A VCU Health nurse was terminated after viral videos showed her advising on methods to harm and incapacitate ICE agents. The nurse suggested using syringes with anesthetics and poison ivy in water guns, and spiking drinks with laxatives. VCU Health stated the content was inappropriate and did not align with their values, initiating an investigation.
On a now-deleted TikTok account, Cook shared videos encouraging medical harm to ICE agents, the hospital said in a statement. The nurse came under investigation after her videos were shared on X by the account ‘LibsofTikTok’, prompting an internal investigation and drawing massive flak online.
The viral videos
In one video captioned ‘#ice #resistance #sabotage’ Cook shared with viewers what she described as a “sabotage tactic” against ICE agents.
“Sabotage tactic, or at least scare tactic. All the medical providers, grab some syringes with needles on the end.” She advised filling the syringes with “saline or succinylcholine” or anything that will be a “deterrent.” Succinylcholine is an anaesthetic that causes rapid, short-term muscle paralysis lasting for four to six minutes.
In another video captioned ‘#resist’ the nurse suggested collecting “poison ivy or poison oak” from their yards. “Get some of that, with gloves, obviously, and get it in some water. Like a gallon of water. And get the poison ivy oak water and I’m going to put it into a water gun. Aim for faces, hands,” she said. In a third video, Cook suggested the single ladies in Minnesota to “get on Tinder, get on Hinge, find these guys, they are around.” She suggested spiking the ICE agent’s drink with “Ex-Lax” to get them sick. “You know, nobody’s going to die.
Just enough to incapacitate them and get them off the street for the next day. Highly, easily deniable.”
Meet Melinda, a healthcare worker at @VCUHealth. She posted a series of videos encouraging people to inject ICE agents with succinylocholine, a temporary paralysis drug, and spray poison on them. She also encourages woman to go on dates with agents and drug their food.