Women Contribute to Changing the Attack on Pain Management

 

Globe filled with pictures of women and surrounded by blue sky.
March is Women’s History Month. We need to recognize those contributing to the fight as well as those suffering from the government agenda.
During the month of March we will have this page for you to learn and use the information to communicate with your legislators.  If you have anything to add, please send it to me through the Contact Us page.

What is Women’s History Month?:

Women’s History Month started with a week celebration of women in a school district in Sonoma, California in 1978.  A few years later, the idea caught on within communities, school districts and organizations across the country. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter issued the first presidential proclamation declaring the week of March 8 as National Women’s History Week. The U.S. Congress followed suit the next year, passing a resolution establishing a national celebration. Six years later, the National Women’s History Project successfully petitioned Congress to expand the event to the entire month of March.

The idea of Women’s History Month is to celebrate the women who have fought for equality, justice, and civil rights within our nation.

 

International Women’s Day

International Women’s Day, a global celebration of the economic, political and social achievements of women, took place for the first time on March 8, 1911. Many countries around the world celebrate the holiday with demonstrations, educational initiatives and customs such as presenting women with gifts and flowers. 

The United Nations has sponsored International Women’s Day since 1975. When adopting its resolution on the observance of International Women’s Day, the United Nations General Assembly cited the following reasons: “To recognize the fact that securing peace and social progress and the full enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms require the active participation, equality and development of women; and to acknowledge the contribution of women to the strengthening of international peace and security.”

Examples of women in the past who have been recognized for their work:

  1. Sojourner Truth: Truth was an ardent abolitionist and women’s rights activist in the 1800’s.
  2. Jeannette Rankin: Speaking and lobbying for women’s suffrage, she was the first woman elected to Congress in 1916
  3. Rosa Parks: Helped initiate the civil rights movement in the US when she refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man.
  4. Harriet Tubman: A leading abolitionist, she led hundreds of enslaved people to freedom along the route of the Underground Railroad.
  5. Susan B. Anthony: champion of the women’s suffrage movement, abolition, and the rights of labor.

 

Although women have made progress, there are still areas where women face obstacles because of their gender or were passed over for recognition. Some of those are:

  1. Sybil Ludington, The Female Paul Revere:  On the night of April 26, 1777, 16-year-old Sybil Ludington rode nearly 40 miles to warn some 400 militiamen that the British troops were coming. Ludington was less than half Revere’s age and rode more than twice as far to carry her warning. She did receive a personal “Thank you.” From General George Washington and was honored with a postal stamp in 1975.
  2. Claudette Colvin: On March 2, 1955, Claudette Colvin refused to move for a white passenger—nine months before Rosa Parks would do the same.
  3. Rosalind Franklin: Revealed DNA’s Structure, while Watson & Crick received credit. She also created the foundation of modern virology.

These are just a few. The problem is, females just aren’t recognized with the same authority as males. It’s a shame, but it is a fact, and it needs to change.

 

Communication Tools

This year’s theme is “Celebrating Women Who Tell Our Stories,” a theme that honors women in every community who have devoted their lives and talents to producing art and news, pursuing truth, and reflecting society decade after decade.

So what can you do to help level the playing field?
How can we celebrate women on our platform?

We need your stories.  Please tell your story and send it to us, allow us to make it public here.  Then use this month to communicate with your legislators how women are being gaslighted by the medical profession. Our pain and diseases need to be recognized and treated.

Does anyone have a list of women who have died because of the lack of pain management? We could post a list. Also, any women who have been working to end the attacks. If you want to recognize anyone, send it to me.

Six Actions to Support Women

1. Explore the history of women’s rights.

Women’s History Milestones: A Timeline

2. Be aware of issues women still face today.

3. Post on social media to spread awareness of Women’s History Month.

Share articles, infographics, inspiring quotes, videos, and other women-centric content on your social media. 

4. Write a thank you note to a woman that inspires you.

A few simple words to acknowledge how another woman has inspired you can mean a lot to her. Maybe they’re a role model or a friend or family member who helped you through a tough time. Maybe you just admire certain qualities about them and don’t say so enough. A show of gratitude is a meaningful gesture.

5. Write yourself a love note.

While you’re at it, spare a few words of praise for yourself! Women are often our own best critics. Try writing down the things you love about yourself; you deserve to be celebrated!

6. Participate in political advocacy.

Even though women’s rights have come a long way, there’s still plenty of work to do to level the playing field and make sure women and girls have the opportunity to succeed. Pick a topic that matters to you and write or call your representatives to voice your concerns. Share the emails, FB and twitter posts that we share on this page for equality in pain management.

Information that can be used to message to legislators

Rather than write a letter and share, I’m going to share the information that I use to write my letter.  So below you will find single sentences, paragraphs, ideas, etc.  Then you take the sentences you want to use, put them together in a brief, single page email to send to the legislators.

For general population, the list of representatives can be found HERE. The group of all minority physicians can be found HERE.  There are now 132 minority legislators, and we should be able to teach them enough to create change and get the Controlled Substance Act repealed.  Then to get their contact information, you can go to their individual websites.

For supporters of doctorsofcourage, you will find the spreadsheets with all of the contact links on the membership site. Then you just have to click the link and paste the message.  I’m able to send to around 200 in 1 hour. Be careful, though, with twitter.  Keep under 100 at a time, and wait a couple of hours or they will block you for 8 hours.

Information to use in your letters:

In 1994, Richard Nixon’s domestic policy advisor John Ehrlichman revealed that the “War on Drugs” had begun as a racially motivated crusade to criminalize Blacks and the anti-war left.

“We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or blacks, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and blacks with heroin and then criminalizing them both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify them night after night in the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did,” Ehrlichman said.

