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Canadian doctor ordered to pay back $600k she earned through mass COVID vaccination

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From LifeSiteNews

By Clare Marie Merkowsky

In a November 26 ruling, the Ontario Health Services Board ordered Kingston-based Dr. Elaine Ma to pay back over $600,000 which she had claimed after having undergraduate medical student volunteers mass vaccinate Ontario residents in 2021.

The province of Ontario paid doctors for every experimental COVID shot they administered, with one physician now being told to repay the $600,000 she earned by using medical students to mass vaccinate residents.Ā 

In a November 26Ā ruling, the Ontario Health Services Board ordered Kingston-based Dr. Elaine Ma to pay back over $600,000 which she had claimed after having undergraduate medical student volunteers mass vaccinate Ontario residents in 2021.Ā 

ā€œThe Appeal Board orders the Respondent to reimburse OHIP the amount of $600,962.16,ā€ the board wrote in their decision.Ā 

Beginning in January 2021, Ma had organized drive-in vaccination clinics in several parking lots in the Kingston region to vaccinate thousands of Canadians. She recruited undergraduate medical student volunteers to administer the shots.Ā Ā 

Under Ma’s program, which lasted until January 2022, 27,250 doses of the experimental COVID shot were administered, earning her a total ofĀ $606,657.60, according to the General Manager of the Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP).Ā Ā 

According to OHIP, Ontario doctors were paid $13 for administrating COVID vaccines, and an additional $5.60 if the patient’s sole reason for their appointment was receiving the shot.Ā 

However, OHIP argued that Ma’s claims did not meet their requirements as she used volunteers to administer the vaccines, explaining, ā€œthe persons who administered vaccines at the clinics organized by Dr. Ma during the Review Period were not her employees.ā€Ā Ā 

As a result, she was ordered to repay the money. However, Ma is arguing that she was acting in Ontario’s best interest, considering the alleged danger of the COVID ā€œpandemic.ā€

ā€œIt’s really still just disbelief that we’ve completely forgotten about COVID,ā€ sheĀ told CTV News Ottawa. ā€œWe’ve completely forgotten what we were asked to do. We’ve completely forgotten the fact that we were asked to do it in new and different ways, and quickly, and as fast as possible.ā€

While Ontario previously paid doctors to administer the shots, Canada’s program to compensate those injured by the so-called ā€œsafe and effectiveā€ COVID vaccinesĀ has now spentĀ $14 million, but the vast majority of claims remain unpaid.Ā 

However, while Ma collected taxpayer dollars to administer the experimental vaccines, many courageous doctors have risked their livelihoods to warn Canadians about the dangers of the COVID shots.Ā Ā 

For example, Ontario pro-freedom Dr. Mark TrozziĀ has lostĀ his medical license for speaking out against the mainstream narrative, despite overwhelming evidence as to theĀ negative effectsĀ of the vaccines.Ā Ā Ā 

In 2023, TrozziĀ exposedĀ the dark money, political pressure, establishment corruption, and fake news that made the COVID-19 propaganda campaign a terror operation that brought the world to its knees.Ā 

In an interview with LifeSiteNews, he revealed that many of his colleagues were spellbound by the government’s COVID-19 fear campaign. However, he notes that others discovered that following the establishment’s mandates for COVID-19 treatment – such as only conducting PCR tests or nasal swab – paid as much as 20 percent more than regular work at their normal practice.Ā 

The campaign to foist the so-called COVID-19 ā€˜vaccines’ upon the global population also carried with it a monetary payoff.

ā€œAs I understand it, those injections paid very well everywhere,ā€ said Trozzi. ā€œOne case in point is one of my colleagues has a contact who’s an ear, nose, and throat surgeon in Germany, and he stopped doing surgery. He said, ā€˜I only do the minimum amount of V.A. specialty work to keep my license because I’m making way more money just giving shots during that peak.ā€™ā€Ā 

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COVID-19

Canadian veteran challenges conviction for guarding War Memorial during Freedom Convoy

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From LifeSiteNews

By Clare Marie Merkowsky

When the convoy first came to Ottawa, allegations were floated that the memorial had been desecrated. After learning of this, Evely quickly organized a group of veterans to stand guard around the clock to protect the area.

A Canadian veteran appealed to the Ontario courts after he was convicted for organizing a guard around the National War Memorial during the Freedom Convoy.

In an OctoberĀ press release, the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (JCCF) announced that an appeal has been filed in the Ontario Court of Appeals on behalf of Master Warrant Officer (Ret’d) Jeffrey Evely over his conviction for mischief and obstructing police while on his way to guard the Ottawa War Memorial during the 2022 Freedom Convoy.

ā€œBy locking down large sections of downtown Ottawa, the police were effectively preventing all civilians from accessing public areas and greatly exceeded their powers under the common law,ā€ constitutional lawyer Chris Fleury explained.

ā€œThis case raises issues that have implications for protests across the province and the country. We are hopeful that the Ontario Court of Appeal will agree and grant leave to appeal,ā€ he added.

The appeal argues that police overstepped their authority in their response to the 2022 protest of COVID mandates. Police actions at the time included locking down the Ottawa core, establishing checkpoints, and arresting protesters.

