Posted on 11/11/2009 6:32:26 PM PST by BunnySlippers
In Hasan's living room, a crumpled prayer rug shared the floor with a paper-shredding machine. When he moved into the apartment in July, he'd put a bed in the bedroom, but he had gotten rid of the bed prior to the shooting.
In a closet, near the washer and dryer and wads of Hasan's clothing, including fatigues, was a box of pill bottles. The medications included a 2001 prescription for Combivir, a drug often prescribed for doctors who may have come in contact with HIV, as well as the antibiotic Clarithromycin, a cough reliever and an antihistamine.
On a card table in the kitchen were coins from various countries, including Israel, and an empty package for a LaserMax gun sight, with a $229.99 pricetag. There was also a book about Islamic dream interpretation, "Dreams and Interpretations," by Allamah Muhammad Bin Sireen. Anwar al Awlaki, the radical cleric in Yemen to whom Hasan had sent e-mails, has produced a lecture series on dream interpretation.
On the kitchen counter were some documents, including a 2003 psychiatry exam and an insurance report for his car. According to neighbor Kim Rosenthal, another neighbor had used a key to scratch Hasan's car and had also scratched a sticker saying "Allah is Love" off the vehicle. The resident was asked to leave, said Rosenthal. When she asked Hasan if he planned to do anything about the incident, Hasan said no. Reported Rosenthal, "He said, 'It's Ramadan, I've forgiven him.' And that was it."
(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...
Did Hasan have HIV and was deliberately spreading it?
How many of his patients has he killed?
How many other Islamic implants and embeds are killing
now throughout America?
where did his money go??
Right—he did work—did it go to Jihad causes? No family close by.
And what does that mean? I assume it meant he had HIV but I don't keep up on this stuff. Is there a drug doctors take who are not infected ? Is there no one in the media who can write a simple declarative sentence? Like, for instance..."he had Combivir, a drug prescribed to those infected with HIV"....or "he had Combivir, a drug doctors are given because (whatever)". First we can't make anything of his being Muslim. Now we can't get a simple answer to a simple question: Was he HIV positive?
Why weren’t drug bottles taken as evidence?
He was nice to his neighbors...he didn't shoot them.
As far as his forgiving the soldier who keyed his car, according to other articles, the guy was arrested and charged. So much for forgiving.
There was a time years ago anyone in the medical profession, who came in contact with someone with HIV would prophylactically take Combvir
They should have been, especially to make sure they were what was on the label. And why was he hanging on to a prescription that was from 2001? Makes me wonder just how thorough an investigation the FBI is doing.
That was years ago..so why was he taking it now?
Thanks. All the reporter had to do was insert that word. Did it work? Is it still prescribed for that? Or is it more likely he took it because he is infected?
Loser.
Murdering bloody Islamic savage.
Blood sausage for the electric chair.
That’s all.
It hasn’t even been a week since the attack, and the FBI didn’t go to his apartment until last Friday. Doesn’t it seem strange that the media has been allowed into his apartment so soon afterwards?
Not everything is a conspiracy. Specific information about his HIV status is probably not publicly available, due to the stupid HIPPA laws. He’s still alive and so still has all these “privacy rights”. But medical professionals are frequently given anti-HIV drugs as a prophylactic, when they’ve gotten pricked with needles that had been used on an HIV+ patient or had direct contact with bodily fluids of HIV+ patients. Especially given that the label was dated 2001, there’s no reason to assume he was HIV+. If he was, his pill box should have had a whole array of recent-label HIV drugs.
Given a misogynistic male muslim, HIV may be a side issue although the lives of gay islamicists must be paved with pain and putrefaction ...
I think they no longer use it as such.It was from 2001; no?
I resent that. I never said it was. I never said everything is.
I object to the sloppy journalism which fosters suspicion. That was my point. If this drug is given as a prophylactic or if privacy rights are an issue, both can be easily mentioned in the report.
According to other reports I’ve read, the guy who keyed his car was also military. Hasan had an insurance report on the incident, meaning that in order to get the damage covered, he had to report it (and he may have reported the damage to police before learning who actually did it — car keyers don’t usually leave a note with their name and contact info). I would certainly hope that charges would be pressed against *anyone* known to have “keyed” a car. If police learned (no matter who from) that this guy keyed a car, then his superior officers would have gotten wind of it too, and I doubt that dropping charges and sweeping it under the rug was an option, even if Hasan didn’t make an issue out of it. It sounds like there was probably a witness, and it may not have been Hasan. Presumably the punk-soldier who keyed the car would have made an effort to do it at a time when he knew Hasan was not around to observe it.
And I would hope that if a Christian said he “forgave” someone for keying his car, but still reported the crime to police so that the damage would be paid for either by insurance or by the perp, we wouldn’t assume the forgiveness wasn’t real. In Hasan’s case, who knows. He sounds like a very disturbed person with delusions of persecution, and even if was telling himself he “forgave” the keyer, he certainly added the incident to the list of things he was stewing over. As far as I can tell, even though he imagined himself to be constantly discriminated against and persecuted for being a Muslim, this keying incident is the only documented example. From everything else I’ve been reading, it sounds like most people were treating him with kid gloves on account of his being Muslim.
If the keyer had some legitimate gripe against Hasan (i.e. due to Hasan behaving inappropriately towards him when serving in his physician capacity), it would have been a LOT more productive to take it up with military officials at Ft. Hood, than key Hasan’s car. The army needed formal complaints filed against Hasan in order to get rid of him, and apparently it never got any. Just imagine how many lives could have been saved if everybody who *should* have filed a formal complaint against him, actually *had* done so.
The medications included a 2001 prescription for Combivir, a drug often prescribed for doctors who may have come in contact with HIV
Obviously, doctors who HAVE HIV would need to take the same drugs as any other person who has HIV. The writer specified what this drug was commonly prescribed for (at least was, back at the time it was prescribed).
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