One of the most overlooked or underreported aspects of the Covenant School Shooting in which a transvestite, Audrey Hale, murdered six people is how the mental health industry furthered her perversion. Vanderbilt University Medical Center promoted the transgenderism of Hale while also failing to report the threat that Hale posed. Brent Leatherwood took it upon himself to utilize Southern Baptist Convention resources to fight the disclosure of the Nashville Manifesto. The manifesto would be published, in part, and reveal the demonic perversion of transgenderism.
The Tennessee Star, the outlet that published the manifesto and has done the best reporting on this story, published an article in July alleging that Vanderbilt University Medical Center was financially compensating the Covenant Children’s Trust. The article is framed so that The Tennessee Star had a lead and published the various parties’ inability to comment on what money they had received.
An attorney who represents The Covenant Children’s Trust, which claims it owns the copyright to the works of Covenant School attacker Audrey Elizabeth Hale, told The Tennessee Star on Wednesday he could not comment on whether his client received any type of financial compensation from Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC), which treated the killer over 22 years, from the time she was six until her death.
The Star contacted attorney Ed Yarbrough, who works at the Spencer Fane firm and represented the Covenant Children’s Trust in the Tennessee lawsuit which sought to compel Metro Nashville to release Hale’s documents, to ask whether his client, the Covenant School or Covenant Presbyterian Church were approached by VUMC to discuss its potential civil liability over its treatment of Hale.
This story was published to advance the allegation that they have: VUMC is making hush payments. The Tennessee Star does not have definitive evidence. but they certainly had enough to float the idea to the public.
The Star additionally asked Yarbrough (pictured above) whether VUMC made any financial payments or other form of settlement with the Covenant Children’s Trust or if it was aware of any arrangements between VUMC and the Covenant School, Covenant Presbyterian Church, or any family members of Hale’s victims.
Yarbrough told The Star, “Not able to comment.”
The Star also contacted Brent Leatherwood, the parent of a Covenant student who now serves as the trustee for the Covenant Children’s Trust, but did not receive a response prior to press time.
VUMC has clear liability in this case, and there could (and should) be a lawsuit made against them for their malpractice and negligence, as well as criminal prosecution. But a connection between legal proceedings and their efforts to suppress the manifesto needs answers from Brent Leatherwood on behalf of Southern Baptists, whose money was used for Leatherwood’s pet project.