From: NIHInfo (NIH/OD)
To: John McMillan
Sent: Tue, March 8, 2011 7:25:40 AM
Subject: RE: 3-5-11 legal complaint-related question to Federal Trade Commission
Dear Mr. McMillan,
Thank you for writing to NIH Info. We are sorry to hear that you are experiencing this situation. The National Institutes of Health conducts and supports biomedical research into diseases, disorders, and infectious illnesses, and we have no authority over the noise levels created by private businesses, commercial practices, air or land traffic, construction, or any other producer of noise in any area. We are strictly relegated to the biomedical field.
If you feel there is a level of noise that constitutes pollution, we would encourage you to have it measured with a meter and have that figure compared against commonly agreed-to standards for noise in residential and commercial spaces; however, that is not work that we perform. We encourage you to work with local resources that would have more familiarity with your area.
Please let us know if we may help you with other information.
NIH Information Staff – code V
National Institutes of Health
Office of Communications and Public Liaison
9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, Maryland 20892
NIH: The nation's medical research agency - making important medical discoveries to improve health and save lives
______
From: John McMillan [mailto:mcmillanj@att.net]
Sent: Monday, March 07, 2011 10:36 PM
To: NIHInfo (NIH/OD)
Subject: Fw: 3-5-11 legal complaint-related question to Federal Trade Commission
Dear National Institutes of Health Officials in Bethesda, Maryland,
I would appreciate a written response from your federal agency in regard to my formal allegation (see below) that I have been subjected involuntarily and against my wishes to significantly injurious, continuous, year-round noise pollution in Austin, Texas, that I myself did not authorize, request, want, or need.
Please note that ear, nose, and throat medical specialist Dr. David Tobey of Austin, Texas, has confirmed the accuracy of my lawfully-worded complaint on this.
Best Wishes,
John Kevin McMillan,
11411 Research Boulevard, Apt. 325, Austin, Texas, 78759.
Home phone: (512) 342-2295.
E-mail: mcmillanj@att.net
Blog: http://www.johnkevinmcmillan.blogspot.com
John Kevin McMillan
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: John McMillan
To: Federal Trade Commission (D.C.)
Sent: Sat, March 5, 2011 11:52:05 PM
Subject: 3-5-11 legal complaint-related question to Federal Trade Commission
Dear Federal Trade Commission Officials in Washington, D.C.,
Is there any circumstance in which your federal agency would pursue legal actions, such as a lawsuit in a court of law, to lawfully and in a civil manner prevent or stop a business entity (such as an unethical media company, for instance) from inflicting medically injurious noise pollution on an American citizen (myself, for instance) against his wishes in a context that violated his own privacy rights.
Sincerely and Best Wishes,
noise pollution victim and longtime Texas resident John Kevin McMillan of Austin, Texas. I have most recently resided inside Austin proper on a continuous basis ever since mid-March of 1997; and I have resided inside Texas ever since January 1988, when I moved back to Texas from Quincy, Massachusetts.
My mailing address: 11411 Research Boulevard, Apt. 325, Austin, Texas, 78759.
Home phone: (512) 342-2295.'
cc: Dr. David Tobey, a nationally renowned ear, nose, and throat medical specialist in Austin, Texas, who has helpfully evaluated my hearing capacity and medical health on several occasions since 2005. Dr. Tobey has determined, with help from statistical reports about my hearing capacity that he has compiled, that permanent and irreversible damage to my hearing capacity and medical health from continuous, year-round noise pollution in Austin, Texas, during that multi-year period since 2005 has been significant in nature, Dr. Tobey has informed me. Dr. Tobey has also recently stated to me in person inside his medical clinic, during a medical examination of me, that permanent damage to my own hearing capacity and medical health resulting from my involuntary exposure to noise pollution in Austin, Texas, has been of the magnitude that an officer of the Austin Police Department in Austin, Texas, would himself sustain over the course of his entire career with that municipal law-enforcement agency.
Dr. Tobey ---- whose medical internship was in Boston, Mass. ---- has helpfully stated to me during medical examinations of me in recent years that he is very sure that I myself did NOT authorize the cited noise pollution, nor did I request it, nor did I generate it myself in any way, Dr. Tobey has helpfully assured me in person inside his medical clinic in northwest Austin
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