Sol Invictus
11-15-2010, 02:18 PM
November 14th, 2010 1:38 am ET
World-renown doctor who owned Lakeland Veterinary Hospital and conducted research on paralyzed swans and dead birds since onset of the Gulf of Mexico operation has disappeared, just before due to release his research. Citizen reporters trying to locate him continue to be stonewalled, even someone who has known him for years who says his sudden absence is out of character.
In an era in which kidnapping, torture and assassinations are officially authorized in the United States and the petrochemical-industrial-complex has silenced reporters from providing Gulf region information in best interest of the public and paid scientists for whitewashed research reports, when a prestigious research scientist suddenly disappears, naturally, red flags are hoisted.
USAF veteran who worked as an Intelligence Operations Specialist in the US and in Europe, Anita Stewart is now flying such a flag high for the swan doctor, Dr. Geoffrey Gardner.
"Swans were a big story when Testing the Water had a Sarasota sand sample at 173ppm on September 22nd," stated Stewart.
Gardner had been arrested three months earlier, in June, in the middle of his research. On July 9, with what appears to be as rough as a mug shot of the prominent veterinarian, the Lakeland Ledger reported that Garner was charged with possession of a controlled substance including pain medication Torbutrol and Torbugesic liquid.
Was he targeted due to his research?
According to the Ledger, the investigation had begun "in May." The Drug Enforcement Agency, Florida Department of Business & Professional Regulation and Lakeland Police Department were all involved in it and later turned it over to Lakeland police "to pursue state charges."
Gardner's DEA license to prescribe controlled substances expired September 2009 and at the time of the Ledger report, it was unclear why the investigation was really initiated.
"Gardner maintains the lapse in his DEA license was a clerical oversight and he has not renewed it since."
The Ledger reporter Gardner saying, "I think the state attorney is an idiot for pursuing this. Surely they have bigger fish to fry. It's completely a waste of taxpayers' money and completely unnecessary."
The case was resolved within a week. By September 23, Fox News reported on Gardner's work, as per Florida Oil Spill Law on September 24: (http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/sarasota-area/comment-page-1)
More info here:
http://www.examiner.com/human-rights-in-national/gulf-swan-doctor-disappearance
World-renown doctor who owned Lakeland Veterinary Hospital and conducted research on paralyzed swans and dead birds since onset of the Gulf of Mexico operation has disappeared, just before due to release his research. Citizen reporters trying to locate him continue to be stonewalled, even someone who has known him for years who says his sudden absence is out of character.
In an era in which kidnapping, torture and assassinations are officially authorized in the United States and the petrochemical-industrial-complex has silenced reporters from providing Gulf region information in best interest of the public and paid scientists for whitewashed research reports, when a prestigious research scientist suddenly disappears, naturally, red flags are hoisted.
USAF veteran who worked as an Intelligence Operations Specialist in the US and in Europe, Anita Stewart is now flying such a flag high for the swan doctor, Dr. Geoffrey Gardner.
"Swans were a big story when Testing the Water had a Sarasota sand sample at 173ppm on September 22nd," stated Stewart.
Gardner had been arrested three months earlier, in June, in the middle of his research. On July 9, with what appears to be as rough as a mug shot of the prominent veterinarian, the Lakeland Ledger reported that Garner was charged with possession of a controlled substance including pain medication Torbutrol and Torbugesic liquid.
Was he targeted due to his research?
According to the Ledger, the investigation had begun "in May." The Drug Enforcement Agency, Florida Department of Business & Professional Regulation and Lakeland Police Department were all involved in it and later turned it over to Lakeland police "to pursue state charges."
Gardner's DEA license to prescribe controlled substances expired September 2009 and at the time of the Ledger report, it was unclear why the investigation was really initiated.
"Gardner maintains the lapse in his DEA license was a clerical oversight and he has not renewed it since."
The Ledger reporter Gardner saying, "I think the state attorney is an idiot for pursuing this. Surely they have bigger fish to fry. It's completely a waste of taxpayers' money and completely unnecessary."
The case was resolved within a week. By September 23, Fox News reported on Gardner's work, as per Florida Oil Spill Law on September 24: (http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/sarasota-area/comment-page-1)
More info here:
http://www.examiner.com/human-rights-in-national/gulf-swan-doctor-disappearance