01/09/2025 / By Lance D Johnson
In a chilling account that blurs the line between medical malpractice and potential criminality, Dr. Daniel Nagase, a Canadian emergency room physician, has revealed what he believes was an attempted murder of Dr. Gary Davidson, former head of the Red Deer Emergency Department and chairman of Alberta’s COVID data task force.
The alleged incident, which occurred in 2023 at Red Deer Hospital, involved Davidson’s sudden deterioration from pneumonia to a life-threatening sepsis infection caused by five different bacteria—a condition Nagase suggests could only result from the deliberate injection of feces into Davidson’s bloodstream.
The story, shared by Nagase in a recent Substack article, raises troubling questions about the motivations behind the withholding of critical COVID-19 data and the potential dangers faced by medical professionals who challenge the status quo.
Dr. Gary Davidson, a physician who had previously lost his medical license for prescribing Ivermectin and expressing dissenting views on COVID-19, recounted his ordeal to Nagase during a private meeting. Davidson explained that his pneumonia, initially caused by a combination of cold exposure, GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease), and exposure to chicken feces while processing poultry, worsened despite treatment with oral antibiotics. Admitted to Red Deer Hospital, where he had once served as chief of the emergency room, Davidson’s condition took a dramatic turn when he developed sepsis—a blood infection involving five distinct bacteria.
Nagase, an experienced emergency physician, noted the rarity of such a multi-bacterial infection in a patient already receiving intravenous antibiotics. “The most feasible means of delivering multiple live bacteria into the blood is through an actual injection of feces,” Nagase wrote. He outlined three possible explanations: self-harm (Munchausen’s), harm by another person (Munchausen’s by proxy), or attempted murder. Nagase leaned toward the latter, suggesting that someone with knowledge of Davidson’s controversial stance on COVID-19 treatments may have sought to silence him.
When asked if he recalled any conversations or spiritual experiences during his time in the ICU, Davidson reportedly responded with a look of “horror” and declined to elaborate.
The incident takes on added significance given Davidson’s role as chairman of Alberta’s COVID data task force, a $2 million initiative launched in 2022 by Premier Danielle Smith to review the province’s pandemic response. Tasked with assessing the “integrity, validity, reliability, and quality” of COVID-19 data, Davidson’s committee was expected to provide transparency on critical issues such as vaccine safety, treatment protocols, and mortality rates. Yet, more than two years later, no preliminary report or raw data has been released to the public.
Nagase criticized Davidson’s inaction, suggesting that financial incentives and non-disclosure agreements may have taken precedence over public health. “Raw Alberta Health Services data remains under wraps,” Nagase wrote. “I can only speculate as to why life-saving information is still held back under Dr. Gary Davidson’s chairmanship.”
The lack of transparency has had real-world consequences. Nagase cited cases like Sheila Annette Lewis, who died in 2023 after refusing an mRNA vaccine required for a lung transplant, and the ongoing inclusion of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines in childhood immunization schedules despite safety concerns. He also noted a surge in unusual cancers and cardiovascular events following widespread mRNA vaccination—a trend he observed firsthand in his emergency room practice.
Nagase’s revelations come at a time when he himself has faced escalating threats, including a suspicious incident at his home on New Year’s Day. In his article, he announced his decision to discontinue publishing on Substack, citing both personal safety concerns and a sense that he has “nothing left to say.” Yet his critique of Davidson and the broader medical establishment underscores a deeper moral dilemma: the tension between professional obligations and personal fears.
“Crimes flourish when greed, cowardice, and individual decisions putting money, convenience, and one’s own anxieties above the life of another are the norm,” Nagase wrote. He challenged his colleagues to take a stand, arguing that continued silence in the face of injustice is tantamount to complicity. “The difference between evil and good lies in how the principle is used,” he added, urging doctors to prioritize human life over institutional loyalty.
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Tagged Under:
accountability, Alberta, attempted murder, cardiovascular event, COVID data task force, data transparency, Dr. Daniel Nagase, Dr. Gary Davidsom, institutional loyalty, ivermectin, medical corruption, medical ethics, medical malpractice, sepsis, silencing dissent, vaccine damage
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