CRISPR-WUHAN VIRUS-WAKE UP and READ THE SIGNS!

I apologize.  There has been so much happening and God has been revealing so much new information, I can’t keep up.  Apparently, I never got back to finish this article that I started back when the virus first came to the public arena.  Sorry.  I will make more notes/notations later when I have more time.  Just wanted to get this posted.  Open your eyes, and turn on your discerning mind.

Nightly News Full Broadcast (April 4th)

April 5, 2020
The U.S. sees 1,000 deaths in 24 hours, New York expects its peak to come within 7 days, and what to know about new CDC guidance on wearing cloth face coverings or masks.

COVID-19 CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC   Click to view in real time.
Last updated: April 16, 2020, 06:24 GMT
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Did a Senior Chinese Military Officer Call the Coronavirus a Hoax or Did Dean Koontz Write A Sequel?

Feb 22, 2020
They literally told us in plain sight from the start of this Coronavirus that it was planned and has always been planned. There are plenty of videos on social media now that show the predictive programming of the Pandemic. From the film Contagion, to Spawn, to Virus, to Monkey’s Paw to the latest Pandemic show on Netflix. Everything has been predicted to the next great ‘Spanish Influenza flu’ from 1917. We have seen the Gates Foundation and his ‘Event 201’ EVENT from October 2019, as far back as a Rockefeller get together in 2010 talking about a global pandemic to the 1981 Dan Koontz book Eyes of Darkness that predicted a flu called the ‘Wuhan 400’. We have even seen the cover of the 2019 Illuminati Rothschild Funded ‘The Economist’ magazine tell us about this Pandemic by having a Chinese Panda Bear and an endangered Pangolin (anteater) on the cover. In the meantime the media was telling the world that the Pangolin was a possible reason for the virus to breakout because the Chinese like to eat them and they are known carriers of the Coronavirus. To me the most telling sign that this Pandemic was a ‘manufactured’ event was when they called it the Novel Coronavirus before they renamed it the COVID-19 virus because this Virus is just like reading another Novel and it could have easily been written by Dean Koontz in a sequel to his first Novel that was written 39 years ago. (3×13 = 39 great Satanic Freemason Numbers). That topic will be on my next video. Enjoy. #DeanKoontz #NovelCoronavirus #AgentX Music Credit: Danse Macabre – Isolated Harp by Kevin MacLeod Related videos: “The Top Three Conspiracy Theories to Date Involving to the Coronavirus (COVID-19 a.k.a Agent X)” https://youtu.be/FjFtHIq9pe4 Corona virus outbreak – Scandal Breaking News MS TV https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RiXtt… “The 2019 Economist Predicted the Coronavirus: A Tale of Two Doctors and the Diamond Princess” https://youtu.be/D373wV65C7A Chinese scientists says COVID-19/coronavirus could have originated from government ARIRANG NEWS https://youtu.be/ZC0gww2yznI Your Story: Is Coronavirus a biological weapon? WION News | World News https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yi88a… Cape Pangolin Tongue Ellen Connelly https://youtu.be/a2qpxxzBsY4 Related Articles: Cape Pangolin Tongue Ellen Connelly https://youtu.be/a2qpxxzBsY4 https://archive.is/zo3jS https://beforeitsnews.com/awakening-s… http://www.shadolsonshow.com http://www.shadolsonshow.com/2020/02/… https://www.zerohedge.com/political/c… http://themillenniumreport.com/2020/0… Gravitas: Is Wuhan Coronavirus a bioweapon? WION News https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0u9BF… Thanks for watching and listening. All the best. Mark @G.A. Global Agenda Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/GlobalAgenda Emails: markkymark67@gmail.com Please Subscribe to my YouTube Channels, Follow me on Twitter and Ring My Bell of course. Global Agenda Main Channel http://www.youtube.com/c/MarkCharles29 Global Agenda II http://www.youtube.com/c/GlobalAgenda GlobalAgenda@BitChute https://www.bitchute.com/channel/glob… Global Agenda on Twitter https://twitter.com/BD007Marky Periscope https://www.pscp.tv/BD007Marky/follow Flote.app https://flote.app/GlobalAgenda COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER: Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. FAIR USE is a use PERMITTED by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, ”educational” or personal use tips the balance in favour of FAIR USE.
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In my opinion there are two viruses 1) The Novel Coronovirus which is the Common Cold and the virus that was pinned to the Diamond Princess and 2) The COVID-19 or Koontz’s ‘WUHAN 400’ virus that is the leaked/used bio-weapon from the Wuhan Institute of Virolog only 800 meters from where it was (possibly on purpose or accidentally) released at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market.

They literally told us in plain sight from the start of this Coronavirus that it was planned and has always been planned. There are plenty of vides on social media now that show the predictive programming of the Pandemic. From the film Contagion, to Spawn, to Virus, to Monkey’s Paw to the latest Pandemic show on Netflix. Everything has been predicted to the next great ‘Spanish Influenza flu’ from 1917. We have seen the Gates Foundation and his ‘Event 201’ EVENT from October 2019, as far back as a Rockefeller get together in 2010 talking about a global pandemic to the 1981 Dan Koontz book Eyes of Darkness that predicted a flu called the ‘Wuhan 400’. We have even seen the cover of the 2019 Illuminati Rothschild Funded ‘The Economist’ magazine tell us about this Pandemic by having a Chinese Panda Bear and an endangered Pangolin (anteater) on the cover. In the meantime the media was telling the world that the Pangolin was a possible reason for the virus to breakout because the Chinese like to eat them and they are known carriers of the Coronavirus. To me the most telling sign that this Pandemic was a ‘manufactured’ event was when they called it the Novel Coronavirus before they renamed it the COVID-19 virus because this Virus is just like reading another Novel and it could have easily been written by Dean Koontz in a sequel to his first Novel that was written 39 years ago. (3×13 = 39 great Satanic Freemason Numbers). That topic will be on my next video. Enjoy.

