The case of Derek Dimmock is the gateway to the horrific – HORRIFIC – scandal of the mass murder of the elderly and others in hospitals and ‘care’ homes during the ‘Covid’ hoax when staggering numbers of people were systematically killed with a mixture of morphine and Midazolam that they called ‘the first wave of Covid’. Evil. Pure evil


The families must have justice in a system that seeks to keep the lid firmly shut. Shout out to Derek’s son who has tenaciously pursued this cause despite all the obstacles he’s had to face. When you see what happened with Midazolam it is hardly a stretch to grasp why so many have been killed or their health destroyed for life by the ‘Covid’ fake vaccine.
BREAKING MIDAZOLAM INQUEST:
One of the country’s leading palliative care experts, who chaired and wrote the UK’s national palliative care guideline NG31, Professor Sam Ahmedzai declares under oath that Derek Dimmock’s CAUSE OF DEATH was a MIDAZOLAM OVERDOSE caused by the doctors… https://t.co/1JsL4IVM3a pic.twitter.com/jt0NboQGt5— أبو عمّار (@MaajidNawaz) December 5, 2025
Use of Midazolam in Man’s Death Probed in Coroner’s Inquest
An inquest into the death of a man whose family believe was unlawfully killed by the inappropriate administering of end-of-life drugs, including the sedative midazolam, has begun hearing evidence.
The Inner London Coroner’s Court last week heard five days of testimony from medical staff involved in the care of Derek Dimmock, 86, who was agitated and in pain thought to be caused by gout, when he was taken to the Royal Trinity Hospice (RTH) in Clapham on June 6, 2020.
Within three hours of admission, he was put on a syringe driver containing midazolam, the opioid oxycodone, and alfentanil—a fentanyl derivative which gives short-term pain relief—after doctors assessed that he was “in the process of dying.”
The hospice report said he “just ran out of breath,” but his wife Maureen Dimmock stated that he declined rapidly from being “fully alert” in the ambulance to comatose after the syringe driver was started.
Although Dimmock, who lived in Putney, suffered from a complex range of age-related health conditions, his wife said he did not appear on the verge of death when he was taken to the hospice, a view supported by the evidence of the crew who transported him in a non-emergency ambulance and by a nurse who saw him the day before his admission.
However, the doctors and nurses responsible for prescribing and administering the drugs told the inquest that Dimmock had “begun to die” when the syringe driver was set up with the aim of keeping him “comfortable” and “dignified.”
Read More: Use of Midazolam in Man’s Death Probed in Coroner’s Inquest
