
Animosity soared to new heights at the start of Day 2 of Bill Gates’ military tribunal, with his lawyer, the dishonorable David Baluarte, accusing the Judge Advocate General’s Corps of “steamrolling” his client on patently false charges. Baluarte challenged the tribunal’s assertion that Gates had had sex with male and female minors, claiming such allegations were impossible because Gates has been impotent since 1999.
“Even if that were true, and we can prove it isn’t,” Vice Adm. John G. Hannink countered, “we still have irrefutable evidence, including his ex-wife’s testimony, that he trafficked in children.”
Vice Adm. Hannink admonished Baluarte and Gates for wasting the court’s time with claims that Gates had contracted Covid-19 while detained at GITMO; Covid-19 PCR and antibody tests proved Gates had not fallen victim to the virus. Gates also claimed he had not received a Covid-19 vaccination, an assertion proved correct by serology tests. The day’s events, however, did not focus on Gates’ ties to the vaccine industry. Instead, the Office of Military Commissions continued pressing the child trafficking charges.
While Gates sat meekly and quietly—heeding his lawyer’s advice—Vice Adm. Hannink introduced the prosecution’s first witness of the day, a man who identified himself as Steven Sharpe, a self-described “fixer” whom Gates had paid tens of millions of dollars to “tidy up” unfortunate incidents. This real-life Ray Donovan refuted Gates’ claims of impotence. Appearing on video via ZOOM, he told the tribunal that he had seen Gates take erectile dysfunction medication and Adrenochrome infusions to counteract ED.
Bill Gates Military Tribunal: Day 2 – Real Raw News
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