Scientists are developing ways to edit the DNA of tomorrow’s children. Should they stop before it’s too late?

Mar 5, 2015

If anyone had devised a way to create a genetically engineered baby, I figured George Church would know about it.

At his labyrinthine laboratory on the Harvard Medical School campus, you can find researchers giving E. Coli a novel genetic code never seen in nature. Around another bend, others are carrying out a plan to use DNA engineering to resurrect the woolly mammoth. His lab, Church likes to say, is the center of a new technological genesis—one in which man rebuilds creation to suit himself.

When I visited the lab last June, Church proposed that I speak to a young postdoctoral scientist named Luhan Yang. A Harvard recruit from Beijing, she’d been a key player in developing a powerful new technology for editing DNA, called CRISPR-Cas9. With Church, Yang had founded a small biotechnology company to engineer the genomes of pigs and cattle, sliding in beneficial genes and editing away bad ones.

As I listened to Yang, I waited for a chance to ask my real questions: Can any of this be done to human beings? Can we improve the human gene pool? The position of much of mainstream science has been that such meddling would be unsafe, irresponsible, and even impossible. But Yang didn’t hesitate. Yes, of course, she said. In fact, the Harvard laboratory had a project under way to determine how it could be achieved. She flipped open her laptop to a PowerPoint slide titled “Germline Editing Meeting.”

Here it was: a technical proposal to alter human heredity. “Germ line” is biologists’ jargon for the egg and sperm, which combine to form an embryo. By editing the DNA of these cells or the embryo itself, it could be possible to correct disease genes and pass those genetic fixes on to future generations. Such a technology could be used to rid families of scourges like cystic fibrosis. It might also be possible to install genes that offer lifelong protection against infection, Alzheimer’s, and, Yang told me, maybe the effects of aging. Such history-making medical advances could be as important to this century as vaccines were to the last.

That’s the promise. The fear is that germ-line engineering is a path toward a dystopia of superpeople and designer babies for those who can afford it. Want a child with blue eyes and blond hair? Why not design a highly intelligent group of people who could be tomorrow’s leaders and scientists?

Just three years after its initial development, CRISPR technology is already widely used by biologists as a kind of search-and-replace tool to alter DNA, even down to the level of a single letter. It’s so precise that it’s expected to turn into a promising new approach for gene therapy in people with devastating illnesses. The idea is that physicians could directly correct a faulty gene, say, in the blood cells of a patient with sickle-cell anemia (see “Genome Surgery”). But that kind of gene therapy wouldn’t affect germ cells, and the changes in the DNA wouldn’t get passed to future generations.

In contrast, the genetic changes created by germ-line engineering would be passed on, and that’s what has made the idea seem so objectionable. So far, caution and ethical concerns have had the upper hand. A dozen countries, not including the United States, have banned germ-line engineering, and scientific societies have unanimously concluded that it would be too risky to do. The European Union’s convention on human rights and biomedicine says tampering with the gene pool would be a crime against “human dignity” and human rights.

But all these declarations were made before it was actually feasible to precisely engineer the germ line. Now, with CRISPR, it is possible.

CRISPR – Part 1- GENETIC MANIPULATION –The Springboard 
CRISPR – Part 2- The DESTROYER
CRISPR – Part 3- THE ULTIMATE END
CRISPR – Part 4 – UNLEASHED

Yang would later tell me that she dropped out of the project not long after we spoke. Yet it remained difficult to know if the experiment she described was occurring, canceled, or awaiting publication. Sinclair said that a collaboration between the two labs was ongoing, but then, like several other scientists whom I’d asked about germ-line engineering, he stopped replying to my e-mails.

Regardless of the fate of that particular experiment, human germ-line engineering has become a burgeoning research concept. At least three other centers in the United States are working on it, as are scientists in China, in the U.K., and at a biotechnology company called OvaScience, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, that boasts some of the world’s leading fertility doctors on its advisory board.

The objective of these groups is to demonstrate that it’s possible to produce children free of specific genes involved in inherited disease. If it’s possible to correct the DNA in a woman’s egg, or a man’s sperm, those cells could be used in an in vitro fertilization (IVF) clinic to produce an embryo and then a child. It might also be possible to directly edit the DNA of an early-stage IVF embryo using CRISPR. Several people interviewed by MIT Technology Review said that such experiments had already been carried out in China and that results describing edited embryos were pending publication. These people, including two high-ranking specialists, didn’t wish to comment publicly because the papers are under review.

All this means that germ-line engineering is much further along than anyone imagined. “What you are talking about is a major issue for all humanity,” says Merle Berger, one of the founders of Boston IVF, a network of fertility clinics that is among the largest in the world and helps more than a thousand women get pregnant each year. “It would be the biggest thing that ever happened in our field.” Berger predicts that repairing genes involved in serious inherited diseases will win wide public acceptance but says the idea of using the technology beyond that would cause a public uproar because “everyone would want the perfect child”: people might pick and choose eye color and eventually intelligence. “These are things we talk about all the time,” he says. “But we have never had the opportunity to do it.”

Editing embryos

How easy would it be to edit a human embryo using CRISPR? Very easy, experts say. “Any scientist with molecular biology skills and knowledge of how to work with [embryos] is going to be able to do this,” says Jennifer Doudna, a biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, who in 2012 co-discovered how to use CRISPR to edit genes.

