(Natural News) In order to “protect its allies against Russia,” the United States performed biological weapons “experiments” on Ukrainian and Georgian soldiers, newly leaked documents show.
Even though both Ukraine and Georgia are considered to be American allies, the Pentagon decided to harm these countries’ soldiers as part of a $2.5 billion Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) biological engagement program, which included research on biological agents, deadly viruses and antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Each type of pathogen was unleashed on local populations in both countries as well, exposing potentially millions of people to deadly infections. (Related: The Pentagon’s secret operations programs in Ukraine date at least as far back as 2005.)
A five-year Pentagon operation in Georgia, code-named GG-21, involved “Arthropod-borne and zoonotic infections among military personnel in Georgia.” The project’s description explains that blood samples were collected from 1,000 military recruits at the time of their registration and physical exam at the Georgian military hospital located in Gori.
These samples were tested for antibodies against the following 14 pathogens:
Bacillus anthracis
Brucella
CCHF virus
Coxiella burnetii
Francisella tularensis
Hantavirus
Rickettsia species
TBE virus
Bartonella species
Borrelia species
Ehlrichia species
Leptospira species
Salmonella typhi
WNV
The 10 milliliter blood samples were to be stored indefinitely at the NCDC (Lugar Center) or the USAMRU-G, with aliquots to be sent to the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) headquarters in the United States, this being the largest biomedical research facility run by the Department of Defense (DoD).
Even though the experiment was not supposed to cause death, any deaths that occurred were to be “promptly reported” to the Georgian Military Hospital and WRAIR, usually within 48 hours of the PI being notified.
The blood samples were also stored and further tested at the Lugar Center, a $180 million Pentagon-funded facility in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi. If the Lugar Center sounds familiar, it could be because it has been embroiled in major controversy over the past several years.
“The Georgian project GG-21 has been funded by DTRA and implemented by American military scientists from a special US Army unit code-named USAMRU-G who operate in the Lugar Center,” reported Arms Watch.
“They have been given diplomatic immunity in Georgia to research bacteria, viruses and toxins without being diplomats. This unit is subordinate to the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR).”
Other documents obtained from the U.S. federal contracts registry show that USAMRU-G is also expanding in other nations beyond Georgia, including in Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania, Poland and Latvia.
“The next USAMRU-G project involving biological tests on soldiers [wa]s due to start in March of this year at the Bulgarian Military Hospital in Sofia,” reports indicate.
Hundreds of millions of dollars have been poured into Ukraine for biological weapons programs
The Pentagon’s UP-8 program in Ukraine was similar but involved intentionally spreading Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) and various hantaviruses. The research also involved patients with suspected cases of leptospirosis. That project began in 2017 and was extended a few times before ending in 2020.
A description of that project reveals that 4,400 healthy soldiers in Lviv, Kharkov, Odesa, and Kyiv were experimented on. The first 4,000 were tested for antibodies against hantaviruses and the remaining 400 for antibodies against CCHF.
Just like the GG-21 experiment, UP-8 involved collecting blood samples for testing, the results of which were never provided to any of the participants. All deaths were also ordered to be reported with 24 hours.
As of July 30, 2020, the DTRA allocated $80 million for biological research programs such as this in Ukraine. The Black & Veatch Special Projects Corp. oversaw this and other programs.
Another DTRA contractor operating in Ukraine is CH2M Hill, which was awarded $22.8 to reconstruct and equip two biolaboratories: the State Scientific Research Institute of Laboratory Diagnostics and Veterinary-Sanitary Expertise (Kyiv ILD) and the State Service of Ukraine for Food Safety and Consumer Protection Regional Diagnostic Laboratory (Odesa RDL).
“The DTRA activities in Georgia and Ukraine fall under the protection of special bilateral agreements. According to these agreements, Georgia and Ukraine shall hold harmless, bring no legal proceedings and indemnify the United States and its personnel, contractors and contractors’ personnel, for damage to property, or death or injury to any persons in Georgia and Ukraine, arising out of activities under this Agreement. If DTRA-sponsored scientists cause deaths or injuries to the local population they cannot be held to account,” Arms Watch explains.
These major revelations show that the Pentagon is heavily vested in bioweapons operations in Eastern Europe, which just so happens to be where Russian President Vladimir Putin is performing his “special military operations.”
Many believe that Putin’s objective is to clean up and clear out these programs, which sit at the border of his country and threaten the Russian people just like they threaten Georgians and Ukrainians. Another perspective is that this was organized on both sides to reap massive profits from yet another war.
