Eighth Circuit Judge David Stras revealed that he banned the First Amendment when it came to silencing a whistleblower on December 8 — and the judge’s former clerk has been revealed.
Niska, a young attorney working for a Minnesota law firm named CrossCastle PLLC, recently ran for House District 31A, helped Stras give birth to a federal injunction, according to the Eighth Circuit’s own docket on Monday.
Harry Niska introduced his clerking judge, Stras, to new legal ideas to stop a whistleblower in 2018.
Niska reportedly identified ways to allow Stras to silence the whistleblower from revealing details of a US Air Force Officer’s unlawful activities.
An injunction was reportedly used to sanction a litigant for being a whistleblower in exposing an Air Force Officer’s involvement in biolabs that acted as surrogates for the origins of COVID-19 and its gain-of-function research.
The Air Force Officer’s attendance at a University of Minnesota PhD program tracked that of Dr. Andrew G. Huff — the Wuhan lab whistleblower who also obtained a separate Software Engineering Master’s degree from the University.
The whistleblower isn’t identified as a March article from ProtestPress.com shows. Niska has said that the Air Force Officer was entitled to raiding the whistleblower’s Wisconsin home in 2017 with “fabricated” and “unique false” evidence to silence and intimidate them from speaking out.
The whistleblower stated, “the District Court used a Magistrate Judge that gave money to the same University of Minnesota School of Public Health — another tell-tale sign — which was also ignored by Stras and his clerk Niska on appeal.”
For his part, Stras was in the same room with the whistleblower and the only other two individuals who had any remote knowledge of the whistleblower’s true sources in 2010.
In his House run, Niska campaigned on a platform that included endorsements from Minnesotans Concerned for Life and Minnesotans for Health and Parental Rights.
The whistleblower said that “Niska did not seem to care about health when allowing the Air Force to silence evidence of a coming pandemic that has killed millions of people worldwide.”
Niska’s actions helped the Air Force Officer and a former Air Force General Jay N. Selander’s law firm, Kutak Rock, conceal their actions until three months before any allegation of the Wuhan leak became public in late 2019.