Australian soap opera actress says that the “scamdemic” was single-handedly brought down by Albertan man who proved in court the virus doesn't exist.
Context: I’ve seen a lot of this today on Facebook and Instagram. Basically King contested a social distancing fine last December and tried to serve a subpoena on Alberta’s CMOH Deena Hinshaw. This paper was allegedly part of Alberta’s defense. But it doesn’t admit anything.
It seems to be a motion to quash his subpoena. It argues that Hinshaw has “no material evidence” related to King’s $1200 fine. King complained on the Stew Peters Show that opposing attorneys argued that it was irrelevant. Yeah, that’s their point—not that the virus doesn’t exist.
As far as I can tell, King lost. A week ago he told his TikTok followers the case is over. He complained that the magistrate gave bad advice. But when Alberta announced they were lifting restrictions, I guess he decided to declare victory after the fact. tiktok.com/@canadianpatri…
Wish I could post documents from the case, but as far as I could tell, it requires sending a lot of Canadian dollars to Canada. (I guess that's what I get for ever complaining about PACER.)
In his TikTok, King mentioned distributing them by thumb drive. Will tweet if I get any.
Thread further breaking this down, which QTs and embeds many of King's confused videos.
TLDR: No evidence "material to" and "available" for King's bonkers (quashed) subpoena does not mean the virus has never been isolated. It has been.
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