Posted on Thursday, July 10, 2025
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by Paul Gardiner
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Hundreds of thousands of grieving American families ask “Why it is taking so long for justice to be delivered to various officials responsible for the tragic treatment and loss of our loved ones in hospitals during the recent COVID-19 pandemic? Where is the proverbial ‘long arm of the law’? Does America have any brave prosecutors?”
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., has publicly alleged that Dr. Anthony Fauci knew that Remdesivir, an antiviral medication, could cause serious harm or even death to patients diagnosed with COVID-19 – but continued to push the drug as a treatment anyway. “Tony Fauci knew that Remdesivir would kill you,” Kennedy has said. “He knew because in 2019 he tried to use it for Ebola.”
Dr. David Martin has provided additional testimony about the highly toxic nature of Remdesivir before members of the Oklahoma state legislature.
A major reason that Remdesivir was widely administered to COVID patients in hospitals was the huge, highly questionable financial incentives to use the drug – something which Dr. Peter McCullough, a board-certified cardiologist and epidemiologist, has described in detail.
On behalf of hundreds of aggrieved families, attorneys have filed extensive legal briefs with seven state attorneys general and two county district attorneys requesting thorough criminal investigations of Dr. Fauci and numerous other public health officials for alleged state crimes committed during the pandemic. Briefs have been filed with the attorneys general of Florida, Texas, Louisianna, Oklahoma, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Arizona.
Alleged crimes include murder, manslaughter, trafficking of persons, participation in enterprise through racketeering or unlawful debt collection, injury to a child, elderly individual, or disabled individual, abandoning or endangering a child, elderly individual, or disabled individual, and unlawful restraint.
Based on the mounting pile of evidence and recent revelations, it surely is time for state attorneys general and county district attorneys to take action on the legal briefs presented to them, convene grand juries, and issue indictments where evidence supports prosecution for alleged crimes. The critical question is: who has the courage to do this?
Paul S. Gardiner is a retired US Army officer, Vietnam veteran, and avid lover of America. He has assisted attorneys in the preparation of the legal briefs described herein.
The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of AMAC or AMAC Action.
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