I haven’t quite found it in my heart yet to forgive the mass-murder sociopaths who perpetrated one of the biggest scams, if not the biggest, in world history on the people who had been trained to genuflect to them — The Experts™ — as some kind of moral and intellectual paragon.
I don’t know what the exact percentage is, but some huge portion of the MAGA base voted for Trump with the expectation he was going to bring the hammer down on these people, which so far hasn’t happened — at all.
Related: Sign the Petition to Repeal Legal Immunity for the Vaccine Industry
Over a year into the administration, not only have there been no arrests, and hence no real deterrent for future crimes against humanity by these people, but there have been no announcements of DOJ investigations into any of these people that I’ve seen.
Granted, there has been some progress on reigning in the wildly corrupt and tyrannical biomedical establishment.
Trump pulled out of the WHO, for one thing.
The HHS, under RFK Jr., also recently scaled back dramatically the radically unwise CDC vaccine schedule for children.
Related: Study: COVID Shots Cripple Immune System — Possibly Permanently
Those are wins, but it’s not enough.
The pharmaceutical industry, and the Public Health™ authorities with whom they work hand-in-glove, will only stop trying to engineer deadlier and more virulent pathogens in secret, unaccountable government-funded labs when they’re sufficiently afraid that they’ll face extreme and rapid justice for it when they’re caught.
A brief list of the unindicted conspirators:
- Anthony Fauci. The king daddy of them all. His crimes, including but not limited to perjury, are so self-evident that the Brandon entity issued a blanket pardon to him right before leaving office. Perhaps, unfortunately for Fauci, there is much speculation that the infamous autopen was actually the pardoner, rather than Biden himself, who may not have even had the wherewithal in the waning days of his presidency to understand anything he was doing. If it was, in fact, the autopen directed by some unelected handler that signed Fauci’s pardon, not Biden himself, that would potentially render the pardon null and void.
Related: Help Get This Simple Fauci Prosecution Playbook to Trump, Please
- Peter Morens. Facui’s right-hand man and the gopher he used to conduct his illicit scheming so as to, in Morens’ own words, under oath in Congress, illegally thwart FOIA oversight.
- Deborah Birx. AKA The Scarf Lady, who quarterbacked the entire White House response to the pandemic in the first Trump administration, was primarily responsible for the pseudoscientific lockdowns, school closures, and “six feet to stop the spread” nonsense conjured out of thin air.
- Mandy Cohen. Former CDC Director who bragged on camera about arbitrarily curtailing Americans’ civil liberties based on personal whims.
- Peter Daszak. Fauci’s longtime collaborator, through whose “nonprofit,” EcoHealth Alliance, Fauci funneled the cash to conduct the illicit gain-of-function work on coronaviruses in the Wuhan lab.
- Francis Collins. NIH Director at the time of the COVID crime spree.
Related: Ousted Director Francis Collins Demands Americans Pay ‘Utmost Respect’ to NIH
Time is of the essence.
Under 18 U.S.C. § 371, the primary statute relating to criminal conspiracy, the statute of limitations is generally five years.
As we are more than five years out from the start of the pandemic, unfortunately, the window of opportunity for bringing these cretins to justice legally, aside from extrajudicial remedies, has closed or is closing for many potential prosecutions.
However, the clock on the five-year provision only begins after the conclusion of the conspiracy. As the shots (and the mandates) were rolled out to the public just five years ago and continue to be administered, and the lockdown/forced masking/etc. measures persisted in many jurisdictions well into 2023 and beyond, it’s arguable that the government could still get these people on conspiracy charges even in 2026.
Via Department of Justice (emphasis added):
Conspiracy is a continuing offense. For statutes such as 18 U.S.C. § 371, which require an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy, the statute of limitations begins to run on the date of the last overt act. See Fiswick v. United States, 329 U.S. 211 (1946); United States v. Butler, 792 F.2d 1528 (11th Cir. 1986). For conspiracy statutes which do not require proof of an overt act, such as RICO (18 U.S.C. § 1961) or 21 U.S.C. § 846, the government must allege and prove that the conspiracy continued into the limitations period. The crucial question in this regard is the scope of the conspiratorial agreement, and the conspiracy is deemed to continue until its purpose has been achieved or abandoned. See United States v. Northern Imp. Co., 814 F.2d 540 (8th Cir. 1987); United States v. Coia, 719 F.2d 1120 (11th Cir. 1983), cert. denied, 466 U.S. 973 (1984).
An individual's "withdrawal" from a conspiracy starts the statute of limitations running as to that individual. "Withdrawal" from a conspiracy for this purpose means that the conspirator must take affirmative action by making a clean breast to the authorities or communicating his or her disassociation to the other conspirators. See United States v. Gonzalez, 797 F.2d 915 (10th Cir. 1986).
Of course, it’s possible there are other charges aside from criminal conspiracy that could stick and for which the statute of limitations doesn’t protect them.
Again, though, it seems the main obstacle is the deafening silence and apparent lack of interest on the part of the administration.