To find out how it could be done, I visited the lab of Guoping Feng, a biologist at MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research, where a colony of marmoset monkeys is being established with the aim of using CRISPR to create accurate models of human brain diseases. To create the models, Feng will edit the DNA of embryos and then transfer them into female marmosets to produce live monkeys. One gene Feng hopes to alter in the animals is SHANK3. The gene is involved in how neurons communicate; when it’s damaged in children, it is known to cause autism.

Feng said that before CRISPR, it was not possible to introduce precise changes into a primate’s DNA. With CRISPR, the technique should be relatively straightforward. The CRISPR system includes a gene-snipping enzyme and a guide molecule that can be programmed to target unique combinations of the DNA letters, A, G, C, and T; get these ingredients into a cell and they will cut and modify the genome at the targeted sites.

But CRISPR is not perfect—and it would be a very haphazard way to edit human embryos, as Feng’s efforts to create gene-edited marmosets show. To employ the CRISPR system in the monkeys, his students simply inject the chemicals into a fertilized egg, which is known as a zygote—the stage just before it starts dividing.

Feng said the efficiency with which CRISPR can delete or disable a gene in a zygote is about 40 percent, whereas making specific edits, or swapping DNA letters, works less frequently—more like 20 percent of the time. Like a person, a monkey has two copies of most genes, one from each parent. Sometimes both copies get edited, but sometimes just one does, or neither. Only about half the embryos will lead to live births, and of those that do, many could contain a mixture of cells with edited DNA and without. If you add up the odds, you find you’d need to edit 20 embryos to get a live monkey with the version you want.

That’s not an insurmountable problem for Feng, since the MIT breeding colony will give him access to many monkey eggs and he’ll be able to generate many embryos. However, it would present obvious problems in humans. Putting the ingredients of CRISPR into a human embryo would be scientifically trivial. But it wouldn’t be practical for much just yet. This is one reason that many scientists view such an experiment (whether or not it has really occurred in China) with scorn, seeing it more as a provocative bid to grab attention than as real science. Rudolf Jaenisch, an MIT biologist who works across the street from Feng and who in the 1970s created the first gene-modified mice, calls attempts to edit human embryos “totally premature.” He says he hopes these papers will be rejected and not published. “It’s just a sensational thing that will stir things up,” says Jaenisch. “We know it’s possible, but is it of practical use? I kind of doubt it.”

For his part, Feng told me he approves of the idea of germ-line engineering. Isn’t the goal of medicine to reduce suffering? Considering the state of the technology, however, he thinks actual gene-edited humans are “10 to 20 years away.” Among other problems, CRISPR can introduce off-target effects or change bits of the genome far from where scientists had intended. Any human embryo altered with CRISPR today would carry the risk that its genome had been changed in unexpected ways. But, Feng said, such problems may eventually be ironed out, and edited people will be born. “To me, it’s possible in the long run to dramatically improve health, lower costs. It’s a kind of prevention,” he said. “It’s hard to predict the future, but correcting disease risks is definitely a possibility and should be supported. I think it will be a reality.”

Editing eggs

Elsewhere in the Boston area, scientists are exploring a different approach to engineering the germ line, one that is technically more demanding but probably more powerful. This strategy combines CRISPR with unfolding discoveries related to stem cells. Scientists at several centers, including Church’s, think they will soon be able to use stem cells to produce eggs and sperm in the laboratory. Unlike embryos, stem cells can be grown and multiplied. Thus they could offer a vastly improved way to create edited offspring with CRISPR. The recipe goes like this: First, edit the genes of the stem cells. Second, turn them into an egg or sperm. Third, produce an offspring.

Some investors got an early view of the technique on December 17, at the Benjamin Hotel in Manhattan, during commercial presentations by OvaScience. The company, which was founded four years ago, aims to commercialize the scientific work of David Sinclair, who is based at Harvard, and Jonathan Tilly, an expert on egg stem cells and the chairman of the biology department at Northeastern University (see “10 Emerging Technologies: Egg Stem Cells,” May/June 2012). It made the presentations as part of a successful effort to raise $132 million in new capital during January.

During the meeting, Sinclair, a velvet-voiced Australian whom Time last year named one of the “100 Most Influential People in the World,” took the podium and provided Wall Street with a peek at what he called “truly world-changing” developments. People would look back at this moment in time and recognize it as a new chapter in “how humans control their bodies,” he said, because it would let parents determine “when and how they have children and how healthy those children are actually going to be.”

The company has not perfected its stem-cell technology—it has not reported that the eggs it grows in the lab are viable—but Sinclair predicted that functional eggs were “a when, and not an if.” Once the technology works, he said, infertile women will be able to produce hundreds of eggs, and maybe hundreds of embryos. Using DNA sequencing to analyze their genes, they could pick among them for the healthiest ones.

Genetically improved children may also be possible. Sinclair told the investors that he was trying to alter the DNA of these egg stem cells using gene editing, work he later told me he was doing with Church’s lab. “We think the new technologies with genome editing will allow it to be used on individuals who aren’t just interested in using IVF to have children but have healthier children as well, if there is a genetic disease in their family,” Sinclair told the investors. He gave the example of Huntington’s disease, caused by a gene that will trigger a fatal brain condition even in someone who inherits only one copy. Sinclair said gene editing could be used to remove the lethal gene defect from an egg cell. His goal, and that of OvaScience, is to “correct those mutations before we generate your child,” he said. “It’s still experimental, but there is no reason to expect it won’t be possible in coming years.”

