Vaccine Manufacturer Lawsuits: The Advocate and the Fear


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As of: 04/27/2023 6:17 p.m

Hundreds of people are trying to sue for damages and compensation for pain and suffering in court because of possible health damage caused by the corona vaccination. A lawyer spreading conspiracy stories represents many plaintiffs.

By By Silvio Duwe, Daniel Laufer and Markus Pohl, rbb

There is something he cannot talk about, says Tobias Ulbrich. In the middle of an interview with the ARD-political magazine contrasts the lawyer asks to turn off the camera. “I really can’t say because it’s likely to start a third world war.”

It’s about the corona vaccines, including the virus itself. In the past, Ulbrich had expressed the suspicion that it could be a biological weapon of war. He wrote this in a criminal complaint and sent it to the Attorney General. Among other things, Ulbrich suspected that those responsible at BioNTech could be involved in genocide. According to him, this advertisement from 2021 should never have become public.

More than 16 lawsuits

Ulbrich’s law firm is primarily responsible for the wave of lawsuits against manufacturers of vaccines in Germany – including BioNTech. According to him, she filed more than 160 lawsuits, and new ones were added every day. His clients are said to be suffering from health problems as a result of the corona vaccination.

That there is such damage is undisputed. However, they are very rare. Experts and health authorities therefore emphasize that the vaccinations are generally safe. Ulbrich, on the other hand, has been giving media interviews for months in which he doubts this. Newspapers and public broadcasters reported. At tagesschau.de he was quoted from a dpa report, according to which he expected a “battle of experts” in the legal dispute if the courts did not make a “deterrent verdict” right from the start.

Ulbrich is not a proven expert in medical law. The law firm “Rogert & Ulbrich”, which he co-founded, is best known for its lawsuits against Volkswagen and other car manufacturers for emissions manipulation. According to her website, Ulbrich is actually a specialist lawyer for transport and forwarding law.

gloomy advertising messages

The fact that so many people who believe that they have been affected by vaccine damage turned to him may have something to do with a remarkable advertising strategy. The Düsseldorf lawyers issued a press release last year in which they calculated that the BioNTech vaccine alone could kill 1.1 million people in Europe. “We will not abandon the vaccinated,” they promised.

The law firm also drummed for attention with the announcement that blood tests from clients showed that they were suffering from an autoimmune disease called “V-AIDS”. The “V” stands for “vaccine” – a vaccination. “Obviously” the body’s own immune system is “destroyed” or at least blatantly weakened “as a result of the vaccination(s)”, according to a press release.

“inappropriate statement”

The Secretary General of the German Society for Immunology, Carsten Watzl, contradicts this “V-AIDS” thesis in the contrasts-Interview clearly. There is no such disease. According to the immunologist, there is no solid evidence that the corona vaccination permanently damages the immune system, on the contrary. “The immune system is strengthened by the vaccination because afterwards I’m better protected against an infection with the corona virus.”

It seems conceivable that the gloomy advertising messages for Ulbrich’s law firm could have consequences. The lawyer Martin W. Huff, who has published an anthology on legal professional law, comments in an interview contrasts To ponder. If something like “V-AIDS” doesn’t exist medically, Ulbrich’s law firm can’t claim that their clients suffer from it.

In his estimation, it would then be an “inappropriate statement”. But such a thing is forbidden for lawyers. “Under this we subsume professional lawyers that no untrue factual allegations may be made.” Huff warns: A bar association and a competitor could take action against Ulbrich’s law firm because of the “V-AIDS” statements.

Appearances in the “lateral thinking” milieu

But it is not only in the press releases from his law firm that Ulbrich stands out with steep theses on corona vaccinations. He appeared several times in the self-proclaimed “Corona Committee”, a video series from the “lateral thinking” milieu. In January, Ulbrich reported there in detail about the criminal complaint that he had sent to the Federal Public Prosecutor. In addition to the suspicion of genocide and attempted genocide, he also expressed the fear that there had been cases of high treason and violations of the War Weapons Control Act.

The CDU politician Jens Spahn and the virologist Christian Drosten may have been involved. In the ad, Ulbrich also claimed that according to Bill Gates’ wishes, “the German people” should be reduced to 27 million inhabitants by means of the vaccination. In the contrastsinterview, Ulbrich says he only wanted to have a suspicion checked at the time. The Attorney General dismissed the complaint.

According to a study by the Berlin Charité, serious side effects from vaccinations are 40 times more common than stated by the PEI.
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A conspiracy ideology worldview

For Josef Holnburger it is evidence of a “closed conspiracy-ideological world view”. The political scientist researches conspiracy narratives at the “Center for Monitoring, Analysis and Strategy (Cemas)”. Allegations made by Ulbrich revolved around the existence of a small group that possessed a vast apparatus of power and wished to use it to do something incredibly evil. According to Holnburger, positions that he publicly represents fit almost seamlessly into the “lateral thinking” scene.

For example, Ulbrich disseminates a kind of political manifesto on a website specially set up for this purpose. Among other things, he calls for a change in criminal law. The “feigned infection via the PCR test for the purpose of selling vaccines” should be punished with life imprisonment. In an interview with contrasts he claimed that PCR tests were meaningless, without these tests there would be no pandemic.

On Twitter he complained five times about a “vaccional socialism” whose “face” or “representatives” were Karl Lauterbach, Friedrich Merz and the FDP – alluding to the Nazi era. contrasts said Ulbrich that he distanced himself from it. He has nothing to do with conspiracy stories.

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