Chicago Sun-Times

QANON BACKER AT CENTER OF COVID TREATMENT FLAP DIES

Supporters of Veronica Wolski — known for posting signs over the Kennedy Expressway, including messages against pandemic restrictio­ns and vaccines — harassed N.W. Side hospital last week for refusing to give her the unproven drug ivermectin

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

A QAnon backer from Chicago died early Monday following a public battle with COVID-19 that recently prompted a coordinate­d harassment campaign against a Northwest Side hospital that declined to treat her with an unapproved and potentiall­y dangerous drug.

Veronica Wolski, 64, of Jefferson Park, died at 12:44 a.m. at Amita Resurrecti­on Medical Center, the Cook County medical examiner’s office reported. She died from pneumonia due to COVID-19 with hypothyroi­dism as a contributi­ng factor, according to the medical examiner’s office.

Wolski had been hospitaliz­ed for weeks, according to posts on the messaging app Telegram, where her supporters had mobilized. Fellow QAnon adherents ultimately began targeting the hospital last week with a small protest and a flood of phone calls after doctors refused to give her ivermectin, a drug that’s been touted by the vaccine-averse and those on the far right as a groundbrea­king treatment for COVID.

While approved for treating parasites in both humans and animals, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has warned that ivermectin hasn’t been proved effective against the coronaviru­s or approved to treat it. In recent months, as fringe figures have lauded ivermectin, poison control centers across the country have reported a massive surge in cases related to the drug. Some people have even begun ingesting an ivermectin paste formulated for horses, according to media reports.

A flyer for a protest last Monday at Resurrecti­on explained Wolski had been hospitaliz­ed there for two weeks with “Covid pneumonia.” The flyer, circulated on Telegram, claimed a doctor who initially agreed to give her ivermectin later backtracke­d because the hospital sided with public health experts who “do not advise its use in COVID-19 cases.”

A hospital spokeswoma­n declined to comment Monday.

Wolski was perhaps most well known for hanging banners with pointed messages on the fence of a pedestrian bridge over the Kennedy Expressway on the Northwest Side. When Wolski was interviewe­d by the Sun-Times in 2018 — as she faced a crackdown from the Illinois State Police — her activism centered on her support for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders after he lost the 2016 Democratic presidenti­al primary.

Known commonly as “the bridge lady” or by her online handle “The People’s Bridge,” Wolski later began supporting former President Donald Trump and displaying signs that pushed the QAnon conspiracy theory and rejected pandemic restrictio­ns and vaccines.

“Ax the vax,” read one sign she posed with on the bridge.

In an interview posted to Vimeo in 2019, Wolski explained how she gravitated toward flying QAnon banners earlier that year.

“There’s something about the Q. There has to be a critical mass reached for some people to know what it means in order for the honks to come in. In order for me to not just look like a lunatic on the bridge,” she said of the conspiracy theory, which holds that Trump is battling a cabal of Democratic pedophiles.

However, Wolski also acknowledg­ed her propaganda work was alienating: “In the face of losing friends along the way, of being disassocia­ted from family members, I don’t back down ever.”

Wolski’s family and an associate couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment.

But on Monday, some of the same highprofil­e QAnon adherents who supported Wolski and trumpeted the campaign against Resurrecti­on offered their condolence­s.

Michael Flynn, Trump’s disgraced former national security adviser whom Wolski credited as a hero, called her “a patriot of the highest order, a blossom of truth in the field of fight that we find ourselves engaged in.”

L. Lin Wood, an embattled attorney who helped file lawsuits supporting Trump’s false claims of voter fraud, was among those who sought to have Wolski discharged this weekend.

In a video posted to Telegram, Wood calls the hospital and demands her release before issuing a stark warning: “If you do not release her, you’re going to be guilty of murder.” In another video, a Chicago police officer prevents a woman from entering the hospital to perform a wellness check on Wolski.

On Monday, Wood eulogized Wolski and included a cryptic message that apparently sought to mobilize his nearly 815,000 followers on the platform again.

“We pray for ALL that are captives to medical tyranny in our country and around the world. It must end. As my brother in Christ, Jarrin Jackson, says, ‘Now go to war,’ ” Wood said on Telegram, referring to a veteran and failed congressio­nal candidate from Oklahoma who is sympatheti­c to QAnon beliefs.

“Non-violent civil disobedien­ce. Let your voices be heard, Patriots,” Wood’s message continued. “For Veronica. For your fellow Americans. For the world. For humanity.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Veronica Wolski gestures to drivers on the Kennedy Expressway in 2017.
SUN-TIMES FILE Veronica Wolski gestures to drivers on the Kennedy Expressway in 2017.
 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Flowers and a flag decorate the fence on a pedestrian bridge over the Kennedy Expressway on Monday in tribute to Veronica Wolski.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Flowers and a flag decorate the fence on a pedestrian bridge over the Kennedy Expressway on Monday in tribute to Veronica Wolski.
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Veronica Wolski talks with a Sun-Times reporter in 2017.
SUN-TIMES FILE Veronica Wolski talks with a Sun-Times reporter in 2017.

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