Sinclair spoke to me briefly on the phone while he was navigating in a cab across a snowed-in Boston, but later he referred my questions to OvaScience. When I contacted OvaScience, Cara Mayfield, a spokeswoman, said its executives could not comment because of their travel schedules but confirmed that the company was working on treating inherited disorders with gene editing. What was surprising to me was that OvaScience’s research in “crossing the germ line,” as critics of human engineering sometimes put it, has generated scarcely any notice. In December of 2013, OvaScience even announced it was putting $1.5 million into a joint venture with a synthetic biology company called Intrexon, whose R&D objectives include gene-editing eggs to “prevent the propagation” of human disease “in future generations.”

When I reached Tilly at Northeastern, he laughed when I told him what I was calling about. “It’s going to be a hot-button issue,” he said. Tilly also said his lab was trying to edit egg stem cells with CRISPR “right now” to rid them of an inherited genetic disease that he didn’t want to name. Tilly emphasized that there are “two pieces of the puzzle”—one being stem cells and the other gene editing. The ability to create large numbers of egg stem cells is critical, because only with sizable quantities can genetic changes be stably introduced using CRISPR, characterized using DNA sequencing, and carefully studied to check for mistakes before producing an egg.

Tilly predicted that the whole end-to-end technology—cells to stem cells, stem cells to sperm or egg and then to offspring—would end up being worked out first in animals, such as cattle, either by his lab or by companies such as eGenesis, the spinoff from the Church lab working on livestock. But he isn’t sure what the next step should be with edited human eggs. You wouldn’t want to fertilize one “willy nilly,” he said. You’d be making a potential human being. And doing that would raise questions he’s not sure he can answer. He told me, “‘Can you do it?’ is one thing. If you can, then the most important questions come up. ‘Would you do it? Why would you want to do it? What is the purpose?’ As scientists we want to know if it’s feasible, but then we get into the bigger questions, and it’s not a science question—it’s a society question.”

Improving humans

If germ-line engineering becomes part of medical practice, it could lead to transformative changes in human well-being, with consequences to people’s life span, identity, and economic output. But it would create ethical dilemmas and social challenges. What if these improvements were available only to the richest societies, or the richest people? An in vitro fertility procedure costs about $20,000 in the United States. Add genetic testing and egg donation or a surrogate mother, and the price soars toward $100,000.

Others believe the idea is dubious because it’s not medically necessary. Hank Greely, a lawyer and ethicist at Stanford University, says proponents “can’t really say what it is good for.” The problem, says Greely, is that it’s already possible to test the DNA of IVF embryos and pick healthy ones, a process that adds about $4,000 to the cost of a fertility procedure. A man with Huntington’s, for instance, could have his sperm used to fertilize a dozen of his partner’s eggs. Half those embryos would not have the Huntington’s gene, and those could be used to begin a pregnancy.

Indeed, some people are adamant that germ-line engineering is being pushed ahead with “false arguments.” That is the view of Edward Lanphier, CEO of Sangamo Biosciences, a California biotechnology company that is using another gene-editing technique, called zinc fingers nucleases, to try to treat HIV in adults by altering their blood cells. “We’ve looked at [germ-line engineering] for a disease rationale, and there is none,” he says. “You can do it. But there really isn’t a medical reason. People say, well, we don’t want children born with this, or born with that—but it’s a completely false argument and a slippery slope toward much more unacceptable uses.”

Critics cite a host of fears. Children would be the subject of experiments. Parents would be influenced by genetic advertising from IVF clinics. Germ-line engineering would encourage the spread of allegedly superior traits. And it would affect people not yet born, without their being able to agree to it. The American Medical Association, for instance, holds that germ-line engineering shouldn’t be done “at this time” because it “affects the welfare of future generations” and could cause “unpredictable and irreversible results.” But like a lot of official statements that forbid changing the genome, the AMA’s, which was last updated in 1996, predates today’s technology. “A lot of people just agreed to these statements,” says Greely. “It wasn’t hard to renounce something that you couldn’t do.”

Others predict that hard-to-oppose medical uses will be identified. A couple with several genetic diseases at once might not be able to find a suitable embryo. Treating infertility is another possibility. Some men don’t produce any sperm, a condition called azoospermia. One cause is a genetic defect in which a region of about one million to six million DNA letters is missing from the Y chromosome. It might be possible to take a skin cell from such a man, turn it into a stem cell, repair the DNA, and then make sperm, says Werner Neuhausser, a young Austrian doctor who splits his time between the Boston IVF fertility-clinic network and Harvard’s Stem Cell Institute. “That will change medicine forever, right? You could cure infertility, that is for sure,” he says.

I spoke with Church several times by telephone over the last few months, and he told me what’s driving everything is the “incredible specificity” of CRISPR. Although not all the details have been worked out, he thinks the technology could replace DNA letters essentially without side effects. He says this is what makes it “tempting to use.” Church says his laboratory is focused mostly on experiments in engineering animals. He added that his lab would not make or edit human embryos, calling such a step “not our style.”

What is Church’s style is human enhancement. And he’s been making a broad case that CRISPR can do more than eliminate disease genes. It can lead to augmentation. At meetings, some involving groups of “transhumanists” interested in next steps for human evolution, Church likes to show a slide on which he lists naturally occurring variants of around 10 genes that, when people are born with them, confer extraordinary qualities or resistance to disease. One makes your bones so hard they’ll break a surgical drill. Another drastically cuts the risk of heart attacks. And a variant of the gene for the amyloid precursor protein, or APP, was found by Icelandic researchers to protect against Alzheimer’s. People with it never get dementia and remain sharp into old age.

Church thinks CRISPR could be used to provide people with favorable versions of genes, making DNA edits that would act as vaccines against some of the most common diseases we face today. Although he told me anything “edgy” should be done only to adults who can consent, it’s obvious to him that the earlier such interventions occur, the better.

