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Bravo and my most sincere thanks to Laura Jeffery for speaking out. This transcript is not from the livestream but from the recent event in Canada.

Canada's National Citizens Inquiry https://www.youtube.com/@citizensinquiry

To All Funeral Directors and Embalmers Worldwide -

March 31, 2023

https://rumble.com/v2fnr48-to-all-funeral-directors-and-embalmers-worldwide-.html

Also -- same video:

Licensed Funeral Director Laura Jeffery on Post-Vaccine Embalming | NCI

April 1, 2023

https://rumble.com/v2fuj08-licensed-funeral-director-laura-jeffery-on-post-vaccine-embalming-nci.html

TRANSCRIPT - SELECTED EXCERPTS

FIRST EXCERPT: What she saw during the first wave of covid and the lockdowns

0:21

QUESTIONER*: Ms. Jeffery, my understanding is, is that you are quite a senior embalmer as far as embalmers in Canada go.

LAURA JEFFERY: I'm the best kept secret in embalming.

QUESTIONER: You have been working as a funeral director, and that includes embalming, for 27 years now.

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: Which, I did the math, that would mean you started roughly in 1996.

LAURA JEFFERY: I'm an old lady. [laughs]

QUESTIONER: I started practicing law in 1995 so —

LAURA JEFFERY: You're an older fellow, too. [laughs]

QUESTIONER: We share a long career. And for the past 5 years, my understanding is you would average roughly about 170, ah —

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: I guess, I don't know what you would call it.

LAURA JEFFERY: I would embalm and care for 170 people that required embalming. I would

care for many more that maybe weren't embalming but I would care for them as well.

QUESTIONER: Right. Now. Right. Because if somebody's being cremated they don't go through—

LAURA JEFFERY: No that's not necessarily true.

QUESTIONER: OK.

LAURA JEFFERY: It doesn't matter if you're buried or cremated, it depends on what you're doing beforehand.

QUESTIONER: OK. Now when covid came along —

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: My understanding is that you were working at a place which cared for approximately least 600—

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: — deceased persons a year.

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: And in a year a half, so covid hit, so we must, we're in, I guess, March of 2020, and a year and a half goes by —

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: — and you're still with this organization that deals, cares with roughly 600 deceased persons a year.

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: How deaths did you see attributed—

LAURA JEFFERY: Seven.

QUESTIONER: Not caused but attributed to covid?

LAURA JEFFERY: Seven.

QUESTIONER: And were there other co-morbidities involved?

LAURA JEFFERY: Of course, yes. Routinely, the covid cases that I would see would be people that had been suffering dementia for probably quite some time, and living in a nursing home facility. And that's fairly typical in the winter, we would see that with any virus or any cold maybe that was going around, because those people are very vulnerable.

QUESTIONER: Now what did you observe about the death rate when covid swept through this land?

LAURA JEFFERY: Nothing. There's nothing to observe.

QUESTIONER: OK.

LAURA JEFFERY: Nothing changed.

QUESTIONER: So nothing changed?

LAURA JEFFERY: Oh, well that's not true actually. So lockdowns create a situation where suicides and drug overdoses escalated dramatically.

QUESTIONER: Now what about the first lockdown?

LAURA JEFFERY: The first lockdown wasn't as obvious. There may have been the odd, unusual death but I mean that also could have just been normal timing. Because the first lockdown was the pajama party, right? The second lockdown was the problem. So the second lockdown, the escalation of suicide deaths and drug overdoses was obvious.

QUESTIONER: OK.

LAURA JEFFERY: Middle-aged people.

QUESTIONER: And as an embalmer, I mean, you're aware of cause of death when you—

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: When you're treating somebody.

LAURA JEFFERY: I don't always look, but I mean sometimes you're very aware, you can't miss it.

QUESTIONER: OK. So the suicides and drug overdoses—

LAURA JEFFERY: Yes.

QUESTIONER: — they're obviously increasing in number in the second lockdown.

LAURA JEFFERY: Second lockdown, yeah.

QUESTIONER: Now my understanding is, is that you had a very unique experience with a 9 week period with a specific type of death. Can you share with us slowly—

LAURA JEFFERY: OK.

QUESTIONER: What, what you witnessed and just how unusual that was?

LAURA JEFFERY: OK, so in nine weeks, so one a week for nine weeks, there was middle-aged women that were, you know, well-settled in their lives, mostly, who didn't want to stay on earth anymore. So they left, by their choice and their hand. So they had children, they had spouses, they had homes. But the second lockdown was too much for them, so they left. And we cared for them. And it was awful, to be honest, like each week one, one, each week one person would do that for no reason. They had children. So that was hard.

QUESTIONER: So, so these are mothers with children?

LAURA JEFFERY: Yep. Average people. Average people. Yeah. I mean, that could have been me, right? Except I don't have kids. But in a general sense, yes, it was a middle-aged woman that had children ranging I found aged like maybe 10 to 20, and then you're looking at that middle-aged woman, right? And she has a home and a husband and children. So that happened.

QUESTIONER: Had you ever in your career seen a suicide death—

LAURA JEFFERY: No.

QUESTIONER: — from that type of person before?

LAURA JEFFERY: No, no, no, no. Women don't do that.

QUESTIONER: So this, this just stuck out like a sore thumb?

LAURA JEFFERY: Hmm mm. Everbody noticed.

5:18

[END OF FIRST EXCERPT]

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TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:

*He is not identified in the video, nor could I find him on the NCI website, but I believe this is Canadian constitutional lawyer and health freedom activist Shawn Buckley, who drafted The Charter of Health Freedom.

See http://www.charterofhealthfreedom.org

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