Mass incarceration, the gradual progeny of a number of congressional bills, made it so much easier. Most notably, the 1984 Comprehensive Crime Control and Safe Streets Act eliminated parole in the federal system. Then the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act established mandatory minimum sentencing schemes, including the infamous 100-to-1 ratio between crack and powder cocaine sentences. Its expansion in 1988 added an overly broad definition of conspiracy to the mix. These laws flooded the federal system with people convicted of low-level and nonviolent drug offenses.

The prevailing narrative at the time was “tough on crime.” It was the same narrative that brought about the crack–powder cocaine disparity, supported the transfer of youth to adult courts, and popularized the myth of the Black man as a “superpredator.”

This led to the proliferation of mandatory minimum sentences, unnecessarily lengthy prison terms, even life, that snatched parents from children and loved ones, destabilizing families and communities. Such punishments should offend our society’s standard of decency.

Supreme Court rulings in the past basically stated that yes, systemic racism exists, but because that is the norm, it is therefore constitutional.

Since the late 1980s, a combination of federal law enforcement policies, prosecutorial practices, and legislation resulted in Black people being disproportionately arrested, convicted, and imprisoned.

There must be an end to the racist policies the War on Drugs brought us. We must not be content with piecemeal reform and baby-step progress. Indeed, rather than steps, it is time for leaps and bounds. You must accept the fact that the War on Drugs was designed to be used against minorities.

 

The plain fact is that the drug war hysteria has become an engine for the restoration of Jim Crow justice in this country,

It is important to talk about the federal DEA training program because many public officials who can no longer deny the fact of racial profiling would like us to believe it is the work of rogue cops. No, we are not talking about rogue cops. We are talking about rogue policy. We are talking about rogue leadership. We are talking about a national policy which is training police all over this country to use traffic violations as an excuse to stop and search people with dark skin. They’re not interested in that when they stop you for those violations. The traffic stops are used as a pretext to look into the car and, one way or another, to obtain your consent to search for drugs,

Nor is this just about highways. In body searches by immigration officials at customs checkpoints ranging from hand frisks to cavity searches and strip searches, 96 percent were fruitless: nothing illegal was found. And the selection was not based on evidence. Two-thirds of the people selected for those body searches were black and Latino. That is policy.

On the streets of our cities, people are stopped for so-called Terry frisks. So-called because their legality is based on a Supreme Court case names Terry v. Ohio, in which the Court ruled that it was constitutional for the police, without a warrant and without the normal evidentiary threshold of probable cause, to stop and frisk people they believe may be packing a gun. They’re supposed to have at least reasonable suspicion that the person they stopped and frisked has a gun. But the reasonable suspicion often turns out to be that you’re black, you’re Latino, and you’re young. Or that you’re walking in a neighborhood you shouldn’t be in, which is to say, not the ghetto. This feeds into the persistent prejudice in peoples’ minds, created by government disinformation for decades that, in fact, most blacks and most Latinos do carry drugs and are drug dealers.

Criminal prohibition of drugs, which is a relatively recent experiment in this country’s history, dating back to the early 20th Century, is profoundly wrong in principle.

On the most basic level, the government ought to have no legitimate power to intrude into anyone’s personal life for things that they do, things that they eat, things that they drink, that may harm themselves. It also is not warranted to threaten me with jail in order to force me into low-cholesterol treatment. And, above all, it is not warranted to arrest and imprison somebody else who eats red meat and ice cream moderately and without danger, because I do so abusively and excessively.

Even with respect to alcohol and tobacco, that principle is plain to most Americans. There are 15 million alcoholics in this country whose lives are in disarray, and which disarray affects the lives of people close to them. But that does not lead to government authority to put those people in jail for their own good. And it especially does not lead to putting people in jail who have a glass of red wine at night because somebody else is drinking a quart of vodka every morning.

Tobacco. Compulsive use of tobacco is infinitely more dangerous than even the compulsive use, much less the moderate use, of a drug like marijuana. But not even the most fierce opponents of tobacco has yet suggested putting people in jail for using it. Nor does anyone suggest using prison as a club to force tobacco users into treatment, and certainly nobody suggests arresting moderate users of tobacco or alcohol for possession of these drugs because somebody else is abusing them.

If anybody tried to suggest such measures in this country, they would be laughed at even within this Congress, this White House, this Department of Justice. So why are we doing precisely that with drugs?

In 1859, John Stewart Mill offered this advice to free societies: He said “one very simple principle to govern absolutely the dealings of society with the individual in the way of compulsion and control. That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of the civilized community against his will is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant. He cannot rightfully be compelled to do so or forbear because it will be better for him to do so, because it will make him happier, because in the opinions of others to do so would be wise or even right. There are good reasons for remonstrating with him or reasoning with him, in persuading him or entreating him, but not for compelling him. Mankind are greater gainers by suffering each other to live as seems good to themselves than by compelling each to live as seems good to the rest.”

We must look at real-world consequences of the drug war. To place that kind of power in the police of any state invites the sort of racial subjugation that drug prohibition has become. Racial profiling on our highways is not, by itself, the issue. Racial profiling is, in fact, part of a larger system of racial subjugation and separation. And that larger system is called drug prohibition.

Drug prohibition has been with us for 100+ years. The early 1900’s was a period in which warped phrases like the yellow peril became popular, in which opium dens, like crackhouses today, were used to whip up an anti-Asian, anti-Chinese sentiment.

It was a period when cocaine-crazed Negroes were said to be threatening the sexual safety of white women. This was the atmosphere in which drug prohibition was initially passed. Once drug prohibition was established, things got steadily worse. Between 1914, when the Harrison Act was passed, and 1970, 55 federal laws and hundreds of state laws were passed making the possession and the sale, the buying and the selling of drugs for personal use a crime.

