Message from @**Åli̊čeȰn✨Q̣̇✨**

Discord ID: 463036022293397504


2018-07-01 17:37:40 UTC  

When I was 12 my grandmother and I took a train to Alabama from California, then we went see her kinfolk in Tennessee. I saw fireflies for the first time. I told her they were flys with flashlights in their butts @Jayde

2018-07-01 17:37:40 UTC  

You have gained a rank @Charlie, you just advanced to 13 . Thanks for all you do Patriot!

2018-07-01 17:37:42 UTC  

International cabal

2018-07-01 17:38:05 UTC  

Hillary was controlling the FBI

2018-07-01 17:38:15 UTC  

CINCINNATI, OH (FOX19) -
Four people are facing charges related to pill mill crackdowns in Hamilton, federal officials announced Thursday.

A federal grand jury charged the suspects in three separate cases for their role in the deaths of three patients and more than $2.4 million in healthcare fraud.

In the first case, Dr. Saad Sakkal is accused of prescribing patients dangerous drug cocktails and illegally distributing drugs, including opioids, according to a 39-count indictment.

Sakkal is charged with being responsible for the deaths of two patients who died in 2016 due to complications from drug use.

It’s alleged that Sakkal prescribed medically-dangerous combinations of controlled substances, including:

Holy Trinity - an opiate, a benzodiazepine, and a stimulant
Prescriptive Speedball – an opiate and a stimulant
Triple Threat Heaven – methadone, a benzodiazepine, and a stimulant
Sakkal began practicing at Lindenwald Medical Association, Inc. in Hamilton in February 2015. He owned and operated the medical practice Metabolic Care Center in Mason.

“According to the indictment, after Sakkal joined Lindenwald Medical Association the type of patients changed, with Patients waiting long periods of time in order to see Sakkal, including waiting outside in the parking lot for the practice to open,” said US Attorney Benjamin Glassman.

Numerous pharmacies denied filling Sakkal’s prescriptions and pharmacists even called Sakkal to warn him of the risks of his prescribing practices. He then organized a protest of local pharmacies.

The previous owner of the Lindenwald Medical Association is also facing charges.

Dr. Rakesh Sharma, 47, allegedly directed employees to see as many patients per day as they could and promised bonuses based on the receivables in the office.

“The indictment alleges that urine tests were given to patients but never reviewed,” said Glassman.

2018-07-01 17:38:21 UTC  

Holy shift

2018-07-01 17:38:32 UTC  

The indictment also alleges Sharma and co-conspirator nurse practitioner Mike Jones, 51, of Liberty Township ordered genetic tests regardless of medical necessity and received kickbacks from the lab processing the tests.

In another case, Dr. Nilesh Jobalia, 53, of Cincinnati is facing a 114-count indictment alleging that as the owner and operator of Cincinnati Centers for Pain Relief in Hamilton, patients were prescribed fentanyl, oxycodone, methadone, morphine, and other controlled substances without being seen by a doctor.

According to the indictment, at least one patient died because of the prescribed substances and unnecessary prescriptions were billed to Medicare, Medicaid, and the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation.

It’s also alleged that Jobalia received more than $103,000 from a pharmaceutical company for purported speaking engagements about Fentanyl Spray.

2018-07-01 17:38:34 UTC  

@Charlie I honestly believe this area is one of the most beautiful in the country. Its breathtaking at times

2018-07-01 17:38:53 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/463035780495835136/image.png

2018-07-01 17:39:08 UTC  

@Badgergirl so u connect lines, u gat Q

2018-07-01 17:39:11 UTC  

Q

2018-07-01 17:39:27 UTC  

A liar now

2018-07-01 17:39:30 UTC  

🤣

2018-07-01 17:39:40 UTC  

🤺

2018-07-01 17:39:44 UTC  

Yes, beautiful, I remember little creeks running through people's yards

2018-07-01 17:39:53 UTC  

Read Q before voice.

