F R A U D
Pfizer committed fraud and FDA looked the other way so that the public would trust the vaxxine. The fix was in from the beginning. They made a mockery of informed consent at our expense and they continue to do so. Blame it on Trump if you like, these vaccines were never safe nor effective.
Fool me once shame on you, fool me 999 times shame on me. Wake TF up, people.
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On Nov. 2, 2021,
The BMJ broke the story of Brook Jackson, the regional director who blew the whistle on data integrity issues in Pfizer's pivotal COVID-19 vaccine trial. Weeks later, documents were
leaked supporting Jackson's complaint about "falsified data."
Among the leaked documents was an email, authored by a former federal agent in the
FDA's Office of Criminal Investigations (OCI), claiming Pfizer knowingly submitted fraudulent data to the FDA, and the agency responded by turning a blind eye.
To grasp the gravity of what is written in the email, it's important to understand the role of OCI.
What Is OCI?OCI is the FDA's criminal law enforcement arm. Much like a police force, it
conducts criminal investigations of illegal activities involving FDA-regulated products and brings them before the Department of Justice for prosecution.
OCI consists of about 200 federal agents, hired from the US Secret Service, the FBI, or the Internal Revenue Service Criminal investigations unit. The agents are stationed throughout the US, as well as attachs in overseas posts, and have the same type of arrest authority as other federal law enforcement agents.
The unit was established by former
FDA Commissioner David Kessler, off the back of the
generic drug scandal in the late 80s. Kessler was determined to crack down on fraud after FDA employees were found guilty of accepting bribes from generic drug makers.
"What I care about most is restoring the credibility and the integrity of the Food and Drug Administration,"
said Kessler at the time," and the only way to do that is to focus on strong enforcement. We are going to enforce the law."
Since then, many OCI investigations have
led to arrests, hefty fines, and imprisonment such as the
recent sentencing of two clinical trial researchers in Florida for conspiracy to falsify data by making it appear as though subjects were participating in the trials when, in truth, they were not.
The Leaked EmailThe email, dated March 26, 2021, obtained by this reporter details the OCI officer's observations about the FDA's handling of Jackson's complaint.
"Having worked at FDA, I see it as surprising, for many reasons, that the agency turned a blind eye to a company's knowing submission of fraudulent data," wrote the OCI officer, whose identity is suppressed after signing a non-disclosure agreement.
The FDA "likely feared the criticism they undoubtedly would have received for holding up a vaccine (which they knew they would eventually approve anyway) at the expense of untold lives lost," added the OCI officer, acknowledging the FDA's dilemma in "weighing the risk/benefit ratio."
According to the email, the FDA had to decide if it served the public better to just approve a vaccine that had much greater efficacy than expected amid the emergency, or make a public issue of Pfizer's data integrity problems and damage public confidence in the vaccine.