Berest
was more or less homeless, so he offered her a place to stay.
According to M.R., for the
entire week Melissa stayed with the couple, she refused the food she was
offered and lived entirely on coffee.
John was an exceptionally loving
father to CC while the parents were together. M.R. trusted him completely
with CC and left her in his care several times, including for an overnight
trip she took out of town. He happily took care of all of her needs. Her
only complaint was his habit of bouncing her in his hands in play, needlessly
fearing it would cause "Shaken Baby Syndrome", but this was
apparently such a common occurrence that the National SBS website had
to put a disclaimer on their site informing people that this DID NOT cause
SBS because so many people had been reporting caretakers for doing this
and similar acts while playing with their children.
| |
Melissa,
Casey's
mother: Sentenced to 8 years in prison |
|
| Baby
Casey, Mar.2001
AFTER
false
SBS diagnosis
|
Melissa had her eye on John
and managed to orchestrate the end of his relationship with MR, after
which John and Melissa became a couple, and she soon became pregnant herself.
Melissa and John lived with
his Korean mother and stepfather for two different periods during her
pregnancy. His stepfather reported that Melissa refused to eat the healthy
food John's mother prepared and instead lived on 8-10 cups of coffee per
day, sweetened with around two cups of sugar. He said she went through
5 lb bags of sugar every few days. John said she ate some junk food like
cookies and chips, and occasionally had fast foods like hamburgers, fries
and sodas. She was supplied with prenatal vitamins, but refused to take
them. She was warned about smoking but continued to do so during and after
her pregnancy. By the time she delivered, she had only gained 10 lbs.
Melissa had also suffered from
iritis (a chronic infection of the iris of the eyes). When she gave birth,
she hemorrhaged for two days. Eating disorders, iritis and abnormal bleeding
are all symptoms found in Vitamin C deficiency.
The
Poisoned Needle
While Melissa was being tended to medically for abnormal bleeding
after delivery, John stayed in the hospital room and held the baby.
Casey was born
around 9PM. Doctors are required to wait 12 hours before vaccinating,
so on her second day of life someone came in and pulled
Baby Casey right out of her father's arms to be vaccinated.
He objected.
His older child was unvaccinated because of a family history of life-threatening
vaccine injuries, including a combined Staph and Strept infection in the
blood that caused a flesh-eating infection so virulent that the whole
family (family
history)
became infected through contact. However, he was told "it's
the law" and that he had no choice.
Someone lied. Washington State allows medical, religious and personal
exemptions, which was claimed for his older child, Casey's half-sister
CC. Besides the flesh-eating disease the mother of his first child contracted
immediately after her first and only vaccination, the grandmother got
hepatitis twice following tetanus shots and was chronically ill after
childhood vaccines, and the great grandfather got Yellow Fever from that
vaccine. A cousin developed "Screaming syndrome" after her first
shot, another cousin got measles after a measles shot, and a lot of other
adverse effects were suspected. John had a valid reason for refusing shots
for his children and the legal right to do so which was denied by a medical
professional at Tacoma General Hospital.
John remembers
hearing them say "triple vax"--a term he otherwise was unfamiliar
with--but the records report only a Hepatitis B vaccination ...a vaccine
so dangerous to newborns that the public in France staged demonstrations
and a large group of people filed lawsuits for vaccine injury until Hep
B was removed from the childhood vaccine schedule.
Doctors and nurses
tend to look on the refusal to vaccinate infants and children as a form
of child abuse or neglect, but a few quotes sum up the other side of the
debate that few doctors ever question or research, or if they do, they
don't tell--especially pediatricians, whose incomes come primarily from
the infant and childhood shots.
**************************
-
Getting
a vaccination does not guarantee immunity. (~CDC, January 28,
1994.)
-
"Neutralizing
antibodies are reported to reflect levels of protection, although
this has not been validated in the field." (~Journal of the
American Medical Association, June 9, 1999, Vol. 281. No. 22)
-
Vaccines
made from animal substrate contain animal viruses that are impossible
to filter out. By 1961, scientists discovered that animal viruses
in vaccines, including smallpox, could act as a carcinogen when given
to mice in combination with cancer-causing chemicals, even in amounts
too small to induce tumors
alone. They concluded that vaccine viruses function as a catalyst
for tumor production. (~Science, December 15, 1961.)
-
THE
WASHINGTON POST, Feb.2, 1986 "Vaccines can be a risk for infected
persons--virus in vaccines, like natural virus infection...MAY ACTIVATE
LATENT VIRAL INFECTIONS."--Dr. Robert Gallo, National Institute
of Health
-
By
the 1920s, several British medical researchers documented that smallpox
was not only more common among the VACCINATED, but that the DEATH
RATE from smallpox was actually higher among those who had been vaccinated.
This indicates that the vaccine was ineffective and predisposed vaccinated
persons to more lethal disease. (~Vaccination, Dr. Viera Schreibner,
1993 pp. 205-220.)
-
Encyclopedia Americana Vol.27, P.852 (1986) Vaccination
Article

| |
|
BANNED
IN AMERICA The
headlines and story featured in the
London Times on May 5th, 1987 that
we in the US were not allowed to read, reportedly due to a conspiracy
of silence agreed to by top journalists and scientists at a secret
meeting for the purpose of a cover-up. |
When vaccines are mentioned,
most people associate them with the eradication of polio and smallpox.
Nothing could be further from the truth than the "revisionist"
history we have all been spoon fed about these epidemics. Polio had three
main world-wide epidemics in the twentieth century. The first two came
and went as epidemics do. The third one we all hear about was nearly ended
before the polio vaccine was introduced. It was only used in two countries,
after which the numbers increased before going back into a decline, and
those 7-8 year olds who were chosen for the mass vaccination cohort were
in an age range least affected by polio, which only has serious side effects
in 1/2 of 1% of those with the infection. The epidemic ended in unvaccinated
countries without any intervention accept the development of cleaner water
and better waste disposal systems as well more sanitary food supplies.
Ask any surveyor. It's part of their professional history.
The polio vaccine was contaminated
with a leukemia virus. After the mass vaccination of children, childhood
leukemia, which was almost unknown prior to the polio vaccine afterward
become one of the top 10 killers of children. For even worse information,
look up SV-40 (SV40) and HeLa cells.
The WHO (World Health Organization)
claim that vaccines eradicated smallpox was equally fictitious. The smallpox
vaccine had a disastrous history from the beginning. Look up the past
history of smallpox vaccine + Philippines. It triggered many epidemics
of smallpox and other diseases and conditions. WHO field workers admitted
in interviews for a book that the only thing that actually worked was
the ancient practice of quarantine, and that "the real story would
never be known". Even that didn't eradicate smallpox so they just
renamed it "Monkeypox". That's how they "ended" smallpox.
*******************************
The
Unauthorized Hep B Vaccination: Documented Adverse Effects
http://www.rxlist.com/recombivax-drug.htm
Symptoms: Studies
involved observation for 5 days only
Pain, tenderness, pruritus,
erythema, ecchymosis, swelling, warmth, nodule formation, irritability,
fever ( = 101°F oral equivalent), diarrhea, fatigue/weakness, diminished
appetite, rhinitis, nausea; pharyngitis, upper respiratory infection,
sweating; achiness, sensation of warmth, lightheadedness; chills, flushing,
vomiting; abdominal pains/cramps; dyspepsia; influenza, cough, vertigo/dizziness,
paresthesia, pruritus, rash (non-specified); angioedema; urticaria, arthralgia
including monoarticular, myalgia; back pain; neck pain, shoulder pain,
neck stiffness, lymphadenopathy, insomnia/disturbed sleep, earache, dysuria,
hypotension, elevation of liver enzymes, constipation, Guillain-Barré
Syndrome, multiple sclerosis; exacerbation of multiple sclerosis; myelitis
including transverse myelitis, seizure; febrile seizure; peripheral neuropathy
including Bell's Palsy; radiculopathy; herpes zoster; migraine; muscle
weakness; hypesthesia; encephalitis, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome; alopecia;
petechiae, eczema, arthritis, increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate;
thrombocytopenia, pain in extremity, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE);
lupus-like syndrome; vasculitis, polyarteritis nodosa, irritability; agitation;
somnolence, optic neuritis, tinnitus, conjunctivitis, visual disturbances,
syncope and tachycardia.
Hypersensitivity
Anaphylaxis and symptoms of
immediate hypersensitivity reactions including rash, pruritus, urticaria,
edema, angioedema, dyspnea, chest discomfort, bronchial spasm, palpitation,
or symptoms consistent with a hypotensive episode have been reported within
the first few hours after vaccination. An apparent hypersensitivity syndrome
(serum-sickness-like) of delayed onset has been reported days to weeks
after vaccination, including: arthralgia/arthritis (usually transient),
fever, and dermatologic reactions such as urticaria, erythema multiforme,
ecchymoses and erythema nodosum
Patients, parents and guardians
should be instructed to report any serious adverse reactions to their
healthcare provider, who in turn should report such events to the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services through the Vaccine Adverse Event
Reporting System (VAERS), 1-800-822-7967.31
The government admits that
only 1-10% of reactions are ever reported by doctors to VAERS. One symptom
left out of this list, among others, is...death.
Hospitalization:
Apnea
Casey
was born on Nov. 20th, 2000. By Nov. 23, Thanksgiving Day, she had become
lethargic and refused her bottle. Then she cried out and John ran to console
the baby. As he held her, Baby Casey's eyes rolled back in her head, she
became unresponsive to voice or finger-snapping, and she appeared to quit
breathing temporarily. He noticed at that time that there was a
yellow tint to her skin, and a bluish darkening (oxygen deprivation) around
her mouth. They rushed her to Mary Bridge Children's Hospital, where no
cause for the "apnea" (breathing stops) episode was
officially listed.
