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Forum speakers promoted ivermectin and other therapies and accused official COVID policies; claims not independently verified
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Summary
Forum speakers described an informal local network that supplied ivermectin and other off‑label COVID-19 therapies, and they asserted those regimens reduced hospitalizations; the claims were presented by the speakers and were not independently verified at the event.
Speakers at the Davis County Conservative Community Forum on Sept. 11 described organizing local access to off‑label COVID-19 treatments, promoted ivermectin and other regimens, and made a series of claims about vaccine harms and batch safety.
Chris Anderson, whom the forum introduced as a holistic nutritionist and a Moore codefendant, described a GroupMe network called "Freedom Fighters" that she said grew to about 500 people and later assisted hundreds of patients. Anderson said Moore worked with compounding pharmacies to obtain ivermectin and that patients were treated on an outpatient basis: "We don't know of anybody that got sick or died doing these protocols," she said.
Moore said his team treated many patients and gave multiple estimates: he said roughly 800–1,000 patients were treated in an early period and that an internal spreadsheet later contained about "over 4,000 names." He said an independent analysis by a physician he named (Jim Thorpe) estimated that, from their caseload alone, they had saved 8.4 lives and prevented about 280 severe adverse events, and another speaker said those numbers could be higher.
Speakers also criticized mainstream COVID treatments and protocols. Moore described remdesivir as a "toxic medication" and said, without presenting documentation in the forum, that it had been removed from some markets in prior epidemics and that it "killed more Ebola patients" than the disease did, according to his account. He also said the pharmacy/shot-lot database "How Bad Is My Batch" showed a Pfizer lot number he recited ("FA...3527") with a high number of immediate deaths and adverse events; a forum speaker cited a website called BearsAware as a source for vaccine-adverse-event compilations.
Speakers also invoked larger legal and ethical frames: they referenced Operation Warp Speed, the Nuremberg Code and a 1971 bioweapons-related policy in a broader critique of vaccine mandates and of pharmaceutical regulation.
Limitations and verification: The statements above summarize forum remarks and are presented as the speakers’ assertions. The reporter has not verified patient treatment counts, clinical outcomes, the accuracy of cited studies, the content of the cited lot-number database, or the safety or efficacy of any treatment or vaccine. Independent clinical studies, public-health agency statements and regulatory records are necessary to corroborate or refute these claims.
Ending: Speakers asked forum attendees to watch a locally produced documentary and to continue advocacy for what they described as medical choice and informed consent. The forum included no independent medical experts representing public-health agencies to respond on the record.

