Schara's daughter Grace died in the hospital a few days after she tested positive for the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19). She was admitted to St. Elizabeth Hospital in Wisconsin, given a deadly combination of precedex, lorazepam and morphine and ultimately given an illegal declaration of Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) order.
"The doctors and nurses in the hospitals receive immunity from liability for killing people that continued along with the bonuses that they pay hospitals for following these agendas that literally murder people," Schara told host Sean Turnbull during his recent guest appearance at the "SGT Report."
Since the death of his daughter, Schara has been deep into investigations into the real reasons why there was gross negligence in hospitals. It was also important to note that Grace didn't have an advocate for 44 hours because Schara was taken out of the St. Elizabeth Hospital for questioning the protocols.
"It was this time that they increased the dose of a sedation drug precedex seven different times. These sedated my best buddy instead of taking care of her. The package insert says specifically to not use that drug for more than 24 hours because it causes acute respiratory failure. And so the first cause of death on Grace's death certificate was acute respiratory failure, which was directly caused by the hospital using that drug," he said.
According to Schara, the hospital received a $7,500 bonus for listing that as the first cause of death. Listed as the second cause of death was COVID-19 pneumonia, and St. Elizabeth has received a $13,000 bonus for that. He said the second cause should have been the overdose of precedex, which the hospital ratcheted up to 14 times the original dose.
The hospital also ordered Grace to use the ventilator, but the family refused. The Scharas later found out that the use of a ventilator would have earned the hospital up to $300,000.
Grace's care provider listed that she had Down syndrome 36 times in 22 doctor's reports during the week that she was in the hospital, Schara said.
"It shouldn't change anything with the standard of care. But they've already been indoctrinated through the 'banality of evil' that Down syndrome people are worthless eaters and they don't have a benefit to society," he pointed out, highlighting that she was a clear target of the depopulation agenda and same as with the elderly. (Related: The Dr. Ardis Show: DNR orders in hospitals conceal government's mass genocide agenda, says Scott Schara – Brighteon.TV.)
The term banality of evil was coined by philosopher Hannah Arendt to dub the characteristics of Adolph Eichmann, who was "not inherently evil, but merely shallow and clueless." Eichmann was a Nazi operative who organized the transportation of millions of Jews to various concentration camps in support of the Nazi's Final Solution.
He also linked the current healthcare methodology with Stanley Milgram's experiment, which showed what a person would do when ordered by the authority to kill somebody.
"Back in 1963, two-thirds of the people participating [in Milgram's experiment] would have killed the other person just by receiving an instruction from their supervisor. In the case of the hospital, they've already been indoctrinated to get the jab on the threat of losing their job. And then you've got to follow these protocols on the threat of losing your job," Schara said.
Both Schara and Turnbull advised listeners to be very careful if somehow they end up in the emergency room.
"How you answer those [assessment] questions will determine if you're going to make it out of there alive. You have to get wise to hospitals in your area that haven't been 'bought.' You have to get wise to have an advocate in the room," he urged.
Visit HospitalHomocide.com for more news about hospital protocols killing COVID-19 patients.
Watch the full segment of "SGT Report" with Sean Turnbull featuring Scott Schara below.
This video is from the SecureLife channel on Brighteon.com.
Scott Schara: Hospital homicide via COVID treatments part of a GENOCIDAL agenda.