The possibility
of a vaccination adverse reaction was not even mentioned in the medical
records even though doctors are required by law to report all reactions
within 72 hours following vaccination to VAERS, the government's
vaccine injury department, but even the government admits that only
1-10% of all known or suspected vaccine injuries are ever reported by
doctors. The Vaccine Adverse Event
Reporting System does NOT publish reports
from parents or caregivers. VAERS was created to help victims.
Instead, it was adversarial from the beginning and works hard
with a battery of attorneys to eliminate as many cases as possible--around
75% of them. Doctors know better than to report vaccine injuries or to
even diagnose them. Careers and reputations are put at risk if they do.
The pressure against such "whistle-blowing" is enormous.
The pediatric
records, whether by careless error or criminal design, record Casey was
vaccinated a day earlier than she was and admitted to the hospital a day
later, effectively side-stepping the reporting period.
| Under-reporting
seems to be considered necessary to preserve the public "faith"
in the mostly compulsory vaccine programs and to avoid personal
blame and extremely expensive liability for "injury,"
although doctors are exempt and vaccine manufacturers refused to
accept liability from the 1980's on and have forced the government
to cover all claims, paying out over 1 billion dollars in
damages for the small percentage of cases they could not
succeed in dismissing. The government admits only 1-10% of cases
are reported by doctors and less than 25% of those are compensated.
|
Heart
Rate and Respiration Abnormalities
Casey was put
on a heart and respiration monitor. At one point the numbers were so low
that one doctor questioned whether the monitor had malfunctioned in some
way, but Dr. Viera Schreibner of Australia noted the same abnormal readings
on equipment when they monitored infants in a "cot watch" breathing
pattern study, unexpectedly documenting that there were a series of key
days of vaccine reactions that were worse than other days, and that these
reactions could continue for a month. The vaccine connection was after
the studies were evaluated, not before.
| Breathing
pattern studies that became vaccination "adverse reaction"
studies
From the Cot watch graphs of Dr.Vera Schreibner: "It
is obvious that even though baby one reacted much more than baby
two (referring to computer chip read-outs on two infants she
studied), the flare-ups of stressed breathing followed the
same pattern of critical days, the most important of these being
day 2, after which day the stress level went down
and started rising again between days 5 and 7,
when the stress level subsided and started increasing again between
days 14-16, subsided again and rose again between
days 19-24, after which it subsided and rose again
towards the 28th day and so on, following closely
the pattern of alarms as recorded by a mother of one baby (figure
1). Days 10 or 11 also emerged as critical days
in babies who reacted strongly, such as baby one."
"One
must also take into consideration that in statistics you always
have a slight spread of a day or two before or after the critical
days. One can also rephrase it that nature does not necessarily
operate in a sudden, cut-off fashion but in a building-up and tapering-off
way." --Dr. Vera Schreibner |
"A
Rare Blood Disease" (Sepsis) --No, No, "Hospital Error"
While Casey
was in the hospital, blood work was done and a doctor told the parents
she had "a rare blood disease" after she tested positive for
strept and staph, just like the infection that nearly killed the mother
of John's first child after her first vaccination. They put Baby Casey
on IV antibiotics for 3 days. One doctor thought it was an apnea incident.
Another physician, Later, after a lot of "poking and prodding"
and no more findings of infection, Dr. C (who became their pediatrician)
arbitrarily decided it was more likely a matter of contamination--a hospital
error. It's more likely that the antibiotics cleared the infection from
the blood, but the only way to verify that infection hadn't spread to
the brain beyond the blood-brain barrier was to test the cerebral spinal
fluid. They tried to do this twice but failed to collect any fluid. The
symptoms she had, including lethargy (an indication of a brain neurological
condition) are consistent with encephalitis among other things.
The matter of the antibiotics
is something to consider. According to her medical records, after her
blood tested positive for Strept and Staph, Baby Casey was put on Ampicillin
and Ceftriaxone. AMPICILLIN.
CEFTRIAXONE
IS CONTERINDICATED FOR INFANTS WITH HIGH BILIRUBIN.
ADVERSE
REACTIONS:
AMPICILLIN
Diarrhea; pain,
swelling, or redness at injection site, black "hairy" tongue;
inflammation and redness of the tongue; nausea; second infection; vomiting.Hemic
and Lymphatic Systems– Anemia, thrombocytopenia, thrombocytopenic
purpura, eosinophilia, leukopenia, and agranulocytosis have been reported
during therapy with the penicillins. Skin rashes and urticaria have been
reported frequently. A few cases of exfoliative dermatitis and erythema
multiforme have been reported.Liver– A moderate rise in serum glutamic
oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) has been noted, particularly in infants.
Additional systemic reactions reported--itching, candidiasis, fatigue,
malaise, headache, chest pain, flatulence, abdominal distension, glossitis,
urine retention, dysuria, edema, facial swelling, erythema, chills, tightness
in throat, substernal pain, epistaxis and mucosal bleeding. Hepatic: Increased
AST (SGOT), ALT (SGPT), alkaline phosphatase, and LDH. Hematologic: Decreased
hemoglobin, hematocrit, RBC, WBC, neutrophils, lymphocytes, platelets
and increased lymphocytes, monocytes, basophils, eosinophils, and platelets.
Blood Chemistry: Decreased serum albumin and total proteins. Renal: Increased
BUN and creatinine.Urinalysis: Presence of RBC's and hyaline casts in
urine.
Gastrointestinal:
Gastritis, stomatitis, and enterocolitis. Onset of pseudomembranous colitis
symptoms may occur during or after antibiotic treatment.
Pediatric Patients:Available
safety data for pediatric patients treated with Ampicillin and Sulbactam
demonstrate a similar adverse events profile to those observed in adult
patients. Additionally, atypical lymphocytosis has been observed in one
pediatric patient receiving Ampicillin and Sulbactam. Thrombophlebitis.
Rash; hives; itching; difficulty breathing; tightness in the chest; swelling
of the mouth, face, lips, or tongue; stomach pain or cramps; unusual bruising
or bleeding; vaginal irritation or discharge; vein inflammation or tenderness;
white patches in mouth.
http://www.peacehealth.org/kbase/cam/hn-1317001.htm:
Summary of Interactions for Ampicillin--Depletion or interference Vitamin
C*
Vitamin K*, Interactions with Supplements
Vitamin C: Test tube studies
show that ampicillin significantly reduces the amount of vitamin C in
the blood.1 Controlled research is needed to determine whether individuals
might benefit from supplementing vitamin C while taking ampicillin.
1. Alabi ZO, Thomas KD, Ogunbona
O, Elegbe IA. The effect of antibacterial agents on plasma vitamin C levels.
Afr J Med Med 1994;23:143-6.
Vitamin K
Several cases of excessive
bleeding have been reported in people who take antibiotics.7, 8, 9, 10
This side effect may be the result of reduced vitamin K activity and/or
reduced vitamin K production by bacteria in the colon. One study showed
that people who had taken broad-spectrum antibiotics had lower liver concentrations
of vitamin K2 (menaquinone), though vitamin K1 (phylloquinone) levels
remained normal.11 Several antibiotics appear to exert a strong effect
on vitamin K activity, while others may not have any effect. Therefore,
one should refer to a specific antibiotic for information on whether it
interacts with vitamin K. Doctors of natural medicine sometimes recommend
vitamin K supplementation to people taking antibiotics. Additional research
is needed to determine whether the amount of vitamin K1 found in some
multivitamins is sufficient to prevent antibiotic-induced bleeding. Moreover,
most multivitamins do not contain vitamin K.
7. Suzuki K, Fukushima T, Meguro K, et al. Intracranial hemorrhage in
an infant owing to vitamin K deficiency despite prophylaxis. Childs Nerv
Syst 1999;15:292-4.
8. Huilgol VR, Markus SL, Vakil NB. Antibiotic-induced iatrogenic hemobilia.
Am J Gastroenterol 1997;92:706-7.
9. Bandrowsky T, Vorono AA, Borris TJ, Marcantoni HW. Amoxicllin-related
postextraction bleeding in an anticoagulated patient with tranexamic acid
rinses. Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod 1996;82:610-2.
10. Kaiser CW, McAuliffe JD, Barth RJ, Lynch JA. Hypoprothrombinemia and
hemorrhage in a surgical patient treated with cefotetan. Arch Surg 1991;126:524-5.
11. Conly J, Stein K. Reduction of vitamin K2 concentration in human liver
associated with the use of broad spectrum antimicrobials. Clin Invest
Med 1994;17:531-9.
CEFTRIAXONE:
LOCAL
REACTIONS—Phlebitis was reported in <1% after IV administration.
HYPERSENSITIVITY—rash (1.7%). Less frequently
reported (<1%) were pruritus, fever or chills. HEMATOLOGIC—eosinophilia
(6%), thrombocytosis (5.1%) and leukopenia (2.1%). Less frequently reported
(<1%) were anemia, hemolytic anemia, neutropenia, lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia
and prolongation of the prothrombin time.
GASTROINTESTINAL—diarrhea (2.7%). Less frequently
reported (<1%) were nausea or vomiting, and dysgeusia. The onset of
pseudomembranous colitis symptoms may occur during or after antibacterial
treatment (see WARNINGS). HEPATIC—elevations of SGOT (3.1%) or SGPT
(3.3%). Less frequently reported (<1%) were elevations of alkaline
phosphatase and bilirubin. RENAL—elevations of the BUN (1.2%). Less
frequently reported (<1%) were elevations of creatinine and the presence
of casts in the urine.CENTRAL
NERVOUS SYSTEM—headache or dizziness were reported occasionally
(<1%).GENITOURINARY—moniliasis or vaginitis were reported occasionally
(<1%). MISCELLANEOUS—diaphoresis and flushing were reported occasionally
(<1%).
Other adverse reactions include abdominal pain, agranulocytosis, allergic
pneumonitis, anaphylaxis, basophilia, biliary lithiasis, bronchospasm,
colitis, dyspepsia, epistaxis, flatulence, gallbladder sludge, glycosuria,
hematuria, jaundice, leukocytosis, lymphocytosis, monocytosis, nephrolithiasis,
palpitations, a decrease in the prothrombin time, renal precipitations,
seizures, and serum sickness.
