Friday, July 31, 2015

Testing for mutants in Clinton county

If you live in Clinton county and suffer from
One of the conditions listed in the claims of us patent reissue 43,467 take the Clinton county mutant challenge.

Rather than rot away from internal decay shoot to kill,  shoot Bcg and get better. Study the patent
Carefully and read the citations found therein.

See also faustmanlab.org, pubmed.org RISTORI + Bcg, pubmed.org faustman.


If you don't believe everything you read I  may be able to convince you by documenting me shooting 
Bcg on you tube

Joyce Mitchell should be low on the scale of mutants in Clinton county who see themselves in one of the claims of us patent reissue 43,467







For many upstate New York residents, the woman who helped two convicted killers escape from a maximum-security prison is getting off easy.
In the days following Joyce Mitchell’s guilty plea in connection with her role in the Clinton Correctional Facility prison escape, residents and local officeholders in the area surrounding the prison have expressed dissatisfaction not only with her sentence but also with the fact that she will keep her state pension.
“I think I have to agree with most of the constituents of Clinton County—it seems more than just a bit light,” said James Langley, a member of the Clinton County Legislature, from Peru, N.Y.
Joyce Mitchell, the former New York prison worker accused of helping two convicted murderers escape maximum security, pleads guilty in court on Tues., July 28. Photo: Reuters
Under a plea deal, Ms. Mitchell agreed to a prison term of 21/3 to seven years and a $6,000 fine. Ms. Mitchell, a former civilian supervisor in a tailor shop in the prison, pleaded guilty Tuesday to a single charge each of promoting prison contraband and criminal facilitation.
With her help, convicted murderers David Sweat and Richard Matt broke out from the prison June 6 in Dannemora, N.Y., in Clinton County and led hundreds of officers on a manhunt that rattled upstate residents for more than three weeks. Ms. Mitchell admitted to providing Messrs. Sweat and Matt with hacksaw blades, chisels, a punch tool and a screwdriver bit.
A spokeswoman for the New York state Office of the Comptroller, which oversees the state’s pension funds, confirmed Mr. Mitchell would be able to collect her pension.
“That’s probably the thing that people are most vocal about,” said Colin Read, a member of the Clinton County Legislature from Plattsburgh.
The state constitution protects most state employees from having to forfeit their pensions even if they are convicted of crimes, a spokeswoman for the comptroller’s office said. The state Legislature passed a law in 2011 that would reduce or revoke the pensions of public employees convicted of certain crimes, but it only applies to workers who entered the state retirement system after that law went into effect.
“As a taxpayer, it’s offensive to me,” said Mr. Langley.
Ms. Mitchell, 51 years old, was suspended without pay June 12 and she resigned June 25. She earned $57,697 as an industrial-training supervisor in the prison, according to the New York state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision. She had worked at the prison in Dannemora since 2008.
Ms. Mitchell can begin receiving pension benefits at age 55 at a reduced rate. She can receive her full benefits if she begins collecting at the age of 62.
Matt Molnar, a pastor from Malone, N.Y., in neighboring Franklin County, said Ms. Mitchell’s sentence “seems a little light” considering how significantly she aided the inmates’ escape and the possibility that people could have been hurt or killed during the manhunt.
Without Ms. Mitchell’s help, the breakout “never would have happened, most likely,” said Mr. Molnar. “That’s a pretty pivotal part she played, to say the least.”
Her attorney Stephen Johnston said her cooperation with the police needs to be taken into account.
“I think what you have to bear in mind here is this woman has never been arrested or never been in trouble in her life before. No one seems to pay any attention to that,” Mr. Johnston said. “She did her best by giving up her right to remain silent, going over and over and over again back to the police to give them as much information as she could, to help them in their efforts to try to capture these guys.”
Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie declined to comment. Mr. Wylie said Tuesday at a news conference: “I feel that we resolved this manner in the best light possible.”
He said he could have asked the court to impose a restitution figure on Ms. Mitchell to offset the cost the state incurred during the weekslong manhunt. But he said he didn’t think that was appropriate to include in the plea disposition.
“If people don’t like the way I handled this case, they can vote differently in 2017,” Mr. Wylie said.
Some residents said they reluctantly accepted Ms. Mitchell’s punishment and were glad that the county was spared an expensive trial.
“I think probably the crime warranted a longer sentence,” said Mark Dame, a member of the Clinton County Legislature, from Plattsburgh. “But I don’t believe that the district attorney had much leeway there to take it to trial and create a much more costly endeavor on top of the millions of dollars the taxpayers spent searching for the convicts that escaped because of her help.”
Clinton County Legislators also cried foul over the possibility that the county may get stuck with Ms. Mitchell’s legal bills. The Plattsburgh City Court Judge assigned attorney Mr. Johnston to represent her because she said she couldn’t afford to pay for her own attorney.
“I’ve been told by the administrator of the assigned counsel plan that the county will pay the bill,” Mr. Johnston said. He said he would be paid $75 an hour. He said he hasn’t calculated how many hours he has worked on the case to date. “Obviously it’s a lot better and cheaper than if we had a trial, right?” Mr. Johnston said.
Ms. Mitchell is scheduled to be sentenced in Clinton County Court on Sept. 28.
“It’s outrageous the taxpayers would have to pay for her legal fees,” Mr. Dame said. He said Clinton County would check to see whether it could contest the court’s decision to assign counsel for Ms. Mitchell.
Write to Joseph De Avila at joseph.deavila@wsj.com

