SAN DIEGO - Human rights activist Boyd E.
Graves requested more time from the U.S. District Court for Southern
Calif. to prove his case against the United States government for the
creation, production, and proliferation of the HIV/AIDS virus inside
the U.S. Special Virus Program.
Following opening arguments July 3,
2003, Judge Jeffrey T. Miller took the matter of Graves’ request for
the full disclosure of the formerly secret U.S. Special Virus Program
under advisement before granting the United States’ attorney Beth
Levine’s request for summary judgment on July, 7 2003.
In a motion
submitted to the United States District Court for Southern California
earlier this week, federal documents revealed Graves seeks to
secure an additional 60 days to amend his AIDS origin complaint
against the U.S. Special Virus Program and the federal agencies
responsible for the program’s administration.
"The peoples’ case was not
dismissed," Graves said. "The people have a real shot at the
full disclosure of the U.S. Special Virus Program."
Court documents indicate Graves
was ‘accosted from his home, beaten, drugged and admitted to the
maximum security psychiatric unit of the Veteran’s Hospital in La
Jolla, California’ on July 4, 2003 and incarcerated through July
seventh.
The Internal Affairs division
of the San Diego Police Department is investigating Graves’ arrest,
and his allegations of physical abuse during his incarceration between
July 4th and 7th, 2003.
Graves said if his latest motion is
denied, he will file a new complaint to further expose the U.S.
Special Virus program. Graves makes his 1971 Special Virus Flow Chart
discovery and many court documents on his case available on-line on
his Web site at http://www.boydgraves.com