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In another video, the nurse appeared wearing hospital scrubs while recommending the use of poison ivy as a weapon.
“Get some of that, with gloves, obviously, and get it in some water,” she explained.
“Get the poison ivy oak water and put it into a water gun. Aim for faces, hands.”
Her third video took an even darker turn, urging single women to target federal agents through dating apps.
“Get on Tinder, get on Hinge, find these guys,” she said.
“Bring some Ex-Lax and put it in their drinks. Get them sick. Just enough to incapacitate them and get them off the street for the next day.”
She concluded with a call for coordination and surveillance.
“Let’s make their lives f—— miserable,” she said.
“Where’s the hotel where they eat? Who makes that breakfast? Let’s find them.”
The compilation of these clips was later shared by Libs of TikTok, sparking national outrage.
Hospital Investigation and Police Involvement
After the videos gained traction, VCU Health confirmed the nurse was immediately removed from duty and barred from hospital facilities.
“The content of the videos is highly inappropriate and does not reflect the integrity or values of our health system,” VCU told Fox News Digital.
VCU Police have launched an active investigation while hospital administrators review potential licensing and employment consequences.
Pattern of Escalating Attacks on ICE
This incident is not happening in isolation. Across the country, healthcare workers and activists have increasingly inserted themselves into ICE operations, sometimes violently.
In Minneapolis, a federal officer was allegedly seriously injured during an anti-ICE confrontation. In California, two surgery center employees were charged with felony assault after allegedly blocking ICE agents from arresting an illegal immigrant who fled into their clinic.
Federal law clearly states that assaulting, obstructing, or interfering with federal officers is a serious crime. That includes using drugs, chemical agents, or physical barriers to impede lawful arrests.
Healthcare professionals are not exempt. In fact, their access to restricted medications and medical facilities raises the stakes even higher.
What the Media Leaves Out
The nurse’s videos openly encouraged poisoning federal agents, drugging them without consent, and coordinating harassment at their living quarters.
Each of those actions violates multiple federal statutes.
Yet much of the media coverage glosses over the bigger picture. Trump’s immigration enforcement operations have focused heavily on illegal immigrants with criminal records, not random families or asylum seekers.
ICE operations in Minneapolis and elsewhere specifically targeted individuals with prior convictions.
The people being shielded by left-wing officials are not innocent victims. They are repeat lawbreakers.
Political Climate Fuels Extremism
Democratic leaders like Jacob Frey and Tim Walz have repeatedly clashed with federal enforcement, sending a message that resistance is not only acceptable but encouraged.
That political atmosphere has consequences.
It creates a culture where a nurse with access to dangerous drugs believes she can call for attacks on federal law enforcement and be cheered on by activists.
Accountability Must Follow
The Justice Department now faces a choice. Allow this behavior to be excused as rhetoric, or enforce the law.
If prosecutors follow the statute, the nurse could face federal charges and permanent loss of her nursing license.
Hospitals nationwide should take notice. Allowing politically radicalized staff access to controlled substances while openly advocating violence against law enforcement is a recipe for disaster.
VCU Health says the nurse does not represent its values. But she was hired, trained, and credentialed within their system.
The real question is how many others think the same way but stayed quiet.
Because encouraging poisonings, drugging people without consent, and coordinating attacks is not protest.
It is not resistance.
It is criminal extremism.