Over all those years prohibition had demonstrably not worked. It did not make drugs less available. It did not interdict drugs sufficiently to suppress supply. It did not make drugs safer. It did not make drug use safer, and it did not decrease the number of people using drugs. Quite the opposite.  Just like during prohibition, when moonshine thrived and people died drinking wood alcohol, drugs have become more potent, more deadly, and more available through the black market.

President Biden, in his state of the union address, mentioned stopping illicit drugs entering the country. But that is impossible. And unnecessary once we understand the futility and wrongfulness of our drug prohibition era.

In other words, the system designed to reduce drug availability and to interfere with the marketing of drugs demonstrably had not accomplished either purpose. Despite that, in New York, in 1973, Governor Nelson Rockefeller decided that the failure of these tough laws was that they weren’t tough enough. And he introduced what came to be known as the Rockefeller Drug Laws, which created draconian mandatory minimum sentences, and helped legitimize the notion of mandatory minimums that plague us today and are responsible for the escalation of incarceration in this country. Mandatory minimums were brought to us, courtesy of the drug war.

The idea was that now we’re really going to get tough. Now if you were caught with even a particle of a forbidden substance, you were going to go away for 15 or 20 years, and no judge could use discretion to vary that sentence.

There were other wonderful effects of the Rockefeller Drug Laws. Because these harsh laws only applied to adults, and not juveniles, they managed to accelerate the use of young people into the fine art of trafficking drugs.

As of January 2023, the incarceration rate of the United States is the sixth highest in the world, at 505 per 100,000 people. While the United States represents about 4.2 percent of the world’s population,[3] it houses around 20 percent of the world’s prisoners.

Pervasive racial targeting provides another peculiarly U.S. stamp to the drug war. We are incarcerating black men at a rate approximately four times the rate of incarceration of black men in South Africa under apartheid. Prisons are used for slave labor in private industry. The number of black men in prison today is more than the number of men enslaved in 1820. Now, it is prisons that deprive black men of their freedom. For black men between the ages of 20 and 29, almost one in three are currently under the thumb of the criminal justice system.

The caustic effect of punitive drug policies has slowly eroded the cornerstone of U.S. democracy. It is no surprise that the court cases that have most destroyed the Bill of Rights, methodically abridging freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures, and property rights, have centered on fear of drugs.

The war on drugs has similarly decimated the Fourth Amendment, a measure intended to limit the power of law enforcement to search and arrest. Unlike other crimes, drug offenses do not typically have complaining witnesses, people who come forward to request police assistance. The parties are mostly consenting participants who likely wish to hide their drug activity. In order to unearth drug crimes, the police resort to wiretapping, surveillance, peering through private windows, flying over houses, undercover operations, bribery of informants, entrapment by offering to buy or sell drugs, and countless other shady or corrupting police practices. Businesses, schools and government agencies have increasingly required intrusive drug tests. For example, until the ACLU brought suit to stop it, Michigan forced all welfare recipients to submit to urine drug tests regardless of suspicion.8 Schools across the nation have sought to drug-test students, threatening to create a broad doctrine of treating students as second class citizens under the Constitution.9

Property rights, once sacred in the United States, have also been sacrificed to the war on drugs under the strange fiction that property could be “”guilty.”” All assets suspected of “”participating”” in a crime can be seized and sold, with the profits flowing to law enforcement budgets. The burden of proof for demonstrating the property’s innocence falls upon the rightful owner. Often without even accusing any individual person of a crime, the police confiscate the homes of innocent people rumored to have some relative who uses drugs; they seize the money of unsuspecting bystanders whose only crime is to carry an unusual amount of cash (“”only drug dealers do that””); and they have gunned down property owners standing in the way of the quest for attractive assets. Beyond the deeply arbitrary process, asset forfeiture poses a deeper threat. A significant part of drug enforcement efforts has shifted from prosecuting drug crime to seizing property.

Of all the constitutional depredations of the war on drugs, one stands out for its continuing damage to democracy: the disenfranchisement of former felons. The United States is the only democracy in the world to deprive its citizens of the right to vote after they have completed their sentences. Coupled with the unprecedented rate of incarceration, disenfranchisement laws fundamentally restructure political power and entrench the politicians who support and benefit from drug war policies. In the states with the most widespread and lasting loss of voting rights, harsh drug laws find particularly solid political support.

The right to vote did not exist for slaves. As of 2020, an estimated 5.17 million people are disenfranchised due to a felony conviction.

The war on drugs subjects the United States to much of the same harm, with much of the same economic and ideological underpinnings, as slavery itself. Much of society sits idly by, accepting the rhetoric that later will seem so unbelievably corrupt. We will one day understand that the war on drugs was a war on people and communities.

And there are many more racial dimensions of the drug war. Blacks do not use drugs more than white people; whites and blacks use drugs at almost exactly the same rates. In fact, the most common drug user is a 25ish year old white female. And since there are five times as many whites as blacks in the United States, it follows that the overwhelming majority of drug users are white. Nevertheless, African-Americans are admitted to state prisons at a rate that is 13.4 times greater than whites, a disparity driven largely by the grossly racial targeting of drug laws.

In yet another instance of the drug wars’ methodical reproduction of the constitutive elements of slavery, disproportionate numbers of black women have lost or stand to lose their children. Some parents, both men and women, have lost custody of their children for being on legitimate pain medicine.

The undercutting of free labor, so central to slavery, plays a similarly powerful role in driving the expansion of drug war prisons. Inmates are paid a pittance, as little as 5 cents an hour. Much ordinary labor is increasingly being transferred to prisons, many of them privatized prisons- or should we say plantations?