ENDOTOXIN
RELEASE FROM ANTIBIOTIC OR VACCINE USE, OR FOLLOWING INFECTION
Different
endotoxin release and IL-6 plasma levels after antibiotic administration
in surgical intensive care patients
Holzheimer, RG; Hirte, JF; Reith, B; Engelhardt, W; Horak, KH; Leppert,
R; Aasen, A; Capel, P; Urbaschek, R; Karch, H; Thiede, A Journal of
Endotoxin Research [J. ENDOTOXIN RES.]. Vol. 3, no. 3. 1996.
"Despite the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, aggressive fluid
resuscitation, vasopressor support, the mortality associated with
Gram-negative sepsis and septic shock has not decreased significantly
in the last two decades. The consequences of host exposure to endotoxin
and the relationship of antibiotic administration to endotoxin release
have become important areas of intense interest. In vitro studies
have demonstrated that there was a difference in endotoxin release between
PBP-3 specific antibiotics ( beta -lactam antibiotics) and PBP-2 specific
antibiotics (carbapenems). This is the first clinical report of surgical
patients admitted to the surgical and anaesthesiology intensive care unit
on the missing endotoxin release after imipenem treatment; however cefotaxime
and ceftriaxone showed
significantly more positive endotoxin tests in the plasma when compared
to imipenem. Ciprofloxacin and vancomycin
were intermediate in endotoxin release and tobramycin did not cause endotoxin
release. There were also significant differences in endotoxin neutralizing
capacity. IL-6 levels were decreased after imipenem faster than after
ceftriaxone or cefotaxime; ciprofloxacin seemed to increase IL-6. Endotoxin
may be harmful in patients where the immune system has been continuously
challenged. Timing, dosage, or combination with other compounds as well
as the effect of antibiotics on macrophages need to be tested in larger
clinical trials. In this respect a consecutive study was started. "
ADVERSE
EFFECTS OF ENDOTOXINS: (toxins released from bacteria cells walls when
they die)
http://www.freeyurko.bizland.com/kaloksb1.html
(Dr. Archie Kalokerinos, M.D.)
-
Endotoxin
can in itself, cause coagulation/bleeding disorders.
-
Endotoxin
uses vast quantities of Vitamin C while being ‘detoxified’
(involving free radical reactions).
-
Vitamin
C deficiency can, in itself, cause haemorrhages.
-
Vitamin
C deficiency can, in itself, cause spontaneous fractures.
| Endotoxin
can target the brain by:
1. specifically, and selectively, damaging the endothelial linings
of cerebral blood vessels
2. breaking the blood-brain barrier
3. seeping into the cerebral tissue
4. causing anoxia by a direct effect on the respiratory centre
5. initiating a rapid series of biochemical disturbances, including
free radical reactions, leading to an extremely rapid onset of cerebral
edema—with a host of possible complications
6. causing coagulation/bleeding disturbances. |
High
Bilirubin and Jaundice
Baby Casey was,
however, unquestionably diagnosed with a high
bilirubin count and jaundice, considered "normal" in
newborns but which usually resolves in 3-4 days, not many days later as
it did in Baby Casey. Dr. C. also claimed "breast milk" was
"probably" the cause of the high bilirubin and jaundice. However,
both apnea and these these conditions are also linked to
vaccine injury, as well as junk food and excess sugar in
the diet. He wasn't even aware that because of Melissa's scanty supply
of pumped breast (she gave up nursing as quickly as possible because of
the discomfort), John had almost immediately put Baby Casey on baby formula
as her main food supply, and chose soy formula due to a family history
of dairy intolerance. (There are medical journal accounts of soy formula
alone causing Barlow's disease--infantile scurvy.)
"Extremely
high levels of bilirubin in infants may cause kernicterus, a form of brain
damage. Signs of severe hyperbilirubinemia include listlessness,
high-pitched crying, apnea (periods
of not breathing), arching of the back, and seizures.
If severe hyperbilirubinemia is not treated, it can cause mental
retardation, hearing loss, behavior disorders, cerebral palsy, or death."
Urine
Tint
According the the medical record, Casey's urine test came up abnormal.
On online check revealed that it could be associated with bone absorption.
First
Sign of Abnormal Bruising
At the end of Baby Casey's
extended hospital stay, one of the medical attendants who drew blood from
her foot held her leg to do so and left a bruise there, in a first sign
of possible "abnormal bruising". John saw it and confronted
the man about it, but it was shrugged off.
John Laverty worked
long, hard hours to earn a good living for a young man his age, but when
his baby daughter lost consciousness and appeared to stop breathing soon
after birth, he rushed her to the hospital and took time off work to stay
in the room with her day and night, to find out what was wrong and to
make sure she was properly cared for and never left alone right up until
his boss threatened to fire him if he didn't come back to work, but only
Casey appeared to be out of danger. He was not not happy with all of the
poking and prodding done, with no clear answers about what had happened.
And he was not happy that a medic had bruised his child.
The pediatrician
told the parents if they wanted to retain him as Casey's doctor, to call
him in a few days at the pediatric clinic where he had his office for
an "after-hospital" checkup. John lost the number but was finally
able to track it down later. When he called, the doctor had gone on vacation
and instead of being referred to another doctor, he was told they would
have to wait until the doctor returned.
The
Nurse Consulation Phone Service
As Casey was being discharged
from Mary Bridge Children's Hospital (the children's wing of Tacoma General
Hospital) on Nov. 27th, 2000 after five days in the hospital, a nurse
handed John and Melissa a white business card with an 800 number to a
nurse consultation phone service under contract with the hospital to call
for any health concerns. While waiting for the doctor to return from vacation,
they had occasion to call the nursing "hotline" a number of
times.
A
Home Visiting Nurse Comes To Check On Baby Casey
The day
after Casey got home from the hospital, Nurse Kristin Schmidt came to
see the family. Her later report on this visit:

Symptoms
Following Baby Casey's Release From The Hospital
The first apparent life-threatening event--apnea--occurred
on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 23, 2000 making
it 2 days after
the Hep B vaccination on Nov. 21.
The first sign of abnormal bruising, seen after Casey's leg was held to
draw blood from her foot, was around Monday,
day
7 after the shot. By the time Casey was released after
5 days, her behavior had begun to deteriorate, but there was nothing specific
for the next few days that John could remember, except that she remained
lethargic--a "sleepy baby" while at the same time more fussy
and irritable. By day
14 or so, Casey had taken a noticeable turn for the worse
and had become even more lethargic and sleepy, irritable, had
a "creepy way of turning her heels in" as John described it,
and was far more fussy when held.
Melissa
would leave Casey in the bassinet all day, but as soon as John came home
from work he wanted to be with his daughter for the rest of the night.
Even Melissa later remarked that he was a little jealous because she got
to be with Casey all day while he had to work. She couldn't handle dirty
diapers, so as soon as he got home he took Casey in to change her diaper
at the same time he got out of his work clothes. He fed her, bathed her,
and spent the rest of the night holding her while he watched tv. She was
more fussy when being held, but John thought it was because he was gone
all day and she "forgot" him. He had no way of knowing that
her symptoms, particularly the frog-leg posture, were classic signs of
Barlow's disease, and that subperiosteal hemorrhaging in the legs was
the cause of the posture due to intense pain aggrevated by movement.
Temporary
Change In Casey's Skull Shape
As John
tells it, a frightening thing happened a few days before the
most acute symptoms began. He came home from work and noticed that Baby
Casey had something going on with her head. He said, "Well,
like her head was elongating and turning into a 'cone head' shape.'' He
called the nurse's hotline immediately and the nurse laughed it off and
assured him it was just a temporary condition caused by the baby lying
on her side too long. The was the position the doctor at the hospital
told the parents to use because she was a "shallow breather."
He was told to lay her on her back and "go to bed." The next
day her skull shape was back to normal.
There
are accounts of babies developing flat spots on the back of their heads
from sleeping on their backs. Their skulls are still relatively soft in
infancy. But this is also something that happens to babies with Vitamin
D deficiency. According to medical literature, bone disease starts with
abnormal thinning of the sides and back of the skull, and if it persists,
individuals with this deficiency can develop characteristic dome-shaped
skulls with "bossed" (protruding) foreheads, which describes
Casey's appearance in photos several months later. Rickets or subclinical
rickets have other diagnostic signs and symptoms. Historically, scurvy
and rickets were often found together.
Casey
Becomes Acutely ill Late At Night After Christmas Shopping
On
Tuesday 12-12-00, 21 days after
her vaccination,
Baby Casey became acutely ill from respiratory
problems with severe lung congestion and difficulty
breathing. John and Melissa had bundled her up and went
out to do some shopping. Around 11pm that night Casey had become congested
and her breathing was labored, so John called the hotline. The nurse said
it was just a bad cold and they didn't need to bring her in. Melissa stayed
on the phone with the nurse who talked John through the Baby Heimlich
Manuever for choking to help Baby Casey cough up the mucus that was making
it hard for her to breath. It required back-patting off and on all night,
about once an hour. She coughed up white froth and
he would suction it out of her mouth until the last time about 5am in
the morning, when a yellow mucus plug came up. After that she was able
to sleep. When
he left for work about 6am, she was resting peacefully when he kissed
her goodby.
When
John came home that evening, on Wednesday,
at
22 days,
he saw a small sore at the corner of her mouth and her eyes were bloodshot
with red lids. Melissa told him she had started this high-pitched crying
around noon and her eyes got red after that. He called the nursing hotline
to talk about it, and they assured him it was "colic" and "red
eyes from crying" and that Casey "didn't need to be seen."