Church tends to dodge questions about genetically modified babies. The idea of improving the human species has always had “enormously bad press,” he wrote in the introduction to Regenesis, his 2012 book on synthetic biology, whose cover was a painting by Eustache Le Sueur of a bearded God creating the world. But that’s ultimately what he’s suggesting: enhancements in the form of protective genes. “An argument will be made that the ultimate prevention is that the earlier you go, the better the prevention,” he told an audience at MIT’s Media Lab last spring. “I do think it’s the ultimate preventive, if we get to the point where it’s very inexpensive, extremely safe, and very predictable.” Church, who has a less cautious side, proceeded to tell the audience that he thought changing genes “is going to get to the point where it’s like you are doing the equivalent of cosmetic surgery.”

Some thinkers have concluded that we should not pass up the chance to make improvements to our species. “The human genome is not perfect,” says John Harris, a bioethicist at Manchester University, in the U.K. “It’s ethically imperative to positively support this technology.” By some measures, U.S. public opinion is not particularly negative toward the idea. A Pew Research survey carried out last August found that 46 percent of adults approved of genetic modification of babies to reduce the risk of serious diseases.

The same survey found that 83 percent said genetic modification to make a baby smarter would be “taking medical advances too far.” But other observers say higher IQ is exactly what we should be considering. Nick Bostrom, an Oxford philosopher best known for his 2014 book Superintelligence, which raised alarms about the risks of artificial intelligence in computers, has also looked at whether humans could use reproductive technology to improve human intellect. Although the ways in which genes affect intelligence aren’t well understood and there are far too many relevant genes to permit easy engineering, such realities don’t dim speculation on the possibility of high-tech eugenics.

What if everyone could be a little bit smarter? Or a few people could be a lot smarter? Even a small number of “super-enhanced” individuals, Bostrom wrote in a 2013 paper, could change the world through their creativity and discoveries, and through innovations that everyone else would use. In his view, genetic enhancement is an important long-range issue like climate change or financial planning by nations, “since human problem-solving ability is a factor in every challenge we face.”

To some scientists, the explosive advance of genetics and biotech means germ-line engineering is inevitable. Of course, safety questions would be paramount. Before there’s a genetically edited baby saying “Mama,” there would have to be tests in rats, rabbits, and probably monkeys, to make sure they are normal. But ultimately, if the benefits seem to outweigh the risks, medicine would take the chance. “It was the same with IVF when it first happened,” says Neuhausser. “We never really knew if that baby was going to be healthy at 40 or 50 years. But someone had to take the plunge.”

Wine country

In January, on Saturday the 24th, around 20 scientists, ethicists, and legal experts traveled to Napa Valley, California, for a retreat among the vineyards at the Carneros Inn. They had been convened by Doudna, the Berkeley scientist who co-discovered the CRISPR system a little over two years ago. She had become aware that scientists might be thinking of crossing the germ line, and she was concerned. Now she wanted to know: could they be stopped?

“We as scientists have come to appreciate that CRISPR is incredibly powerful. But that swings both ways. We need to make sure that it’s applied carefully,” Doudna told me. “The issue is especially human germ-line editing and the appreciation that this is now a capability in everyone’s hands.”

At the meeting, along with ethicists like Greely, was Paul Berg, a Stanford biochemist and Nobel Prize winner known for having organized the Asilomar Conference, a historic 1975 forum at which biologists reached an agreement on how to safely proceed with recombinant DNA, the newly discovered method of splicing DNA into bacteria.

Should there be an Asilomar for germ-line engineering? Doudna thinks so, but the prospects for consensus seem dim. Biotechnology research is now global, involving hundreds of thousands of people. There’s no single authority that speaks for science, and no easy way to put the genie back in the bottle. Doudna told me she hoped that if American scientists agreed to a moratorium on human germ-line engineering, it might influence researchers elsewhere in the world to cease their work.

Doudna said she felt that a self-imposed pause should apply not only to making gene-edited babies but also to using CRISPR to alter human embryos, eggs, or sperm—as researchers at Harvard, Northeastern, and OvaScience are doing. “I don’t feel that those experiments are appropriate to do right now in human cells that could turn into a person,” she told me. “I feel that the research that needs to be done right now is to understand safety, efficacy, and delivery. And I think those experiments can be done in nonhuman systems. I would like to see a lot more work done before it’s done for germ-line editing. I would favor a very cautious approach.”

Not everyone agrees that germ-line engineering is such a big worry, or that experiments should be padlocked. Greely notes that in the United States, there are piles of regulations to keep lab science from morphing into a genetically modified baby anytime soon. “I would not want to use safety as an excuse for a non-safety-based ban,” says Greely, who says he pushed back against talk of a moratorium. But he also says he agreed to sign Doudna’s letter, which now reflects the consensus of the group. “Although I don’t view this as a crisis moment, I think it’s probably about time for us to have this discussion,” he says.

(After this article was published online in March, Doudna’s editorial appeared in Science (see “Scientists Call for a Summit on Gene-Edited Babies.) Along with Greely, Berg, and 15 others, she called for a global moratorium on any effort to use CRISPR to generate gene-edited children until researchers could determine “what clinical applications, if any, might in the future be deemed permissible.” The group, however, endorsed basic research, including applying CRISPR to embryos. The final list of signatories included Church, although he did not attend the Napa meeting.)

As news has spread of germ-line experiments, some biotechnology companies now working on CRISPR have realized that they will have to take a stand. Nessan Bermingham is CEO of Intellia Therapeutics, a Boston startup that raised $15 million last year to develop CRISPR into gene therapy treatments for adults or children. He says germ-line engineering “is not on our commercial radar,” and he suggests that his company could use its patents to prevent anyone from commercializing it.

