Shielding the Elite: How James Comey’s Blind Eye Protected Power, Profits, and a Broken Mental Health System

Republished with permission from AbleChild.

When the story of the Marc Rich pardon broke, the American public was stunned—not just by the audacity of the pardon itself, but by the web of influence, money, and connections that seemed to insulate the powerful from accountability. At the center of the post-pardon investigation stood James Comey, a man who would later become a household name for his roles in other political dramas. Yet, in this case, Comey’s investigation stopped short of the most glaring conflicts: the intersection of political fundraising, government contracts, and the profit-driven world of mental health care.

Beth Dozoretz, a prominent Democratic fundraiser and close Clinton ally, played a pivotal role in the campaign for Rich’s pardon. Her husband, Psychiatrist, Dr. Ronald Dozoretz, was the founder of ValueOptions, one of the largest mental health managed care companies in America—a company that, during this period, secured billions in government contracts. The Dozoretz family’s political connections and financial interests were clear, yet Comey’s investigation focused narrowly on whether the pardon itself was “bought” with donations, ignoring the broader implications of political access and government reliance on ValueOptions.

Why did Comey’s probe fail to address these obvious intersections? Was it legal caution, political calculation, or a willful blindness to the realities of elite privilege? The result was the same: the investigation left untouched the deeper questions of how political insiders profit from government largesse—while millions of vulnerable Americans, especially children, suffer the consequences.

The mental health industry, dominated by companies like ValueOptions, has long been plagued by scandals:

  • Wrongful diagnoses and overmedication of children, often driven by profit motives and a lack of scientific rigor.

  • Billions in taxpayer dollars funneled to providers with questionable track records and political connections.

  • A system that rewards volume over quality, leaving countless families struggling with the fallout of unnecessary drugging and ineffective care.

The elite seem to escape the obvious, protected by their networks and, perhaps, by investigators like James Comey who are unwilling or unable to connect the dots. Is James Comey truly so naïve—or do we simply choose to forget the failures that allow power and profit to capture the justice system and put public health at risk?

As millions of children continue to be misdiagnosed and medicated, and as billions in public funds flow to politically connected companies, the unanswered questions from the Marc Rich pardon investigation remain a stark reminder: in America, the rules are different for the elite. And too often, those tasked with holding them accountable look the other way.

But organizations like AbleChild stand as a warning and a promise: regardless of who you are, you will be held to account for the massive drugging of American children. AbleChild, a national nonprofit founded by parents, has long fought to expose how the mental health industry lobbied for government grants, conducted clinical drug trials on children, and revamped educational models to push subjective psychiatric labels and drug “treatments” onto vulnerable youth—all while companies with huge government contracts walked away unexamined during investigations like the one into a “bought” pardon.

AbleChild’s mission is clear: to ensure that every child’s rights are protected, that informed consent is respected, and that no amount of political influence or government funding can shield those responsible for the harm caused by wrongful psychiatric labeling and over-medication. The era of looking the other way must end—because the well-being of America’s children is not for sale.

AbleChild is a 501(3) C nonprofit organization that has recently co-written landmark legislation in Tennessee, setting a national precedent for transparency and accountability in the intersection of mental health, pharmaceutical practices, and public safety.

What you can do.  Sign the Petition calling for federal hearings!

Donate! Every dollar you give is a powerful statement, a resounding declaration that the struggles of these families will no longer be ignored. Your generosity today will echo through generations, ensuring that the rights and well-being of children are fiercely guarded. Don’t let another family navigate this journey alone. Donate now and join us in creating a world where every child’s mind is nurtured, respected, and given the opportunity to thrive.

As a 501(c)3 organization, your donation to AbleChild is not only an investment in the well-being of vulnerable children but also a tax-deductible contribution to a cause that transcends individual lives.

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