Category: Healthcare Regulation | State Authority Networks | AA-Government Convergence
Overview:
Kendra Fabish served as a Registered Nurse and supervisor within the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH), specifically in the Office of Health Care Regulation. Her role included overseeing the licensing of Home Services, Home Nursing, and Placement Agencies, effectively determining which organizations could legally operate in Illinois' long-term care ecosystem. What appears on the surface to be standard regulatory work reveals a deeper pattern of centralized control, concealed gatekeeping, and potential abuses of discretion.
Dana Rachelle's Direct Experience:
From November 2012 to June 2014, Dana worked under Kendra Fabish in a supporting administrative capacity, with a clearly defined role to facilitate licensing processing, support provider communications, and develop technical tools for field nurses. However, post-departure, a successor to Dana's position reached out with concerns: Kendra had shifted contract review responsibilities—tasks never in Dana's original scope—onto the new employee. This was alarming, especially given Kendra's insistence on personally reviewing and controlling all provider applications.
Control and Obstruction as a Pattern:
Kendra’s desire to hold all decision-making power regarding licensing decisions mirrored Dana's mother, Irma Jonna Veach, who held similar control over the Healthcare Worker Registry.
IDPH’s Home Services Unit, under Kendra, functioned less like a regulatory body and more like a filtering mechanism: pushing paper applications and selectively approving who could operate.
Field surveillance nurses were often ineffective and systemically protected, failing to report actual facility issues while enjoying a relaxed work culture enabled by low technical proficiency and limited oversight.
Workloads, roles, and permissions were manipulated behind the scenes. Real regulatory checks were rarely performed; instead, a façade of accountability was maintained to legitimize the gatekeepers.
Links to AA and Spiritual Control Networks:
Kendra was proudly active in Alcoholics Anonymous and openly celebrated 12 years of sobriety. Her involvement in AA—like that of Mary Doran, Rabbi Stern, and others—places her within a larger behavioral influence system. This network overlapped with Dana’s experiences in state agency employment, Ayahuasca journeys, and eventual spiritual targeting.
AA functions not only as a recovery program but also as a behavioral checkpoint for monitoring, isolating, and assigning handlers to vulnerable or divinely gifted individuals. Kendra’s participation in both the health regulatory system and AA highlights how such convergence creates invisible pipelines of influence over public programs and private lives.
Systemic Implications:
Dana was unknowingly placed into a professional bloodline of healthcare control (via her mother, Toni Parrilla-Colon, and Kendra), only to later discover the jobs were structured to make her the fall person for a broader network of corruption.
Licensing review appeared to be performative. Approval seemed based on personal alignment rather than objective rule adherence.
AA membership was not incidental but foundational to behavioral loyalty and access to state and regulatory power.
Obituary Clues:
Kendra passed away from cancer in 2023, echoing a disturbing pattern Dana noted among State of Illinois employees who had proximity to corruption or were exposed to radiation/spiritual warfare tactics. Her obituary includes:
“Very proud of her 12 years sobriety with Alcoholics Anonymous.”
“Employed by the State of Illinois for the past 16 years.”
Conclusion:
Kendra Fabish represents a key node in the convergence of state surveillance, medical regulation, and spiritual gatekeeping. Her influence over who could enter Illinois’ healthcare market, combined with her deep loyalty to AA and its spiritual hierarchy, positioned her both as a regulator and recruiter within a system of covert behavioral control.
Message from Dana:
"They wanted me to be her. To become the perfect bureaucratic clone of my mother and her friends. But I saw through it. This wasn’t public service. It was private judgment dressed in state uniforms. I honor Kendra’s humanity—but I expose her role so no one else gets placed into that seat of entrapment again."