Here lies the new Civil Rights Movement. As in a nightmare it revisits the same issue civil rights activists faced in the 1960s when fighting Jim Crow, the same issues abolitionists faced in the nineteenth century. It is the original sin of the United States that the “”Founding Fathers”” sanctioned slavery and enshrined racism in the Constitution in the form of the three-fifths compromise. And with each generation Americans become uncomfortable with this legacy of racism. We chronically disavow the sin, distancing ourselves from the old, discredited form of racism. We denounce it. We say we have finally healed ourselves. But yet, as with the figure of original sin, it rises back up to the surface, and today takes form as the war on drugs. We must recognize it and call it by its true name. It is the U.S. apartheid, the new Jim Crow.

Benefits of repealing the Controlled Substance Act:

  1. Reduce the expense of incarceration of citizens and the poverty of their families on the taxpayer.
  2. Reduce the taxpayer expense of chasing the rabbit of drug addiction treatment.
  3. Reduce the taxpayer expense of defunct agencies.
  4. End the border problem, as people would not have to leave their country to escape the cartels, and they could raise and sell the natural herbal products for sale to the legal industry.

Facts to know and pass on

  1. Drugs are not the cause of addiction. Addiction is caused by toxicity in the body through lifestyle.
  2. Addiction can be cured with non-pharmaceutical treatment and lifestyle changes.

For more information, visit www.doctorsofcourage.org/videos/ and watch The REAL Cause of Drug Abuse.

Emails, Facebook and Twitter posts to legislators

General introductory email:

We, Doctors and Patients of Courage, represent the 100 million Americans who have legitimate pain or the doctors who are trying to treat them. We are looking for legislators—of which you could be one—who will put the country’s interest over his/her own. As a newly-elected representative, we would like to help you understand a major problem the government has caused. We are asking you to help fix the ignorance of the government and the standard jumping into a quagmire of ineffective solutions that they are so good at creating. The problem, as we see it, is one of money. More money is being spent than is being recovered, but the organizations recovering the money spread the lies and throw the blame on others, to justify their own existence.

We are throwing money away because of a government-created, fake “crisis” with the only intent of making money for special interest law enforcement groups and agencies. Read Ronald Libby’s masterpiece “The Criminalization of Medicine” and learn the history of what you have walked into. Learn the truth on www.doctorsofcourage.org. The government is

actually creating addiction by the increased anxiety of legitimate patients who need legitimate medicines to maintain a quality of life. We can give you the information on how government ignorance and mishandling of the facts is actually creating the problem you are attempting to control, and won’t with your current methods. The centuries-old percentage of addiction has always been 1%. It was 1% when the fake government agencies decided to criminalize the legitimate use of opioids in the 1990’s. It is now climbing (slightly, to 1.3%) due to government-created anxiety (the #1 acidifier of the body) in legitimate patients now being tortured with lack of treatment.

Please become a supporter of stopping this never-ending waste of taxpayer’s money. Learn what WILL work. Stop destroying the lives of 33% of the citizens over the 1% that you aren’t helping anyway. Learn how you can help be learning the REAL cause of Addiction and Drug Abuse, which can be seen on a video on https://www.doctorsofcourage.org/videos/.

Linda Cheek, MD, the president of Doctors of Courage, is happy to speak to any group that would like to get together to work on what will really solve the problem. Her website is www.lindacheekmd.com

Respectfully,

Name
www.doctorsofcourage.org

 

FB post:

The country needs a legislator—maybe you—who puts the country’s interest over his/her own. We are throwing money away because of a government-created, fake “crisis” with the only intent of making money for special interest law enforcement groups and agencies. Read Ronald Libby’s masterpiece “The Criminalization of Medicine” and learn the history of what you have walked into. Learn the truth on www.doctorsofcourage.org. The government is actually creating addiction by the increased anxiety of legitimate patients who need legitimate medicines to maintain a quality of life. We can give you the information on how government ignorance and mishandling of the facts is actually creating the problem you are attempting to control, and won’t with your current methods. The centuries-old percentage of addiction has always been 1%. It was 1% when the fake government agencies decided to criminalize the legitimate use of opioids in the 1990’s. It is now climbing (slightly, to 1.3%) due to government-created anxiety (the #1 acidifier of the body) in legitimate patients now being tortured with lack of treatment.

Please become a supporter of stopping this never-ending waste of taxpayer’s money. Learn what WILL work. Stop destroying the lives of 33% of the citizens over the 1% that you aren’t helping anyway. Learn how you can help be learning the REAL cause of Addiction and Drug Abuse, which can be seen on a video on https://www.doctorsofcourage.org/videos/. Linda Cheek, MD, the president of Doctors of Courage, can speak to any group to work on what will really solve the problem. Her website is: www.lindacheekmd.com

Tweet:

Needed: decrease the deficit and stop attacks on citizens by rogue agencies supporting themselves with US tax dollars. For the truth about the fake, government-created “opioid crisis”, go to www.doctorsofcourage.org. Stop
throwing money down a bottomless pit.

Women's stories of gaslighting (to be written)

To be written

Women's stories of pain (to be written)

To be written

 

Caduseus

An example of female medical professionals who have had their lives ruined by the US government using the Controlled Substance Act illegally.