“The technology is in its infancy,” he says. “It is not appropriate for people to even be contemplating germ-line applications.”

Bermingham told me he never imagined he’d have to be taking a position on genetically modified babies so soon. Modifying human heredity has always been a theoretical possibility. Suddenly it’s a real one. But wasn’t the point always to understand and control our own biology—to become masters over the processes that created us?

Doudna says she is also thinking about these issues. “It cuts to the core of who we are as people, and it makes you ask if humans should be exercising that kind of power,” she told me. “There are moral and ethical issues, but one of the profound questions is just the appreciation that if germ-line editing is conducted in humans, that is changing human evolution.” One reason she feels the research should slow down is to give scientists a chance to spend more time explaining what their next steps could be.

“Most of the public,” she says, “does not appreciate what is coming.”

This story was updated on April 23, 2015

CDC Workers Deaths | Vanderbilt Television News Archive

CDC WORKERS DEATHS #250793

CBS Evening News for Tuesday, Mar 01, 1977
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(Studio) 2 employees of CDC (Centers for Disease Control) in Atlanta die of mysterious illness; had worked in area where Legionnaires’ disease investigation being conducted.
REPORTER: Roger Mudd

(Atlanta, Georgia) 2 men were George Flowers and Robert Dubingon. [CDC (Centers for Disease Control) spokesperson Dr. Richard DIXON – says 1 of problems in diagnosis is 1st symptoms common to all infections. Says they’re concerned about others working at Center and are probing for disease cause, but also have public health responsibility to continue work. Also says Legionnaires’ disease can’t be excluded, but feels it’s unlikely.] Doctors say it’s possible cause will never be known.
REPORTER: Bernard Goldberg

Reporter(s):
Goldberg, Bernard;
Mudd, Roger
Duration:
00:02:00

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What killed 40 biological- and chemical weapons researchers, and other suspicious deaths

Around forty microbiologists that have specialized biological and chemical weapons research have died accidentally or otherwise odd circumstances between November 2001 and January 2005. Who is killing them? This is my – and many other people – theory:

With George Bush presidency, United States Defense was introduced pre-emptive strike defense doctrine. This means that the possible the enemy could be eliminated before it has done anything, but is capable to make deathly strike.  After 9/11 attack that destroyed the two NWC building in New York.There were another terrorist attack with letters that were filled with substance called Anthrax ,against members of Congress and media. After that, started accidental deaths of biological and chemical weapons scientists.

I believe that after Anthrax attack , there was compiled  a list of scientist, that had the  knowledge and  possibility to make Anthrax,  or other deathly diseases, or toxic substances. From that list were singled out those that were – one reason or other – not considered reliable, and  they were eliminated one by one. The results are forty suspicious deaths. A tough decision that was typical on this era of United States, ended of these people lives for mostly only reason, that they knew too much of dangerous subject. The Nation presumed safety and security, was put before justice, and lives of  some innocent individuals.

Forty Microbiologist died in suspicious sircustances

Three environmental scientist Eugene Franklin Mallove, Juventina Villa Mojica and Dorothy Stang were  murdered after this radio programand after releasing lab test results linking chemtrails to the mass death of fish, plant and animal life.

Raymond A. Robinson list of a hundred suspiciously dead scientists

Steve Quayle list of suspiciously dead scientists 1995-2003

Steve Quayle list of suspiciously dead scientists since 2004

Steve Quayle More about deaths of scientists

Assassination of 530 Iraqi scientists ?

Dead Microbiologistsby 911Review.org.

8 Dead, 5 Missing Doctors! What They Knew ?


Nineteen suspicious deaths of  9/11  mass-murder witnesses and truth-seekers, Veterans today article based on Ph.D. Crockett Grabbe book Anatomy of Mass Murders. Besides of murders of truth-seekers, there are also some attempts to suppress  and manipulate 9/11  search-engine information on Internet.

Killed Nuclear scientists, Iran nuclear scientists are eliminated one by one

Bomb Kills Iranian Nuclear Scientist – (November 2010) another murdered Iran nuclear scientist

Bomb Kills Iranian Nuclear Scientist again  (January 2012)

Suspicious suicides

Eight bankers “suicides”  in one month (February 2014). Does the trail of death bankers lead somewhere

Seven suspicious high political  profile suicides in Ukraine in one month , and three prominent Poroshenko critics killed in Kiev in three days,

Four Turkish defence industry Engineers in same company, made suspicious  suicides – Newspaper suspects reason of suicide was telepathy , but I believe that reason was electromagnetic mindcontrol, and harassment.

Veterans Today about 25 died or disappeared bankers -What’s Going on with the Bankers?

48 Suspicious banking deaths (August 2014)

Nachumlist – Deaths connected to the Obama White House

Nachumlist – Hillary Clinton Death pool

Dr. Fred Bell was found death 24 hours after interview with Jesse Ventura about mindcontrol and other electromagnetic weapons.  This is the document that  Jesse Ventura was filming “Conspiracy theory”

Where is Timothy Cunningham’s Whistleblower Report on Coronavirus?

Tore

Who is Timothy Cunningham? He worked for the CDC, but he was a special CDC officer. He was an Epidemic Intelligence Service officer. What’s that? Epidemic Intelligence Service Officers deal with diseases and biowarfare. He was on the team for H1N1, Ebola, and the Zika virus.

According to exclusive sources, he was startled with findings over the years in respects to how flu vaccines amplify the side effects of viral infections rather than inoculate patients effectively.

