In 2006, a whistleblower described an underground facility in northeastern China where thousands of Falun Gong practitioners were being held as living organ donors — blood-typed, compatibility-screened, and killed on demand when a paying patient's transplant need arose. The allegation was extreme. The evidence that followed was not.
Two Canadian lawyers applied statistical methodology to China's transplant volumes and found numbers that voluntary donation could not explain. An investigative journalist compiled survivor testimony documenting the system's operational mechanics from the inside. An independent legal tribunal — chaired by the prosecutor of Slobodan Milošević, applying a beyond-reasonable-doubt evidentiary standard — concluded in 2019 that forced organ harvesting had been committed on a significant scale and that it continued. Peer-reviewed academic research found that China's post-reform transplant figures were statistically inconsistent with genuine voluntary donation.
The evidence was documented. The investigators were credentialed. The findings were independently corroborated across two decades of parallel research.
The mainstream media was largely silent. The WHO accepted China's reform claims without independent verification. Western corporations maintained supply chains and market access arrangements without asking inconvenient questions. International transplant organizations normalized Chinese transplant medicine without resolving the ethical concerns the evidence required them to resolve. Fifty years of engagement policy — built on the foundational prediction that trade breeds freedom — produced not a liberalizing China but a better-resourced version of the same system.
Killed to Order and Jan Jekielek's EXPOSÉ is a comprehensive companion to Jan Jekielek's landmark investigation — a structured guide to the evidence, the institutions, the complicity, and the response that the evidence demands. Drawing on Jekielek's two decades of investigative reporting for The Epoch Times and his long-form interview series American Thought Leaders, this book takes readers through the full architecture of what may be the most extensively documented ongoing crime against humanity that the free world has chosen not to fully see.
You will understand how the system was built — the operational mechanics of a kill-to-order procurement infrastructure that requires a pre-screened living donor pool and generates billions in annual revenue. You will understand why it has persisted — the institutional capture of global health governance, the media silence shaped by access relationships and revenue dependencies, the corporate interests aligned against accountability, and the engagement framework that consistently reframed contradictory evidence as an argument for more engagement. And you will understand what is required in response — the legislative tools available, the advocacy infrastructure already operational, and the specific actions that every reader, in their particular position, can take to contribute to the accountability effort while the window for effective action remains open.
This is not a book for people who prefer their geopolitics comfortable. It is a book for people who believe that the free world's response to documented atrocity is a test of whether it believes the things it says it believes — and who are prepared to do something about what they find when they look honestly at what that test currently reveals.
Killed to Order and Jan Jekielek's Exposé - Reid Reflections
In 2006, a whistleblower described an underground facility in northeastern China where thousands of Falun Gong practitioners were being held as living organ donors — blood-typed, compatibility-screened, and killed on demand when a paying patient's transplant need arose. The allegation was extreme. The evidence that followed was not.
Two Canadian lawyers applied statistical methodology to China's transplant volumes and found numbers that voluntary donation could not explain. An investigative journalist compiled survivor testimony documenting the system's operational mechanics from the inside. An independent legal tribunal — chaired by the prosecutor of Slobodan Milošević, applying a beyond-reasonable-doubt evidentiary standard — concluded in 2019 that forced organ harvesting had been committed on a significant scale and that it continued. Peer-reviewed academic research found that China's post-reform transplant figures were statistically inconsistent with genuine voluntary donation.
The evidence was documented. The investigators were credentialed. The findings were independently corroborated across two decades of parallel research.
The mainstream media was largely silent. The WHO accepted China's reform claims without independent verification. Western corporations maintained supply chains and market access arrangements without asking inconvenient questions. International transplant organizations normalized Chinese transplant medicine without resolving the ethical concerns the evidence required them to resolve. Fifty years of engagement policy — built on the foundational prediction that trade breeds freedom — produced not a liberalizing China but a better-resourced version of the same system.
Killed to Order and Jan Jekielek's EXPOSÉ is a comprehensive companion to Jan Jekielek's landmark investigation — a structured guide to the evidence, the institutions, the complicity, and the response that the evidence demands. Drawing on Jekielek's two decades of investigative reporting for The Epoch Times and his long-form interview series American Thought Leaders, this book takes readers through the full architecture of what may be the most extensively documented ongoing crime against humanity that the free world has chosen not to fully see.
You will understand how the system was built — the operational mechanics of a kill-to-order procurement infrastructure that requires a pre-screened living donor pool and generates billions in annual revenue. You will understand why it has persisted — the institutional capture of global health governance, the media silence shaped by access relationships and revenue dependencies, the corporate interests aligned against accountability, and the engagement framework that consistently reframed contradictory evidence as an argument for more engagement. And you will understand what is required in response — the legislative tools available, the advocacy infrastructure already operational, and the specific actions that every reader, in their particular position, can take to contribute to the accountability effort while the window for effective action remains open.
This is not a book for people who prefer their geopolitics comfortable. It is a book for people who believe that the free world's response to documented atrocity is a test of whether it believes the things it says it believes — and who are prepared to do something about what they find when they look honestly at what that test currently reveals.