By means of introduction to the Grand Jury 30 years ago, John
Cullen worked at Oracle as a program manager that put together the mapping
system that John Hopkins University has been using to track the
Coronavirus. That's his software. He built it, and early on during
the outbreak just using the map, this is the JH official map I noticed there
were 10 dead in Bejing. And so his testimony is going to build on the
foundational testimony of Dr. Mikovits. This is data to support their
testimony.
His observations, he's a quantitative analysis. He looks at
data and renders it understood quickly. The John Hopkins reports So
Cullen started thinking more deeply about what Dr. Judy Mikovits said is that
the virus itself, the SARS-Co-V2 virus, and the sickness that we're seeing in
the hospitals, asked if that connection has been made? And so he dug
deeper. What he found was at the CDC's website, the United States was
going through a dramatic influenza outbreak. In fact, at the beginning of
the first week, the first week of January of 2020, 4,000 people a week from
what's called PNI, pneumonia & influenza, and this was unprecedented.
We never saw anything like this before. And this was before Coronavirus
hit. And so I was a bit taken aback, and I said, "Wait a
second." Then what happened? This looks like the worst
outbreak of influenza we've ever seen, and, in fact, it was. What the
data shows is that the 2019-2020 influenza season in the United States,
according to the CDC, was the worst in history. The question is--can two
viruses spread at the same time? Why not, right? Could people have
Coronavirus and herpes? Sure, why not, right? Could some people
have Coronavirus and other people have influenza? Sure, why not? We
know what the influenza outbreak looked like before Coronavirus arrived.
Let's go to the next slide. What you're looking at here [16:45] is the
CDC's Mortality Data. So this is different than the upfront
surveillance. This is people who died. And what we see here, this
goes all the way back to October 2016 to the present day, right? And
this is direct from the CDC. And what you see here is on the right-hand
side it's much bigger than its ever been. Let's go down to the next page
. . . . In Time Magazine of January 2020, telling us this is the worst
influenza season the CDC has ever seen. And Dr. Fauci told us that 80,000
people died in 2017, so that would mean that this was even worse. So this
is Time Magazine, this was published in January 2020, and I would like to enter
this into evidence, Mr. Klayman, if this is possible, that this is Time
Magazine telling us that this is the worst influenza season the United States
has ever seen.