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‘No vaccine!’: Woman arrested for allegedly driving through vaccination site in protest, nearly hitting workers

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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As a coronavirus vaccination tent was set up in the hope of inoculating more residents in Maryville, Tenn., sheriff’s deputies working at the site this week saw an SUV speeding their way — and the person behind the wheel wasn’t slowing for a shot.

Instead, Virginia Christine Lewis Brown was protesting the vaccine by driving her Chrysler Pacifica “at a high rate of speed” through a vaccine tent in a mall parking lot, police said.
“No vaccine!” she yelled Monday as she plowed through the tent, according to witness accounts to sheriff’s deputies.
Brown, 36, was arrested for driving through a vaccination tent and “placing the lives of seven workers in danger,” the Blount County Sheriff’s Office announced Thursday. She’s been charged with seven counts of felony reckless endangerment. Tennessee attorneys claim each count carries penalties that include a possible prison sentence of 1 to 15 years and a fine of up to $10,000.


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Brown, of Greenback, Tenn., did not immediately return a request for comment Thursday. It’s unclear whether she has an attorney.
Resistance to vaccine mandates is building. A powerful network is helping.
This week’s incident occurred as demonstrations from anti-vaccine protesters have unfolded nationwide despite the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finding that the vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna are effective in preventing infections. Demonstrations have popped up in vaccination sites such as high schools and racing tracks in recent months, and anti-vaccine protesters temporarily shut down Dodger Stadium after maskless people blocked the entrance to one of the country’s largest sites.








Anti-vaccine protesters temporarily shut down major coronavirus vaccine site in Los Angeles








Protesters blocked the gates of Dodger Stadium, the location of a major coronavirus vaccine site in Los Angeles, for more than an hour on Jan. 30. (daveedkapoor via Storyful)
Although the number of U.S. coronavirus cases on Wednesday was the lowest in roughly a year, only about 40 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, according to a Washington Post database. In Tennessee, more than 31 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, ranking the state among the lowest in the nation.
Your questions about coronavirus vaccines, answered
The incident happened Monday morning at a vaccine site operated by the Blount County Health Department at Foothills Mall in Maryville, a suburb of Knoxville, authorities said in a news release. The Maryville Daily Times reported that workers with the health department and Tennessee National Guard were among the 15 people operating the tent at the time.



Sheriff’s deputies said they saw the SUV motoring through the cones set up in the parking lot and it kept speeding toward them. An incident report from a sheriff’s deputy notes that Brown allegedly told personnel there that “she was not there for the vaccine.”
“The deputies reported that Ms. Brown did not stop at the check-in area at the entrance of the tent but continued through the tent at a high rate of speed, then exited the tent and out of the parking lot,” the sheriff’s office said.
As Brown drove to a nearby bank, workers at the vaccine site told police how the Chrysler almost hit them, according to the Daily Times.
“I had several victims tell me she almost hit them as she fled through the tent at high speeds,” a deputy wrote in an incident report. “I was advised that they were within inches and feet of the vehicle as it came through the tent. Several victims stated that they thought the driver was going to kill them.”



When officers detained her, Brown acknowledged that she had driven her car through the site “to protest the vaccine,” claiming she was only driving 5 mph, police records show. She was taken into custody at Blount County Correctional Facility, police said.
Brown was released on bonds totaling $21,000 pending a court hearing. She is scheduled for a June 7 hearing at Blount County General Sessions Court. In her mug shot released by the sheriff’s office, a single tear appears to be rolling down her left cheek.
Corie Gouge, a spokesperson with the Tennessee Department of Health, told The Washington Post that the county could not comment on the incident since it is part of an ongoing investigation. Gouge praised the workers while emphasizing that the Foothills Mall vaccine site remains open for any residents wanting a shot.



“We are grateful for the work and service of our Blount County Health Department staff who are working to protect and promote health-care services in the community, including offering the covid vaccine,” Gouge said in a statement to The Post. “We hope this incident does not deter anyone who is seeking services from the health department today or in the future.”

 
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As a coronavirus vaccination tent was set up in the hope of inoculating more residents in Maryville, Tenn., sheriff’s deputies working at the site this week saw an SUV speeding their way — and the person behind the wheel wasn’t slowing for a shot.

