Based on thousands of victim testimonies and detailed medical record reviews from across the country, we have uncovered the most common tactics used in the deadly COVID hospital protocols. This was the hospitals’ modus operandi during COVID — a systematic, coordinated approach that turned patient care into patient harm.

  1. Refused Outpatient Treatment — Family doctors, clinics, urgent care physicians refused to see patients or provide early treatment, instructing patients to “do nothing” until oxygen levels dropped requiring hospitalization.
  2. Isolation tactics — Upon being admitted to the hospital victims were denied access to family, friends, advocates, pastors, priests, or clergy. Even in death, last rites and family access were refused.
  3. Denial of rights — Admission and consent forms were left unsigned or marked by staff as “unable to sign.” Staff falsely claimed “verbal” consent to treatments was provided.
  4. No informed consent — Victims/POA received no information on risks or side effects of medications, intubation, or procedures as evidenced by no formal documentation in medical records and testimony by family or survivors. 
  5. Vaccination Discrimination — Victims faced mockery, verbal abuse, and neglect based on vaccination status. Often receiving lower levels of care and different treatment options.
  6. Rapid oxygen escalation — Oxygen levels increased aggressively (often via BiPAP), causing anxiety and lung damage that led to mechanical ventilation.
  7. Forced protocol drugs only — Victims were limited to heavily incentivized and harmful hospital protocol drugs: Remdesivir/Veklury, Baricitinib/Olumiant, Tocilizumab/Actemra — often forced even when refused.
  8. Denied other treatments — Requests for vitamins, Ivermectin, Budesonide, Hydroxychloroquine, etc., were refused or ridiculed. Families were falsely told these were “not FDA approved” or “ineffective.”
  9. Gaslighting — Constantly told they would “die without compliance to protocol” or ventilation; families and victims told repeatedly they were “a very sick woman or man.”
  10. Communication cut-off — Call lights, glasses, phones, or devices were removed or placed out of reach. Families were falsely told patients didn’t want to speak.
  11. Refusal to communicate — Doctors, nurses, and administrators ignored family and advocate inquiries, often disregarding valid medical and durable POA documents.
  12. Sedation and overdose — Heavy use of Ativan, Midazolam, Haldol, Lorazepam, Precedex, Morphine, and Fentanyl, impairing breathing and leading to overdoses requiring reversal drugs.
  13. Non-emergency ventilation — Victims were pressured into early or unnecessary ventilation “to let the lungs rest,” despite no emergency need.
  14. Manipulated DNR orders — Pressure to sign Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) orders, misrepresentation of Do Not Intubate (DNI) as DNR, or outright falsification and disregard of existing directives.
  15. Starvation and dehydration — Victims were denied food, water, or any nutrition and given diuretics or laxatives instead.
  16. Physical and chemical restraints — Used without legal justification or proper documentation.
  17. Bathroom denial — Forced catheterization or use of rectal tubes without need or consent.
  18. Neglect of basic care — Hygiene, oral care, bathing, grooming, and dirty linens are often ignored.
  19. Dehumanization — Victims described as being treated like animals, stripped of dignity.
  20. Intuition of wrongdoing — Families and victims overwhelmingly felt “something was terribly wrong.”
  21. End of Life Care pushed — Pressured into palliative care, comfort care or hospice early on; often covertly ordered.
  22. Security enforcement — Police or security used to enforce isolation and institutional policies; families threatened with arrest when advocating for their loved one.
  23. Refusal of new doctors or facility transfer — Denied requests to change doctors or transfer hospitals; rapid decline or hastening of death when transfers were attempted.
  24. Secondary infections — Hospital-acquired infections like Sepsis or MRSA; severe wounds, injuries, necrosis, blood clots and pressure sores developed.
  25. Unqualified or transient staff — Treatment by foreign, travel, FEMA, or inadequately qualified medical personnel.
Download PDF