“He needs an urgent operation and every day the operation is delayed he is heartbroken,” one of his doctors was quoted as saying in the order.
Baby W’s parents, Cole Reeves and Samantha Savage, insisted that the operation would only be possible if the blood used in the operation came. from unvaccinated donors. Doctors said that using blood donated from outside normal channels was “not acceptable” for the condition and that surgery without donor blood was “not an option”.
Time is running out and With the parents still contesting this, Judge Ian Gault ruled that it was “in Baby W’s best interests” for the court to take temporary custody of him until the operation was completed.
Baby W has been placed in court custody since Wednesday until he recovers from surgery, but no later than the end of January. The operation scheduled for Friday morning is estimated to take 48 hours. Two doctors were appointed as Baby W’s legal representatives to consent to the surgery, and Reeves and Savage were appointed her representatives “for all other purposes”. The doctors said they would “consider the views of the parents” whenever possible – as long as it did not compromise the “best interests of Baby W”.
According to the order, the decision came after several weeks of tense period filled with baseless allegations.
After Baby W underwent the procedure in late October, his parents were “concerned” when they learned he needed a blood “top”. They asked for an alternative route in the future because they do not want their child to receive “blood other than blood that does not contain Pfizer vaccine, mRNA, spike protein or any other associated contaminants,” the order states. .
Reeves and Savage later told medical staff at Starship Children’s Hospital in Oakland that they believed spike proteins in the blood of people who had received mRNA vaccines, such as the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines, “caused unexpected transfusion-related deaths. “
A November meeting between Baby W’s parents and doctors was “hijacked by a supporter of the parents” who spewed a “conspiracy theory,” according to the order. the person claimed receiving children Transfusion died at the Starship hospital.
Two days ago, doctors met with Savage to explain that they “couldn’t spend any more time” on Baby W’s requests for blood from special donors. parents must decide whether to agree to the operation or not. According to the warrant, Savage became “extremely upset” and accused the doctors of “backing him into a corner with no support.”
Judge Gault told the court Thursday evening that Reeves and Savage also interfered with the efforts of paramedics to prepare Baby W for surgery. “You touch our child and we will file a criminal case against you,” they said.
In the complaint, Gault wrote that the parents’ representative, Sue Gray, sent the court medical reports from doctors in Texas and Hawaii, evaluated Baby W “closely” via Zoom video call, and argued that “this is not an emergency.” and the surgery should be delayed for a week to “further evaluate other options.”
“It used to be common for Baby W to need surgery,” Gault writes, but now parents objected not only to the use of blood transfusions, but to the surgery and preparations. The development made it “clearly necessary” for him to order his parents not to interfere, he said.
Reeves and Savage appeared Wednesday on the Infowars podcast hosted by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. filed for bankruptcy After being charged with perjury on Friday, he leaked information about the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.
“He is much bigger than us. It is much bigger than a baby. God does not want this to happen to mankind. She doesn’t want this to happen to a baby,” Reeves said a baby spoke in the background.
“We think it’s not right from God’s point of view,” he said.
Gray, a self-proclaimed expert on medicinal mystery and the “biological harm of electromagnetic radiation,” did not respond to a request for comment. There is gray it was known that he spread baseless claims, specifically about coronavirus vaccines. He he said After “many hours” of review, Reeves and Savage concluded there was “no time to file,” CNN said in a statement Thursday before Gault’s plea, adding that “the priority for the family is to spend time peacefully with their baby.” to support him through.”
Nikki Turner, medical director of the Immunization Advisory Center at the University of Auckland, said in the lawsuit that any component of the vaccine was unlikely to be present in donor blood and would not have been harmful regardless.
There are coronavirus vaccines, including those using mRNA technology has been demonstrated many times to be safe and effective means of combating severe covid-19.