Kansas AG Sues Pfizer for Misrepresenting COVID Shot as 'Safe and Effective'
Calvin Freiburger : Jun 19, 2024
LifeSiteNews.com
"Pfizer misled Kansans about the vaccines' risks, including to pregnant women and for myocarditis. Additionally, Pfizer claimed its vaccine protected against COVID variants, despite data showing otherwise..."
(Topeka, KS) — [LifeSiteNews.com] Kansas Republican Attorney General Kris Kobach announced on Monday that he is suing pharmaceutical giant Pfizer over "multiple misleading statements" about the health risks and ineffectiveness of its mRNA-based COVID-19 shot, in a case that if successful could mark a turning point in the ongoing battle against the controversial injections. (Image: Pixabay)
"Pfizer misled Kansans about the vaccines' risks, including to pregnant women and for myocarditis," the complaint states, according to a press release from the attorney general's office. "Additionally, Pfizer claimed its vaccine protected against COVID variants, despite data showing otherwise. The pharmaceutical giant also suggested its vaccine prevented COVID transmission, but later admitted it had never studied whether its vaccine stopped transmission."
"The complaint also alleges that Pfizer coordinated with social media officials to censor speech critical of COVID-19 vaccines and declined to participate in the federal government's vaccine development program, Operation Warp Speed, to avoid government oversight," Kobach's office further says.
READ: The Telegraph admits COVID shots may have helped cause over 3 million excess deaths
Among its attempts to deceive the public, Pfizer maintained its own adverse event database, which included cases not reported to the federal Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), but "did not publicly release adverse events data from its database." It also "did not disclose that its trial included only healthy individuals and excluded unhealthy individuals" and therefore "did not possess a reasonable basis to represent that it was safe for individuals who had been diagnosed with COVID-19, who were immunocompromised, or who were pregnant or breastfeeding," according to the lawsuit.
The complaint maintains that Pfizer's misrepresentations, which helped the company earn $75 billion in two years, constitute violations of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, "regardless of whether any individual consumer ultimately received Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine."
In a statement to Fox Business, Pfizer responded that its claims "have been accurate and science-based. The Company believes that the state's case has no merit and will respond to the suit in due course"... Subscribe for free to Breaking Christian News here
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