Then
she developed this brown discoloration under her lower lip that looked
like she had been "eating chocolate amd drooled". He wondered
if it was "wind burn" from being out in the weather the evening
before, even though he had her warmly dressed and wrapped. The next morning
it had separated into four distinct "messy sores" at the corners
of her mouth on each side with two more rimming her lower lip, spaced
almost equally apart. John called the hotline again about the sores. The
nurse said it was just cold sores, and to keep A&D lotion on it. Also,
that she "didn't need to be seen." He kept the clear, greasy
lotion on the sores right up through the time the went to a pediatric
appointment the following Monday. The doctor had finally returned from
vacation and called them to set the time. It was supposed to have been
a hospital follow-up but he scheduled it as a one month "well-baby"
appointment.
At
23 days, (Thursday) John came home and noticed a little
bit of blood in Casey's saliva. He figured she was teething and just suctioned
it out and didn't bother the nurse. It did not recur.
Around 24-25 days after
her shot, the diarrhea started. Casey had remained
congested and fussy with the high-pitched crying, and still had noisy
breathing, but didn't seem to be as ill as she was the first night. No
fever--just congested respiration and a runny nose. He also noticed that
she had been grunting.
On Friday
night, Dec. 15th, John was alone with the baby for the first time. Melissa
had gone out to have coffee with her estranged mother and left Casey with
John. He was sitting on the bed playing with her by holding her horizontally
and bouncing her in his hands to make her laugh. He doesn't know how it
happened, but she slipped through his hands. Her fall was broken by a
padded laundry basket beside him on to a carpeted floor. She quit crying
as soon as he grabbed her up and hugged her to his chest in a panic, and
she didn't have a bump or bruise on her after bumping her head on the
rim of the laundry basket, but he immediately called the nurse's hotline,
told them what happened, and asked what to do. The nurse went through
a detailed checklist for any sign of injury, decided there was none and
told him it wasn't necessary to bring her in to be seen.
Baby
Casey was sleeping peacefully when Melissa and her mother returned. She
didn't know anything had happened and John didn't volunteer the information,
particularly when he had done it before in front of her and she got mad.
In fact, he had done the same thing with his older daughter several times,
and her mother had a fit too, and told him to do it by pumping his arms
up and down with her instead of bouncing her in the flat of his hands.
On Saturday
(Dec. 16th, 2000) John's mother and stepfather came to visit. When I asked
the stepfather how she seemed at that time, he said she was lethargic
as usual, but otherwise "fine".
When
John got home from work the next day (Sunday), he noticed a red spot on
Casey's left cheek and asked Melissa about it. Melissa thought it was
from the day before when John's mother was holding the baby to her chest
were she had a scarf pin, and that had left a mark. But photographs taken
a day or so later show it as an erupting pimple or whitehead, so it was
just a swelling where she was breaking out. However, Melissa later told
CPS that she had been holding Baby Casey when she bumped into a wall or
doorjamb that day or evening, also. She didn't tell John about it at the
time, but he didn't notice anything different when he came home other
than the spot on her cheek.
The
next morning they had the pediatric appointment. It was John's day off
so he ran errands in the morning and then drove Melissa (Melissa couldn't
drive) and Baby Casey to the clinic an hour early. The appointment was
at 10:15 and they were there a little after 9am. John remembers that Casey
was "in a good mood", an alert "happy baby" the day
they went to the well-baby appointment on Dec.18th,
2000,
27 days after her shot.
He carried her inside in the car seat, but she got fussy when being handled
at the clinic.
The
Medical Assistant Discusses The Parent's Health Concerns
The doctor's
Medical Assistant, Shelly LaVergne came out and talked to the parents
and looked at Casey. John and Melissa were telling her about what had
been going on--a bad cold, colic, etc. The M.A. also thought the 4 skin
lesions were cold sores, but was concerned about the red eyes and eyelids
and agreed to make certain the doctor discussed all of this with them.
Then she had John undress Casey and lay her on a cold examining table.
Casey let out an "ear-splitting scream" and began what the M.A.
described as "inconsolable high-pitched crying" that alarmed
her. She went in and told the doctor she thought something was wrong.
John was concerned too. He thought maybe the cold surface had set her
off because she had always been kept warm and wrapped up, but he wanted
answers to his health concerns, although the nurses had continually told
him it was just a bad cold, colic, red eyes from crying and cold sores.
Melissa was also concerned about how little of her bottle Casey was taking
at a time which she described as about a half ounce.
When
the pediatrician came out, he kept trying to talk to Melissa, but she
was a "Special Ed" kid who didn't even know what kind of Baby
Formula they were using. John was the experienced parent who had to teach
her everything from scratch, and the primary caretaker for all practical
purposes, so if she didn't know something, John would answer, or correct
her if she "fibbed" like claiming she was breast-feeding when
she wasn't. Things weren't going well between the doctor and John. John
was distrustful because of his previous experience with the hospital and
doctors, and the doctor was perturbed that John was taking the lead when
he expected the mother of the child to do so. John told him about everything,
including the temporary skull deformation, which didn't seem to faze him.
He finally--in reference to the skin lesions and red eyes--mumbled something
about "child abuse" and said he was sending Casey to the hospital
to "get checked out". Neither parent was happy about Casey going
back to the same hospital and doctors who had botched her earlier stay,
particularly since they had been assured by hotline nurses for days that
Casey didn't even need to be seen.
John was also
overheard saying the doctor was just doing it "for the money",
which got back to the doctor. He had someone call an ambulance around
11:45am, and then called the police but only to meet the ambulance in
case the parents tried to interfere with her being admitted to the hospital,
which he later stated along with an admission that there hadn't been any
trouble. They wanted to go in the ambulance with Casey, but the EMT's
told them they weren't allowed to, besides which John had the car and
needed to drive it to the hospital. Apparently Melissa was afraid to go
in it anyway, telling someone because it "went too fast".
The
Medical Assistant's Report
TRANSCRIBED
REPORT: This was the first person to observe and examine baby
Casey at the "well-baby" visit with the pedicatrician
at the Northwest Pediatrics clinic on December 18th, 2000.
Called
parents back--FOB (father of baby) carrying baby, MOB (mother of
baby) carrying bag and car seat. Asked routine questions--normal
pregnancy, yes: Induced or spontaneous. delivery--mom looked puzzled
and looked at FOB--he responded with, "they broke her H20".
Asked if breast-fed or formula-fed. MOB replied breast and FOB replied
formula-then MOB said is given formula @ times. MOB wasn't sure
of name of formula. FOB replied Similac.
FOB
was asking about "red marks" on baby's eyes. MOB said
she contacted the Mary Bridge nurse because MOB has "arthritis"
[sic] and she (MOB) that the eye redness was arthritis (Melissa
was saying "iritis"). FOB and MOB said baby has been
crying a lot and maybe the eyes (then FOB showed me the baby's
eyelids that were red and discolored) could be from the baby crying.
FOB
asked about the blisters on baby chin. I asked what happened.
FOB said they (MOB and FOB and baby) went shopping on Tuesday
12/12/00. Baby started coughing and FOB said the next day she
had the blisters. MOB said she (baby) had the blisters after they
got back from shopping. MOB said she called the nurse @ Mary Bridge
Hospital and told her about the blisters and the nurse said she
has a cold and doesn't need to be seen.
FOB
still holding baby while sitting down on bench. FOB placed baby
against his chest. FOB was wearing a white furry jacket. Baby's
face was against the fur. MOB told FOB to move her head because
MOB was afraid she would inhale some of the fuzzy jacket. FOB
stated if she (the baby) couldn't breath then she (the baby) would
turn her own head.
MOB
started talking about the baby being hospitalized for one week
because the baby stopped breathing. FOB said the doctors all thought
she had some kind of rare blood disease and she (the baby) had
to be "poked" and FOB said "She had all kinds of
shit done to her." FOB said they still weren't sure what's
wrong with her.
Baby
cried every time FOB moved her. I asked if baby usually cries
this much. MOB said yes. I asked even when baby came home from
the hospital? MOB replied "no, she has always cried and my
mother says she has colic. But the cry has been louder the last
2-3 days." FOB replied that the baby "must have a cold."
I asked
FOB and MOB to undress the baby down to her diaper so that I can
weigh her, get her length and check her head circumference. FOB
laid baby on table to undress her. Baby screamed piercing cry.
I asked MOB if the baby usually cried like that. She said yes.
The MOB & FOB wanted to know if I thought the baby had colic?
I said I would make a note of it and Dr. Clapper would be able
to give them an answer. MOB looked over at the baby and MOB said
to FOB, "you can't hold her like that because you left a
red mark on her face". I looked at baby's face and there
was a small red mark on baby's left cheek. FOB said he didn't
touch her there, but he held her head still by (then he showed
me and MOB) placing his left thumb on baby's right side of the
temporal lobe and placed his finger to the left side of the baby's
temporal lobe. I did not see any marks.
MOB asked why the baby would get marks so easily? I said that
the baby has sensitive skin and we have to be gentle with them.
FOB
finished undressing the baby (while the baby cried). The FOB carried
the baby to the scale. I weighed the baby. I told FOB to take
the baby back to the room. He did and laid the baby on the table.
Once the FOB left the baby to still (?). Baby stopped crying.
I picked up the baby so I could turn her to get her length. She
cried. FOB and MOB were standing next to me. I asked again if
she always cries with that high pitch. MOB replied, "She's
just tired and has a cold." I finished measuring her and
told the FOB and MOB to wrap the baby in a blanket and Doctor
Clapper would be in shortly.
I
left the room and told Dr. Clapper that I thought there was something
wrong with the baby because of the high pitch cries and the frequency
of crying.
I was
putting the chart together and MOB came out of the room by herself
and said she was concerned about how little the baby seemed to
be eating. I asked how much does she eat & MOB replied 1/2
ounce to 1 ounce every hour. I asked when the baby eats the 1/2
to 1 ounce what does she (the baby) do? MOB replied, "she
falls asleep." I told MOB that I would let Dr. Clapper know
and he would give his advice to how much he thought the baby should
eat. She went back to the room.
After
putting the paperwork for the baby together I went in their room
to give them the baby's measurements. FOB had the baby on the
table. I looked at the baby and she had what appeared to me was
Vaseline on her chin where the blisters were. I asked the FOB
what was on her, he replied "A & D ointment;" that
the nurse @ Mary Bridge told him to apply the ointment.