“All of this came to be because the globalists thrive in profits from their wars,” wrote a commenter at Natural News, adding that “scary times” were needed as “distractions to enact their Luciferian GREAT RESET.”
“Finally, their goal is to force their New World Order under a massively organized one world government after unleashing myriads of great destructions to keep the world of nations off balance and easily redirected into galactic cattle cars.”
To keep up with the latest news about the Pentagon’s bioweapons programs, be sure to visit BioTerrorism.news.
A new database of over 120,000 emails from Hunter Biden’s laptop has been released by a former Trump aide this week.
128,775 emails were uploaded to BidenLaptopEmails.com, a searchable database by Garrett Ziegler, a former aide to Peter Navarro in Donald Trump’s Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy, uploaded through his organization Marco Polo.
“Here are the 128k emails from the Biden Laptop, which is a modern Rosetta Stone of white and blue collar crime under the patina of ‘the Delaware Way,’” the site said, referring to a term often used by Joe Biden for bipartisanship in his home state, which has since become a euphemism for elite corruption.
“Prior to the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, a number of ancient languages were mere gibberish and hash marks. Similarly, the emails on the Biden Laptop illuminated previously convoluted webs of the people you see leading the charge for global governance; truly, the emails can be considered a translation tool for Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) gathering.”
“We do not condone, encourage, intend, or have any knowledge that any other person will or may use the information herein for any unlawful purpose. Marco Polo’s motive is to see justice delivered—to all criminals—by those whose responsibility it is to carry out that duty.”
Many of the emails from Hunter’s laptop have already been covered by the likes of the New York Post and the Daily Mail in the weeks before the 2020 presidential election, but many more are now searchable for public investigation.
The process moves slowly but is a critically important element of the trial.
From 200 potential jurors called to appear in Katherine Magbanua’s retrial for her alleged role in the 2014 murder or Dan Markel, prosecutors and defense attorneys selected about 60 on Tuesday to interview in greater detail.
One by one, Judge Robert Wheeler asked jurors to disclose if they had any personal relationships with individuals listed as witnesses, and from there, prosecutor Georgia Cappleman and defense attorneys Tara Kawass and Chris DeCoste took turns asking more pointed questions.
Cappleman’s questions related to people’s backgrounds, including experiences with the justice system and crime, while the defense wanted to know if jurors expected his client to take the stand and reminded jurors that their job is to presume her innocence unless proven otherwise.
Of the initial 21 who were individually questioned, 13 were excused. Another batch was brought in, and as of 4:45 p.m., the legal teams were still deciding which jurors would remain. But by 5:30 p.m., final jurors were selected.
“Seven men, seven women selected,” tweetedJeff Burlew with the Tallahassee Democrat.
“We officially have a jury in Katherine Magbanua’s retrial. Jury selection took a full two days,” tweetedJada Williams of ABC27.
The process moves slowly but is a critically important element of the trial. Opening statements are expected to begin Wednesday morning.
In the meantime, here’s a few things to think about.
Prior jurors spoke out, perhaps influencing what attorneys are focused on this time
In 2019, Magbanua’s trial ended in a hung jury, reportedly with a vote of 10-2 in which one juror was particularly opposed to conviction. At the same time, Magbanua’s co-defendant Sigfredo Garcia was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life.
What was on jurors’ minds as they deliberated? Which pieces of evidence were most compelling, and how did they perceive the credibility of various witnesses?
Sometime after the trial, two jurors spoke, including one who voted against conviction, and one who was frustrated by this outcome. You can hear their accounts here and here.
Witness lists clarified
Jurors will hear testimony from dozens of witnesses, including multiple officers with the Tallahassee Police Department, FDLE, and the FBI; neighbors who had heard the gunshot and encountered Dan Markel immediately after he was shot; a surgeon and the medical examiner; friends of Magbanua and her co-defendants; Luis Rivera, who confessed to his role in the murder and shared why they did it and how they were paid (in stapled cash); Markel’s ex-wife Wendi Adelson, who Rivera claims the murder was done on behalf of; Charlie Adelson’s ex-girlfriend, who in prior statements attested to Charlie’s safe full of stapled cash; former employees of the Adelson Institute, where Magbanua claims to have worked; a local man who encountered Garcia and Rivera during their two visits to Tallahassee and who “believe it!” was a fan favorite during the 2019 trial, if there is such a thing; and many more.
