It has taken me some time to talk about the demise of Team Halo since I still struggle with the damage these “healthcare heroes” have done to me and my family. The writing of my book Dark Influence has helped my healing journey dramatically. It has fueled the nationwide legislative changes that I and American Frontline Nurses have been working on to prevent this type of criminal gang stalking behavior by licensed healthcare professionals.
During my research for Dark Influence, I attempted to access the teamhalo.org website to discover the website was no longer active. A quick scan by our research team determined that Team Halo’s social medias were still active, but their “influencers” had removed #teamhalo from their profiles. The removal of the signature hashtag had to have come from an administrative level because we saw the abrupt removal of the hashtag when disgraced Team Halo members Tyler Kuhk (thatsassynp) and Josephine Kracht (Alias “Jessica Anderson” and handle jesss_2019) were dropped from the team for unprofessional behavior per the response to an email sent to the Team Halo media email that is no longer active.
It’s very apparent that Team Halo is no longer active. Team Halo influencers are struggling without the artificial algorithm support from their UN contract with TikTok. Jonathan Laxton, a doctor from Canada who has an obsession with Dr. Peter McCullough and The Wellness Company is concerning but then again he needs the view count considering his last TikTok video posted on April 16th only gained a paltry 8% total view count versus a time with algorithm support. Even Dr. Eric Burnett, an American doctor, is struggling for relevance as he has a 1% total view count for his most recent video on September 18th. We saw what happened with Josephine Kracht’s view count when she was removed from Team Halo, view counts dropped drastically. Her most recent video has only a total view count of 3%.
With the disbanding of Team Halo, a unique opportunity has arisen: they no longer have immunity from being reported to social media platforms.
And we know from a Team Halo insider named Tyler Hardy that they had immunity from being deplatformed. “Hardy also said that because Team Halo and TikTok had an agreement, TikTok didn’t apply the same community standards to Team Halo members’ accounts.”
No more preferential algorithm boosts. No no more whitelisting.
This means that their content can officially be reported to platforms for the harassment and stalking that they do via social media platforms. Team Halo’s abrupt departure has left many confused. The group was well funded and all their “guides” were volunteers, meaning that they weren’t paid, so finances were not the reason to abruptly close the doors. But just because the organization has put its tail between its legs and run away, doesn’t mean that they have stopped their nefarious tactics of attempting to get their followers to stalk nurses and doctors and get them fraudulently reported to their licensing boards. Those tactics are still alive and running, they just take place in groups like Shots Heard Round the World…
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Fortunately we archived some of these pages.
Teresa Kelly https://archive.is/7KZwO
Some of the players including Heidi Larson and Angie Rasmussen https://archive.is/Uz4jA
"Dr" Kat https://archive.is/5VXj5
Index https://archive.is/teamhalo.org