The ITNJ, spawn of Sacha Stone, conspiracy theory propagator

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The ITNJ is a self-appointed ‘court’ that holds unsanctioned hearings on topics ranging from child trafficking and corruption to the ‘effects’ of 5G.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8211171/Exposed-conspiracy-theorists-claim-coronavirus-linked-5G.html

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The Daily Mail

Exposed: The conspiracy theorists who claim coronavirus is linked to 5G, including the cousin of a cabinet minister and a former CIA spy

  • International Tribunal for Natural Justice is sharing the 5G conspiracy theory
  • ITNJ is promoting the theory that 5G is helping the coronavirus to spread
  • Members include cousin of a Tory Minister and an ex-wife of an EastEnders actor
  • Another, an ex-CIA agent, once said child slaves were being sent to Mars

By Jamie Nimmo
For The Mail On Sunday

Published: 22:41 BST, 11 April 2020 | Updated: 12:38 BST, 12 April 2020

Members of a bizarre organisation that falsely links the new 5G mobile phone network to the coronavirus can be exposed today by The Mail on Sunday.

The cousin of a Tory Minister and the ex-wife of an EastEnders actor are key members of the International Tribunal for Natural Justice (ITNJ), which also promotes claims 5G causes cancer and is a weapon.

Other members include a conspiracy theorist who claims Nasa has kidnapped children and sent them to Mars as slaves.

Read more:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8211171/Exposed-conspiracy-theorists-claim-coronavirus-linked-5G.html

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Sacha Stone fathered The International Tribunal for Natural Justice (ITNJ)

Simon Jean Paul Sasha Adams (born 1966), known as Sacha Stone, is a British New Age influencer and conspiracy theory promoter. He is best known for marketing 5GBioShield, a fraudulent anti-radiation protection device.[1] He is also known for founding The International Tribunal for Natural Justice, The New Earth Project and the New Earth Festival which he hosts at his private resort, Akasha New Earth Haven, in Ubud, Bali.[2]

Anti Vaccine claims

At the 2019 NewEarth Festival, curated by Stone in Bali, invited speakers included anti-vaccine activist Del Bigtree and US conspiracy theory author G. Edward Griffin.[2]

Stone has stated that the COVID-19 vaccine is a conspiracy to implant a “nanochip” in the human body so that “the Beast” can “take control of their soul.” Stone has stated that use of vaccines is misguided: “Anyone who rolls their sleeve up for a vaccine – or an RFID nanochip – is absolutely inviting the Beast to take control of their soul”.[8][5][7]

On 5 January 2021, Stone hosted an event titled “Focus on Fauci” with anti-vaccine activists Judy Mikovits, a discredited biochemist, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an American lawyer known for promoting skeptical views on vaccines and radio-communication systems.[9]

International Tribunal For Natural Justice

Stone founded ITNJ (The International Tribunal For Natural Justice), an organisation which stages court-like hearings dedicated to applying the principle of “natural law” to matters of current affairs. ITNJ has featured discredited individuals who have subsequently used it as a forum for making claims that have been deemed to be false or misleading statements.

ITNJ hearings are chaired by Sir [sic] John Walsh of Brannagh, a lawyer disbarred from his practice in Victoria, Australia[10][11] who is a former chancellor of Greenwich University, an unaccredited university formerly of Norfolk Island, Victoria.

Robert O. Young, an American naturopath, who was jailed for illegally practising medicine,[12][13] claimed in a November 2019 ITNJ video that “Mandating vaccines is part of depopulation plan”. In a widely circulated clip, Young makes unsubstantiated claims that Bill Gates wants to kill three billion people, that international health agencies are “using chemical warfare against all of us”, that viruses are not real, that vaccines are poison, and that alkaline can be used to cure any ailment. The video went viral on social media, which were dismissed as false by numerous factcheck organisations[14][15][16][17][18]

The ITNJ organised a hearing on child trafficking, with “chief counsel” Robert David Steele, a former CIA-agent. His opening speech supported the Pizzagate conspiracy theory and suggested that Hillary Clinton’s 2016 US presidential campaign team were Satanic paedophiles.[4]