Instead, Virginia Christine Lewis Brown was protesting the vaccine by driving her Chrysler Pacifica “at a high rate of speed” through a vaccine tent in a mall parking lot, police said.
“No vaccine!” she yelled Monday as she plowed through the tent, according to witness accounts to sheriff’s deputies.
Brown, 36, was arrested for driving through a vaccination tent and “placing the lives of seven workers in danger,” the Blount County Sheriff’s Office announced Thursday. She’s been charged with seven counts of felony reckless endangerment. Tennessee attorneys claim each count carries penalties that include a possible prison sentence of 1 to 15 years and a fine of up to $10,000.


ADVERTISING


Brown, of Greenback, Tenn., did not immediately return a request for comment Thursday. It’s unclear whether she has an attorney.
Resistance to vaccine mandates is building. A powerful network is helping.
This week’s incident occurred as demonstrations from anti-vaccine protesters have unfolded nationwide despite the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finding that the vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna are effective in preventing infections. Demonstrations have popped up in vaccination sites such as high schools and racing tracks in recent months, and anti-vaccine protesters temporarily shut down Dodger Stadium after maskless people blocked the entrance to one of the country’s largest sites.








Anti-vaccine protesters temporarily shut down major coronavirus vaccine site in Los Angeles








Protesters blocked the gates of Dodger Stadium, the location of a major coronavirus vaccine site in Los Angeles, for more than an hour on Jan. 30. (daveedkapoor via Storyful)
Although the number of U.S. coronavirus cases on Wednesday was the lowest in roughly a year, only about 40 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, according to a Washington Post database. In Tennessee, more than 31 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, ranking the state among the lowest in the nation.
Your questions about coronavirus vaccines, answered
The incident happened Monday morning at a vaccine site operated by the Blount County Health Department at Foothills Mall in Maryville, a suburb of Knoxville, authorities said in a news release. The Maryville Daily Times reported that workers with the health department and Tennessee National Guard were among the 15 people operating the tent at the time.



Sheriff’s deputies said they saw the SUV motoring through the cones set up in the parking lot and it kept speeding toward them. An incident report from a sheriff’s deputy notes that Brown allegedly told personnel there that “she was not there for the vaccine.”
“The deputies reported that Ms. Brown did not stop at the check-in area at the entrance of the tent but continued through the tent at a high rate of speed, then exited the tent and out of the parking lot,” the sheriff’s office said.
As Brown drove to a nearby bank, workers at the vaccine site told police how the Chrysler almost hit them, according to the Daily Times.
“I had several victims tell me she almost hit them as she fled through the tent at high speeds,” a deputy wrote in an incident report. “I was advised that they were within inches and feet of the vehicle as it came through the tent. Several victims stated that they thought the driver was going to kill them.”



When officers detained her, Brown acknowledged that she had driven her car through the site “to protest the vaccine,” claiming she was only driving 5 mph, police records show. She was taken into custody at Blount County Correctional Facility, police said.
Brown was released on bonds totaling $21,000 pending a court hearing. She is scheduled for a June 7 hearing at Blount County General Sessions Court. In her mug shot released by the sheriff’s office, a single tear appears to be rolling down her left cheek.
Corie Gouge, a spokesperson with the Tennessee Department of Health, told The Washington Post that the county could not comment on the incident since it is part of an ongoing investigation. Gouge praised the workers while emphasizing that the Foothills Mall vaccine site remains open for any residents wanting a shot.



“We are grateful for the work and service of our Blount County Health Department staff who are working to protect and promote health-care services in the community, including offering the covid vaccine,” Gouge said in a statement to The Post. “We hope this incident does not deter anyone who is seeking services from the health department today or in the future.”

Protest? Like January 6th was a protest? Attempted murder charges please!
 
As a coronavirus vaccination tent was set up in the hope of inoculating more residents in Maryville, Tenn., sheriff’s deputies working at the site this week saw an SUV speeding their way — and the person behind the wheel wasn’t slowing for a shot.

Instead, Virginia Christine Lewis Brown was protesting the vaccine by driving her Chrysler Pacifica “at a high rate of speed” through a vaccine tent in a mall parking lot, police said.
“No vaccine!” she yelled Monday as she plowed through the tent, according to witness accounts to sheriff’s deputies.
Brown, 36, was arrested for driving through a vaccination tent and “placing the lives of seven workers in danger,” the Blount County Sheriff’s Office announced Thursday. She’s been charged with seven counts of felony reckless endangerment. Tennessee attorneys claim each count carries penalties that include a possible prison sentence of 1 to 15 years and a fine of up to $10,000.


