Criminal medical malpractice and doctors who offer legal remedies for medical conditions
Angry patients and lawyers at the doctor's office
We strongly disclaim any recommendation of legal services or affiliation with various bar associations, but we have collected a number of links here that do appear to offer such services, many of them quite recent.
However the objective of criminal law is solely to punish. Complainants who desire compensation for damages would ordinarily be pursuing such claims at civil law. Along with their attorneys they would be well advised against using false trappings of criminal law in the pursuit of civil claims. Any accusations of criminality should be made with reference to particular statutes and constitutional authority to prosecute such offenses.
The state medical boards have authority to regulate and discipline practices of medicine just as state bar associations regulate and discipline practices of law. However by polite gentlemen's agreement the lawyers are not pursuing board complaints against physicians because they fear retaliatory bar complaints.
State medical boards have also been illegally confederated outside of a proper national jurisdiction just as the state lottery commissions have, for the purpose of enabling and coordinating stateside games of vice to evade the law and operate outside of hostile federal and state jurisdictions.
Human life from its very inception is played as a game of heavy vice and carnality at all modern hospitals and clinics, and claims of medical malpractice for unjustified mayhem and ruthless excision of pounds of flesh must compete against counter-claims of unpaid medical bills and related debts.
Playing cards are dealt, dice are rolled, and cigars and bottles of whiskey are passed out when babies are born, and there's a vague hand-waving cause of action in helpless courts to recoup drinking, drugging, gambling and prostitution losses from liquor merchants, drug dealers, pimps and extortioners at such establishments where humans are otherwise said to be cared for medically or healthwise.






























