Fed Brown Shirts Tell Congressman To Get Lost;
What HHS is Doing With Illegal Alien Children
is None of His Business:
EXCERPT:
"Oklahoma Congressman Jim Bridenstine went to the Ft. Sill Army base in his home state to get a firsthand look at the processing of 1,200 new illegal alien inductees into America’s shadows. He got only as far as the gate. A security officer who works for the contractor “BCFS" known as the “Brown Shirts.” advised the Representative that he was not allowed to see what was going on inside and denied him entry. Bridenstine issued a statement saying, “There is no excuse for denying a Federal Representative from Oklahoma access to a federal facility in Oklahoma where unaccompanied children are being held.”"
KRISTA PIFERRER OF BCFS http://www.bcfs.net/ ; AND http://www.discoverbcfs.net/
"BCFS contracts with local, state and federal government agencies to provide health and human services throughout the world. Our organization has nearly 70 years of experience caring for at-risk populations. We are proud to work with our government partners to achieve this mission."
"BCFS today announced that Krista Piferrer has been promoted to Executive Vice President of External Affairs. In this role, Piferrer will oversee government relations, media communications, public relations and broad-based donor development for the international health and human services organization. “Krista is a valued member of my leadership team,” said Kevin C. Dinnin, BCFS President/CEO. “Her depth of experience and expertise, combined with her strong instincts, continue to make her a great asset to our organization.” Piferrer has served as Vice President of Communications for BCFS since 2008. Prior to joining the organization, Piferrer was Deputy Press Secretary for Texas Governor Rick Perry, on the record during some of the state’s most high profile and controversial cases in recent years. She was also an aide to Florida Governor Jeb Bush, Press Secretary for the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration, and part of the communications team for the Florida departments of Community Affairs and Health. Piferrer currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce and is a member of the American College of Healthcare Executives."
Medical staff warned:
Keep your mouths shut about illegal
immigrants or face arrest:
EXCERPT:
Editor's note: The contractor running the refugee camp at Lackland Air Force Base is "BCFS," not "Baptist Family and Children's Services" -- as noted in a previous version of this story.
"A government-contracted security force threatened to arrest doctors and nurses if they divulged any information about the contagion threat at a refugee camp housing illegal alien children at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, sources say. In spite of the threat, several former camp workers broke their confidentiality agreements and shared exclusive details with me about the dangerous conditions at the camp. “There were several of us who wanted to talk about the camps, but the agents made it clear we would be arrested,” a psychiatric counselor told me. “We were under orders not to say anything.” The sources said workers were guarded by a security force from the BCFS, which the Department of Health and Human Services hired to run the Lackland Camp. The sources say security forces called themselves the “Brown Shirts.” “It was a very submissive atmosphere,” the counselor said. “Once you stepped onto the grounds, you abided by their laws – the Brown Shirt laws.” She said the workers were stripped of their cellphones and other communication devices. Anyone caught with a phone was immediately fired. “Everyone was paranoid,” she said. “The children had more rights than the workers.” She said children in the camp had measles, scabies, chicken pox and strep throat as well as mental and emotional issues." “You could see the bugs crawling through their hair,” she said. “After we would rinse out their hair, the sink would be loaded with black bugs.”
Obama's Brownshirts Threaten Health Workers
Who Divulge Infectious Diseases Brought By
Tidal Wave Of Illegals Into America:
EXCERPT: "BCFS spokeswoman, Executive VP of External Affairs Krista Piferrer said the agency takes “any allegation of malfeasance or inappropriate care of a child very seriously. There are a number of checks and balances to ensure children are receiving appropriate and adequate mental health care.” She said the clinicians are supervised by a federal field specialist from HHS’s Office of Refugee Resettlement, and that BCFS have 58 medical professionals serving at Lackland. As for those brown shirts, the BCFS said they are “incident management team personnel” – who happen to wear tan shirts."
FROM BCFS EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT DIVISION: http://www.bcfsemd.org/
KEVIN DINNIN, PRESIDENT OF BCFS
ON THE LEFT ABOVE
The team consists of medical and mental health experts, disability policy and rights advocates, former fire and police leaders, national emergency planning and training experts, legal professionals, academicians, research and policy professionals, and public health veterans. It also includes former department leaders from FEMA, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
President
Dinnin is the foremost national expert on medical sheltering and integrating people with disabilities into emergency planning. Under his leadership, BCFS EMD and its parent company, BCFS Health and Human Services, has provided services to those affected by crisis and disaster around the world with an array of mental health, medical and human service programs.
Dinnin served as the project executive for the FEMA guidance for Functional Needs Support Services in General Populations shelters, published in 2010. Additionally, he has been credited with developing the most comprehensive training manual for sheltering persons with medical needs known to be in existence.
He served as the commander of the Health and Medical Branch of Texas Task Force Ike following the devastating hurricane in 2008, and served as commander for the final Galveston shelter operation for those impacted by Hurricane Ike. In 2010, Dinnin led an incident management team and medical strike team to Haiti following the devastating 7.0 earthquake, where he implemented the Incident Command System in one of the largest hospitals in Port-au-Prince.
Additionally, Dinnin has held numerous appointments with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, including a secretarial appointment to the National Advisory Committee on Terrorism following the September 11th terrorist attacks. He was selected by the Texas Division of Emergency Management to serve as Incident Commander of the West Texas Unified Command when more than 1,000 responders engaged in the Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints Yearning for Zion Ranch incident in San Angelo, Texas.
President
Dinnin is the foremost national expert on medical sheltering and integrating people with disabilities into emergency planning. Under his leadership, BCFS EMD and its parent company, BCFS Health and Human Services, has provided services to those affected by crisis and disaster around the world with an array of mental health, medical and human service programs.
Dinnin served as the project executive for the FEMA guidance for Functional Needs Support Services in General Populations shelters, published in 2010. Additionally, he has been credited with developing the most comprehensive training manual for sheltering persons with medical needs known to be in existence.
He served as the commander of the Health and Medical Branch of Texas Task Force Ike following the devastating hurricane in 2008, and served as commander for the final Galveston shelter operation for those impacted by Hurricane Ike. In 2010, Dinnin led an incident management team and medical strike team to Haiti following the devastating 7.0 earthquake, where he implemented the Incident Command System in one of the largest hospitals in Port-au-Prince.
Additionally, Dinnin has held numerous appointments with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, including a secretarial appointment to the National Advisory Committee on Terrorism following the September 11th terrorist attacks. He was selected by the Texas Division of Emergency Management to serve as Incident Commander of the West Texas Unified Command when more than 1,000 responders engaged in the Fundamentalist Church of Latter Day Saints Yearning for Zion Ranch incident in San Angelo, Texas.