Marion Jacobson
Ed Hodges
MURDERED BY FDA DEATH PROTOCOL
Ed HodgesEd Hodges
Military Honors
Name: Ed Hodges
Age: 56
Sex: Male
Location: TX
Military/LE: Retried from military
Evidence Summary
Became Sick: 12/22/2020
Sought Care: 12/25/2020
Admitted: 12/25/2020
Ventilated: 01/03/2021
Days Isolated: 40 days
Days on Vent: 30
Remdesivir: 5 days
Meds Refused:
hcq
Meds Administered:
Remdesivir, ativan, antibiotics, antifungal, Amlodipine, amlodipine, atorvastatin, blood thinner, blood pressure meds, ceftriaxone, Convalescent Plasma, clonidine, dexamethasone, dexametomidine, doxycycline, Decadron, Dilaudid, diuretic, enoxaparin, Enoxaparin, arythro, famotidine, fentynal, gabapentin, insulin, lasix, midazolam, nimbex, Oxygen, pain killers, pantoprazole, paralytic drugs, polyethyleneglycol, precedex, propofol, sedatives, seraquel, sodium chloride, Steroids, Vancomycin, vit c, Albuterol, Ketamine, Levalbuterol, Reglan, Levophed, Polyvinyl alcohol, Potassium chloride, Promethazine, Rocuronium, Tramadol, Trazodone
Hospital: Baylor Scott and White All Saints Medical Center
Killed: 02/03/2021

Evidence: Interview Recording

Ed Hodges
EXHIBIT A — 2023
00:00:00/--:--:--
Clinical & Hospital Experience
Hospital Procedures & Rights
DNR: Yes, victim was asked to sign a DNR
Remdesivir Consent: Yes, victim gave consent
Documented Mistreatment:
Isolated, Neglected
Medical Treatment & Hospitalization

Prior to being put on the ventilator, the patient complained that nurses left him exposed for hours in a cold room after turning him over. Slow response when called. Nurse argued with him. Once on the ventilator, he was paralyzed, in a coma, started developing pressure sores, and just pumped full of increasing amounts of narcotics. Hospital did not allow spouse to visit even though she had Covid and had recovered and was negative.

The rush to put Covid patients on ventilators, requiring them to be in a coma and paralyzed should not have been the first option for treatment. It felt like keeping the covid patients in comas made it easier on the staff to care for them.
Witness Testimony

My husband and I both contracted Covid-19 just before Christmas in 2020. On Christmas day we went to the hospital emergency room to seek diagnosis and treatment. I was treated and released, told to take over-the-counter flu medication but my husband was admitted to the hospital because his blood oxygen level decreased upon exertion.

The treatment they provided him in the first few days was Remdesivir even though my husband asked them about hydroxychloroquine. Of course they had him on oxygen using a nasal canula, and multiple other medications. They also administered convalescent plasma three days after admission. After 5 days on Remdesivir and being in the Covid segregated part of the hospital, he was admitted to the ICU. After 5 days in the ICU he was put on a ventilator. He was told it was imperative for his survival, so he gave consent and they did not wait for him to be able to reach me and let me know. He was put into a coma and paralyzed and put on the ventilator. After 30 days on the ventilator and his condition declining daily, he died. During this entire 40 days they did not allow any visitors, nor did they even allow people into the hospital if they were there to see a Covid patient. They had a desk set up just inside the hospital doors where they screened everyone.

I called multiple times a day to get updates and the nurses were mostly all very kind and answered my questions, but it was difficult to get a doctor to speak to me. I even went to the hospital in person and asked if the doctor would come downstairs to speak to me and give me an update, and he refused.

Nurses informed me that the only time doctors even saw him was for a couple of minutes each morning on rounds. Other than that, the doctors just relayed instructions to the nursing staff as needed.

On 2/2/2021, 39 days after admission, the hospital finally allowed me to come and see him as they said he had tested negative for Covid. So I went to see him briefly and though he was unaware of my presence, I was glad to be able to see and touch him. I was alarmed by the number of bags of IV drugs, especially because there were so many narcotics among them like morphine, fentanyl and ketamine.

Because he was Covid negative, they were going to move him to the non-Covid ICU and so I had to leave. I was told that this whole transfer did not go well. He was put on a temporary mobile ventilator, moved to another floor where the regular ICU was located, and they refused to accept him. They said he was much too ill for them and he needed to go back to the Covid ICU. So he was moved back. I have no idea how long he was on that temporary ventilator, or how long this whole bungled transfer took, but his condition deteriorated rapidly and he died that night.

The hospital contacted me when he was near death to say I could come and see him. I rushed there and was able to spend his last hour and a half of life in his room with him, although he was in such a state I doubt he had any awareness of my presence.

I felt then, and still feel today, that the rush to put him on a ventilator instead of perhaps doing a tracheostomy in order to allow him to be awake and alert while ventilated is what caused his eventual death. The ventilator and the massive amounts of drugs they had him on to keep him under and to keep him from trying to breathe on his own for 30 days eventually killed him.

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Testimony Clips 27

The following clips were extracted from Ed Hodges's recorded testimony interview. Each captures a key moment relevant to one or more of the 25 documented COVID protocol commonalities.

00:10:44.600 - 00:10:59.785
“"if this was as as, dangerous an illness as they say it was, it just seemed to me like the doctors should have been more involved. They, you know, they should have been more hands on.”
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00:25:30.180 - 00:26:01.839
“"I think it was the fact that that it was COVID is what made it wasn't that he was so sick. Like, normally, if you have the flu, you don't go to the emergency room. But because it was we were COVID positive, that was frightening. You know? And so it was like, oh, well, it's COVID. We better go, you know, get the good drugs and get, you know, get better.”
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00:23:37.000 - 00:23:49.275
“"And I will always believe that, the thirty days that he spent on the ventilator and as drugged as he was is what actually killed him and it wasn't the covid that killed him.”
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00:14:31.040 - 00:15:00.699
“"And instead, eventually, your organs are gonna begin to shut down when you're on heavy drugs like that for that long. ... And I think they were planning to do that the next day.”
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00:17:17.285 - 00:17:42.494
“"at one point before he was, on a ventilator, he asked me to look into whether he could go to a different hospital because he was so unhappy there. And they told me they wouldn't they said they wouldn't release him, and they said no other hospital would accept him in the condition that he was in. So there was no way that he could go to another hospital.”
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00:10:06.584 - 00:10:33.334
“"And I found out, nurses told me that, the only time any doctors ever saw the patients was during those rounds in the morning. And there would be several doctors who went on rounds at the same time, and they literally spent a minute, maybe two minutes in each patient's room. Other than that, everything was done by nurses.”
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