What is find
seriously disquieting is not this particular example which is clearly
bad enough, bu. that a culture of fraudulent research has sprung up
around the whole vaccine business. This unfortunately makes way to
much sense. If the vaccine is useless, then there is no egregious
harm in selling it. Thus the rationalization to cook the books.
And of course if
your competitor is doing it, so will you.
The HIV vaccine
claim made scant sense when it was made and not taken too seriously
at the time either. I know that I dismissed it and I am hardly an
industry insider. That it was not even an experimental mistake is
disappointing. That it succeeded in promoting research funds is
enough cause for these charges.
Researcher
Charged in Major HIV Vaccine Fraud Case
IOWA
CITY, Iowa — Jun 24, 2014, 5:09 PM ET
By
RYAN J. FOLEY Associated Press
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/researcher-charged-major-hiv-vaccine-fraud-case-24288252?singlePage=true
Responding
to a major case of research misconduct, federal prosecutors have
taken the rare step of filing charges against a scientist after he
admitted falsifying data that led to millions in grants and hopes of
a breakthrough in AIDS vaccine research.
Investigators
say former Iowa State University laboratory manager Dong-Pyou Han has
confessed to spiking samples of rabbit blood with human antibodies to
make an experimental HIV vaccine appear to have great promise. After
years of work and millions in National Institutes of Health grants,
another laboratory uncovered irregularities that suggested the
results — once hailed as groundbreaking — were bogus.
Han
was indicted last week on four counts of making false statements,
each of which carries up to five years in prison. He was set to be
arraigned Tuesday in Des Moines, but he didn't show up due to an
apparent paperwork mix-up. A prosecutor said Han will be given
another chance to appear next week.
Han,
57, didn't return a message left at his home in Cleveland, where he's
been living since resigning from the university last fall. A native
of South Korea, he surrendered his passport following his arrest and
initial court appearance in Ohio last week.
Experts
said the fraud was extraordinary and that charges are rarely brought
in such cases. The National Institutes of Health said it's reviewing
what impact the case has had on the research it funds.
"It's
an important case because it is extremely rare for scientists found
to have committed fraud to be held accountable by the actual criminal
justice system," said Ivan Oransky, co-founder of Retraction
Watch, which tracks research misconduct.
Oransky,
a journalist who also has a medical degree, said there have been only
a handful of similar prosecutions in the last 30 years.
He
said Han's case was "particularly brazen" and noted that
charges are rarely brought because the U.S. Office of Research
Integrity, which investigates misconduct, doesn't have prosecution
authority, and most cases involve smaller amounts of money.
"It's
a pretty extraordinary case involving clear, intentional
falsification," added Mike Carome, a consumer advocate and
director of Public Citizen's Health Research Group. "The wool
was pulled over many people's eyes."
Carome
noted that Han's misconduct wasted tax dollars and caused researchers
to chase a false lead. He said such cases also undermine the public's
trust in researchers.
Finding
an HIV vaccine remains a top international scientific priority. A
2009 study in Thailand is the only one ever to show a modest success,
protecting about a third of recipients against infection. That's not
good enough for general use, so researchers continue exploring
numerous approaches.
According
to the indictment, Han's misconduct caused colleagues to make false
statements in a federal grant application and progress reports to
NIH.
The
NIH paid out $5 million under that grant as of earlier this month.
Iowa State has agreed to pay back NIH nearly $500,000 for the cost of
Han's salary.
Han's
misconduct dates to when he worked at Case Western Reserve University
in Cleveland under Michael Cho, who was leading a team testing an
experimental HIV vaccine on rabbits.
Starting
in 2008, Cho's team received initial NIH funding for the work. Cho
reported soon that his vaccine was causing rabbits to develop
antibodies to HIV, which left NIH officials "flabbergasted,"
according to a criminal complaint against Han.'
Cho's
team sent blood samples in 2009 to Duke University researchers, who
verified the apparent positive impact on the vaccinated rabbits. The
confirmation was seen as "a major breakthrough in HIV/AIDS
vaccine research," according to the complaint.
Iowa
State recruited Cho in 2009, and with his team — including Han —
he soon received a five-year NIH grant to continue the research. The
team kept reporting progress. But in January 2013, a team at Harvard
University found the promising results had been achieved with rabbit
blood spiked with human antibodies.
An
investigation by Iowa State pinpointed Han, after he was caught
sending more spiked samples to Duke University. In a Sept. 30, 2013
confession letter, Han said he started the fraud in 2009 "because
he wanted (results) to look better" and that he acted alone.
"I
was foolish, coward, and not frank," he wrote.
Cho
has said he was devastated and angered that he wasted years on the
research, but he has vowed to continue his work. He has not been
accused of any wrongdoing.
Stephen
Brown, medical director for the AIDS Research Alliance, said the case
highlights the fierce competition to win increasingly scarce NIH
research funding.
"Han's
case also indicates the need for greater transparency and oversight
of the peer review funding process, which is cloaked in secrecy and
often leads to large sums being given to favored organizations,
despite a lack of output," Brown said in a statement.
Vaccine
researcher charged with felony crimes for research fraud; may spend
20 years in prison over faked AIDS vaccine
Wednesday,
June 25, 2014
http://www.naturalnews.com/045726_research_fraud_AIDS_vaccine_science-based_medicine.html
(NaturalNews)
Scientific fraud is so common in the vaccine industry, it's
practically the default business model. The truth is that most
vaccines don't work,
so in order to make them appear to work, researchers routinely
spike blood samples of
vaccinated test subjects with antibodies, making it appear the
vaccine caused the body to produce those antibodies.
Now,
a National Institutes of Health-funded vaccine scientist who was
celebrated as achieving a breakthrough vaccine against HIV has
confessed to spiking
the test subject blood samples with antibodies.
