Dr Bay (left) with supporters Michael Simms and Dave Oneegs.

SUSPENDED junior doctor William “Billy” Bay, founder of Queensland Peoples’ Protest that advocated for informed consent and freedom of speech in Australia, has won his Supreme Court case against the Australian Health Practitioners Agency (AHPRA).

“It might be difficult to characterise the conduct of the Board and AHPRA as anything less than profoundly unsatisfactory,” Justice Bradley said in a sharp rebuke of the defendants.

He criticised the regulators for their “animus” and “combative approach” towards Dr Bay, highlighting their inability to prove that he had breached any relevant laws or guidelines. As a result, AHPRA and the Board were ordered to cover the legal costs and not only lift his suspension today, but retrograde from the date of his suspension.

The case is significant in that it is the only Supreme Court action to overturn a medical establishment action in relation to the Covid-19 global psychological operation in Australia, which required a lockstep approach to imposing a totalitarian and fascist medical regime under the guise of confronting an alleged global pandemic.

Dr Bay’s medical licence had been suspended by AHPRA since August 17th, 2022, for allegedly endangering public safety by speaking out against COVID-19 vaccine mandates. His win on Friday is a landmark Supreme Court case against AHPRA, because it upheld freedom of speech by doctors and the doctor-patient relationship.

Before his suspension, Dr Bay worked as a GP Registrar (non-partner doctor) in North Brisbane and as a medical administrator at Princess Alexandra Hospital. Earlier roles include English Editor for the Korean Government and Visiting Professor of English.

An award-winning chess player, cellist, and Bitcoin trader, Dr Bay practised Vipassana meditation and lived as a monk before embracing Christianity in 2022. He describes himself as a patriotic, uncensored Christian Australian, unafraid of controversy.

In an interview with UK dissident doctor Ahmad Malik, Dr Bay explained said the court case marked a significant victory against what he called the “kangaroo court” of medical regulators.

In 2022, Dr Bay disrupted the Australian Medical Association (AMA) National Conference with a live-streamed protest, accusing then-Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly of misleading the public and manipulating doctors.

He urged medical professionals to side with Australians and stop administering vaccines he said were causing harm. As security escorted him out he declared “All GPs and doctors in Australia are on notice by the people of Queensland,” identifying his actions as part of the Queensland People’s Protest.

Professor Anne Tonkin, who chaired the Medical Board of Australia at the time, was present at the AMA conference and discussed with AMA chairman and Associate Professor Julian Rait, about making a complaint to the Medical Board about Dr Bay’s conduct.

AHPRA and the board claimed that the urgency of the pandemic required them to quickly suspend Dr Bay to prevent him from continuing to influence others and create “mistrust of vaccinations (in relation to COVID-19), of public health measures, of the health system generally, and of the regulation of the health care system.”

Maybe not coincidentally, Prof. Tonkin quietly stepped down from her position only a few days ago. Has the professor been reading the writing on the wall referencing the emerging mRNA disaster that the government medical system is struggling to cover up?

Dr Bay’s basic complaint was that he was expelled from the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners without due process. He fought an uphill battle within a legal system demonstrating corruption and collusion.

Dr Malik said he believed a key reason for Dr Bay’s success was that he represented himself, meaning there were no lawyers to complicate matters, misrepresent him, or potentially be influenced by external pressures such as bribery or the threat of disbarment for defending him honestly.

“Hopefully, this win will be the equivalent of a dam breaking. Other cases, such as those of Dr My Le Trinh and Dr Sarah Myhill (here in the UK), which are fighting against the corrupt medical regulators, will hopefully also be successful,” he said.

He said that as for the medical licensing boards worldwide, listeners would see in his podcast next week with Dr Bruce Dooley that it can be argued that all are captured, rotten and corrupt. “It isn’t a case of fixing them; they must be demolished for patient safety,” said Dr Malik.

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