A mortar and pestle representing pharmacy
Amanda Leche, PA

Amanda Leche, PA

Greenville, SC
Indicted Oct, 2018
Still waiting for conclusion

Amy Pearson, MD

Amy Pearson, MD

Richmond Hill, GA
Arrested Oct, 2018
Indicted Dec, 2018
Still waiting for conclusion

Anita Dawson, DO

Anita Dawson, DO

Milton, WV
Plea Jan, 2013
Sentenced to 2 years

Barbara Lang, clinic owner

Barbara Lang, Owner

Chattanooga, TN
Convicted Jan, 2015
Sentenced to 280 yr

Brenda Banks, MD

Brenda Banks, MD

Columbus, OH
Arrested Jan, 2o12
Convicted 2012
Sentenced to 48 months

Celia Lloyd-Turner, MD

Celia Lloyd-Turner, MD

Toney, AL
Indicted April, 2019
Plea Feb, 2020
Sentenced to 2 yr home confinement

Carol Jessop, MD

Carol Jessop, MD

Oakland, CA
Indicted July, 2015
Still waiting on conclusion

Connie Basch, MD

Corinne Basch, MD

Arcata, CA
BOM attack May, 2019
Agreement with Board of Medicine 
35 month probation

Cynthia Cadet MD

Cynthia Cadet, MD

Parkland, FL
Indicted Aug, 2011
Convicted July, 2013
Sentenced to 6 1/2 yr

Elizabeth Korcz, MD

Elizabeth Korcz, MD

Hoover, AL
Arrested Aug, 2017
Plea  Dec, 2020
Sentenced to 4 yr 4 mo

Freeda Flynn, MD

Freeda Flynn, MD

Saint Clairsville, OH
Indicted Sept, 2019
Convicted Jan, 2023

Lisa Tseng, DO

Hsiu-Ying Tseng, DO

Rowland Heights, CA
Convicted Oct, 2015
Sentenced to 30 yr

Jayam K. Iyer, MD<br />

Jayam Krishna Iyer, MD

Clearwater, FL
Plea Sept, 2018
Sentenced to 6 mo

Jessica Spayd, ANP

Jessica J. Spayd, FNP

Eagle River, AK
Arrested Oct, 2019
Convicted Oct, 2022

Kim Feldman

Kim Feldman, wife of MD

Tampa, FL
Indicted Dec, 2014
Convicted Feb, 2016
Sentenced to 4 yr

 

Kristen Holland

Kristen Holland, Pharmacist

Little Rock, AR
Arrested May, 2015
Still waiting for conclusion

Linda Cheek, MD

Linda Cheek, MD

Dublin, VA
Indicted June, 2012
Convicted Feb, 2013
Sentenced to 33 mo

 

Lyn Kahn

Lyn Kahn, wife of MD

Casper, WY
Indicted Jan, 2017
Plea April, 2019
Sentenced to Time served

Madhu Aggarwal, MD

Madhu Aggarwal, MD

Weirton, WV
Plea July, 2018
Sentenced to 6 mo home detention

Margaret Easley, NP

Margaret Easley, NP

Lander, WY
Indicted July, 2018
Plea Oct 2019
Sentenced to 1 year probation

Marie Nazaire, PA

Marie Nazaire, PA

Brooklyn, NY
Indicted 2017
Still waiting for conclusion

Merideth Norris, DO

Merideth Norris, DO

Kennebunk, ME
Arrested Oct, 2022

Melany Mencer-Parks, MD

Melanie Mencer-Parks, MD

Houston, T
Arrested Aug, 2016
Plea Nov, 2016
Sentenced to 1 yr 1day

 

Qing McGaha, MD

Qing Lu McGaha, MD

Clearwater, FL
Indicted Jan, 2022

Regan Nichols, DO

Regan Nichols, DO

Midwest City, OK
Arrested June, 2017
Convicted April, 2021
Sentenced to 7 yr

Robin Cox, DO, victim of illegal government overreach

Robin Cox, DO

Rodgers, AR
Indicted Oct, 2019
Plea May, 2020
Sentenced to 3 yr

Rosalind Sugarmann, owner of Addiction Specialists, Inc

Roz Sugarmann

Allison Park, PA
Indicted April, 2016
Plea Dec, 2016
Sentenced to 1 yr & 1 day

Ruth D. Jones, MD

Ruth D. Jones, MD

Johnstown, PA
Plea Nov, 2019
Sentenced to 2 yr probation

Sandra Kincaid

Sandra Kincaid, owner

Maryville, TN
Raided 2010
Convicted Oct, 2013
Sentenced to 39 yr

Stephanie Tarapchak, MD

Stephanie Tarapchak, DO

Ashland, PA
Convicted Oct, 2015
Sentenced to 7.5-15 yrs

Suwarna Tilak, MD

Suwarna Tilak, MD

Jacksonville, FL
Raid, Oct, 2017
Settled Sept, 2018
Financial reimbursement

TaShawna Stokes, MD

TaShawna Stokes, MD

Kennesaw, GA
Indicted July, 2015
Husband Incarcerated.

Tressie Duffy, MD

Tressie Duffy, MD

Martinsburg, WV
Indicted Sept, 2014
Convicted June, 2016
Sentenced to 1 yr + 1 day

Vivian Herrero, MD

Vivian M. Herrero, MD

Dunedin, FL
Indicted Oct, 2022

The ladies below are ones I don’t have pictures of, but have been attacked.  For more detailed information on them, go to Professionals Attacked under Victims on the Menu

