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Subject: Accused and tried for witchcraft in America
Date: Feb 14, 2008 10:54 AM
This is nothing unusual (ARTICLE BELOW).
James Phillips did not want to be sued for malpractice, so after he
told me the
Lyme crimes "should be written up in The New Yorker," he said under
oath
that the very same statements about Yale re Lyme Cryme mean I am a
"like Ted
Kascynski" "chemist" who has "command hallucinations to kill."
http://www.actionlyme.org/JAMES_PHILLIPS_HOMEPAGE.htm
'Not quite one year after I sent him a check for 100 dollars copying
fees and
a request for all my records, because I intended to sue him for
malpractice.
Isn't it amazing that 1.5 years after the Lyme Crymes "should be
written
up in the New Yorker," then I was criminally charged with being "a
dangerously
intelligent chemist like Ted Kascynski the Unibomber" - all the same
bullshit
invented for me by DMHAS's Kenneth "Hyde the Bodies" Marcus, and James
Phillips??
I solved the two biggest medical crimes in the last 200 years, and
suddenly I am
a witch with magical telekinetic chemistry powers??
But then, didn't Brian Fallon at Columbia University find the exact
same thing
as occurred in my personal Lyme brain case:
http://www.actionlyme.org/JAMES_PHILLIPS_HOMEPAGE.htm
to have occurred in a majority of his own in a 4.7 million dollar NIH
study?
http://www.actionlyme.org/FALLON_DANGEROUS_TERRORIST.htm
Lyme is a relapsing brain disease?
http://www.actionlyme.org/LYME_IS_A_PERMANENT_BRAIN_INFECTION.htm
And isn't Brian Fallon's wife a Yale Psych Department graduate?
http://www.actionlyme.org/Nields_Yale.htm
"..the most devastating aspect of their illness experience was not
being believed
by their doctors or having the reality of their illness denied by
those close to
them."
Yes.
Phillips told me she was, and that they all knew she had Lyme disease
at the Yale
Psycho Pervos Haven, and he told me that in the Summer of 2000.
Who could have guessed that such people could be so unbelievably, off-
the-charts
stupid and have an MD degree?
HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE??
Nevertheless, perhaps Saudi Arabia would be interested in a Witch-
Off?? Me and
the Saudi witches can get together and have a Curses and Magic
competition.
Here are some of the things, we Lyme witches are known to be able to
do:
http://www.actionlyme.org/070430hometemp.htm
Kathleen M. Dickson
================================================
http://www.rawstory.com/news/mochila/Saudis_to_execute_a_woman_for_witch_02142008.html
Saudis to execute a woman for witchcraft
Rights Group: Saudis Should Halt Execution of a Woman for Witchcraft
DONNA ABU-NASR
AP News
Feb 14, 2008 06:49 EST
A leading human rights group appealed to Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah
on Thursday
to stop the execution of a woman accused of witchcraft and performing
supernatural
acts.
The New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a statement that the
kingdom's
religious police who arrested and interrogated Fawza Falih, and the
judges who tried
her in the northern town of Quraiyat never gave her the opportunity to
prove her
innocence in the face of "absurd charges that have no basis in law."
Falih's case underscores shortcomings in Saudi Arabia's Islamic legal
system
in which rules of evidence are shaky, lawyers are not always present
and sentences
often depend on the whim of judges.
The most frequent victims are women, who already suffer severe
restrictions on daily
life in Saudi Arabia: They cannot drive, appear before a judge without
a male representative,
or travel abroad without a male guardian's permission.
Witchcraft is considered an offense against Islam in the conservative
kingdom.
In Falih's case, the judges relied on a coerced confession and on the
statements
of witnesses who said she had "bewitched" them to convict her in April
2006, according to the group.
Falih later retracted her confession in court, claiming it was
extracted under duress,
and said that as an illiterate woman, she did not understand the
document she was
forced to fingerprint.
"The fact that Saudi judges still conduct trials for unprovable crimes
like
'witchcraft' underscores their inability to carry out objective
criminal
investigations," said Joe Stork, Middle East director at Human Rights
Watch.
There was no immediate comment on the statement from Saudi Arabia,
where government
offices are closed on Thursdays, the start of the Muslim weekend.
"Fawza Falih's case is an example of how the authorities failed to
comply
even with existing safeguards in the Saudi justice system," he added.
The Saudi court cited an instance in which a man allegedly became
impotent after
being bewitched by Falih, the rights group said.
An appeals court ruled in September 2006 that Falih could not be
sentenced to death
for witchcraft because she had retracted her confession. But a lower
court subsequently
reissued the death sentence for the benefit of "public interest" and
to
"protect the creed, souls and property of this country," the group's
statement said.
HRW statement came a day after Yakin Erturk, the U.N. special
investigator for violence
against women, wrapped up a 10-day visit to Saudi Arabia during which
she highlighted
another controversial case that has attracted international criticism.
Ertuk met with Fatima and Mansour al-Timani, who were forcibly
divorced by the wife's
family on grounds she had married someone from a lesser tribe.
The couple learned of the divorce on Feb. 25, 2006, when police
knocked on their
door to serve Mansour the divorce papers.
At a news conference on Wednesday, Erturk said she met the wife and
husband who
were in a "terrible state of mind" and that Saudi officials had
promised
her arrangements would be made for the couple's reunion, according to
Saudi
newspaper Arab News.
___
On the Net:
http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/02/13/saudia18046.htm