Dr.
Clapper asked if I would get an O2Sat (?) on baby. I went in there.
MOB was very upset and crying. FOB was holding baby. I told them
what I was going to do. MOB said she knew about that from when
they went to the hospital for one week. FOB replied that this
was stupid and that there was nothing wrong with the baby. MOB
replied she was extremely tired of last time she was at the hospital
because the nurses @ T6 (Mary Bridge) kept waking MOB up every
two hours to feed the baby. She seemed to be irritated about this.
MOB replied saying Dr. Clapper is over-reacting and that the baby
just has a cold, and there is nothing wrong with her. FOB seemed
to be angry. I asked if they wanted to talk with Dr. Clapper again,
they said no. After getting the 02SAT-which I told the parents
it was100% MOB said that having the baby go in the ambulance was
"freaking" (her?) out. MOB asked if they could take
the baby by their car. I told them I couldn't override what Dr.
Clapper had said and if they wanted to talk to Dr. Clapper again
and MOB asked ROB who was looking out the window and just shrugged
his shoulders. MOB started crying again and said she would like
to talk to Dr. Clapper.
When
paramedics arrived FOB and MOB stayed seated on the bench. After
the paramedics took her away. MOB was crying. Neither FOB or MOB
went with the baby in the ambulance. FOB and MOB left after the
baby was gone.
|
Back
To Mary Bridge Children's Hospital
John didn't think anything
was seriously wrong, so he dropped Melissa off at the hospital. They arrived
the same time the ambulance did, and Melissa carried her in to be admitted,
telling the nurse the doctor wanted her checked out. John went on home
to pack a bag for them, and stayed for a while cleaning up the apartment
before he went back, until Melissa told him to get back to the hospital
after a couple of hours--he had washed dishes, picked up and was about
to do some laundry when she called him and ordered him back in a way that
communicated trouble.
More editing...............(will
finish this in the next few days)
Melissa probably
had no idea of the damaging effects of her eating habits and the smoking
which includes interference with the absorption of iron, calcium, other
minerals and vitamins necessary to the developing fetus, particularly
vitamins K and C. She reportedly grew up with a deficient diet.
Along with smoking, this type of prolonged nutritional deficiency state
passes on to an unborn child, potentially resulting in or contributing
to the often fatal Cheadle-Möller-Barlow syndrome
(Barlow's disease,
Barlow disease, Möller-Barlow disease--infantile scurvy)
which is characterized by gingival lesions (only when teeth are present),
arthralgia, loss of appetite and weight loss, listlessness, bone abnormalities
(beading on the ribs and other bones) that can be misread as healing fractures
and actual spontaneous fractures, or those that occur from normal handling
or minor mishaps, or major unseen fractures from birth injuries, bleeding
internally, hemorrhages, abnormal bruising, redness, swelling, blisters,
slow healing, an abnormal frog-leg position, and high-pitched crying
among other symptoms, all of which have been written about by the internationally-known
physician, the late Dr. C.A.B. Clemetson
among others, thanks mostly to the ground-breaking work and published
writings of world-famous Australian physician, Dr. Archie
Kalokerinos, M.D. Apart from nutritional deficiencies,
other triggering factors such as infection
or the introduction of foreign proteins through vaccination are
believed by some researchers to accelerate fulminating scurvy, causing
a Barlow's disease variant
which appears to progress much faster than normal infantile scurvy. (World-wide
medical journal articles.) This accelerated condition is now
referred to as Clemetson-Kalokerinos Syndrome by a group
of physicians familiar with the research and findings, who are not threatened
by the association with vaccine "adverse events".
Melissa herself
appears to have suffered from deficiency symptoms. She mentioned iritis
to the pediatrician's assistant
(who mistakenly thought the father had this condition), possibly associated
with vitamin C deficiency. It was a painful condition she suffered from
most of her life. Under stress and with this type of eating habits she
likely harbored many deficiency states which may have contributed to her
own earlier diagnosis of hyperactivity, learning disabilities and abnormal
behavior which led to a determination that she was "unfit for trial"
in an unrelated case that was settled by a guilty plea in the middle of
this case. This finding was overlooked or ignored in both of her cases.
As previously
reported, Baby Casey was taken and injected with the Hep B vax over the
objection of her father while her mother was being tended to for abnormal
bleeding after delivery. The parents were given no information about possible
side effects or signs to worry about, nor told to contact her
physician if any of the known symptoms appeared. One of the documented
side effects--apnea, occurred soon
after. Connections have been made between a junk
food, refined sugar diet, and vaccinations,
and high bilirubin levels in the newborn and adults also. In fact, bilirubin
increases have been linked to vaccines. The high
bilirubin count may have contributed to the apnea. Other
symptoms associated with high bilirubin are: listlessness,
high-pitched crying, arching
of the back, and seizures.
Following
the Hep B vaccination and apnea incident, Baby Casey
developed a cascade of symptoms. We spent months with John remembering
what he could and answering my questions. At one point, I asked without
any explanation (8-8-07) if he had noticed any unusual "frog
leg" postures, John said, "Yes,
she had this way of turning her
heels under that was creepy to look at." The
frog leg posture is pathognomic of Barlow's disease. Later on, after
she was put into foster care immediately upon leaving the hospital, and
when we arranged a visit, the foster mom said Casey "didn't
like to be held." I also noticed when someone was holding
her on their hip in a position that would normally involve a little one
clamping her knees around someone's waist, that her legs seemed to splay
out abnormally and wondered about that, along with a stiff-legged
look apparent in one of the photos I took of her that day. Many
other details came up as we spoke over time that John hadn't thought of
until we were going through day-by-day accounts or realized had any significance.
The pediatrician
filled out the clinic report marking everything as normal to begin with
and then went back later and altered it.

The
following are transcribed medical notes from that day. Some of them appear
to have been changed, and some things were added that were not observed
or reported in error at the pediatric clinic, according to an opthomologist's
report soon after.
-
Alert
and vigorous, crying
-
Head:
normal fontanelle, bruise ecchymoses (R) zygoma (there was
nothing on her right zygoma [cheekbone] until after she was taken
from her parents at the clinic)
-
"Something-type
(??) lesions" lower lip
(skin sores) Began as chocolate brown discoloration, next day erupted
into sores
-
Lung
congestion: "??? rales"
(spot on lungs from infection later described as probable lung "contusion"
(bruise)
-
"Irritable
crying not consolable" described the distinctive cry
that concerned the nurse in terms less recognizable than "inconsolable
high-pitched crying" usually associated with brain swelling/encephalitis
caused by vaccine adverse reactions
-
Crying/fussy
onset last week, had ??? (can't read)
-
Ecchymoses
over eyelids
-
Ears--OK
(they were not ok after she was handled at the hospital--concerns
listed on forensic report)
-
Breast
feeds: Melissa was unable to nurse, only had scant milk to
pump --Casey was fed mostly soy formula (dairy intolerance in family)
-
Cries
a lot, sleeps ok
-
Subscleral
hemorrhages?
-
Fundal
hemorrhages?
Below
is an excerpt from the official report of ophthalmologist Clark W. Deem,
MD, called in to check for
expected retinal hemorrhages. No subscleral, fundal or retinal
hemorrhages found. Click for full
report.

However,
the pediatrician later told detectives he noted swelling
on her head, labored breathing,
and described her eyes as hemorrhaged
and her eyelids as black
on a later report.
(This
page needs revising, but a summary of legal and medical issues are as
follows)
**********************************************************************************************************
Summary of the primary legal and medical issues.
1. The interdisciplinary groups involved with this case failed to investigate
it properly. They have guidelines that require a full investigation of
every aspect of the case, and that should have included the prior medical
and nutritional history. If they had done so, they would have discovered
the probability that Casey was born with multiple nutrition-based metabolic
diseases. Her mother lived on 8-10 cups of coffee per day, sweetened with
around two cups of sugar, refused the healthy food she was offered and
ate only junk food like cookies and chips, and some fast food. She refused
to take the prenatal vitamins she was given, gained only 10lbs during
her pregnancy, and smoked. Her eating disorder was most likely caused
by Vitamin C deficiency itself. There were other signs, iritis and hemorrhaging
for two days after giving birth, which are all symptoms found in scurvy.
She had prenatal care, but obviously the quality of care bordered on criminal
neglect or they would have taken better care of her, gave her better prenatal
advice and caught signs of problems, particularly her lack of weight gain.
Casey's symptoms were consistent with Vitamin C deficiency (Barlow's disease,
or more specifically Barlow's disease variant, a vaccine or infection-accelerated
form of infantile scurvy-endotoxemia), D deficiency, and possibly K deficiency.
She also had characteristics of Infantile Cortical Hyperostosis, which
some online medical authorities now believe may be an early manifestation
or stage of Barlow's disease (infantile scurvy). It wasn't just the prenatal
diet and lack of nutrition--the Hep B shot can cause massive states of
Vitamin C deficiency and other side effects, including brain swelling
and a different kind of bleeding disorder (thrombocytopenia) and the antibiotics
can interfere with the formation and absorption of Vitamin C and K, as
well as other serious side effects. Also, there are reports in the medical
literature of infantile scurvy being caused by soy formula alone (Casey
had signs of lactose intolerance). Doctors used to advise mothers who
put their babies on formula to supplement with orange juice. Now pediatricians
tell parents, "no juice until 4 months" and then advise apple
juice or other kinds that are low in Vitamin C, and even more so in the
store-bought juices that are pasteurized. The soy formula wasn't wrong.
Casey reacted to formula with dairy in it later, and had to be put back
on non-dairy formula, but without orange juice or other Vitamin C rich
juices or supplements, the problem was allowed to continue.