Abreu, Vanja FL-Miami
Ajrawat, Sukhveen Kaur MD-Potomac
Akremi, Janet MO-Boonville
Akwuba, Lillian AL-Montgomery
Almanza, Eklis FL-Hialeah
Altman, Maureen FL-Tampa
Amedome, Enna TX-Spring
Anderson, Natalie A. GA-Brunswick
Antle, Dawn IN-Jeffersonville
Arnold, Janet WA-Richland
Askari, Nevorn GA-Monroe
Atkins, Tara GA-Cartersville
Averill, Lynn FL-Pompano Beach
Avery-Kelly, Arnita GA-Decatur
Bailey, Heather PA-Exeter Township
Baker, Yvette DE-Dover
Bangura, Luella IN-Carmel
Barbuto, Tina FL-Boca Raton
Barker, Sara TX-Carrizo Springs
Barnes, Shanta LA-Baton Rouge
Barnett, Sherry L. TN-Jonesborough
Berlin, Monica Ann CA-Del Mar
Berry, Kristy KY-Paintsville
Bethencourt, Megaly S FL-Miami
Biggs, Carol GA-Valdosta
Biggs, Nilaja GA-Valdosta
Blake, Faith TN-Chattanooga
Bolles, Olivia FL-Tampa (Dr. in Delaware)
Bond, Mary Ann TN-Bells
Bordeaux, Deborah SC-Myrtle Beach
Bozer, Amanda FL-Broward
Brown, Loretta PA-Landsowne
Brown, Tayjha PA-Coatesville
Bruce, Barbara A. LA-New Orleans
Bryan, Lauran MI-Detroit
Burgess, Arduth MI-Mason
Byrd, Vanessa AR-Little Rock
Camara, Yolanda FL-Brandon
Cannata, Rosetta V. FL-Osprey
Cantrell, Tammy KY-Paintsville
Caraceni, Leslie MA-Worcester
Carman, Toni OH-Willoughby
Carreras, Candace A FL-Boca Raton
Carter, Beth MI-Southfield
Carter, Betty Jo FL-Ruskin
Cearns, Donna AR-Little Rock
Chai, Christina NY-Yonkers
Chavarin, Mona Alicia CA-Fresno
Chettiar, Janaki
Ciamacco, Felicia OH-New Albany
Clardy, Christina TX-Houston
Clark, Amanda WV-Martinsburg
Clark, Monica Raynette VA-Woodbridge
Cleggett, Jacqueline LA-New Orleans
Clemons, Clarisse NY-Rockville Centre
Clemons, Cynthia TN-Knoxville
Climer, Karen OH-Alexandria
Colasante, Ona FL-Gainesville
Colbert, Tracie WV-Martinsburg
Collier, Serissa L KY-Pikeville
Collins, Christina TN-Knoxville
Columbus, Lynne C. FL-Clearwater
Conner, Odean AL-Gadsden
Connolly, Christine Ann CO-Littleton
Cordes, Jamie Chiles TN-Maryville
Cortez, Debra PA-Bristol
Craig, Gazelle TX-Houston
Cronier, Elizabeth AL-Montgomery
Cullins, Suzette LA-New Orleans
Daniels, Toni CA-Oakland
Dateshidze, Jane NJ-Medford
Davis, Schara Monique AL-Huntsville
Davtyan, Anush CA-Reseda
Dawson, Anita WV-Milton
Dela Cruz, Fanny MI-Livonia
Deloach, Betty LA-Shreveport
Demille, Julie Ann OR-Portland
Devalle, Stacey PA-Exeter Township
Dickenson, Eva MD-Delaware
Dismukes, Jennifer OK-western
Donald, Felicia VA-Alexandria
Dossey, Katherine OK-Beggs
Drust, Susan MI-North Shore
Dunn, Cindy Louise Hyche AL-Moody
Duong, Khanh Van Kim FL-Broward
Easley, Margaret WY-Lander
Echarri, Maria FL-Miami
Edwards, Joyce MD-Largo
Egbuniwe, Azuka OK-Texoma
Ehtesham, Uzma VA-Norton
Eicher, Mary Jane FL-St. Petersburg
Ellis, Jeri Lynn OK-Shawnee
Emerson, Teresa VA-Chilhowie
Ennis, Evelyne GA-Gray
Escobar, Ereida A. VA-Arlington
Esponda, Tamara FL-Hialeah
Essian, Adeline FL-Broward 
Esslinger, Nancy PA-Upper Chichester
Evans, Jessica FL-St. Petersburg
Fanopoulos, Jennifer ID-Meridian
Farrell, Jennifer CT-New Haven
Fetzer, Sherry Ann TN-Maryville
Fisher, Ardella TX-Houston
Foong, Lee Lee IL-Sterling
Fowlkes, Sandra TN-Ripley
Franklin, Jennifer MI-Oak Park
Fuertes, Gladys FL-Tampa
Gaitan, Liz GA-Lilburn
Gajduko, Marina MD-Timonium
Garcia, Nancy FL-Miami
Garg, Madhu CA-Glendora
Gayle, Francene Aretha AL-Huntsville
Geada, Aimee FL-Miami
Germeil, Jeanne FL-North Miami Beach
Gerson, Arlene PA-Philadelphia
Gillespie, Dorothy MS-Hattiesburg
Gillis, Jacinta FL-Pinellas Park
Glaz, Reynat NY-Brooklyn
Godec, Jeanine WA-Seattle
Gonzalez, Angelina FL-Miami
Gonzalez, Magaly FL-Hialeah
Gonzalez, Michele FL-Tampa
Gratz, Addie OK-Texoma
Green, Toni MI-St. Clair Shores
Grigoryan, Nuritsa CA-Los Angeles
Grossman, Andrea NY-White Plains
Gulde, Janis TX-Webster
Gundersen-Watson, Gay IN-Fort Wayne
Guzman, Tamral “Tammy” TN-Maryville
Hamilton, Brandy Lynn GA-Gray
Harding-Huffine, Sarah KS-Manhattan
Harris, Althea TX-Houston
Hart, Louann IA-Des Moines
Hassman, Jeri AZ-Tucson
Hayes, Clella KY-Tompkinsville
Hebble, Karen FL-Fort Myers
Henry, Wendi TN-Maryville
Herpin, Callie TX-Houston
Hess, Jennifer PA-Washington
Hibson, Janelle A. VA-Woodbridge
Hill, Karen AL-Southern
Hoffstetter, Sylvia TN-Knoxville
Hofschulz, Lisa MI-Wauwatosa
Hollander, Corina AZ-Tucson
Hollier, Lisa L. TX-Sunnyvale
Holliman, Cassandra AL-Fayette
Hollis, Samantha DE-Wilmington
Huffman, Alice OH-South Point
Huffman, Denise OH-South Point
Hunt, Jill IA-Dubuque
Ilem, Priscilla NJ-Wayne
Iles, Lynette I. IA-Washington
Isbell, Sherry OK-Chandler
Jakacki, Lilian NY-Queens
Jaszczult, Joan NJ-Belleville
Johnson, Teresa FL-Lecanto
Johnston, Sharon L FL-Naples
Jones, Monica OH-Hillsboro
Jowers, Allison TN-Ripley
Kammeyer, Ann C. WA-Marysville
Keith, Rosalie NY-Alfred
Kennedy, Gloria Faye VA-Richlands
Kigham, Ndufola TX-Desoto
Kirkland, Buffy Rene TN-Maryville
