Five minutes and 14 seconds inot the medra infomercial Ricci Kilgore says, " I wasn't offered alot of umm therapy because they didn't have alot of hope."
THAT IS CLEARLY A LIE NO MATTER WHAT THE INJURY STATUS.
http://www.medra.com/video/medra2.html
Ricci Kilgore endorses Medra Inc, a fraudulent company that rips people off of 30,000 dollars for so called stem cells, by appearing on their website. Dr William C Rader is a California psychiatrist that has been treating peolpe with SUPPOSED fetal stem cells since 1997.
Countless numbers of SCI patients that NEVER would have believed Rader but were swayed by Ricci Kilgore's testimony. They threw 30,000 dollars into the pockets of William C Rader the stem cell fraud.
As late as a month ago, William C Rader was telling a complete quad that all his SCI patients had improved. A LIE. When a disgruntled SCI patient with the initials RD posted on a topix board what a scam Medra was. He was contacted by Dr Rader, John Brower and then Ricci Kilgore. This tells me Ricci is connected to MEDRA Inc.
The disgrunted customer was given free stem cells and an all expense paid vacation to Tijuana, where he received his stem cells in a strip mall. Of course the customer had to retract his negative post which he did.
As for Albert Scheller, uncle Forsythe used his cancer protocols, so I am sure they knew each other.
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0ISW/is_277-278/ai_n16702337/
In the US, Dr. James Forsythe, MD, at the Cancer Screening & Treatment Center in Reno, Nevada, is following many of the cancer treatment protocols of Dr. Scheller.
Scheller worked with Rader until his death in a Las Vegas hotel room. So this is how they found Ricci Kilgore the PERFECT Stem Cell Miracle patient.
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The original articles are from the Idaho State journal archives. The first year of her injury in 2000, there are 4 articles. Then in 2005, Ricci re-appears saying the doctors told her she would never walk and talking about stem cells.
These articles speak for themselves.
Bengal track athletes injured in accident
By Journal Staff
POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) Three Idaho State University freshmen track and field athletes were injured last weekend in a one-car accident while driving back to the school from Reno, Nev.
Ricci Kilgore, Paul Litchfield and Nick Herald were driving in a van that hit a patch of black ice and skidded, overturned, then rolled on Sunday. Litchfield, who was driving, and Herald both were shaken but did not require medical attention.
Kilgore was thrown from the vehicle and landed nearly 30 feet away. She suffered a broken back and was taken by Life Flight to Washoe Medical Center in Reno.
Kilgore remained in stable condition Monday night and reported feeling nothing from her knees down. That was an improvement from 12 hours previously, when Kilgore had no feeling from the waist down. She was scheduled for surgery on Tuesday.
Kilgore was a pole vaulter who competed late in the year for the Bengals. Herald and Litchfield were multi-event specialists
Publication:Idaho State; Date:Mar 22, 2000; Section:Undefined; Page Number:1
ISU pole vaulters surgery successful
By The Journal Staff
RENO, Nev. Ricci Kilgore, the Idaho State University freshman pole vaulter who was injured in a car accident on Sunday as she and two other freshman athletes returned home from a trip to Reno, Nev., underwent surgery Tuesday morning to relieve pressure on the injured part of her broken back.
The surgery was termed a success by hospital medical staff. Feeling was restored throughout her legs and the medical team that performed the operation said she should regain full use of her legs.
Kilgore, who attended Reno High School, was driving back to Pocatello with Nick Herald and Paul Litchfield, when their van encountered black ice about a mile east of the I-84/I-86 junction and flipped.
Kilgore, who was sent out of the back window of the van, was thrown 30 feet and broke her back upon impact. The affected vertebrae is located in the lumbar region, almost straight back from the belly button. Herald, who was driving, and Litchfield did not require medical attention.
Kilgore was taken to Cassia Hospital in Burley, Idaho, then Life-Flighted to Washoe Medical Center in Reno.
Her surgery began at 11 a.m. local time and entailed cleaning out the bone fragments from the ruptured vertebrae, straightening out the two vertebrae above the injured one to relieve pressure, and grafting bone from her hip to reconstruct the damaged segment.
Paul Heglar, her high school track coach, said that everything could not have gone better, regarding the surgery Tuesday.
Date:Mar 23, 2000;
Section:Undefined;
Page Number:1
Injured Bengal pole vaulter regains feeling
By The Journal Staff
RENO, Nev. Following successful surgery Tuesday on Ricci Kilgores broken back, feeling has been restored throughout her legs and into her toes, and physical therapy could begin as early as the end of the week.
