
“WE WILL GO WHERE THE MONEY IS AND THE GUNS ARE NOT”
NORMAN J CLEMENT RPH., DDS, NORMAN L. CLEMENT PHARM-TECH, MALACHI F. MACKANDAL PHARMD, BELINDA BROWN-PARKER, IN THE SPIRIT OF JOSEPH SOLVO ESQ., INC.T. SPIRIT OF REV. IN THE SPIRIT OF WALTER R. CLEMENT BS., MS, MBA. HARVEY JENKINS MD, PH.D., IN THE SPIRIT OF C.T. VIVIAN, JELANI ZIMBABWE CLEMENT, BS., MBA., IN THE SPIRIT OF THE HON. PATRICE LUMUMBA, IN THE SPIRIT OF ERLIN CLEMENT SR., EVELYN J. CLEMENT, WALTER F. WRENN III., MD., JULIE KILLINGSWORTH, RENEE BLARE, RPH, DR. TERENCE SASAKI, MD LESLY POMPY MD., CHRISTOPHER RUSSO, MD., NANCY SEEFELDT, WILLIE GUINYARD BS., JOSEPH WEBSTER MD., MBA, BEVERLY C. PRINCE MD., FACS., NEIL ARNAND, MD., RICHARD KAUL, MD., IN THE SPIRIT OF LEROY BAYLOR, JAY K. JOSHI MD., MBA, AISHA GARDNER, ADRIENNE EDMUNDSON, ESTER HYATT PH.D., WALTER L. SMITH BS., IN THE SPIRIT OF BRAHM FISHER ESQ., MICHELE ALEXANDER MD., CUDJOE WILDING BS, MARTIN NJOKU, BS., RPH., IN THE SPIRIT OF DEBRA LYNN SHEPHERD, BERES E. MUSCHETT, STRATEGIC ADVISORS

WHEN BIGOTS ARE ARMED WITH BADGES

Dr. Christopher R. Russo, M.D.
@Ledhedd2
“Ketamine can be very useful in anesthesiology too. It is the sole anesthetic for bad hypovolemic shock for instance gunshot wounds bleeding out. Along with a paralytic and a little fentanyl. Can’t give anything that causes vasodilation until resuscitated or they die on induction.”

Dr. Thomas Kline MD, PhD
@ThomasKlineMD
“..Prosecutors get ahead in the world with federal judge ships and high-end law firms by having a lot of convictions. The doctors are easy. There’s a feeding frenzy going on advancing careers while ruining the lives of four doctors at the Detroit pain clinic..”
D.E.A. DIRECTOR ANNE MILGRAM’S CRIMINALIZATION OF MEDICAL PROTOCOLS: THE STORY OF DR. MARK IBSEN, MD
“I prescribed 120 oxycodone 15s for Jessica Mullins several days ago. She’s planning to go to California because of a family emergency. She needed an early refill. Evidently she received 101 tablets from the pharmacy.
I now understand their current policy is to try to fill the prescription with three days to obtain more medication. More medication did not magically appear.
Evidently the burden is behind the patient to call me and asked me to write another prescription. This is an unfair burden for Patient and myself.


So it was that the bison came upon a family of mice who were all sick, but they had nothing with which to pay for the doctor’s aid.
“But without my care, your children will die.
I must help, it is my duty,” he said. Without a thought, the doctor gave them his aid, one after the other, and each mouse he healed was grateful. Soon, however, he began to tire and eventually became exhausted, yet still more mice came. “Surely, though, this deed will be worth it in the end,” he thought, and strengthened his resolve.
And, it is unprofessional behavior to dispense less than the prescribed amount.It is also unprofessional behavior to failed to notify me that the patient is getting less than the prescribed amount. Neither of these things happened.
When the patient called to ask if I would write the prescription, I told her I could not do that without confirming that she was shorted.
The burden to prove that the patient needs the medication. This is not an appropriate burden for me to bear.

When I talk to the patient, she was friendly and appropriate.When I called the pharmacy, the pharmacist were matter-of-fact, not seeing any danger or red flags in their behaviors.

I sent in the prescription for 19 more tablets. This whole effort required 30 to 45 minutes of my time. That includes a conversation with the m pharmacist.

I’ve never seen this kind of laxity in a system that is so hyper regulated. It would’ve been much more efficient and clear for the pharmacist to have called me to let me know that the patient was getting less than the prescribed amount.
Well, this may appear to be a small detail, any instance where I fail to document every change in therapy might result in my incarceration. I think it’s only fair. That pharmacist should be as thorough as I have to be.

I now feel, I must change my policies, and I will be looking into how to insist that pharmacist respond in a professional manner. It seems to me I have a “corresponding responsibility“ to sssure that patients get the correct number of pills without any uncertainty as to who’s holding onto the extra.”
MarkIbsenMD
D.E.A. AGENTS SHAKEDOWN OPERATIONS AT AIRPORTS STEALING CITIZENS PROPERTY IN PLANE SIGHT CONGRESS MUST INVESTIGATE
DR. RICHARD LAWHERN, PH.D. MISGUIDED drug prohibition policy set by the Department of Justice (DOJ)

“The primary narrative directing opioid policy is that the overdose epidemic is driven by clinician overprescribing, creating patient addicts. This has led to draconian laws and the use of invasive prescription monitoring programs that have harmed patients with chronic pain throughout the country. The black box algorithms mine data and have never been subjected to independent verification.
@RMA_DNA
DEA lady is weird. Also, not that it matters but.. y’all (Face the Nation) are using Matthew Perry as click bait lol. Making up some fake ketamine epidemic
Patients and prescribers alike are flagged as suspicious.3 Although opioid prescribing has dropped dramatically since the introduction of prescription monitoring, overdose deaths have risen exponentially, driven by the illicit fentanyl market. Despite this, law enforcement continues to focus on the diversion of prescription medication.
Debbie B.Women’s Health Advocate/Lobbyist/Artist
There is no due process for doctors. There is no safety for doctors or patients in an era of boundary invasion. That, in itself is sneaky and sets our whole medical system up for being able to do harm. Where is the “Right to Privacy”? It is the scariest time in the history of modern medicine when doctors can be jailed and patients treated like they’re not human and none of us has any recourse.
The drug prohibition policy set by the Department of Justice (DOJ) is a misguided attempt to address skyrocketing opioid overdoses. It is their way of trying to fix the issue of the unchecked distribution of opioids.

The blame for that falls on the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), Congress, and lobbyists.4 This focus on limiting the prescribing of legal opioids has led to an increasingly lethal illicit opiate supply.
The DOJ continues to erroneously cite diversion of licit legitimate prescriptions of opioids as the problem. As a result, doctors have been imprisoned for terms ranging from 20 years to life without parole, all for practicing medicine. Others have had their careers and reputations irreparably harmed.”

Following Published January 13, 2023 in the Journal of Legal Medicine.
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ALL WATCHED OVER BY MACHINES OF LOVING GRACE
BE SURE TO DONATE TO THE MARK IBSEN GOFUNDME DEFENSE FUND, WHERE THE SON ALWAYS RISES!!!
FOR NOW, YOU ARE WITHIN
THE NORMS