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The People vs. Anthony Fauci: Prosecuting Him is Our Last Chance for Covid Justice

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News

Time is running out to prosecute Dr. Anthony Fauci. After May 11, Fauci – the man touted as “America’s doctor” during the pandemic and who led the U.S. response – will be clear of the five-year statute of limitations. Past that date, he can’t be indicted over allegations that he lied to Congress.
[Source: unherd.com]

[Image source: wikimedia.org]

Comment

Once the five-year statute of limitations expires, prosecutors will no longer be able to bring charges related to allegations that Fauci misled lawmakers over whether the U.S. government funded research in Wuhan, China, that may have contributed to the COVID-19 pandemic. Significantly, therefore, recent charges against David Morens, a former senior adviser at the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases – which include allegations of destroyed records and concealed communications – have renewed scrutiny of U.S. government support for coronavirus research connected to the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

Many observers argue that Fauci’s 2021 Senate exchanges with Senator Rand Paul could essentially amount to perjury because he denied that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) had funded gain-of-function work at the Wuhan lab. Subsequent congressional testimony by NIH official Lawrence Tabak, along with internal emails, raise serious questions about whether Fauci had fully disclosed what he knew.

To learn more about the accusations against Fauci, see this article from 2021 on our website.

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