⚠️ The Michigan Public-Safety Story
In 2018, a chiropractic manipulation in Michigan allegedly caused severe head and neck trauma.
What followed was years of pain, missing documentation, altered reports, and a system that repeatedly
refused to acknowledge the full harm — even while new imaging, symptoms, and records piled up.
The case documented in CRACKD is not just about one provider. It is about how medical, legal, and
insurance systems can close ranks around each other while patients are left fighting alone for the
basic truth to be written in their records. This hub exists to make that pattern visible,
create a permanent forensic trail, and help other patients avoid the same traps.
- Documented cervical and occipital trauma following a chiropractic manipulation.
- Years of inconsistent or incomplete documentation by multiple facilities.
- Barriers to obtaining full records, imaging, and honest reporting.
- Ongoing public-safety concerns if patterns remain unreported and uncorrected.
ℹ️ About the Author
CRACKD started as one patient’s fight to survive and be believed. It has become a framework for documentation,
advocacy, and storytelling for anyone harmed by a system that was supposed to protect them.
My name is Robert Edwin Parham. I am not a doctor or a lawyer. I am a patient who suffered
a serious injury after a chiropractic manipulation and then had to fight for years for that injury to be
honestly documented. I built the Trinity forensic timeline so that regulators, attorneys, journalists,
and other patients would not have to guess what happened — they can see the dates, records, and patterns
for themselves.
This project is operated by the patient and victim in this case, Robert Edwin Parham, whose goal is advocacy and public awareness. It exists because some oversight bodies, including the Office of Inspector General (OIG), may allow certain complaints to remain unclassified or unresolved. For media, investigative, or oversight inquiries about this site or case, please contact invest@crackdbooks.com.
In 2018, Robert Edwin Parham was an accomplished Aviation and Logistics Specialist with years of TSA clearance and a half decade of FBO experience, working directly with pilots, first officers, loadmasters, and cargo services personnel in global air charter operations. His work required hazmat recertification, ISO compliance, and regulatory testing.
Robert was also an active Certified Logistics Technician, trained extensively in FMCSA, AES, and CFR regulations. He coordinated domestic and international freight by ground, air, vessel, and rail, assisting automotive suppliers, hospitals, ventilator distribution during COVID, cancer patients, and military personnel on critical JIT expedites and hand-carries.
Robert managed thousands of supplier and carrier accounts worldwide, frequently communicating directly with executive leadership at companies such as Cox Transfer, TQL, Volkswagen, Honda, and many others. His performance contributed to multiple General Motors Diamond Supplier of the Year Awards, reflecting exceptional execution and reliability.
At the time, he held a five-year Logistics Technician certification, demonstrating his professional commitment to safety, precision, and operational excellence.http://www.linkedin.com/in/roberteparham
In the years following my injury, I spent significant time trying to obtain my medical records, a process that became emotionally exhausting and raised deep concerns about the professionalism I was experiencing from so-called “doctors.” From my perspective, the repeated delays, with verbal resistance, felt psychologically manipulative and combative, and providers allowed my victimization to continue for years without reporting to LARA. The physician involved had relocated from Florida to Michigan, which made me worry that other patients might have faced similar issues without medical direction, integrity, or compliance in reporting harm or negligence within a medical network.
During this process, I learned that the OIG only accepts unclassified complaints, and it appeared that neither the DOJ nor LARA had been notified by providers, despite the fact that a physician had nearly killed a patient in a clinical setting and the harm to the patient’s skull, brain, and cervical spine initially went undocumented, preventing any formal investigation. At one point, I felt subjected to inappropriate mental-health screening tactics, but I later learned that this is sometimes considered routine medical practice, which allows interpretation errors in clinical settings. Due to these concerns, I requested involvement from the Brownstown Police Department, but encountered reluctance, delays, and limited transparency. The medical facility also declined to provide its licensing and insurance information to both the officers and myself during the criminal investigation, and refused to provide authorization forms so I could request that my medical records be mailed to other government bodies for oversight.
B.A.R. members who are called “lawyers” are not government agents or public figures, and they have no legal or ethical obligations to assist in alerting or stopping reported criminal behavior if it is not financially beneficial for their law firm. I know this from experience, because I encountered several law firms with this level of integrity. This means B.A.R. members will associate with any type of criminal or terrorist that the government allows them to assist, and will deny helping clients with valid claims when government agencies blacklist the victim to protect corporations, insurance interests, or government priorities.
In the United States, MCL 600.5838a (and related statutes) medical malpractice is primarily viewed as a civil negligence claim rather than a criminal matter, which avoids criminal investigation or oversight into obvious negligence. Malpractice = mistake or negligence. However, a crime involves intent or reckless disregard, such as performing a procedure without consent, extreme disregard for life or safety, falsifying records, or committing insurance fraud by billing for treatment that did not occur or by changing medical records to conceal reports of patient harm.
In my case, I believe that my medical records were altered by Greg Ross Fountain after I retained Lipton Law Firm in 2023. I requested their help in pursuing criminal charges rather than a civil lawsuit, but was advised that doctors are rarely charged criminally. Throughout 2024 and 2025, Seva Law Firm, KayJ Law Firm, and Vanstone Injury Law were denied access to my medical records from Fountain Chiropractic Clinic during an active PIP “No Fault” claim valued at $1,250,000. The denial prevented them from reviewing evidence relevant to pre-existing skull and spinal trauma. I was advised to obtain another law firm to obtain medical records while active PIP benifits were not being paid out lawfully. The crazy things is there are websites with lawyers that arrange settlements for even terrorist activity, but no laywer wanted to file suit for my harm. Why? Blacklisted by the B.A.R. possibly to protect goverment interest?
Note: patient victimization is rarely punished, seldom prosecuted, and it is systemically profitable for healthcare facilities to avoid reporting patient harm in order to prevent formal investigations. From 2018 to 2025, there were no reports of police interaction at a medical facility in this case until I forced investigation. Google reviews of Fountain Chiropractic Clinic have no relationship to federally required medical obligations. Online reviews reflect subjective opinions. Medical record entries, omissions, or errors, on the other hand, are factual and reveal compliance or lack of compliance.
Dr. Sara Platte documented symptoms that plausibly supported my decision to seek chiropractic care for neck and head pain, which were reported prior to the alleged chiropractic injury. Trinity Health diagnosed tonsillitis, thyroid concerns and eustachian tube dysfunction in the medical record. However, after I reported harm by the chiropractor, resolvement of the above conditions are not documented.
This hub will continue to evolve as the book series is completed, legal filings progress, and new tools
are built for other survivors. The goal is simple: truth in the record, accountability for harm, and
pathways for patients to turn their pain into documented, undeniable stories.