Many people were first exposed to the fraud in the medical testing field during the COVID scamdemic when PCR tests were weaponized to take away people's freedoms.
The FDA issued literally hundreds of emergency use authorizations (EUAs) to drug testing companies to quickly get into the market tests that could allegedly detect the COVID-19 "virus."
The fraud was so great that people began sending the same PCR test to different laboratories to show that these test results were not consistent even between different laboratories, and some even sent in swabs of fruit or other foods that came back with positive COVID-19 "virus" results.
This fraud in medical diagnostics has existed long before the COVID scam, however.
We have covered for years now how drug tests are weaponized against parents and used in child custody cases to justify States medically kidnapping children.
In 2019, for example, we reported how the owner of a drug testing laboratory in Alabama was arrested for falsifying paternity tests and drug test screenings in child custody cases.
This article received over 100,000 views on our MedicalKidnap.com website, suggesting that many parents have experienced this kind of fraud in losing their children.
In 2020 we reported a case in Alabama where the mother of a newborn baby was separated from her child in the hospital because a drug test allegedly found traces of opioids in her system, but it was a false positive because the mother had eaten poppy seed bread the day before.
When WAFF posted the story on social media, they say the story was exposed to tens of thousands of people who read it, and they received hundreds of comments from people saying they had experienced similar experiences with Child Protective Services.
When a woman is giving birth in a hospital, she is often tested for drugs illegally, without her knowledge or consent. If the drug test turns out positive, she goes home without her baby.
In an article just published by Alice Hines at VICE News, she reports that Averhealth, a drug testing company used by courts around the country to decide whether people go to jail or parents retain custody of their children, was under investigation by the Department of Justice (DOJ) for fraud in 2022.
Averhealth runs millions of drug tests a year, working with courts and government agencies in 34 states.