Curtis Webb answered the phone, heard the first part of her story and then asked where she lived. As soon as he found out her location and address, he told her to stay put since he would be right over. True to his word, he was there in 20 minutes. Curtis Webb turned out to be a Godsend and went right to work getting every detailed medical record and autopsy report he could get his hands on.
The claim was filed and pediatrician Dr. Edward Yazbak agreed to be their expert witness after Angie searched the internet in desperation looking for one. At the end of September 2001, Curtis Webb finally job function email list got a complete autopsy report and it just happened to be an additional six pages more than the one Angie received three years earlier. The autopsy report came just days before Angie and Curtis flew to Massachusetts for the VICP hearing.
The hearing was held in a ritzy hotel and was called a “Masters Court.” Master French, a woman, presided as the judge. Robert Daum, the inventor of Tetrammune, was the VICP and Dept. of Health and Human Service's (HHS) expert witness. Mr. Menowski was the attorney for HHS. When the 34 cases reported to VAERS regarding Tetrammune was brought to Daum's attention, he passed it off as a coincidence. When the judge addressed Daum point blank with the question of “What kind of reactions do occur with Tetrammune?” he repeatedly told the judge that there are no known adverse reactions. She finally said, “Don't you tell me there are no known reactions. This is what I do for a living and I see case after case of adverse reactions from these vaccines.”
The judge took both attorneys aside and told Menowski
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