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  From the January 2003 Idaho Observer

Vaccines and medicine -- not father -- caused Florida baby's death, toxicologist concludes

ORLANDO, Florida -- Mohammed Al-Bayati, Ph.D., recently published a report
that identifies the cause of the injuries that led to the 1997 death of Baby Alan. Dr.
Al-Bayati's findings support the beliefs of vaccine damage experts and activists from
all over the world; that Baby Alan died of complications resulting from the
administration contraindicated vaccines -- not from being shaken to death by his
father. 

“I identified the causes of injuries in this case. Mr. Yurko is innocent,” Dr. al-Bayati
stated. Dr. Al-Bayati, a toxicologist and pathologist, enjoys international acclaim for
his ground-breaking research into the toxicological roots of AIDS. Now he has
become the latest member in a growing body of scientists and lay people who are
part of the Yurko Project. 

The baby's father Alan Yurko was sentenced to life plus ten years in prison for
shaking his baby to death. Yurko's conviction and sentence is symptomatic of a
national trend that has, in potentially hundreds of cases, wrongfully imprisoned
parents for shaken baby syndrome (SBS) as a cover for vaccine damage. 

One day in Nov., 1997, Baby Alan, born in a weakened state after a difficult
pregnancy just two and one half months before, stopped breathing. Yurko rushed
his son to the hospital where he died a few hours later. 

Dr. Al-Bayati found that Baby Alan had been given high doses of sodium
bicarbonate and heparin, which caused cardiac arrest and internal bleeding --
symptoms similar to SBS. Dr. Al-Bayati explored the toxicological aspects of the
unfortunate baby's case because the child did not develop SBS-like symptoms until
after he was admitted to the hospital. 

Aside from Dr. Al-Bayati's thorough investigation into the cause of Baby Alan's
death being consistent with the facts of the case that prove Yurko's innocence, his
inquiries bring to light certain discrepancies that indicate prosecutorial misconduct.
“They said they had examined the baby's heart, but they didn't, because it had already
been harvested for donation; they did not review the child's medical history, nor did
they analyze the effects of the vaccines and medications that were in the baby's
system,” he observed. 

“They sent an innocent man to jail,” commented Dr. Al-Bayati after he had
conducted an investigation into the baby's death -- something Dr. Al-Bayati claims
was not done by the attending medical examiner. 

Dr. Al-Bayati determined that the baby's death was vaccine-and-medication induced;
the reaction of the child's system to an overload of drugs and antibiotics. 

The implications of the Yurko case are huge. “No one has looked at the toxicological
effects that medications may have on a segment of the population, and many cases
labeled SIDS or SBS are probably something else,” Dr. Al-Bayati said. 

The Yurko project filed a 100-page appeal in the Florida supreme Court in March,
2002. The hearing is expected to be heard sometime this year. The Yurko case is
getting a boost by the recent release of three other Florida men who, it was
determined, were wrongfully imprisoned for SBS. Prosecutorial misconduct was a
key component of those convictions as well. Dr. Al-Bayati's report can be found at:
www.freeyurko.bizland.com/albayati1.html 
(check this out-it's extremely detailed...)