Kirkwood, Beverly OH-Dayton
Kutschbach, Joan Z CA-Elk Grove
Lackey, Shelby KY-Paintsville
Lang, Mary Jean KY-London
Le, Kimberly T. CA-Carmichael
Leblanc, Ana CA-Chino Hills
Ledesma, Laura FL-Hialeah
Lee, Chia Jean TX-Plano
Lewis, Brenda GA-Atlanta
Lewis, Verna VA-Roanoke
Liva, Elaina FL-Pompano Beach
Livingston, Sandra MS-Cleveland
Lizama, Adelaida FL-Boca Raton
Lloyd, Robin FL-St. Petersburg
Lockhart, Beverly KY-Pikeville
Lopresti, Jacqueline NJ-Fair Haven
Louis-Jacques, Marjorie NY-Brooklyn
Lozada, Esmeralda TX-Dallas
Lucente, Julia I. OH-Dayton
Lumpkin, Christina TN-Ripley
Makarova, Viktoriya PA-Philadelphia
Marino, Barbara D TX-Houston
Marks, Heather L. TN-Murfreesboro
Marlow, Lea IN-Jeffersonville
Martell, Indira FL-Miami
Martinez, Estrella NY-Albany
Masso, Cynthia PA-Philadelphia
Mastrin, Marcia AZ-Phoenix
Mata, Danielle C. WA-Richland
Mata, Esperanza MA-South Chatham
Matalon, Vivienne NJ-Cherry Hill
Mathews, Amanda OH-Hillsboro
McCune, Bridgett FL-Destin
McGaha, Qing Lu FL-Clearwater
McIlhenny, Lisa NY-Voorhees
McIntosh-Filmore, Margaret NC-Charlotte
McNeil, Apryl Mamzette NY-New York
Meghnot, Lillian MI-Detroit
Mentzer, Tanya AL-Hoover
Merced, Teresa KY-Jackson
Milan, Edita WV-Harrison Cty
Miller, Elesa TN-Ripley
Miller, Myra Sue WV-Williamson
Million, Melisa OK-Tulsa
Mitchell, Sonya MI-Southfield
Mohammed, Camille FL-Clearwater
Mohanty, Nibedita VA-Stafford
Morford, Shelly Lynn FL-Fort Lauderdale
Moyer, Susan WI-Wauwatosa
Mrdjen, Jasna CA-Los Gatos
Mullan, Lucretia FL-St. Petersburg
Murphy, Jennifer AL-Decatur
Naushad, Wajiha MO-Town and Country
Naylor, Sharon TN-Lafollette
Nebbari, Rajaa PA-Scranton
Newman, Courtney TN-Knoxville
Nguyen, Kaitlyn Phuong CA-Fountain Valley
Niamatali, Shirley TX-Dallas
Norris, Merideth ME-Lewiston
Nunez, Diane CA-Glendora
Nunez, Lenele Maria CA-Fresno
Oates, Myrtle TX-Houston
Ofume, Rosemary GA-Atlanta
O’Hara, Janet OH-Painesville
Osire, Agnes TX-Houston
Otano, Martha FL-Cape Coral
Ott, Stephanie AL-Montgomery
Ovsepian, Lianna “Lili” CA-Glendale
Ozoh, Cheryl MI-West Bloomfield
Ozuligbo, Ngozi Justina AL-Birmingham
Parker, Bridgette AL-Mobile
Parrado, Evelyn FL-Miami
Patel, Krina MI-Shelby Township
Pealor, Erin TN-Memphis
Perry, Susan MS-Biloxi
Perry-Thornton, Elena MI-Detroit
Petway, Britney TN-Jackson
Philipoff, Diana FL-Pompano Beach
Pinkard, Jean MI-Farmington Hills
Piquant, Loran NY-Queens
Pirie, Lynne Bursey AZ-Phoenix
Pliner, Lisa MA-Boston
Polukhin, Elena Lev MN-Bloomington
Porro, Yamille Duain FL-Hialeah
Prichard, Jennifer C WA-Richland
Purvi, Rana CT-Stamford
Rahbarvafaei, Saloumeh CA-Northridge
Raines, Kristen AR-Little Rock
Rakhit, Jayati Gupta OH-Moreland Hills
Reimers, Elizabeth TN-Winchester
Resnick, Alina M. MD-Timonium
Richards, Linda IN-Kokomo
Ritter, Michele MI-Waterford
Rivera, Joanne NJ-Pennsauken
Rodriguez-Izanga, Clara S. FL-Miami Beach
Roggow, Debra FL-Fort Myers
Rongione, Angela PA-Philadelphia
Roos, Linda J. TX-Houston
Roy, Manjula FL-Butler Beach
Russell, Kathryn Nikole TN-Memphis
Sabugo, Evelyn Frances PA-Philadelphia
Sachy, Maureen GA-Gray
Sadler, Nancy OH-Waverly
Salouha, Samah OH-Strongsville
Sanchez, Tania FL-Miami
Sanders, Johnnie Chaisson AL-Montgomery
Sanders, Lisa GA-Fort Gordon
Schlosser, Theresa “Tammy” LA-New Orleans
Schneider, Amy PA-York
Schneider, Barbara  PA-Philadelphia
Schneider, Linda KS-Haysville
Severio, Charlene LA-Baton Rouge
Sharma, Kiran TX-Webster
Sheldon, Tina CO-Silverthorne
Snook, Tonia LA-Slidell
Sparks, Lisa AZ-Phoenix
Speir, Kay OK-Tulsa
Spina, Kim NY-White Plains
Stapleton, Tina Marie KY-Paintsville
Stelling, Heather MO-Joplin
Suggs, Windy SC-Myrtle Beach
Sutherland, Deborah SC-Myrtle Beach
Swanson, Shannon L. OH-Andover
Sweet, Lynn AZ-Ahwatukee
Tarapchak, Stephanie PA-Ashland
Taylor, Alicia TN-Lafollette
Taylor, Stephanie GA-Douglas
Temeck, Barbara OH-Cincinnati
Temponeras, Margaret OH-Wheelersburg
Tenhet, Melissa KY-London
Thomas, Deborah G TN-Maryville
Thomas, Sabrina PA-Greensburg
Thompson, Tammy Lynn NC-Tabor City
Tilton, Pauline CA-Hesperia
Torres, Enemisis FL-Miami
Tran, Amy MI-Macomb Township
Truong, Hong FL-Dunedin
Tumlinson, Lisa TX-Dallas
Turturo, Bernice FL-Pompano Beach
Valentine, Charise MI-Dearborn Heights
Van, Thu-Hoa MS-Biloxi
Vanhoose, Barbie KY-Paintsville
Vercauteren, Joyce MD-Greenbelt
Vigil, Gloria NM-Albuquerque
Wadley, Esther MO-Republic
Wagoner, Marilyn IN-Kokomo
Wagoner, Michelle IN-Kokomo
Waldo, Donna A MO-St. Louis
Washington-Bhamre, Sharon NY-Long Island
Webman, Dara GA-Lilburn
Wheeler, Julie WV-Oak Hill
Williams, Monique B CA-Los Angeles
Winkler, Heidi Ann CA-Norwalk
Womack, Holli TN-Knoxville
Wyatt, Felicie G. AR-Little Rock
Yandle, Susan H FL-Jacksonville
Zampogna, Jennifer PA-Mechanicsburg
Zeman, Christine AR-Little Rock
Caduseus

