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A Message from Robert F. Kennedy Jr. - Chairman on Leave
April 26, 2023

Philadelphia HS Student Dies of Leukemia on the Same Day of His Diagnosis

A 16-year-old Philadelphia public high school student died from acute leukemia on the same day as his diagnosis. His family stated in his obituary that before April 13th, Kyle Limper was a “completely healthy and happy young man with no sign of illness” Local media mostly ignored this shocking story, but it was picked up by suburban outlets and media in other states.

Kyle was a very athletic young man, a student at Penn Treaty High School, and he played for the Kensington High football team. Kyle began to complain of back pain, and the next day he was unable to stand up after waking in the morning.

His family rushed him to St. Christopher’s Hospital, where it was discovered he was having multiple organ failure stemming from a turbotype of acute leukemia. His father reported that “every time we came back into the room, it was just getting worse and worse”. After 24 hours in the hospital, Kyle passed away. The family’s GoFundMe can be found here.

This case of rapid leukemia is extremely rare and mostly strikes toddlers and very small children. The five-year survival rates for people under 20 years are considered to be over 68% or higher.

As a Philadelphia public high school athlete, Kyle Limper faced a COVID-19 vaccine mandate to play after-school sports during the 2021–2022 school year. The unusual and unnecessary requirement was imposed after Nick Simmons, Senior Advisor for School Reopening and Recovery, Office of the Secretary of the Department of Education in Washington, put pressure on an already willing PA DOE to figure out ways to push vaccine clinics into schools and COVID-19 shots into kids.

Unable to mandate it to whole school districts they identified athletics as an admissible avenue for the use of coercive pressure tactics.  See FOIA documents ordered by Megan Brock below.

The very sudden wave of turbocancers that have become manifest in the past two years should be attributed to the COVID-19 vaccine until proof is established that the occurrence of these incredibly short diagnosis-to-death durations is not due to acute toxicity from the COVID-19 genetic treatments.

In 2021 video below, Brett Weinstein, Robert Malone, and Steve Kirsch discuss the Japanese bio-distribution study of the lipid nanoparticle that delivers the mRNA gene therapy to cells. The possibility of leukemia development is noted because of these drugs demonstrated high concentrations in the bone marrow.