Dong-Pyou Han had taken $5 million in NIH grant money to further his
"research" at Iowa State University. The mainstream media
and vaccine advocates hailed his research as groundbreaking,
"game-changing" advancements in the search for an AIDS
vaccine.
But
now, it turns out Han committed outrageous scientific fraud that
wasted taxpayer money and diverted resources away from other
important research projects. So federal prosecutors have taken the
extraordinary step of charging Han with making false statements to
the government. He now faces four felony counts, each of which
carries a maximum prison sentence of five years. (Yes, lying to the
government is a federal crime. But the government lying to us,
well... that's another matter altogether.)
"It's
an important case because it is extremely rare for scientists found
to have committed fraud to be held accountable by the actual criminal
justice system," said Retraction
Watch co-founder
Ivan Oransky in an ABC News article. (1)
The
vaccine industry routinely gets away with fraud: Why aren't more
criminal charges filed?
The
vaccine industry, you see, is run like a criminal mafia that has
blanket legal immunity thanks to the U.S. Congress. Vaccines are the
only product sold in the USA which can be defectively manufactured
and kill people, yet still face zero legal liability in the courts.
In
the United States, a vaccine manufacturer could spike their vaccines
with motor oil, cancer viruses, live bacteria, hexavalent chromium,
Agent Orange or any other chemical they wanted, and the
manufacturer would still have total immunity from all lawsuits.
Because of this immunity, vaccine
manufacturing has zero quality control pressure in
the real world, because vaccine manufacturers are not liable for
defective products. So what's the difference if a few batches a
year accidentally
contain SV40 cancer viruses,
or shards of glass, or too much mercury?
That's
why Dr. Maurice Hilleman, former Merck vaccine developer, openly
said, "I think that vaccines have to be considered the bargain
basement technology for the 20th century." (SOURCE)
Vaccine
and drug researchers who commit fraud are also routinely given a slap
on the wrist rather than being charged with felony crimes. Remember
the psychiatric doctor named Charles Nemeroff who held a chairman
position at Emory University? Even after being caught
secretly taking $800,000 from GlaxoSmithKline and
stripped of his chairmanship, Emory University -- a dubious
institution steeped in drug money influence -- failed to fire
Nemeroff and kept him on staff. According to the WSJ, 14 other Emory
University doctors also received money from the Depression and
Anxiety journal to write articles about Effector. At Emory, it
seems, selling out to the drug industry is just a routine way of
participating in academia.
It's
time to end legal immunity for research fraud
Vaccine
researchers in particular have long enjoyed a presumed legal
immunity, even when they commit outrageous scientific fraud. The
public has been hoodwinked into thinking vaccines always work and
drug companies are engaged in "evidence-based medicine"
even when it's all being faked.
In
truth, most
vaccines don't work on most people.
This is readily admitted on the vaccine inserts themselves, believe
it or not. For example, I have in my possession a Flulaval Influenza
Virus Vaccine made by GlaxoSmithKline. This insert says, word for
word, all the following astonishing things:
"There
have been no controlled trials adequately demonstrating a decrease in
influenza disease after vaccination with Flulaval." (The
vaccine insert openly admits the vaccine is backed by zero evidence?
So much for so-called "evidence-based medicine." Now you're
taking a flu shot on pure faith. Perhaps they should be called
Evangelical Vaccines...)
Because
some readers were skeptical that a vaccine insert would openly admit
the vaccine doesn't work, I have taken a photo of this insert as
shown here. This is the
photo the vaccine industry desperately hopes you never see:
Other
astonishing statements made on the vaccine insert include:
"Safety
and effectiveness of Flulaval have not been established in pregnant
women, nursing mothers or children." (And yet this vaccine
is routinely administered to pregnant women.)
"Safety
and effectiveness of Flulaval in pediatric patients have not been
established." (Yet the vaccine is also routinely given to
children.)
"Flulaval
has not been evaluated for carcinogenic or mutagenic potential, or
for impairment of fertility." (It might cause cancer and
spontaneous abortions, in other words, but they don't really know.)
"Do
not administer Flulaval to anyone... following previous
administration of any influenza vaccine." (No one who has
already had a flu shot in any previous year should take this flu
shot. Yet flu shots are routinely given year after year to the very
same people who often end up getting the flu anyway because their
immune systems are so compromised.)
Total
immunity from FTC over blatant marketing fraud
What's
interesting to note about flu vaccines in particular is that they
also enjoy complete immunity from the FTC even while making blatantly
false claims in their marketing.
The
FTC, you see, routinely goes after scammy weight loss supplement
companies for making false claims. They even threw Kevin Trudeau in
prison for making false statements in a weight loss book.
But
when influenza vaccines are aggressively marketed with blatantly
false claims -- both literal claims and implied claims -- the FTC
utterly ignores them. Think about it: what other product can get away
with being marketed to the public as working even though its own
safety sheet openly admits there's no evidence the product works at
all?
Can
you imagine an oil company selling gasoline that didn't combust? Or a
soap company selling a liquid that didn't contain any soap? How about
a wine maker selling a beverage that turned out to be grape juice
instead of wine? In all these cases, people would get angry and the
FTC would investigate. But when flu shots are sold without any
scientific evidence that they really work, the federal government
looks the other way and pretends no marketing fraud is taking place.
Thank
goodness at least one branch of the feds is charging Dong-Pyou Han
with crimes related to the massive vaccine fraud he committed. This
is at least a start. If all fraudulent vaccine researchers were
similarly charged with felony crimes, we'd have a court system full
of such cases and we'd probably have to build a whole new prison just
for the vaccine criminals, where they could all practice exposing
each other to Anthrax by using CDC-approved research protocols.
Sources
for this article include:
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