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INSANE COVID COURT convicts Austrian woman of “Grossly Negligent Homicide” For “Fatally Infecting Her Neighbor With COVID-19”
09/22/2024A chilling court case in Austria sounds like it could have come right out of a dystopian novel. An insane, vindictive prosecutor and a compliant judge convicted a 54-year-old Austrian woman with “grossly negligent homicide” for “fatally infecting her neighbor with COVID-19.” The Austrian prosecutors argued that the woman came in contact with her neighbor in a stairwell and shared viral DNA, before the neighbor got sick with COVID-19 and died of pneumonia.
This outrageous case sets a dangerous legal precedent, enshrining the germ theory as definitive legal doctrine, and making everyday activities subject to police state surveillance and prosecution. With this insane case, anyone with a damaged immune system can prosecute anyone they want, without serious evidence, for their own sicknesses and chronic diseases.
As the defendant was being prosecuted for living her life and breathing freely, the court ordered her to submit viral DNA samples. The deceased neighbor was also probed for viral DNA. The “virological report” suggested that the deceased neighbor and the defendant shared similar viral DNA. However, this bio-surveillance proves absolutely nothing, because anyone can share bits and pieces of viral DNA at any given time. Pathogens are ubiquitous. The real causes of illness and immune failure were ignored in this case. The terrain theory of disease was completely left out of the equation in this insane conviction.
The innocent woman was sentenced to four months of suspended imprisonment and issued an 800-euro fine ($886.75) for “grossly negligent homicide.” If individuals can be held criminally liable for spreading a common illness, particularly with such loose evidentiary standards, it opens the door for a dystopian future where everyday activities carry the risk of criminal prosecution.
Woman found guilty of fatally infecting neighbor with COVID-19
The punishment marks the Austrian woman's second pandemic-related conviction in a year.
www.newsweek.com