HomeMy WebLinkAbout11.04.25 Board Correspondence - FW_ Long, white, fibrous stands in the blood vessels..ATTENTION: This message originated from outside Butte County. Please exercise judgment before opening
attachments, clicking on links, or replying..
From:Clerk of the Board
To:Mutony, Heather
Cc:Lee, Lewis
Subject:Board Correspondence - FW: Long, white, fibrous stands in the blood vessels.
Date:Wednesday, November 5, 2025 4:28:59 PM
Attachments:https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F7195e26e-fed6-4c3a-8ecf-
2bcec55bf177_1190x671.png
Please see Board Correspondence -
From: lance dreiss <lancedreiss@att.net>
Sent: Tuesday, November 4, 2025 7:27 PM
To: pcbs@countyofplumas.com; Soderstrom, Monica <msoderstrom@buttecounty.net>;
Assemblymember.Gallagher@assembly.ca.gov; Senator.Dahle@senate.ca.gov;
davidhollister@countyofplumas.com; sheriff@countyofplumas.com; District Attorney
<District_Attorney@buttecounty.net>; Kimmelshue, Tod <TKimmelshue@buttecounty.net>; Pickett,
Andy <APickett@buttecounty.net>; Connelly, Bill <BConnelly@buttecounty.net>; Teeter, Doug
<DTeeter@buttecounty.net>; Julie Threet <julie4butte5@gmail.com>; Waugh, Melanie
<mwaugh@buttecounty.net>; Kitts, Melissa <mkitts@buttecounty.net>; Durfee, Peter
<PDurfee@buttecounty.net>; Ritter, Tami <TRitter@buttecounty.net>; Teri DuBose
<Teri.DuBose@mail.house.gov>; Congressman Doug LaMalfa <CA01DL.Outreach@mail.house.gov>;
Stephens, Brad J. <BStephens@buttecounty.net>; Clerk of the Board
<clerkoftheboard@buttecounty.net>
Subject: Long, white, fibrous stands in the blood vessels.
Public Record
Richard described how, since early 2021, he has repeatedly found long, white, fibrous strands
in the blood vessels of the deceased. Before the pandemic, clots were typically red and jelly-
like — “grape jelly,” he calls them. Now many have turned tough, rubbery, and pale. He
estimates that roughly half of the bodies he embalms still show these abnormal formations,
even though the larger ones appear less frequent. “It’s like a roller coaster,” he said. “When I
think it’s going away, it comes back.”
Tom’s latest survey of 301 embalmers around the world backs that up: roughly 27 percent
reported finding the white fibrous clots, and about 22 percent saw widespread micro-clotting.
At a Tennessee conference in 2025, two-thirds of attending embalmers raised their hands
when asked if they had seen the same thing.
The evidence is now undeniable — at least that something abnormal is happening. Yet no
formal investigation has been undertaken. Vascular surgeons, Tom explained, remain silent;
one even withdrew after hospital pressure. It echoes a wider pattern of fear and inertia across
medicine. Clinicians trust the “experts,” and if the experts aren’t speaking, the assumption is
that nothing is wrong.
I understand the hesitation. As a physician, I used to ignore these reports myself. Surely, I
thought, if it were real, someone in the scientific community would have addressed it by now.
But here we are — in year five — and the clots are still appearing.
To dismiss them as coincidence or “conspiracy” is no longer acceptable. We’ve now seen live
cases: deep-vein thromboses removed from patients, showing the same white fibrous material
later confirmed under electron microscopy as human in origin and amyloid-like in structure.
These are not silicone artefacts or embalming residues. Something is altering the fibrin
network of blood itself.
Whether these clots form shortly before death or after it remains unclear. But either way, they
represent a profound disturbance in the biology of coagulation — one that demands urgent
study.
For me, this isn’t about politics or blame. It’s about science. If something so visually obvious
can be ignored for four years, what else are we missing? Medicine cannot afford to look away.
As Richard said plainly: blood is red. When it turns white, we should all want to know why.
diana dreiss