VERSIÓN EN ESPAÑOL, HAGA CLIC AQUÍ
Would you like to help expose the worldwide “COVID-19” fraud?
If you would like to file your own FOI request to another institution, or obtain an updated response from an institution that already provided a “no records” response in the past, at the bottom of this page is a suggested template.
(I strongly suggest that you use the wording in the template, because it lessens the chance that an institution will waste your time and create confusion with “bogus” isolation records or vague excuses for providing no records.)
Please share with me any responses that you receive! Christinem@fluoridefreepeel.ca.
The following pointers and template are based on my personal experience, which has been mainly with Canadian institutions.
Keep in mind that legislation governing Freedom of Information (FOI), or “Access to Information” requests differs depending on the jurisdiction. You should be able to find online, from both the applicable level of government (i.e. Ontario) and the specific institution you are interested in (i.e. University of Toronto), instructions on how to go about submitting a request.
With Canadian (federal), Ontario (provincial), and municipal requests within Ontario, a request must be framed in terms of records, not requests for answers to questions. (If you want answers to questions there is another process involving “petitions” which I have no experience with.)
Direct your FOI request to whichever institution you are “targeting”. If you want to know what records the “Ministry of Health” has, send your request to the FOI coordinator for the Ministry of Health. And note that private institutions are not subject to FOI requests, but government agencies and government funded organizations (i.e. universities) generally are.
If a request is politically sensitive (like “SARS-COV-2″/”COVID-19” requests) or the FOI coordinator you are dealing with is not very competent, you may find that they try to “blow you off” or discourage you, or advise you to cancel your request or to submit it to another institution instead, or provide official-sounding-but-bogus excuses to cancel your entire request or parts of it. Stand your ground! And note that this is when it’s really helpful to have an understanding of the applicable legislation and to quote it when responding back to the institution.
Contact information for the FOI coordinators for the various Canadian federal institutions are listed here:
https://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/ap/atip-aiprp/coord-eng.asp#N
Note that only Canadian federal intuitions (i.e. Health Canada, PHAC and NRC) demand “proof of right” (a copy of your birth certificate or something along those lines). You don’t need to provide any “proof of right” for provincial (i.e. University of Toronto) or municipal requests.
The name of the applicable legislation will depend on where you live, and whether it’s a federal, provincial or municipal request.
For Canadian federal requests, and for requests within Ontario, a $5 application fee is required for you “Freedom” of Information request. The application fee will be payable to different payees depending on the institution you are dealing with. You can ask the institution if you are uncertain who to make a cheque payable to.
With some institutions you can submit your request and pay the application fee online. If online payment is available, I like to submit online for ease of payment, but I also follow up with an email because I like to have a record showing all the details of my request.
Specifying that you prefer electronic files/letters sent to you via email avoids having the institution try to charge you for photocopying and/or shipping, saves time and makes it easier to share the files online.
For the template below, you would need to edit the parts that are in bold so that it makes sense for whichever request you are working on. But the general outline below may be helpful.
Regarding the section of the template on “publicly available records”: I always include this section because, generally, if an institution has a record that matches what you are requesting but that record is already available to the public elsewhere, then the institution does not have to provide that record to you.
So, if you do not include this section the institution might “refuse access” based on this excuse, giving the false impression that they do have records matching your request even if they do not have any.
If they really do have records that are publicly available elsewhere, then you require the citations so that you can find those records, and if they do not have any records, then you need them to say so! And it is their job to assist you, not bamboozle you.
Also, under Ontario’s FIPPA (the Ontario legislation that governs the process for requests to provincial institutions) and MFIPPA (the Ontario legislation that governs requests to municipal institutions), the institution is required to state explicitly that they have no responsive records (none that match what you are looking for) if they do not have any.
Note:
July 6, 2022 update: my colleague Michael S. in New Zealand has devised alternate FOI wording for records proving the existence of “SARS-COV-2” – not just purification of alleged “SARS-COV-2” particles. This wording really drills down on the scientific method:
https://www.fluoridefreepeel.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/FOI-template-SARS-COV-2Proof-Of-Existance.pdf)
Below is wording for the virus purification FOIs.
Subject: Access to Info Request: records re PURIFICATION OF “SARS-COV-2”
August 16, 2021
To: Roger Andoh
Freedom of Information Officer
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention /
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
1600 Clifton Rd NE MS T-01
Atlanta, Georgia 30333
Phone: 770-488-6277
Fax: 770-488-6200
Submitted via email to: FOIARequests@cdc.gov
Dear Mr. Andoh,
I require access to general records, as per the Freedom of Information Act.
Description of Requested Records:
All studies and/or reports in the possession, custody or control of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and/or the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) describing the purification of the alleged “COVID-19 virus” (aka “SARS-COV-2”, including any alleged “variants”) directly from a sample taken from a diseased human, where the patient sample was not first combined with any other source of genetic material (i.e. monkey kidney cells aka Vero cells; fetal bovine serum).
Clarification of Request:
Please note that I am not requesting studies/reports where researchers failed to purify the suspected “virus” and instead:
- cultured something, and/or
- performed an amplification test (i.e. PCR), and/or
- fabricated a genome from sequences (allegedly) detected in an impure substance, and/or
- produced electron microscopy images of unpurified things.
I am already aware that according to virus theory a “virus” requires host cells in order to replicate, and am not requesting records that describe replication of a ‘virus’ without host cells. Nor am I requesting records that describe a strict fulfillment of Koch’s Postulates, or records where researchers conflate extraction of genetic material from a patient sample or cell culture with “virus isolation”, or records that describe a suspected “virus” floating in a vacuum, or private patient information.
I simply request records that describe purification (separation of the alleged virus from everything else in the patient sample, as per standard laboratory practices for the purification of other very small things).
Please note that my request includes any study/report matching the above description, authored by anyone, anywhere.
If any records match the above description of requested records and are currently available in the public domain, please provide enough information about each record so that I may identify and access each one with certainty (i.e. title, author(s), date, journal, where the public may access it). Please provide URLs where possible.
Format:
Pdf documents sent to me via email; I do not wish for anything to be shipped to me.
Contact Information:
Last name:
First name:
Address:
Phone:
Email:
Thanks you in advance and best wishes,