The dismissal standards in California are actually better for plaintiffs than the federal standards. Like I said, California is a special place because it's incorporating the Nuremberg Code. It has some better court rules, and we are past the motion to dismiss and that allows us to get Discovery on what they were doing. --Warner Mendenhall
We are past the dismissal of the case, and I think people have seen that happen with cases around the country. The defendants typically file a motion to dismiss . . . you don't have standing, or you can't make your case, and I think that's the beauty of where we are. The dismissal standards in California are actually better for plaintiffs than the federal standards. Like I said, California is a special place because it's incorporating the Nuremberg Code. It has some better court rules, and we are past the motion to dismiss and that allows us to get Discovery on what they were doing. And one of the things that we have alleged is essentially that the University of California system has been running an experiment on all of its own people and it's collecting data, it's analyzing that data, and we want to see that data, and we want to understand the experiments and the studies that they're doing on their own population. And they know how many people of those 220,000 that have been fired over this, that were injured over this, what are their health issues, and that's the kind of data that we want to follow up on. With the system, it's a very expensive process. I can tell you that we would love to have some people assist on this because it is unbelievably expensive. When you have a big system like this, and you have to go into complex computer databases, and you have to hire people who understand medical statistics, Medical Datamatics, all of that stuff. So I know you're going to link to his LinkedIn page at GiveSendGo/NurembergNow, and we really do need to raise money to have a successful fight over all the data that we want to get from the University of California. So that's GiveSendGo.com/ NurembergNow.
from that website, it reads,
With the help of our assiduous lawyers (Warner Mendenhall, Jeremy Friedman, et al), we filed a class action suit against the UC: Rake et al v Regents of the University of California. In the suit, we are seeking justice for the perpetrators of violence against the human body and against humanity itself. Their violations of the Nuremberg Code, the right to medical privacy, the right to be free from retaliation by employers who disagree with your personal medical choices, and the right to free speech cannot and will not go unpunished.
An overview of Medical Datamatics.