Since 2020, ITNJ has spread conspiracy theories about the COVID-19 pandemic, including claims that 5G technology helps the coronavirus spread.[16][17][19] On 10 May 2020, ITNJ hosted a hearing which included testimony from discredited former doctor Andrew Wakefield and Sherri Tenpenny, an American anti-vaccination activist.[20]

Claims about 5G

Stone has promoted the claim that 5G is associated with health risks. He produced 5G Apocalypse: The Extinction Event,[2] an hour-long documentary film promoting the idea that 5G telephone networks are a military weapon disguised as a telephone system. The documentary introduced Mark Steele, whose claims comprise the bulk of its content.[21] The hour-long documentary had over a million views before being removed from YouTube.[22]

At the documentary’s launch, Stone sold access to the film for $10, which included a 10% discount on the Bauer 5GBioShield, a USB-stick which Stone marketed as being able to protect users from the harmful effects of 5G radiation.[23][24] The USB stick was sold by Stone through an affiliate marketing network, but was later considered to be a scam by Trading Standards.[1]

Arise USA Tour

Stone was a guest speaker in Robert David Steele’s Arise USA tour. He used this as a platform to alert his audience to a “wave of unprecedented evil” which he believed to be taking over America.[25]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacha_Stone

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Robert O Young

Robert Oldham Young is an American naturopathic practitioner and author of alternative medicine books promoting an alkaline diet. His most popular works are the “pH Miracle” series of books, which outline his beliefs about holistic healing and an “alkalarian” lifestyle. Wikipedia

Practicing medicine without a license

In 1995, Young allegedly drew blood from two women, told them they were ill, and then sold them herbal products to treat these illnesses. He was charged with two third-degree felony counts of practicing medicine without a license, but pled guilty to a reduced misdemeanor charge.[14][25] Young argued that he had never claimed to be a medical doctor, that the women had entrapped him by asking to be part of his research, and that he “looked at the women’s blood and simply gave them some nutritional advice.”[14]

In 2001, Young was again charged with a felony in Utah, after a cancer patient alleged that Young told her to stop chemotherapy and to substitute one of his products to treat her cancer. Subsequently, when an undercover agent visited Young, he allegedly analyzed her blood and prescribed a liquid diet. The case was taken to preliminary trial, but charges were dropped after the prosecutor stated that he could not find enough people who felt cheated by Young.[25] Young dismissed the arrests as “harassment” and stated that he moved to California because the legal climate there was more tolerant.[25] On May 12, 2011 Quackwatch published a critical analysis of Young’s qualifications and practices.[24]

In 2014 Young was arrested in San Diego and received 18 felony charges relating to practicing medicine without a license, and of theft.[29] According to the Medical Board of California’s press release chronically ill patients were paying Young up to $50,000 for his treatments.[30] His trial started in Vista Superior Court in November 2015.[31] In February 2016, jurors found Young guilty of two counts of practicing medicine without a license.[32] As of January 2017 he was facing a three-year jail sentence and was also to be retried on six charges of fraud, after a jury deadlocked 8–4.[33] To avoid a retrial, Young pleaded guilty to two more counts of practicing medicine without a license. The 44-month sentence in the plea agreement included a declaration by Young that he has no degrees from any accredited schools, and that he is not “a microbiologist, hematologist, medical doctor, naturopathic doctor, or trained scientist”.[34][5]

Young was sentenced at the end of June 2017.[34]

In November 2018 he was ordered to pay US$105 million to a cancer patient who had sued him for claiming to be a doctor and advising her to forgo traditional medical treatment.[35]

Claims about vaccines

In 2020, at a meeting of the conspiracy theory group, the International Tribunal for Natural Justice, Young made a speech that included comments about Bill Gates and vaccines (“For the purpose of sterilization and population control, there’s too many people on the planet we need to get rid of. In the words of Bill Gates, at least three billion people need to die”; international health agencies are “using chemical warfare against all of us.”) that went viral on social media, which were dismissed as false by numerous factcheck organizations.[38][39]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_O._Young

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