In September 2024, Everly was convicted of mischief and obstruction after his involvement in the 2022 Freedom Convoy, which protested COVID mandates by gathering Canadians in front of Parliament in Ottawa.

As LifeSiteNewsĀ previously reported, when the convoy first came to Ottawa, allegations were floated that the memorial had been desecrated. After learning of this, Evely quickly organized a group of veterans to stand guard around the clock to protect the area.

However, under former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s use of the Emergencies Act, many parts of downtown Ottawa were blocked to the public, and a vigilant police force roamed the streets.

It was during this time that Evely was arrested for entering a closed off section of downtown Ottawa during the early hours of February 19, 2022. He had been on his way to take the 4:25 a.m. shift protecting the Ottawa War Memorial.

He was forcibly pushed to the ground, landing face first. The veteran was then arrested and charged with mischief and obstructing police.

At the time, the use of the EA was justified by claims that the protest was ā€œviolent,ā€ a claim that has still gone unsubstantiated.

In fact, videos of the protest against COVID regulations and shot mandates show Canadians from across the country gathering outside Parliament engaged in dancing, street hockey, and other family-friendly activities.

Indeed, the only acts of violence caught on video were carried out against the protesters after the Trudeau government directed police to end the protest. One such video showed an elderly women being trampled by a police horse.

While the officers’ actions were originally sanctioned under the EA, Federal Court Justice Richard Mosley ruled that Trudeau was ā€œnot justifiedā€ in invoking the EA, forcing Crown prosecutors to adopt a different strategy.

Now, Crown prosecutors allege that the common law granted police the authority to stop and detain Evely, regardless of the EA.

However, Evely and his lawyers have challenged this argument under section 9 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, insisting that his ā€œarrest and detention were arbitrary.ā€

Earlier this month, Freedom Convoy organizers Tamara Lich and Chris BarberĀ were sentencedĀ to 18-month house arrest after a harrowing 25-month trial process. Many haveĀ condemnedĀ the sentence, warning it amounts to ā€œpolitical persecutionā€ of those who stand up to the Liberal government.

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Freedom Convoy leader Tamara Lich says ā€˜I am not to leave the house’ while serving sentence

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From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

‘I was hoping to be able to drop off and pick up my grandsons from school, but apparently that request will have to go to a judge’

Freedom Convoy leader Tamara Lich detailed her restrictive house arrest conditions, revealing she is ā€œnotā€ able to leave her house or even pick up her grandkids from school without permission from the state.

Lich wrote in aĀ X postĀ onĀ Wednesday that this past Tuesday was her first meeting with her probation officer, whom she described as ā€œfair and efficient,ā€ adding that she was handed the conditions set out by the judge.

ā€œI was hoping to be able to drop off and pick up my grandsons from school, but apparently that request will have to go to a judge under a variation application, so we’ll just leave everything as is for now,ā€ she wrote.

Lich noted that she has another interview with her probation officer next week to ā€œassess the level of risk I pose to re-offend.ā€

ā€œIt sounds like it’ll basically be a questionnaire to assess my mental state and any dangers I may pose to society,ā€ she said.

While it is common for those on house arrest to have to ask for permission to leave their house, sometimes arrangements can be made otherwise.

On October 7, Ontario Court Justice Heather Perkins-McVeyĀ sentencedĀ Lich and Chris Barber to 18 months’ house arrest after being convicted earlier in the year convicted of ā€œmischief.ā€

Lich was given 18 months less time already spent in custody, amounting to 15 1/2 months.

AsĀ reported byĀ LifeSiteNews, the Canadian government was hoping to put Lich in jail for no less than seven years and Barber for eight years for their roles in the 2022 protests against COVID mandates.

Lich said that her probation officerĀ ā€œinformed me of the consequences should I breach these conditions, and I am not to leave the house, even for the approved ā€˜necessities of life’ without contacting her to let her know where I’ll be and for how long,ā€ she wrote.

ā€œShe will then provide a letter stating I have been granted permission to be out in society. I’m to have my papers on my person at all times and ready to produce should I be pulled over or seen by law enforcement out and about.ā€

Lich said that the probation officer did print a letter ā€œbefore I left, so I could stop at the optometrist and dentist offices on my way home.ā€

She said that her official release date is January 21, 2027, which she said amounts to ā€œ1,799 days after my initial arrest.ā€

AsĀ reported byĀ LifeSiteNews, Lich, reflecting on her recent house arrest verdict, said she has no ā€œremorseā€ and will not ā€œapologizeā€ for leading a movement that demanded an end to all COVID mandates.

LifeSiteNewsĀ reportedĀ that Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre offered his thoughts on the sentencing, wishing them a ā€œpeacefulā€ life while stopping short of blasting the sentence as his fellow MPs did.

In early 2022, the Freedom Convoy saw thousands of Canadians from coast to coast come to Ottawa to demand an end to COVID mandates in all forms. Despite the peaceful nature of the protest, Trudeau’s government enacted the never-before-used Emergencies Act (EA) on February 14, 2022.

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