Sunday, December 30, 2018

Why is Omaha the go-to place to hospitalize everyone exposed to the deadly Ebola virus these days?

The Ebola virus is back in town, and Omahans are welcoming it with open arms
By now, it's becoming very clear to anyone who reads the news that Omaha, Nebraska is the go-to place where U.S. government health care officials at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID) prefer to send anyone suspected of either having or being exposed to the world's most deadly infectious diseases around the world, such as the deadly Ebola virus, when infected Americans come back to the U.S. for possible monitoring and/or treatment.

Just this Saturday, an unnamed U.S. health care worker, who may have been exposed to the deadly Ebola virus while treating patients in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), arrived back in the U.S. and was put in immediate quarantine at Nebraska Medicine in Omaha, NE.

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Story of American missionary killed by isolated island tribe overshadows a much bigger story: Is this ancient tribe in question the direct descendants of Adam and Eve?

Is the 'most isolated tribe on Earth' the closest living descendants of the first modern man to first emerge out of Africa?
By the time of publishing of this post, a lot of people will have already heard of the bizarre story spreading virally around the world of the extremely foolhardy 27-year-old American self-styled missionary, John Allen Chau, who was killed by what was described by the press as the "most isolated tribe in the world," when he naively tried to intrude into their society, after they gave him fair warning that he was not welcome onto their land, and convert them all to Christianity.

The foolish actions of self-styled American missionary, John Allen Chau, has
not only doomed himself, but may have doomed the fate of the Sentinelese as
the world will begin to realize the significance of who the Sentinelese are in
relation to the first modern men to migrate out of Africa, so scientists are bound
endanger the Sentinelese with more unnecessary contact with modern world
The extremely ancient and isolated tribe, known as the Sentinelese, are an indigenous people who inhabit the completely untouched and relatively unexplored North Sentinel Island (which is about the size of Manhattan Island) in the Bay of Bengal, which in turn is a part of the Andaman and Nicobar Archipelago in the Indian Ocean.

Far be it from us to accuse the mainstream media of just falling into the same old trap of reporting another sensationalized story about the perils of the civilized world confronting a group of "savages" for clickbait, while missing the significance and much bigger picture of the much more important story right underneath their noses.

But that's exactly what they have predictably done, in the name of today's clickbait tabloid journalism that passes for legitimate news. The so-called mainstream press in its ever predictable thirst for tabloid news has once again chosen to focus on the much more insignificant story, à la Cannibal Holocaust, of a savage, primitive tribe murdering a naive, foolhardy, but well-meaning missionary on some warped "humanitarian" mission to save them from the excesses of their own hedonism.

Friday, September 14, 2018

Convicted 'Creighton killer' Dr. Anthony Garcia gets the death sentence

To no one's surprise, the pronouncement was 'death' by the Nebraska 3-judge panel
A three-judge panel today sentenced convicted quadruple murderer, Dr. Anthony Garcia, to death for his actions in the killings of Thomas Hunter, 11, and the family housekeeper Shirlee Sherman, 57, in March 2008 and Dr. Roger Brumback and his wife Mary, both 65, in May 2013.
  
The hangman awaits Dr. Anthony Garcia as a 3-judge panel today recommended
the death sentence for the convicted and now condemned quadruple murderer
Both sets of double murders, which took place a little more than five years apart in the quiet heartland town of Omaha, NE, were thought to be motivated by Dr. Garcia's festering desire for revenge after he was unceremoniously fired from the Creighton University Medical School in 2001.

Garcia was fired from the Creighton University pathology residency training program back in the summer of 2001 by the two then-heads of the pathology department, Drs. William Hunter (the residency director) and Roger Brumback (the department chairman) for what was characterized as unprofessional conduct.

Prosecutors from the Douglas County Attorney's Office contend that Garcia held a simmering and fomenting grudge against Drs. Hunter and Brumback for smearing his professional reputation with a devastating and stigmatic firing which stuck with the troubled doctor throughout his medical career.

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Defense argues Dr. Anthony Garcia should be spared the death penalty because of severe mental illness and 'profound burden of failure' in death penalty sentencing hearing

Douglas County Sheriff's deputies wheel in Anthony Garcia, who doesn't
seem to be faking having mental illness, for his death penalty hearing

The much-anticipated and long-delayed death penalty phase for convicted "Creighton killer" Dr. Anthony Garcia finally began Wednesday morning to determine whether he will get the death penalty or spend the rest of his natural life in prison.

Garcia was convicted for two sets of double murders last October with aggravating circumstances that qualified for death penalty consideration under Nebraska law.

In 2008, he broke into the Dundee home of his former boss, then Creighton University Medical Center pathology residency director Dr. William Hunter, and stabbed to death Dr. Hunter's 11-year-old son, Thomas, and the family's housekeeper, Shirlee Sherman, while Dr. Hunter was still at work.

Then in 2013 five years later, he broke into his other former boss' home, then Creighton University Medical Center pathology department chairman Dr. Roger Brumback, and stabbed to death Dr. Brumback and his wife Mary.

All four murders were thought to be motivated by revenge for Dr. Garcia's dismissal from the Creighton University Medical Center pathology residency program back in 2001.

Thursday, March 1, 2018

Death penalty hearing for Anthony Garcia delayed again until May

Yet another delay in the death penalty phase of the Anthony Garcia murder trial
The death penalty hearing for convicted murderer, Dr. Anthony Garcia, has been delayed yet again.

Dr. Garcia's new legal counsel, the Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy, asked for the delay because of difficulty in getting files on Garcia's mental health records from his former attorneys, Robert Motta Sr. and Robert Motta Jr. of Chicago.

The three-judge panel hearing on whether Dr. Garcia would face the death penalty for his crimes was originally set for March 12th, but now has been rescheduled for May 30 to June 1 by Douglas County District Judge Gary Randall.

At a hearing on Tuesday, Douglas County Attorney Don Kleine objected to the delay, saying the case has dragged on way too long.

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

As Anthony Garcia's quadruple murder case is featured on another TV show, Judge dismisses Garcia's motion against the death penalty

What's been happening on Medicine of Omaha's Wild Medicine?
A lot of you have been wondering what's been happening of late on Medicine of Omaha's Wild Medicine.

Apparently, there's been a news blackout on medicine-related stories by the Omaha press because we've been stealing so much of their thunder with scandals about the medical profession in the Omaha area.

For instance in the past, the Omaha World-Herald unsuccessfully lodged a copyright complaint against us for thumb-nailing one of their photos, which is legal to do since it's on their servers. Those kinds of false copyright DMCA claims went nowhere.

But this week, another national television show—this time a cable outlet called Investigation Discovery (ID)—has aired yet another crime documentary of the events of the Anthony Garcia quadruple murder case, breaking the news blackout. The show, episode 4 of James Patternson's Murder is Forever entitled, "Murder on the Run," aired Monday night at 9 p.m. on ID. (Click here to see a link to the video of the show.)