2. The day after birth, Casey was given a Hep B shot against her father's
will. They told him he had no choice because it was “the law”--in
a state which allows personal exemptions from vaccination. Listed side
effects:
http://www.rxlist.com/recombivax-drug.htm
Symptoms: Studies involved observation for 5 days only Pain, tenderness,
pruritus, erythema, ecchymosis, swelling, warmth, nodule formation, irritability,
fever ( = 101°F oral equivalent), diarrhea, fatigue/weakness, diminished
appetite, rhinitis, nausea; pharyngitis, upper respiratory infection,
sweating; achiness, sensation of warmth, lightheadedness; chills, flushing,
vomiting; abdominal pains/cramps; dyspepsia; influenza, cough, vertigo/dizziness,
paresthesia, pruritus, rash (non-specified); angioedema; urticaria, arthralgia
including monoarticular, myalgia; back pain; neck pain, shoulder pain,
neck stiffness, lymphadenopathy, insomnia/disturbed sleep, earache, dysuria,
hypotension, elevation of liver enzymes, constipation, Guillain-Barré
Syndrome, multiple sclerosis; exacerbation of multiple sclerosis; myelitis
including transverse myelitis, seizure; febrile seizure; peripheral neuropathy
including Bell's Palsy; radiculopathy; herpes zoster; migraine; muscle
weakness; hypesthesia; encephalitis, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome; alopecia;
petechiae, eczema, arthritis, increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate;
thrombocytopenia, pain in extremity, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE);
lupus-like syndrome; vasculitis, polyarteritis nodosa, irritability; agitation;
somnolence, optic neuritis, tinnitus, conjunctivitis, visual disturbances,
syncope and tachycardia.
Hypersensitivity: Anaphylaxis and symptoms of immediate hypersensitivity
reactions including rash, pruritus, urticaria, edema, angioedema, dyspnea,
chest discomfort, bronchial spasm, palpitation, or symptoms consistent
with a hypotensive episode have been reported within the first few hours
after vaccination. An apparent hypersensitivity syndrome (serum-sickness-like)
of delayed onset has been reported days to weeks after vaccination, including:
arthralgia/arthritis (usually transient), fever, and dermatologic reactions
such as urticaria, erythema multiforme, ecchymoses and erythema nodosum
This vaccine is so dangerous that the French public demonstrated and
filed civil suits and got it removed from the infant vaccination schedule.
Two days later, on Thanksgiving Day, Nov.23, 2000, Casey stopped eating,
became lethargic and then quit breathing temporarily and became unresponsive
and was taking to Mary Bridge Children's hospital. The pediatrician involved
with this case, Dr. John Clapper, altered his pediatric records to say
that she was vaccinated a day earlier and went to the hospital a day later
than she did, possibly to avoid the 72 hr. vaccine injury required reporting
period the law requires.
Blood tests showed an infection in the blood (sepsis) –and she
was put on two very dangerous antibiotics by IV for three days. She had
jaundice, high bilirubin, a urine reading consistent with bone resorption
and such abnormal heart and respiration readings at one point that one
of the doctors questioned whether the monitors had malfunctioned. They
tried unsuccessfully to take cerebral-spinal fluid to rule out infection
in the brain, beyond the reach of antibiotics (the blood-brain barrier),
and just assumed it wasn't there, even though her symptoms, particularly
lethargy indicated otherwise.
Dr. Clapper treated all of her symptoms dismissively, claimed the infection
was probably “hospital error” from contamination, and that
since no doctor had witnessed the life-threatening apnea episode at home,
suggested that the parents had probably “over-reacted” and
it never happened.
3. As Casey was being discharged, the nurses gave the parents a white
business card with an 800 number to a nurse consultation phone service
(hotline) under contract with Mary Bridge Hospital to handle calls about
health issues. The parents were told that the phone nursing service kept
in-house records of the calls. John called Sheriff's Det. Michael Hefty
and gave him the 800 number, but instead of contacting the nursing phone
service, the detective went to the wrong hospital (Tacoma General) and
talked to the wrong nurses (floor nurses on duty at the time). They don't
keep records of calls to the nurse's stations and of course didn't remember
any calls from Casey's parents, because that wasn't who they were calling.
The Detective went as far as getting a hospital information sheet with
a different number to call for newborn care, and then claimed the parents
both lied about making numerous calls to a nursing hotline. By failing
to get the call records and claiming the parents never made those calls,
he was able to charge both of them with felony negligence for failing
to contact medical authorities earlier. I spoke to the current director
of the phone consultation nursing service associated with Mary Bridge
Children's Hospital. She verified that they keep in-house records of who
called, when, why and about which child, exactly as the parents told the
investigators when questioned separately. However, she won't release the
archived phone records without a subpoena, and the case must be reopened
before subpoenas can be issued.
4. After Casey was released from the hospital, she remained lethargic
and several new symptoms developed: fussiness, irritability, poor eating,
not wanting to be held, and a frog-leg posture, all symptoms included
in medical literature on Barlow's disease, but she also had the puffy
cheeks (seen in forensic photos) characteristic of Infantile Cortisol
Hyperostosis which generally presents with a swollen lower face and fractures
in the ribs and clavicles, exactly what was found when she was 28 days
old.
5. One day when John came home from work, he saw that Casey's head appeared
to be changing into a cone or dome head shape. The hotline nurse he called
advised him to change her sleeping position from the side (as advised
by doctors because she was a “shallow breather”) to her back,
and to get some sleep and quit worrying. The next morning her head had
resumed a normal shape. There are many cases in medical literature where
infants have developed flattened skulls from lying on their backs, but
an overnight change would be unusual for a normal infant, although characteristic
of prolonged Vitamin D deficiency where the skull becomes abnormally thin
on the sides and back of the head, potentially resulting in a permanent
dome-shaped skull. Photographs at three months show her dome-shaped skull,
"bossed" (protruding forehead), hair loss on the sides and back
of her head, thickened wrist joints, and she had other symptoms found
in medical literature including thumb contractures which required hand
splints while she was in foster care, all consistent with Vit. D deficiency.
A study from 2008 on Vit. D supplements (pills) suggests that taking this
synthetic form of D can make the problem worse, meaning that supplements
added to formula aren't doing the job. Vit. D deficiency is now recognized
as being epidemic in pregnant women, infants in particular and adults
in general.
6. A week before the second hospitalization, Casey developed a severe
respiratory condition and breathing difficulties. A hotline nurse guided
John through the Baby Heimlich Maneuver chest compressions on the back
to help break up congestion, which was repeated through the night until
she coughed up a plug of yellow mucus and was able to sleep. Respiratory
infections like that are symptoms found in both Barlow's disease and Vitamin
D deficiency.
7. The next day while John was at work, “inconsolable, high-pitched
crying” began—an exact description known world-wide of “cri
encéphalique”, the characteristic cry of encephalitis, described
as a “cerebral cry” caused by the pain of brain swelling.
Encephalitis is linked to all vaccines. In fact, vaccine components have
been used to experimentally induce encephalitis in rat studies.
8. At the same time she developed subconjunctival hemorrhages and red
eyelids. A hotline nurse insisted it was just “colic” and
red eyes from crying, and that she “didn't need to be seen”
(that was their advice after every single call). Subconjunctival hemorrhages
along with swollen, diffusely hemorrhaged eyelids are diagnostic signs
of Barlow's disease, according to the medical literature.
9. About the same time, Casey had a tiny lesion at the corner of her mouth
which was followed by a chocolate brown discoloration under her lower
lip, and then three more lesions under the lower lip. I Googled the description
(as I did every single sign and symptom) and discovered it in old scurvy
literature—scurvy is a hemorrhagic condition (vascular fragility)
with systemic effects and bone disease, often ending in “sudden
death” (SIDS)--and the exact description was of an extravasation
of blood under the skin, appearing blue, purple, black or brown, which
can erupt on the surface into poorly healing skin lesions (ulcerated sores).
They look like cold sores, which the hotline nurse insisted they were
sight unseen and advised John to apply K&D lotion. The medical assistant
at the pediatric clinic thought the same. THEY WERE NOT BURNS, as claimed
by the ICU doctor, nor “a severe cut or laceration” as described
by the forensic officer in his report. Any objective person looking at
the forensic photos would know those crusted sores were not burns, which
also would have left scars, seeped and been red around the edges. They
might have been cold sores or vaccine sores, but John's description of
what preceded the eruption led me to medical literature which identified
the true cause. Nor were they considered to be burns the first few hours,
or that description would have been on the forensic report which was directed
by the ICU doctor. They became “burns” when everything was
interpreted in terms of “abuse” to blame the parents.
10. The next day John got home and found a little blood in Casey's saliva
and assumed she was just teething and suctioned it out. It didn't recur.
Bleeding from the gums, esophagus or stomach often occurs in Barlow's
disease. It was NOT from a contusion in the lungs as the ICU doctor claimed
days after the fact. There was no contusion. She had “rales”
(fluid in the lungs) and thickened lung walls from infection, not injury.
At least that (rales) is what the pediatrician added to his clinic report.
An area of “opacity” in a lower lung lobe was interpreted
as a contusion (bruise). They needed to come up with some form of thoracic
“damage” to support the abuse accusation.
11. On the Friday before a pediatric appointment the following Monday,
which had been delayed because the doctor was on vacation and his office
refused to refer them to someone else, John was sitting on his bed, playing
with Casey by bouncing her in his hands (not smart, but many people do
it), when she slipped through his hands. Her fall was broken by a padded
laundry basket beside him onto a carpeted floor. It didn't even raise
a bruise, but he called the hotline, a nurse went through a lengthy checklist
and determined that Casey was uninjured, and “didn't need to be
seen”. Her grandparents saw her the next day and told me she was
fine, other than still lethargic as she had been since two days after
vaccination.
