Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Anti-vaccine group targets California medical chief

- OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ

SAN FRANCISCO — The president of California’s medical board, which issues medical licenses and discipline­s doctors, says a group of anti-vaccine activists stalked her at home and followed her to her office — where four men confronted her in a dark parking garage in what she described as a terrifying experience.

Kristina Lawson, a former mayor of Walnut Creek who was appointed to the board by former Gov. Jerry Brown, said on social media Wednesday she grew concerned Monday after she noticed the people in a white SUV parked near her home and saw someone flying a drone over her house.

“They watched my daughter drive herself to school and watched me walk out of my house, get in my car, and take my two kids to school,” she wrote in a tweet.

The SUV then followed her to work and parked “headto-head” with her car in a garage, she said. Lawson said that when she left the office building and entered the parking garage later that evening, four men jumped out of the SUV with cameras and recording equipment and confronted her.

Lawson contacted the Walnut Creek Police Department, which later told her the men told officers they wanted to interview her.

“Instead, they ambushed me in a dark parking garage when they suspected I would be alone,” she wrote on social media.

She said the people identified themselves as representi­ng America’s Frontline Doctors and had not contacted the state medical board or her workplace to request to speak with her.

Led by Simone Gold, a Beverly Hills doctor who was arrested during the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, America’s Frontline Doctors criticizes the covid-19 vaccine and has been widely discredite­d for spreading disinforma­tion about the coronaviru­s and unproven treatments.

“I was concerned when I saw someone flying a drone over my house and saw a mysterious white truck parked outside my home. Later that day, my concern turned to terror,” Lawson said in a statement.

She added: “I arrived in the dark parking garage behind my office and experience­d four men unexpected­ly rush towards me, jumping out of the same white truck that had been parked outside my house. I then realized that these four men had been surreptiti­ously stalking me.”

Lawson said she decided to go public with what happened to her “to shed light on these reprehensi­ble, unacceptab­le tactics of intimidati­on”

“But like other California­ns who believe in both science and fair play, I will not be intimidate­d,” she said.

Walnut Creek police spokeswoma­n Lt. Holley Connors said in a statement that a man claiming to be “a state detective from Georgia” called a police dispatcher Monday and said he was conducting “surveillan­ce” in San Miguel, an unincorpor­ated area near Walnut Creek.

The dispatcher asked the man, whose name was not made public, if he had a weapon, and the man responded that his gun was locked in a case, Connors said. The dispatcher told the man that he should contact the Contra Costa County sheriff’s office, which oversees the area he said he was in.

The sheriff’s office did not return email and phone messages seeking comment.

Connors said the same man called the Walnut Creek police again later in the day to let them know he was in a parking lot in Walnut Creek with at least one other person.

“The Police Department determined that the man who called earlier in the day claiming to be a detective from Georgia was likely involved” in the incident with Lawson, Connors wrote, adding that police have no evidence of a crime but that investigat­ors are still gathering informatio­n.

Bill Prasifka, the Medical Board of California’s executive director, said he supports Lawson in condemning any attempts to intimidate her or any other member of the board and staff.

Board members and staff have been “advised to remain vigilant to their surroundin­gs and provided security reminders,” Prasifka said in a statement.

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