Women who have had their lives ended in the fight to end the war on drugs, doctors, and pain patients.

A mortar and pestle representing pharmacy
Zena Crenshaw-Logal, JD

Zena Crenshaw-Logal, JD

Fought to bring the Justice System to the United Nations for Human Rights Violations.
Died suspiciously

Terri Lewis

Terri Lewis, PhD

Advocate for pain management

Lisa Edwards

Lisa Edwards

60 y/o dies in police car after being denied at hospital in Tennessee.

Debbiek Nickels Heck, MD

Debbie Nickels Heck, MD

Physician targeted, died from pain

Siobhan Reynolds lecturing.

Siobhan Reynolds

Fought the fight for years
Died Dec 2011 by government 

Dr. Susan Moore of Indianapolis, IN. Left picture in hospital with COVID. Right side picture in her healthy past.

Susan Moore

Doctor in pain discriminated against by hospital.

clipard of nurse with cap and dress.

Sandy Good, RN

A nurse at Vanderbilt University, she’d injured her back doing her job. She died 6yrs ago from an overdose.

Mission

Free Our Innocent Doctors!

The War on Drugs was a political agenda started in 1904 to make America a world power and to disenfranchise minorities to keep the voting masses a white majority. It is purely racist. No one should be backing this today. You can learn the history by reading the book by David F. Musto, MD: The American Disease, Origins of Narcotic Control. I summarize the facts in this book in my webinar recording that can be found HERE.

The War on Blacks is an effect of this early attempt to disenfranchise blacks. After the Civil War, white leaders looked for ways to keep blacks from voting.  Workers at that time, in fields and in factories, were given cocaine to help increase their activity and productivity. So this was used against blacks with propaganda. Opium was propagandized against Orientals. Through this propaganda, Dr. Hamilton Wright, the father of American narcotic laws, achieved the passage of the Harrison Act in 1914. 

Every drug used to create the Controlled Substance Act was purely political. And if you just learned from history, we would end this today. Learn more on the Communication Campaign page.

A Word

From Our Founder

After 7 years of fighting this fight, I hope to see people learn what is needed to get the Controlled Substance Act repealed.  My goal all along has been to free the innocent and stop the attacks. I hope that my mission can be fulfilled in my lifetime.

My thoughts go to all the innocent parties/advocates that are now deceased who will be sending up praises from heaven: James Graves, MD, Rev. Ronald Myers, MD, Terri Lewis, and more.

– Linda Cheek, MD

About the Author Linda Cheek, MD

Linda Cheek is a teacher and disenfranchised medical doctor, turned activist, author, and speaker. A victim of prosecutorial misconduct and outright law-breaking of the government agencies DEA, DHHS, and DOJ, she hopes to be a part of exonerating all doctors illegally attacked through the Controlled Substance Act. She holds the key to success, as she can offset the government propaganda that drugs cause addiction with the truth: The REAL Cause of Drug Abuse.
Get a free gift to learn how the government is breaking the law to attack your doctor: Click here to get my free gift

 

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