12. On the day of the pediatric appointment, which was supposed to be
an “after hospital” visit, but was listed by the doctor as
a “well-baby” appointment, John ran errands and then picked
up Melissa and the baby. They went an hour early and spent it with Medical
Assistant Shelly LaVergne. She wrote a detailed report of the visit, all
of the health concerns they brought up, and documented that there wasn't
a bruise on Casey's body, just a red spot on her cheek that later erupted
into a pimple or whitehead, as can be seen in the forensic photos. Melissa
thought it was caused by a scarf pin the grandmother wore on her chest
when she held Casey during a visit on the previous Saturday. LaVergne
became concerned when Casey was laid on an examining table and let out
an “ear-splitting” scream, followed by what she described
as “inconsolable, high-pitched crying,” and went to get the
doctor. Her concerns were listed at the top of the clinic report as the
crying, the cold-sore type lesions and the red eyes. Her hand-written
report was given to the prosecution. It was apparently withheld from the
defense attorneys and certainly from the court. The parents didn't know
it existed. That report alone could have changed the outcome of the case.
13. Dr. Clapper spent around a half hour with the family before calling
an ambulance, which contradicts reports claiming he basically took one
look at Casey and sent her to the hospital. He and John did not get along,
because John was still distrustful after the earlier hospital fiasco.
Also, John was the experienced parent of two children and was better able
to understand what the doctor was saying and asking questions about. The
doctor didn't even know John had another child and resented John being
the one answering questions, which can be clearly determined from the
police reports. He also was told that John was overheard making an accusation
that must have enraged him—that he was just doing it (sending her
back to the hospital) for the money. So, he targeted John by later telling
investigators that in his experience, MOTHERS don't hurt their babies,
which is not supported by statistics or even common sense. Criminal literature
is filled with cases of mothers who harmed or killed their children. Current
statistics on abusers put gender at near 50-50 with slightly more male
offenders, with a historical increase in male perpetrators probably due
to more males becoming caretakers in recent decades, with more working
mothers. Dr. Clapper did an oxygen saturation test on Casey that came
back normal. The fluid in the lungs and encephalitic cry alone were reasons
to have her hospitalized. However, Dr. Clapper told the parents he was
sending her to the hospital due to the "red eyes and skin lesions"
which he suggested might be "child abuse".
14. The parents wanted to go in the ambulance, but the EMT's told them
it wasn't allowed, contrary to accounts that attempted to make it look
like they didn't care enough to do so, although Melissa apparently admitted
being frightened of riding in an ambulance because they "go fast"
(the Medical Assistant's report). Either way, John had to drive the car
to the hospital.
15. John arrived at the hospital right behind the ambulance, dropped Melissa
off and went home to pack a bag for them to stay at the hospital with
Casey. He stayed to clean the apartment because he believed the hotline
nurses who had assured them that she only had a bad cold, colic and cold
sores and didn't need medical care.
16. Dr. Clapper initially marked everything as normal on his clinic report,
and then criminally altered the medical form after the fact, listing symptoms
that didn't exist or were found much later at the hospital—not by
him.
17. Dr. Clapper called the police to meet the ambulance, but only to make
certain the parents didn't interfere with her admission to the hospital,
not because there were any actual signs of abuse. He admitted this in
a report submitted by the defense counsel's investigator, and also that
the parents caused no problems. If he had called in a case of suspected
abuse to the police, they would have stayed at the hospital or immediately
called in investigators on the case.
18. The appointment was at 10:15, but the family went an hour early and
spent that time with the medical assistant. The ambulance was called at
10:45 AM, according to the nursing notes. Law enforcement wasn't called
to investigate “abuse” until around 3:30 PM. That was Deputy
Shaffer and another one. They called in Detectives Hefty (lead) and Hall,
who arrived around 4:30 PM.
19. By that time, doctors had inflicted finger imprints on Casey's forehead
from handling her. These were blamed on the parents, but were so slight
that when Det. Hefty examined Casey some time after he arrived at 4:30
PM he didn't even see them, only the four skin lesions, as he admitted
under oath at the 3.5 hearing.
20. Around 4:30, Forensic Officer Johnson took ten 35mm photos of Casey.
His report lists the fingermarks on her forehead, he mentions that a nose
tube will be inserted by ICU Dr. Martha McCravey after he finishes, and
he falsely describes four distinct sores as a “severe cut or laceration”
on her chin. He also mentions a “torn frenum” which is the
tiny piece of skin between lip and gums. Frenum lesions are described
in Barlow's disease, which produces defective collagen and affects connective
tissues. Officer Johnson's original forensic photos have disappeared and
were replaced with another set taken later after more bruises had developed
from medical handling (evidence tampering). They show someone gripping
Baby Casey's head exactly where a depressed fracture, a raised hemorrhage
under the scalp and a finger bruise on the temple were found later, none
of which were there when the first set of photos were taken. What exists
now is a forensic report with no matching photos, and a second set of
photos with no matching forensic report. The second set of later photos
was passed off as the original forensic photos in court.
21. The parents were interrogated separately and gave the same information.
John was only asked about the skin sores, which were later “interpreted”
as burns of some kind, up until the x-rays were seen. Melissa was additionally
asked about a bruise on the cheek later in the day, but thought they were
talking about the red spot on the cheek, and mentioned the grandmother's
scarf pin as the probable cause. She wasn't allowed to see Casey and didn't
realize they were talking about a large diffuse bruise that developed
after the first set of photos were taken. The bruise was on the cheek
opposite the one with the red spot. Any objective person looking at the
photos with the cheek bruise right next to a very red ear could have figured
out it was caused by a medical person holding Casey's head sideways on
a bed or table, probably while she was being examined.
22. X-rays were brought out around midnight and shown to the parents and
detectives at the same time. Callus formation on ribs and clavicles were
described as “healing fractures”. Barlow's disease can cause
fractures spontaneously, from normal handling, but it also causes a condition
known as subperiosteal hemorrhages where bleeding from the skin covering
on the bones calcifies and looks identical to “healing fractures
in different stages” on x-rays. The only way to tell the difference
is by microscopic examination of the callus material, which of course
they didn't do.
23. Full body x-rays were taken after the chest findings. They were negative
for head injuries.
24. Melissa was arrested shortly after the midnight viewing of the x-rays
on a prior warrant and never spoke to the police again on advice from
her attorney, according to the police reports. She knew nothing about
head injuries at that time because they hadn't occurred yet, and yet the
police reports indicated that she was interrogated by them about head
injuries on the day of admission.
25. The next day they did a CT scan and found a small depressed skull
fracture which caused the bone plate to overlap, two tiny subdural hematomas
(inconsistent with blunt force trauma), and 12 pinpoint hemorrhages. ICU
Dr. McCravey said the fractures and bleeding were “only hours old”
which means it happened in the hospital, not while the parents had her.
As previously mentioned, in rickets medical literature, bone abnormalities
begin in the skull with thinning on the sides and back of the head, so
thin that finger pressure alone can cause a depressed fracture. Barlow's
disease is characterized by bleeding anywhere in the body. Subdural hemorrhage
(SDH) is listed as a symptom in current online medical sites for infantile
scurvy. Retinal hemorrhages (a primary symptom used to falsely diagnose
SBS), which usually goes hand-in-hand with SDH and other bleeding inside
the head can occur spontaneously. Abnormal bruising also.
26. Contrary to falsified police reports, John didn't find out about head
“injuries” until he returned to the hospital the next afternoon
to see Casey (but wasn't allowed to do so). ICU Dr. McCravey told him
it was a “linear” fracture and withheld the information that
it was only hours old after Casey had been in the hospital for two days.
He didn't find out Casey had a depressed skull fracture with an overlapping
bone plate until recently, when the police reports were read to him over
the phone.
27. The ICU doctor, who knew the head injuries occurred in the hospital,
claimed (according to the police reports) it required a force equal to
“a fall from a 2-story building or unrestrained head impact in a
vehicle accident” which is straight out of SBS literature and completely
false. All of the triad of symptoms supposedly diagnostic of SBS (Diffuse
Axonal Injury-DAI, Subdural Hematoma-SDH, and Retinal Hemorrhages-RH)
are found in birth injuries, in medical conditions, and in documented
accidental short falls as little as a couple of feet, according to medical
and scientific literature. The doctor also used completely unrelated stories
of accidental falls which did not produce these injuries, which had nothing
to do with this case. In fact, Det. Hefty admitted at the 3.5 hearing
that he never even told the doctors what the parents thought caused the
injuries (the Baby Heimlich, bumping into a wall, and John dropping the
baby), but instead used “hypothetical” examples when he spoke
to the doctors. He also lied on his report, falsely claiming John said
he “tossed the baby to within a foot of an 8' ceiling”. When
I read that to John, he said, “that's crazy”. The mothers
of both of his daughters saw him playing with the babies that way—sitting
down and bouncing his daughters in the flat of his hands to make them
laugh. My daughter showed him how to do it by pumping his arms up and
down, as more accurately described by Det. Hall when John talked about
it days after the initial interrogations. He volunteered the information
the next time he saw the detectives (a week later), after learning about
the skull fracture and bleeding, because he thought that was the cause.
He was never, at any time, told that the head injuries were only hours
old at the time they were found on the day after Casey was admitted to
the hospital. He wasn't even told she had a depressed skull fracture,
just a “linear” one.
28. Deputy Shaffer, and Dets. Hefty and Hall collaborated on falsified
reports, claiming they were told as soon as they arrived at the hospital
that Casey had suffered “massive injuries” and listed symptoms
that weren't even found on that day. Most of the content of their reports
was falsified, including making it appear as though they had questioned
both parents about the head injuries on the day Casey was admitted to
the hospital, which they did not.
29. Det. Hefty withheld a CPS report that seems to have disappeared. A
caseworker spoke to both parents separately, who both assumed they caused
the head injuries—John from having dropped Casey, and Melissa for
having bumped into a wall or doorjamb while carrying her the night before
the pediatric appointment, according to what she told the caseworker.
Neither parent had told the other about these incidents. They both volunteered
this information to CPS. On Dec. 26th, 2000, the detectives spoke to John
at his apartment. He voluntarily told them about dropping Casey then for
the first time. The detectives took information from the CPS report and
used it as though they had gotten it themselves. Hefty had just gotten
the report. He didn't even tell his partner about it, according to Det.
Hall's report. Det. Hefty took the laundry basket and turned everything
in to a forensic lab. The report probably would have found DNA on the
rim of the basket to support John's account, but it never surfaced either.