David dalEiden, congress & planned parenthood




Join together with narrow minds to injure and harm Americans
Bcg should be easily and inexpensively available in the us
because it isnot people with autoimmune diseases are rotting
Planned parenthood could easily replace all federal funding by providing Bcg to the sick
Congress and the FDA areal. Fluff and stuff without intrinsic values of substance

See faustmanlab.org, pubmed.org faustman DL and pubmed.org RISTORI + Bcg

A good life for many depends upon bcg



Group vows '8 to 10' more Planned Parenthood videos coming


Man behind Planned Parenthood videos speaks out
Man behind Planned Parenthood videos speaks out 06:35

Story highlights

  • David Daleiden, head of Center for Medical Progress, told CNN's "New Day" that he wanted to expose the practices of Planned Parenthood
  • Planned Parenthood officials say they are not breaking any laws and denies all of Daleiden's allegations
(CNN)The group that has released Planned Parenthood videos allegedly showing the illegal sale of fetal tissue plans to release about a dozen total videos with the ultimate goal of seeing the group defunded.
David Daleiden, head of Center for Medical Progress, an anti-abortion nonprofit that so far has released four heavily edited videos -- and other longer videos the group says were unedited -- targeting Planned Parenthood, told CNN's "New Day" that he wanted to expose the practices of the influential organization that receives $500 million in federal tax dollars.
"When people are using illegal abortion procedures, that's something that most people find barbaric and that's something that most people don't want funded by their taxpayer dollars," Daleiden said.
Planned Parenthood officials say they are not breaking any laws and denies all of Daleiden's allegations. CNN reached out to Planned Parenthood on Friday for response.
    Federal law already prevents Planned Parenthood from using the federal money it receives specifically for abortion. And while the group is the country's largest provider of abortion services, Planned Parenthood said that 10% of its clients receive an abortion. The group also provides sexually transmitted disease and infection testing, breast exams and birth control.

    More Videos to Come

    Earlier this week, a California court issued a restraining order preventing the Center for Medical Progress from releasing a video with StemExpress executives.
    StemExpress is a California-based company that provides organs and tissue to researchers. Planned Parenthood provides fetal tissue to the company.
    "We've got anywhere from eight to 10 more videos -- the exact number could vary, but I predict a dozen, give or take, when everything is said and done," he said.
    The group that has released Planned Parenthood videos allegedly showing the illegal sale of fetal tissue plans to release about a dozen total videos with the ultimate goal of seeing the group defunded.

    Potential government shutdown

    Several investigations into Planned Parenthood have been launched following the video, and Presidential candidate and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul introduced a bill this week calling for the group to be defunded.
    The number of lawmakers threatening to shutdown the federal government unless Planned Parenthood is defunded is growing.
    Eighteen lawmakers sent a letter Thursday calling for Planned Parenthood funding to be tied to spending legislation, vowing not to support any spending bill until the nonprofit no longer receives government funds.
    "The recent reports that Planned Parenthood has sold the tissue of unborn babies for profit is deeply disturbing. This is simply unacceptable," said Republican Rep. Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina in the letter. "I vehemently urge House Republican leadership to use every available tool to strip this organization of any and all taxpayer funds and take measures to prevent the group from receiving taxpayer dollars in the future. Furthermore, we will not support any funding measure that provides taxpayer dollars for this organization."
    Planned Parenthood officials said efforts to defund the group that serves 2.7 million women annually are not representative of the American public.
    "Rand Paul, Mitch McConnell, Ted Cruz, and Joni Ernst should probably listen to the medical community before they decide to legislate health care for millions of people," said Dawn Laguens, executive vice president of Planned Parenthood Action Fund, said Thursday after the fourth video's release. "Family planning providers are uniquely qualified to provide reproductive health care, and providers have asserted that the "absorption" plan to simply hand off millions of women's health care simply isn't feasible."

    Planned Parenthood requests review

    Planned Parenthood said Friday that it has has asked National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins to create an independent panel to review the techniques, risks and benefits of fetal tissue research in an effort to demonstrate through "science-based examination" the justifications for fetal research.
    An NIH spokeswoman told CNN that Collins "has received the letter and is reviewing it."
    The request was revealed in a message sent to Planned Parenthood supporters.