In December of 2017, Cunningham was assigned to what was at the time a new project unofficially known as “Shogun”. According to our exclusive sources, testing and manipulation of the SARS strand was being used against a new drug that could eliminate a virus to infect your cells. It’s important to understand HOW viruses function to understand WHAT Timothy Cunningham’s whistleblower report had.

How do viruses infect people? 

Viral infections, in other words, are your cells being hijacked to spew out more viruses. The cells in your body are used as a host to replicate more viral cells until there are none of your cells left. Viruses are like stupid parasites, they keep going until all life is eradicated. Unless they are able to mutate to a point where they can metabolize without a host, they will die too. In essence, they use your cells to proliferate, but don’t have a plan when they are “done” with you.

Until now, most medications like Tamiflu focus on disabling viruses to “explode”. When a virus hijacks a cell, it replicates until the cell literally explodes (lysis). Tamiflu doesn’t allow for the lytic cycle to be completed, therefore, no further cells are infected by the newly created viruses.

What did Timothy Cunningham find out?

It turns out that the Chinese did what they always do. They stole (were given) proprietary information from the CDC and labs at Harvard to kickstart their new research, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation. This new research is two-prong.

  • Designing the SARS virus to target specific cells that control fertility in males. Almost like chemical castration.
  • Designing the SARS virus to infect and insert “protein code” with retroviral applications that respond to SQUARE WAVES.

In 2015, the Chinese successfully came upon research that found a novel method to control viral infections. The research focused on inducing apoptosis of cells (which self destruct) when initiation of viral material production is detected. The lab in Wuhan, China, is where the Chinese investigate and create subtle BioWarfare agents. For every bioweapon you make, an “antidote” must be created. In this case they took the antidote (so did the CDC) and reverse engineered different weapons.

Cunningham discovered that certain individuals in the U.S. were working on information they received from the Chinese – in respects to weaponizing SARS – with high specificity in virulence targeting specific genetic code and enzyme packets for transcription. In essence, the new virus would mimic that of HIV. A “smart” virus that could replicate all ligands of target cells in order to not be detected by innate immune cells, and therefore just “lie in waiting”.

In January 2018, the EID (Epidemic Intel Division) of the CDC had decided to test this in specific COHORTS.

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What is a specific COHORT?

Have you noticed how all your vaccines and flu shots have bar codes? They are scanned multiple times, etc. Well, with information they gather from clinics, hospitals, and pharmacies via your insurance (thanks Obamacare), the CDC have a full picture of almost everyone’s health. In addition, your DNA… is stored at your local hospital or clinic every time you give blood. Not convinced? Read the fine print in your “CONSENT TO TREAT” that you are made to sign every time you visit. It clearly states they can hold all audio, pics, video, and DNA up to 7 years and SHARE it, according to federal guidelines. (Again, thanks Obamacare). What are the federal guidelines? Obamacare made it so any insurance company and any private company they contract with like Global Strategies Group, Lockheed, Google, Amazon etc – including car insurance, can have access to it. Don’t believe it – READ the Affordable Care Act.

With that in mind, a cohort is a selected group of individuals or target demographic that you test drugs on.

Here is a purely hypothetical example:

The Cleveland Clinic has various groups of primary care. Hypothetically speaking, if the target group was “Caucasian males aged 35-55 that have ABC genetic type, found in specific European groups,” then you would simply find which clinic has patients that fit that profile. Let’s assume that two offices provide a 15% test pool for that target group, because the clinics are present in neighborhoods that have a lot of German and Polish migrants. The remaining 85% are simply statistical data or controls that can provide direction for future research.

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Once your cohort sample is identified you usually deploy the drug you want to test. Hypothetically speaking, the flu vaccines or PNEUMONIA vaccines that people over 50 are offered every ten years can be your MEAN to covertly test your drug or bio weapon.

The above scenario is hypothetical, but rings true to the fact that in Spring people are testing positive across the nation for Influenza A and B rapidly. Those were vaccines deployed in 2018 and 2019, which is very telling.

We asked our exclusive source about that and the response was:

Expression of Influenza A and B could indicate that they contracted COVID-19 but expressed the virus they were supposed to be inoculated with. In other words, COVID-19 exposure may activate the “dead” virus, hypothetically speaking.

Former EID Officer

What did Timothy Cunningham Allegedly Know?

An omitted fact preceding Cunningham’s disappearance is his recent meeting with certain people from Japan to which he was provided concerning data that confirmed that the Chinese and certain entities that met in McLean Virginia discussed.

Prior to his disappearance and “suicide” he visited ALL his close confidants, terrified as he was bold enough to leave a paper trail by filing a whistleblower report. He filed it on a Monday, and within 48 hours he knew that his identity was not protected. He attempted to reach the President of the United States. General Kelly was not very happy about that from what our sources say, and in his panic seemed erratic. Tim didn’t sound right. He was telling people to delete his number from their phones and was on the run because people were going to kill him. The FBI counterintelligence division, the same one Peter Strzok worked for, knows that – there are emails.

Two weeks after his disappearance he was found dead in a river. They claimed it was a result from suicide. A sailor died of drowning? Even as an NCO you go through the swim test and swim class.

His knowledge? Japan created an all encompassed cure, and pharmaceutical companies were seeking ways around it.

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Does President Donald J. Trump know?

Does President Trump know that while all of us are being VACCINATED that Shionogi & Co., a Japanese company from Japan, has invented a drug that can eradicate ANY VIRUS that invades the human body?

Imagine if the people of the United States of America knew that every year their annual flu vaccine was unnecessary and that all their Congresspersons and Senators have HUGE pharmaceutical portfolios. Imagine if they also knew that the hospital and doctors were rewarded for all the vaccines they provided, even though they were unnecessary because there is a medication that can stop any virus. This is all speculation…of course.

