Civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. traveled Tuesday to Dallas, Texas to meet with Southern Dallas pastors, community leaders and the family of Thomas Eric Duncan, the first Ebola victim diagnosed with the virus in the Unites States.
During his visit, Jackson appealed for the humane treatment of Duncan, saying he “needs love and medical treatment.”
According to reports, Duncan contracted the disease just days before a planned trip to to reunite with his family in Dallas when he helped a sick pregnant woman get to a hospital in Liberia. The woman died the next morning.
Duncan was screened for Ebola at the airport and answered “no” when asked if he had been in contact with anyone with the disease. He had no fever upon boarding his plane to Dallas.
Duncan could face criminal charges in both Liberia and the Unites States over allegations that he misled officials about his exposure to the virus. Jackson shot down these allegations Tuesday, claiming that Duncan wasn’t lying when he said he wasn’t experiencing symptoms of the contagious disease. “He showed no signs of the Ebola virus at that time. If he had, he would not have come home to be with his children,” Jackson said.