There are two other missing lab reports. When Casey was able to cough
up mucus after the final Baby Heimlich treatment the night she got sick,
John suctioned her mouth and emptied it onto a baby blanket or something
similar, and he did the same thing when he suctioned bloody saliva out
of her mouth which he thought was from teething. Lab reports may have
provided evidence that she had a lung infection as he described, and they
would have seen there was very little blood in her saliva to offset the
doctor's claim (sight unseen) that she was bleeding from a "contusion"
(bruise) of the lung caused by "assumed" blunt force trauma
to the ribs.
30. A “hospital expert” diagnosed Casey with “Shaken
Baby Syndrome” based partly on Dr. Clapper's false report of “fundal
hemorrhages” (retinal hemorrhages) that never existed, as verified
by an ophthalmologist at the hospital.
31. Casey developed more bruising over time in the hospital, all blamed
on the parents. Legal documents claim she was admitted to the hospital
with bruises all over her body.
32. Doctors put her on morphine for two weeks—counter-indicated
in head injury cases. It also masked symptoms that could have been diagnostic
of metabolic disease, particularly the pain in her legs that caused her
to hold them in a frog-leg posture, that made her cry every time she was
handled and to not want to be held, even later in foster care. The foster
mother said Casey was so fussy when being held that they left her on a
blanket on the floor, and she was observed holding her legs oddly during
a visit with Casey and the foster family by her step-grandfather and the
grandparents of her half-sister Sierra.
33. Casey developed swallowing difficulties in the hospital—a symptom
listed in Barlow's medical literature. They did a surgical procedure on
her that nearly killed her just to look at her esphogus for “burns”
and to biopsy her stomach. She stopped breathing and had to be bagged
and ventiliated. There were no findings. Medical literature (Anesthesiology—a
textbook excerpt sent to me by a doctor in England) instructs doctors
not to put anything down the throat of an infant with a respiratory condition
because it can stop their breathing. She was not tested or treated for
any kind of infection in the lungs, or any kind of metabolic disease.
There is no evidence from the pediatric records or DSHS financial records
that she was given any kind of medical treatment whatsoever, other than
an oxygen tube which wasn't needed at the time she was admitted to the
hospital.
34. Tiny white lesions were found on the roof of the mouth, larynx and
pharynx some time after the first forensic photos were taken and “interpreted”
as burns. These specific signs are diagnostic of Barlow's disease. When
more white lesions appeared in Casey's mouth while she was in foster care,
they were diagnosed as “oral thrush” --a medical condition
associated with immune deficiency, which is a common and expected side
effect of antibiotic treatment.
35. When the x-rays were taken, there was callus formation on 10 ribs
and two clavicles and nothing else. When another set was taken 10 days
later in the hospital, there was callus formation on 10 new ribs where
there had been no fracture lines or bone displacement before, indicating
that either doctors broke more ribs or they were looking at calcifying
subperiosteal hemorrhages in an on-going bleeding disorder. Studies have
shown that a single rib broken by traumatic force has an 85% chance of
causing “serious thoracic injury”. None was found when over
20 bones were considered to have been broken by “traumatic force”.
Statistically, this is a near impossibility. Nor was there ever a single
bruise or mark on her torso, before or after she was admitted to the hospital.
36. After Casey left the hospital, she continued to have respiratory infections,
then diagnosed as “viral infections”. She developed eczema,
a symptom found in Barlow's disease, although it probably has other causes.
I also observed that her skin around herwas perfect. No “burn”
scars. She seemed perfectly normal at the time except for the way she
held her legs. She was alert and interested in what we were doing (taking
pictures). I held her and played with her during most of the hour visit.
But for the 21/2 years her pediatric records continued, she was bombarded
with vaccinations and continued to develop new “encephalitic”
areas seen in the brain,.all attributed to former abuse. There were continued
reports of “colic” which was most likely more episodes of
“cri encéphalique” from vaccine-induced brain swelling
and the terrible pain it causes. Also, after meeting developmental markers
early on, she appears to have lost language skills and developed separation
anxiety. She was taken from her parents, put in foster care for about
18 months, and then handed over to adoptive parents, all of which are
reasons for extreme emotional trauma.
37. The doctors in this case violated emergency pediatric guidelines that
instruct them to do DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS to eliminate medical causes
before making an assumption of abuse. A ruling of child abuse is a legal
determination meant to be made by cooperating authorities because clinical
symptoms don't normally determine whether injuries are accidental or inflicted,
and that is without even considering medical causes of the same symptoms.
Any other flagrant violation of conventional medical protocol would likely
result in a doctor's license being revoked and possible arrest.
38. ICU Dr. McCravey falsified a medical report of the case. (Details
later.)
39. Pediatrician Dr. Clapper falsified a discharge summary of the case.
(Details later.)
40. Dets. Hefty and Hall gave perjured testimony at the 3.5 hearing, but
also made admissions favorable to the defendants that were ignored or
overlooked. (Details later.)
41. The PSI (Pre Sentence Investigation) reports and all of the court
documents were based on assumptions, falsified reports and missing documents,
and as such were “fruit from the poisoned tree.”
42. The prosecution submitted a last minute altered motion to include
an amended charge of assault by “recklessness” (accidental
injury), essentially turning the defense's case against them without giving
them time to prepare a defense claiming the parent's actions were accidental,
but fell short of the legal definition of “reckless”. (This
is an assumption of what their legal strategy would have been if they
had time to prepare it.)
43. The court erred in not giving copies of the motions to the defense
attorneys until just a couple of hours before a jury was to be seated.
It was the only charge the prosecutor had a chance of proving based on
statements made by the defendants themselves. The defense attorneys argued
against it being allowed at the last minute, but failed to cite the exception
to Collins involving a legal prejudice to the case. The prosecutor didn't
want to go to trial without it and the defense didn't want to go to trial
with it, in spite of it being favorable to their clients, so the parents
were threatened with 40 years in prison if they went to trial and emotionally
coerced into taking Newman plea bargains.
44. Melissa was given a plea bargain on condition that she testify against
John, which she agreed to do, but had nothing more to offer. She knew
no one intentionally hurt the baby. She tried to protect her plea bargain
agreement by offering “evidence” against John on another unrelated
charge against her which was not even a criminal act, in contradiction
to the prosecution's portrayal of her as being intimidated, manipulated
by John, or “loyal” to the man she loved to the point of withholding
evidence. She told the truth, but the prosecution didn't believe her or
John. The detectives never interviewed anyone in the family other than
a brief conversation with her mother, which was hateful and incriminating
towards Melissa. They didn't even speak to the mother of John's first-born
child, who would have testified (in spite of her bitterness and pain over
their breakup) that John was a loving and doting father who would never
harm a child intentionally.
45. I spoke to Melissa in jail after she was arrested. She told me personally,
“IF John hurt my baby, I'll KILL HIM. She never witnessed any kind
of abuse or she wouldn't have made a statement like that, and according
to John, he never saw anything that would make him suspect Melissa. He
remains very protective of her. He believes she did the best she could
with Casey, considering that she had no experience with babies.
46. When Melissa was arrested on a prior warrant during this investigation,
jail authorities determined her to be “unfit for trial” due
to her lack of understanding between right and wrong. According to the
court file on that other case, Melissa should have been formally evaluated.
That means she should not have been charged in this case, which was expected
to go to trial until just hours before a jury was due to be seated. The
investigating authorities either didn't bother to look in her other file,
or withheld that information from the court.
47. John's attorney told him if he signed the Newman plea that Melissa
would get a short sentence, that relatives were getting Casey and Melissa
could get her back when she got out of prison and that he “would
have a family to come home to”. It is unknown whether the attorney
withheld the facts or simply didn't bother to find out that Casey was
going to be adopted out to strangers, that both parental rights had been
terminated and they wouldn't be allowed to have contact with Casey as
a standard part of the court orders following conviction. John agreed
to take the plea on that basis, to protect Melissa and Casey.
48. After the pleas were accepted by the court, John changed his mind
and asked that the plea be withdrawn and to go to trial. His attorney
filed the motion for the withdrawal and a hearing on the plea was scheduled
for the same day Melissa was to be sentenced. Instead of waiting for the
court ruling, John's attorney privately told him it “wasn't allowed”
and apparently withdrew the motion without telling John it was supposed
to be formally ruled on by the Judge.
49. John (and probably Melissa) was never explicitly warned by the court
of the possibility of an “exceptional sentence” and was blindsided
by the sentence. He was so emotionally distraught in court he couldn't
even speak. He still didn't know the timeline of injuries never matched
the events he thought caused them because the doctors and investigators
withheld this information from everyone, including the court, and the
probability of medical causes of the symptoms never came up. A specialist
on bone disease was supposed to have been scheduled to examine Casey,
but the appointment was apparently cancelled or never made. John signed
the plea bargain agreement for 147 months (he had been threatened with
certain conviction based on symptoms alone and 40 years in prison if he
went to trial). Melissa signed one for a 4-year sentence. Instead of honoring
the agreement made between the prosecutor and defense attorneys, the judge
added 4 more years to each sentence, an "exceptional" sentence
based on unproven facts, assumptions, false information and withheld evidence.
John was given a 200 month sentence (16.6 years) and Melissa was given
8 years instead of 4. John has now been in prison over 9 years. Melissa
was released in 2008.
50. The exceptional sentence violated Apprendi, which became case law
in 2000 prior to the arrests. It required a confession or facts proven
beyond a reasonable doubt by a jury before a sentence over the statutory
maximum is allowed. That did not mean the maximum sentence allowed on
the charges, only on the charge or charges that could have been proven
beyond a reasonable doubt by a jury, and certainly not by the lower standard
the Judge used (a preponderance of evidence). With the information the
prosecutor had, the only charge that could have been proven at trial was
“recklessness”, but only as long as the jury didn't find out
the life-threatening injuries happened after Casey was admitted to the
hospital. The rest of it would have come out at trial.
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