Corruption

Tuskegee Over? Think Again

January 27th, 2012

Sixty-five years ago in Nuremberg, Germany, American prosecutors confronted the Nazi physicians who had subjected Jews and others to a murderous regime of medical research. The “doctors’ trial” was the first of the war crimes trials; one of its outcomes was the famous Nuremberg Code, a set of ethical guidelines for human experimentation. (more…)

  • AIDS Researchers “Neurotic” When Asked Questions

    Few Americans can explain how polymerase chain reaction (PCR) works or who invented it.  But for those involved in the criminal justice system, few will deny the contributions made by Kary Mullis Ph.D that led to his 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.  As a result of his invention, The Innocence Project has helped to clear 280 people previously convicted of serious crimes in the United States.  (more…)

  • Part II: The Destruction of Sgt. Gutierrez

    Part 1 introduced readers to USAF Sergeant David Gutierrez, who received more than forty vaccines that are known to spread disease, compromise immune function and cause false positive HIV test results.  Under intense media pressure, the USAF charged and convicted Gutierrez despite overwhelming evidence of his innocence.  Part II explains (more…)

  • The Alchemy of Flow Cytometry

    Since 2009, OMSJ has examined more than 100 criminal, civil and military cases related to testing, diagnosis and treatment of HIV and AIDS.  In the majority of those cases, OMSJ found that clinicians who relied on high patient caseloads to generate revenue routinely use unreliable HIV tests to misdiagnose their patients. (more…)

  • Patient Advocate Exposed as Pharma Shill

    The head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has declared the overdoses from opioid drugs like OxyContin an “epidemic”.   And a growing group of experts doubts that they work for long-term pain.  But the pills continue to have an influential champion in the American Pain Foundation, which describes itself (more…)

  • Prosecuting Wall Street

    (CBS News) Two whistleblowers offer a rare window into the root causes of the subprime mortgage meltdown.  Eileen Foster, a former senior executive at Countrywide Financial, and Richard Bowen, a former vice president at Citigroup, tell Steve Kroft the companies ignored their repeated warnings about defective, even fraudulent mortgages.  The result, experts say, was a cascading wave of mortgage defaults for which virtually no high-ranking Wall Street executives have been prosecuted. (more…)

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