What’s as notable as who is on the witness list is who is not. In January, Magbanua’s defense team added four members of the Adelson family to their witness list — Charlie, who is now incarcerated and accused of Markel’s murder; Wendi and Donna — who were both named as co-conspirators by the state but who have not been arrested; and Harvey, the patriarch. While Wendi will appear as a state witness and will be given the limited immunity that such a subpoena confers, no Adelson family members will appear as a defense witness. All would be expected to invoke their Fifth Amendment rights, which is improper for a jury to hear.
Internet chatter ramps up
The Markel murder has been a hot topic for eight years in online circles, with engagement ramping up on Twitter with various hashtags including #danmarkel and #justicefordanmarkel, and on WebSleuths, Facebook, and increasingly, on Reddit.
One frequent commenter, Fanci Fiction, makes art out of tragedy and engages with case watchers on Twitter. Why? The answer may be simple. According to the channel’s YouTubebio, “Murder is wrong.” And on Twitter, “Y’all mind if I hate murder?”
Fanci Fiction’s videos hit across the board, with themes on Magbanua defense strategy; key pieces of intrigue or evidence such as Charlie’s peculiar use of stapled cash; code words used by conspirators; Wendi Adelson’s decision to change the last name of Dan’s children from Markel to Adelson, her drive-by the crime scene, and her bizarre inability to spell “Jibbers” on the stand despite having had Markel stored in her phone under that name; Charlie’s phone call with the undercover FBI agent; and more.
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Florida Politics is providing daily coverage of Magbanua’s retrial for the 2014 murder-for-hire of FSU law professor Markel. The case has drawn international media attention to Florida’s capital city, and we’ll share with readers the top things to watch for and discuss as proceedings unfold. Our reporting will draw from many sources, including contributor Karen Cyphers of Sachs Media, who with attorney Jason Solomon advocate with the grassroots group, Justice for Dan, to draw attention to this case and provide analysis of relevance to Florida’s political, advocacy, and legal communities.
‘Frankly, the litigation landscape in Florida is making it untenable for some of these (reinsurance) investors to agree to allocate capacity to Florida.’
Three different property insurance companies asking state regulators to approve rate increases cited similar reasons during hearings Tuesday: more roof claims, higher reinsurance costs and the threat of more lawsuits related to the jump in claims.
“We’ve seen many more roof claims with much higher costs,” said Florida Farm Bureau Insurance Company vice president Ben Kimmons.
Florida Farm Bureau is asking the Office of Insurance Regulation to approve a 48.7% rate increase for its 63,135 residential property insurance policies. The vast majority of those policies, 62,169, are homeowners policies.
The company has two types of coverages, standard and preferred. If regulators approve the request, the 23,906 standard policies would see a statewide average increase of $1,200 per year in their premium, up to $3,701. The 38,263 preferred policies would see an average annual increase of $952, to $2,867.
Kimmons said the company is planning to cancel 7,600 policies with roofs older than 20 years as roof-related claims have soared in the last three years.
The complaint is a familiar one for lawmakers, who are poised to return to the Capitol next week for a Special Session aimed at stabilizing the property insurance market. Two companies have gone bankrupt, four have announced plans to cancel more than 120,000 policies, other insurers are seeking large rate hikes and one ratings agency has said downgrades are possible for some companies if lawmakers don’t take action this summer.
Gov. Ron DeSantis called lawmakers back to address some of the issues affecting insurers, including roof claims and litigation expenses.
But previous attempts by the Legislature to solve issues driving up claims and costs might not be having the intended effect.
Regulators asked executives with some of the companies to explain how legislation passed two years ago attempting to reduce the practice of assignment of benefits, or AOB, where a homeowner will sign their claim benefits over to a contractor who will do the repairs and work the claim with the insurer, is affecting their rates.
Many said the law is having little effect or it’s too early to say.
Bob Aaron, vice president of personal insurance product management at First Floridian Auto and Home Insurance Company, said lawyers and roof contractors are finding ways to get around the AOB law. That means they’re unlikely to take advantage of a provision allowing companies to offer lower rates to customers who take policies prohibiting the assignment of benefits.
“It may just wind up in a premium drain as you will have similar sets of customers being represented,” Aaron said.
First Floridian is seeking a rate increase of 23% for its homeowners policies. For its 10,180 customers with preferred policies, they’ll see an average $352 rate increase, to $1,913, if the rate hike is approved. The 3,097 homeowners with standard policies will receive an average rate hike of $440, to $2,258.
Another factor in higher rates is reinsurance.
Angel Conlin, CEO of KIN Interinsurance Network, said many reinsurers simply don’t want to enter the Florida market.
“Many of the concerns we’re hearing is, frankly, the litigation landscape in Florida is making it untenable for some of these investors to agree to allocate capacity to Florida,” Conlin said.