2018-07-01 17:40:35 UTC  

Didn’t want to die

2018-07-01 17:40:52 UTC  

AUSTIN (KXAN) — An investigation by the Office of the City Auditor found a Code Department inspector used a city vehicle to visit family members on city time outside of his work zone, logging more than 1,330 miles in those visits and failing to meet inspection quotas, according to the investigation report.

Code Department officials noticed the employee’s productivity levels dropping in November 2017 and began investigating. The inspector, who was placed on administrative leave in January and later resigned his position, is not named in the report.

You can read the audit report here.
Cora Wright, director of the Code Department, said improvements to oversight, standardized performance metrics and caseload monitoring helped the department discover the “apparent misconduct.” Those improvements were put in place after a department “realignment” in October 2017, according to Wright’s response letter in the audit.

City auditors reviewed the Code employee’s GPS history, mileage and work history.

Between August and December 2017, the inspector drove to two residences that were eight and four miles south of his inspection district. His mother, mother-in-law and sister lived in the homes. The employee made more than 88 visits in that timeframe and drove about 1,331 miles, according to the report.

The employee was required to average five inspections per day. From October 2017 through January, the employee averaged less than 1.5 inspections a day, which was the lowest on his team.

2018-07-01 17:41:13 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/463036368562552855/image.jpg

2018-07-01 17:41:27 UTC  

@powde@Powder 💜 dig thru these vids, prolly some stuff on serpant mound ohio https://www.youtube.com/user/MegalithomaniaUK/videos

2018-07-01 17:41:34 UTC  

😮

2018-07-01 17:41:35 UTC  

love the site

2018-07-01 17:41:50 UTC  

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

2018-07-01 17:42:03 UTC  

You Delete What You No Longer Need.
You Save What You Do Need.
Q

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/463036574561468416/DhCPAKQWAAA0QSq.jpg

2018-07-01 17:42:12 UTC  

AUSTIN (KXAN) — This week on State of Texas: lawmakers discuss "red flag" laws and mental health as part of ongoing school safety hearings, a University of Texas pollster examines how Texans feel about the root cause of school shootings and a new look at the significance of the Wendy Davis abortion filibuster, five years later.

House lawmakers consider "red flag" law

With the Santa Fe shooting still fresh in the minds of Texans, House members held a new round of school safety hearings.

On Monday, members started looking at whether Texas should have a "red flag" law. That law would allow family, law enforcement and school officials to request a protective order from a judge to temporarily take guns away from persons deemed "potentially dangerous."

The idea has lawmakers trying to strike a balance between preventing mass shootings and respecting the right to bear arms. Many gun rights activists oppose the proposal, which they perceive as a violation of their Second Amendment rights.

CJ Grisham, the president of Open Carry Texas, attended the hearing at the Capitol, with a handgun visible in a holster on his hip. He criticized the proposal, saying it could hurt the rights of law-abiding gun owners. "You never get good policy when you base it off of emotion," Grisham said.

Probate Judge Guy Herman, however, feels that temporary interventions could stop further violence. "I don't want to see another Santa Fe happen again," Herman said. "There was info out that if it had been given to the right people, maybe we could have stopped that."

Red flag laws aren't the only safety measures on the table. Mental health has also become a major topic of discussion in the efforts to prevent more school shootings.

A group of high school students spoke Thursday before a joint hearing of the House Public Health and Public Education committees. They told lawmakers that mental health resources at school are scarce and hard to access.

2018-07-01 17:42:48 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/463036765704290314/image.jpg

2018-07-01 17:43:06 UTC  

As a veteran I still Don't quite get the civilians..I wonder if other veterans ever felt that way

2018-07-01 17:43:10 UTC  

Question, did the NSA delete needed phone/txt messages also??

2018-07-01 17:43:30 UTC  

Muh Concern

2018-07-01 17:44:01 UTC  

Good Morning to all ☕