Current:Home > ContactNBA legend John Stockton details reasons for his medical 'beliefs' in court filing -ThriveEdge Finance
NBA legend John Stockton details reasons for his medical 'beliefs' in court filing
View
Date:2025-04-12 17:39:17
NBA legend John Stockton has submitted a declaration in federal court that details the reasons for his recent rebellion against vaccines and COVID-19 restrictions – reasons that are at odds with science and instead rooted in personal experiences or misconceptions.
Stockton, 62, said in the declaration filed Tuesday that he noticed a “pattern” after he contracted the flu decades ago despite getting the flu vaccine. He said one of his children was harmed by vaccines, though he didn’t say how. He also said he listened to the advice of a chiropractor who told him to consider “not vaccinating my children.”
It should be noted that chiropractors aren’t epidemiologists trained in investigating patterns and causes of illnesses such as the flu and COVID. Also, flu vaccines aren’t 100% effective because there are different strains of the flu, a virus that changes over time. Vaccines instead can reduce the risk and severity of the illness, according to the Mayo Clinic and other scientific sources.
“A pattern was emerging,” Stockton said in the declaration filed in U.S. District Court in Spokane, Wash. “I contracted the flu despite the vaccine. My child was hurt because of the vaccine. Maybe there was some truth in our Chiropractor’s words. I spent a lot of time over the next 30 years reading books, paying attention, and asking questions. To find the truth, I used a mosaic approach seeking data, anecdotal information, personal experience, common-sense and contrary indicators.”
Why is John Stockton doing this?
Stockton submitted the declaration in support of his lawsuit against Washington state officials who cracked down on COVID-19 misinformation from doctors. The lawsuit claims that some doctors’ free-speech rights were violated because they spoke “against the mainstream Covid narrative.” He and other plaintiffs also filed a motion Tuesday that seeks a preliminary injunction to stop the defendants from investigating or sanctioning physicians for “speaking out in any public forum against the government endorsed Covid narrative.”
Stockton, a basketball Hall of Famer, has a street named after him in Salt Lake City and a statute of his likeness outside his former NBA arena there. He noted his mother and sister were nurses and that he grew up in an environment "where we trusted our doctors, took medications as prescribed and followed thevaccine schedule at the time."
He then apparently changed his mind, citing his NBA career and all the medical professionals he worked with, including the chiropractor who worked with his team, the Utah Jazz. Stockton recalled how he didn’t miss a game in 17 seasons but missed 18 games one season because of surgery (1997) and four more games another season (1989-90).
“Two of those games were because I got the flu and spent a night or two in a Charlotte NC hospital,” he said in the declaration. “That season, I had received the flu vaccine.”
John Stockton’s post-NBA cause
Stockton has been in the news before for his unscientific beliefs against vaccines and COVID restrictions. He played college basketball at Gonzaga in Spokane and had his season tickets there suspended for his refusal to wear a mask during games during the pandemic.
In the new filing he said he agreed to be a plaintiff in this lawsuit based on his “deeply held beliefs.”
In a separate recent interview with the Deseret News, he identified the chiropractor who influenced him as Craig Buhler, who worked with the Jazz. In 2022, Stockton wrote a letter to a federal judge in support of Buhler’s wife before she was sentenced to 30 days in prison in relation to her role in the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
How John Stockton arrived at his beliefs
The new filing details how Stockton arrived at his beliefs, which includes anecdotes he heard but apparently didn’t verify and other personal experiences that haven’t been verified independently. For example, he said his father went into sepsis within four days of receiving the flu shot and that this happened three years in a row. However, it’s not clear whether other factors could have caused any sepsis.
Referring to his bout with the flu in the 1989-90 season, Stockton said in his declaration that “I had just recently began learning about alternative medicine, like chiropractic, naturopathy, acupuncture, etc. as it was employed by our team trainer at the time.”
“My initial reluctance wavered over time as I saw the healing power of the human body,” the declaration said. “I saw remarkable results, healing from ankle and back sprains and tendonitis in hours instead of weeks. Family members healed overnight from health issues that medicines were unable to resolve. So, when our Chiropractor suggested that `maybe I should consider not vaccinating my children,’ I reluctantly listened. We still followed the prescribed schedule until one of our children was harmed noticeably by vaccines.”
Stockton didn’t say how his child was harmed or cite any evidence about how he arrived at this conclusion.
Stockton cites misinterpreted data
He also cited data that has been widely misinterpreted or has been used to intentionally mislead. Stockton claims drug company “Pfizer’s own report… acknowledges more than 42,000 adverse events for the Covid 19 shots and 1,200 deaths.”
This claim previously spread on social media but is false and not based on causal relationships between the vaccine and adverse events. In an interview with the Spokesman-Review in 2022, Stockton also made unfounded claims that “more than 100 professional athletes have died of vaccination.”
Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: [email protected]
veryGood! (61922)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Terence Davies, filmmaker of the lyrical ‘Distant Voices, Still Lives,’ dies at the age of 77
- Workers at Mack Trucks reject tentative contract deal and will go on strike early Monday
- Bills LB Matt Milano sustains knee injury in 1st-quarter pileup, won’t return vs Jaguars
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- 49ers vs. Cowboys Sunday Night Football highlights: San Francisco steamrolls Dallas
- Some in Congress want to cut Ukraine aid and boost Taiwan’s. But Taiwan sees its fate tied to Kyiv’s
- 'You can't be what you can't see': How fire camps are preparing young women to enter the workforce
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- An Israeli airstrike kills 19 members of the same family in a southern Gaza refugee camp
Ranking
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Some in Congress want to cut Ukraine aid and boost Taiwan’s. But Taiwan sees its fate tied to Kyiv’s
- Miami could have taken a knee to beat Georgia Tech. Instead, Hurricanes ran, fumbled and lost.
- US demands condemnation of Hamas at UN meeting, but Security Council takes no immediate action
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- German conservative opposition wins 2 state elections, with far-right making gains
- How long have humans been in North America? New Mexico footprints are rewriting history.
- California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoes bill aimed at limiting the price of insulin
Recommendation
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Economics Nobel Prize goes to Claudia Goldin, an expert on women at work
American Airlines pilot union calls for stopping flights to Israel, citing declaration of war
Videos of 'flash mob' thefts are everywhere, but are the incidents increasing?
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill penalized for giving football to his mom after scoring touchdown
She survived being shot at point-blank range. Who wanted Nicki Lenway dead?
A Complete Guide to Nick Cannon's Sprawling Family Tree