
A U.S. Navy corpsman administers a U.S. Marine with the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine on Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 15, 2021. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Rachel K. Young-Porter)
A health-care worker who formerly worked at an extended-care facility in Issaquah, Washington, has come forward with a claim that a patient was given a "chemical restraint" to get her to take the COVID vaccine, and she died that night.
The charges are just some of the allegations that also include forged signatures on records, understaffing and more, made by whistleblowers Cassandra Renner and Jonathan Schlect about an Aegis Living facility where they used to work.
Advertisement - story continues below
Renner explained, "I had overheard a chemical restraint being given to one of the residents I worked with in order to get her to take the COVID vaccine…They had given her a PRN, like Xanax, and they were successful after giving her the PRN in order to get her to take the COVID vaccine. The resident was lied to about what shot she was receiving. She was told that it was the flu shot… She's no longer with us and in her last moments of life, she had to have her dignity removed."
The concerns came in an interview with Project Veritas:
TRENDING: 'This is bullsh**': Biden loses Dem donor over handling of Israel-Hamas war
BREAKING: Two Healthcare Insiders @AegisLiving Blow Whistle on Alleged Elder Abuse & Medical Fraud
"Aegis Living is Grossly Taking Advantage of Severely Vulnerable Adults"
"Signature Had Been Forged Multiple Times" pic.twitter.com/LxhGsdvAMY
— [email protected]🇺🇸 (@EricSpracklen) September 14, 2021
Advertisement - story continues below
Renner told Project Veritas she witnessed a company taking advantage of severely vulnerable adults.
"I don't think that the neglect is coming directly from the care managers, as much as it is coming from the facility making the choice to be short-staffed," Renner reported. "We can probably, on a good day, get about 50% of what these people are paying for done."
Renner documented being told by a director to sign that chores for patients were completed, even if they weren't. Also, she said, "I had found out that my signature had been forged multiple times. Someone signed for me to claim that I had completed a service that I specifically did not sign because it was not completed."
Schlect reported being told to forge signatures or be out of compliance with his job.
Project Veritas said Aegis Living Associate Care Director, Margie Massa, corroborated the claims.
Advertisement - story continues below
"If there’s not a signature there [on the document] then that means you didn’t do the service. If I knew who worked that day, then I might jot in an initial because I'm kind of saving their a----too. You know?" she said.
Content created by the WND News Center is available for re-publication without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact [email protected].
SUPPORT TRUTHFUL JOURNALISM. MAKE A DONATION TO THE NONPROFIT WND NEWS CENTER. THANK YOU!