Health Freedom victory within reach in North Carolina as SB 31 amendment clarifies definition of medical felony crimes

Mike Adams
Natural News

We are on the verge of being able to report a significant health freedom victory in North Carolina. Although we do not yet have a confirmation that this amendment has passed, NaturalNews received the text of an amendment from a North Carolina state Senator who sponsored the bill, and the text is encouraging (see below).

The amendment has not yet passed, but if it does, it will alter the text of the bill to indicate that the Class I felony charge would only be applied to those who “falsely represent” themselves as being licensed medical practitioners, not merely to those who “practice medicine without being duly licensed.”

The distinction is crucial to protect holistic health practitioners. A law which targeted people who merely “practice medicine without a license” would have technically criminalized huge numbers of holistic health practitioners who are actually denied any sort of license to practice medicine by the state (http://www.naturalnews.com/031976_N…). The new language of this amendment, if adopted, would limit the Class I felony charge only to those who falsely (fraudulently) pretend to have a medical license while actually having no such license (see the amendment text, below).

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