ADVERTISING


Brown, of Greenback, Tenn., did not immediately return a request for comment Thursday. It’s unclear whether she has an attorney.
Resistance to vaccine mandates is building. A powerful network is helping.
This week’s incident occurred as demonstrations from anti-vaccine protesters have unfolded nationwide despite the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finding that the vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna are effective in preventing infections. Demonstrations have popped up in vaccination sites such as high schools and racing tracks in recent months, and anti-vaccine protesters temporarily shut down Dodger Stadium after maskless people blocked the entrance to one of the country’s largest sites.








Anti-vaccine protesters temporarily shut down major coronavirus vaccine site in Los Angeles








Protesters blocked the gates of Dodger Stadium, the location of a major coronavirus vaccine site in Los Angeles, for more than an hour on Jan. 30. (daveedkapoor via Storyful)
Although the number of U.S. coronavirus cases on Wednesday was the lowest in roughly a year, only about 40 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, according to a Washington Post database. In Tennessee, more than 31 percent of the population is fully vaccinated, ranking the state among the lowest in the nation.
Your questions about coronavirus vaccines, answered
The incident happened Monday morning at a vaccine site operated by the Blount County Health Department at Foothills Mall in Maryville, a suburb of Knoxville, authorities said in a news release. The Maryville Daily Times reported that workers with the health department and Tennessee National Guard were among the 15 people operating the tent at the time.



Sheriff’s deputies said they saw the SUV motoring through the cones set up in the parking lot and it kept speeding toward them. An incident report from a sheriff’s deputy notes that Brown allegedly told personnel there that “she was not there for the vaccine.”
“The deputies reported that Ms. Brown did not stop at the check-in area at the entrance of the tent but continued through the tent at a high rate of speed, then exited the tent and out of the parking lot,” the sheriff’s office said.
As Brown drove to a nearby bank, workers at the vaccine site told police how the Chrysler almost hit them, according to the Daily Times.
“I had several victims tell me she almost hit them as she fled through the tent at high speeds,” a deputy wrote in an incident report. “I was advised that they were within inches and feet of the vehicle as it came through the tent. Several victims stated that they thought the driver was going to kill them.”



When officers detained her, Brown acknowledged that she had driven her car through the site “to protest the vaccine,” claiming she was only driving 5 mph, police records show. She was taken into custody at Blount County Correctional Facility, police said.
Brown was released on bonds totaling $21,000 pending a court hearing. She is scheduled for a June 7 hearing at Blount County General Sessions Court. In her mug shot released by the sheriff’s office, a single tear appears to be rolling down her left cheek.
Corie Gouge, a spokesperson with the Tennessee Department of Health, told The Washington Post that the county could not comment on the incident since it is part of an ongoing investigation. Gouge praised the workers while emphasizing that the Foothills Mall vaccine site remains open for any residents wanting a shot.



“We are grateful for the work and service of our Blount County Health Department staff who are working to protect and promote health-care services in the community, including offering the covid vaccine,” Gouge said in a statement to The Post. “We hope this incident does not deter anyone who is seeking services from the health department today or in the future.”

7*15

Give her the full 105.
 
Maybe Rand Paul will pick up her legal fees? This is what Facebook does to people. Give her the 15 and save society some headaches.
 
People are dumb! from my ex-SIL's FB page:

193311909_10219613541197653_6928636059324423196_n.jpg


Typically I don't engage, but I couldn't help myself today:


I'm sorry, but there is so much lunacy in that meme.
1 - condoms are 98% effective in their own right.
2 - Research the mRNA vaccine. It's actually pretty astounding science, and is a game-changer for the future.
3 - Per the CDC, if you're vaccinated there's zero mask requirement outside and very few instances where one is "recommended" in doors.
Also, all vaccines have had break-through cases, thus common sense says, "of course the COVID-19 vaccines aren't 100%".
For example: Two doses of inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) are 90% effective or more against polio; three doses are 99% effective. Smallpox vaccine? 95% effective.

(also, Donald and Melania Trump received COVID vaccine at the White House in January
😉
)
 
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