Kilgore, a freshman pole vaulter from Idaho State, was injured as she and two others freshman track athletes returned home from a trip to Reno, Nev.
A 6-8 hour surgery was performed Tuesday at Renos Washoe Medical Center to repair and relieve pressure on a ruptured vertebrae in her broken back.
Contacted in Intensive Care Wednesday morning at Washoe, Kilgore said she has regained feeling to her toes and said she may begin physical therapy at the end of the week to begin the recovery process.
Publication:Idaho State; Date:May 27, 2000; Section:Undefined; Page Number:1
Injured ISU athlete on way back home
By The Journal Staff
RENO, Nev. Idaho State freshman Ricci Kilgore has progressed to outpatient status, two months after suffering a broken back in a traffic accident here.
Kilgore, a pole vaulter for the Idaho State track and field team last fall, was thrown from a van on the way back to Pocatello from Reno, Nev., on March 19. During the initial hours following the accident, Kilgore had no feeling in her legs or toes.
Surgery was performed after the accident to repair the injured vertebrae and the long road of recovery started with physical therapy sessions to strengthen the area around the injury. Kilgore does about 90 minutes of work with her physical therapist each day, then does an additional three hours of work on her own. Because of her hard work, Kilgore can now recover in the comfort of her own home.
Paul Heglar, her track coach at Reno High School who has been with Kilgore throughout the ordeal, said the physical therapy is currently focused on strengthening her legs, specifically the hamstrings. Kilgore lost a lot of weight initially after the accident, but has put back on nine pounds in the past few weeks.
They are working with her everyday in the walker and working on her holding her own weight, Heglar said. They are trying to regain muscle.
Kilgores goal is to pole vault again, but for the immediate future her focus is on therapy, in the hopes of re-enrolling in college next fall or the following spring.
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Maybe her belief in the stem cells prompted her to get a personal trainer and in her own words "But through absolute determination, she pushes herself to the limit every day, physically, to make the cells work for her." But her Medra video is manipulative and what is left out is as bad as lying.
My only motive has been to make it easier for people to find out the truth about Medra and the way they manipulate their miracle cases. If Ricci's tale was the only Medra testimony of twisted truth, I would not have been so fast to use the word fraud. Manipulating the truth about injuries and illnesses, is a pattern that has made Medra a very successful offshore stem cell provider.
John Brower is Rader's right hand man, self described as the patients relation man .His child is Brian's miracle from the Medra website. His son's real name is Jake.
This is the Medra website claiming Brian aka Jake, was semi-vegetative for three years until the saw Rader, somewhere in 2006.
http://www.medra.com/brian.html
Here is the same child using some of the same pictures being uses in a 2006 Steenblock newsletter ,claiming the same improvements form umbilical cord stem cells.
http://web.archive.org/web/20061111063401/http://www.strokedoctor.com/newsletters/SEP-OCT-2006.pdf
The weird thing is Dr Steenblock, Dr Forsythe, Ricci's uncle and Valerie Kilgore, Ricci's mom are all part of Nevada's homeopathic medical community.
Most of the miracle stories on the Medra site are incomplete. Hannah is the new star. Her video claims that the Dr Rader healed her brain and her EEG is returning to normal.
http://www.medra.com/video/medra4.html
On her blog, Hannah's mother tells another story:
Our neurologist came in on Thursday afternoon and broke the news to us that we were already expecting. Hannah's EEG is much worse (although she is sick). She is having very frequent absence, atypical absence and complex partial seizures that are very difficult to detect with the naked eye. These are often called, “subclinical”.
http://www.hopeforhannah.ca/journal_may_09.html
I will never understand the motivation behind allowing your own or your child's story to be used in such a heartbreakingly false way.
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The hundreds of people that gave $30,000 dollars to con man Rader could be put to such better use. Equipment, therapies but now it is in the hands of William C Rader. Who in his own words said.
"Now either I am psychotic, a compulsive liar, or I'm telling the truth."
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2007/05/doctor_claims_s/
http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?section=news/local&id=5283114
Dr. William Rader, Medra, Inc.: "There's no one else in the world who knows what I know ... I'm the only one doing this. One mind."
Dr. William Rader: "I'm not telling a cell where to go, because I have no clue where it should go. This is nature, God's work. whatever you want to call it."
It's criticism that doesn't phase Dr. Rader.
Dr. William Rader: "I know who I am, I'm a good boy. I'm little Billy Rader. I am a good boy
Frauds like William C Rader give stem cells a bad name. When I think of all the research that could have been funded by the $30,000 he scams out of desperate people it make me ill. Thankfully, with President Obama, we will soon have clinical trials and hopefully the frauds will fade away!