Hypothetically speaking, you can’t come out and say something like that ever… you would be christened the King of Tin Foil hats. Though, if people got sick and an “epidemic” happened to draw attention to the “flu,” it would be appropriate… hypothetically speaking.

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The complaints many have is that President Trump is NOT distributing CDC derived testing kits. Instead, he has requested all labs and hospitals nationwide to create their own. Why? No centralization of information. Publicly available information promotes transparency. It’s obvious that the EID is foaming at the mouth right now and the Deep State is terrified.

The amplification of the “flu” and the quarantines – self or government imposed – create a hyper focused public that demands answers.

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So many rumors and hypothesis – but one thing can shed some light. Shionogi & Co. used their ANTI-HIV medications to create their FLU TERMINATOR. The medication disallows the RNA/DNA of the virus to be replicated by the HUMAN nucleus. That means it is a generic drug that disables “unzipping proteins” necessary for transcription. If the cells can’t be hijacked, then the virus dies in the intercellular space it occupies since it lacks a host.

Why are we getting vaccinated against viruses when we can terminate the ability to have them hijacked in the first place?

Timothy Cunningham said that to his close friend before he disappeared

The Kansas City Star had the most abundant information surrounding the missing EID Officer:

The Cunninghams have told police about a “worrisome” phone call and text messages from him on Feb. 11, the details of which they shared with police but are keeping private from others.

Kansas City Star

If what our sources are telling us is true, and if Japan really has a blanket drug with this virus being designed to try to evade it, the President of the United States would definitely know. Time for Mr. Cunningham’s whistle-blower report to be leaked.

Donald J. Trump

@realDonaldTrump

Just had a great conversation with Prime Minister Abe of Japan. I told him that the just completed Olympic venue is magnificent. He has done an incredible job, one that will make him very proud. Good things will happen for Japan and their great Prime Minister. Lots of options!

35.8K people are talking about this.

The mass hysteria and weaponization of a flu coup by the mainstream media (MSM) was done in an attempt to make the case that the president is incompetent and tank the market. “Never let a good crisis go to waste,” is a saying the Deep State loves, and one that seems pretty accurate in this case.

Haley Kennington @kenningtonsays

Every day that I read the headlines & see the Coronavirus chatter, I can’t help but to be reminded:

“You never want a serious crisis to go to waste. What I mean by that is- it’s an opportunity to do things that you think you could not do before.”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yeA_kHHLow 

Buying time to avoid the inevitable.

Tore is a nationally syndicated talk radio host that airs live M-F 12-2PM EST on Red State Talk Radio 

Steve Quayle’s List:

Dead Scientists 2004-2015

Dead Scientists 1994-2003

Dead Scientists Articles – Index

Erin Elizabeth: 

Health Nut Magazine and List Dead Holistic Practitioners.

 AND 

Eleven microbiologists mysteriously dead over the span of just five months. Some of them world leaders in developing weapons-grade biological plagues. Others the best in figuring out how to stop millions from dying because of biological weapons. Still others, experts in the theory of bioterrorism.

Throw in a few Russian defectors, a few nervy U.S. biotech companies, a deranged assassin or two, a bit of Elvis, a couple of Satanists, a subtle hint of espionage, a big whack of imagination, and the plot is complete, if a bit reminiscent of James Bond.

The first three died in the space of just over a week in November. Benito Que, 52, was an expert in infectious diseases and cellular biology at the Miami Medical School. Police originally suspected that he had been beaten on Nov. 12 in a carjacking in the medical school’s parking lot. Strangely enough, though, his body showed no signs of a beating. Doctors then began to suspect a stroke.

Just four days after Dr. Que fell unconscious came the mysterious disappearance of Don Wiley, 57, one of the foremost microbiologists in the United States. Dr. Wiley, of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Harvard University, was an expert on how the immune system responds to viral attacks such as the classic doomsday plagues of HIV, ebola and influenza.

He had just bought tickets to take his son to Graceland the following day. Police found his rental car on a bridge outside Memphis, Tenn. His body was later found in the Mississippi River. Forensic experts said he may have had a dizzy spell and have fallen off the bridge.

Just five days after that, the world-class microbiologist and high-profile Russian defector Valdimir Pasechnik, 64, fell dead. The pathologist who did the autopsy, and who also happened to be associated with Britain’s spy agency, concluded he died of a stroke.

Dr. Pasechnik, who defected to the United Kingdom in 1989, played a huge role in Russian biowarfare and helped to figure out how to modify cruise missiles to deliver the agents of mass biological destruction.

The next two deaths came four days apart in December. Robert Schwartz, 57, was stabbed and slashed with what police believe was a sword in his farmhouse in Leesberg, Va. His daughter, who identifies herself as a pagan high priestess, and several of her fellow pagans have been charged.

Dr. Schwartz was an expert in DNA sequencing and pathogenic micro-organisms, who worked at the Center for Innovative Technology in Herndon, Va.

Four days later, Nguyen Van Set, 44, died at work in Geelong, Australia, in a laboratory accident. He entered an airlocked storage lab and died from exposure to nitrogen. Other scientists at the animal diseases facility of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization had just come to fame for discovering a virulent strain of mousepox, which could be modified to affect smallpox.

Then in February, the Russian microbiologist Victor Korshunov, 56, an expert in intestinal bacteria of children around the world, was bashed over the head near his home in Moscow. Five days later the British microbiologist Ian Langford, 40, was found dead in his home near Norwich, England, naked from the waist down and wedged under a chair. He was an expert in environmental risks and disease.

Two weeks later, two prominent microbiologists died in San Francisco. Tanya Holzmayer, 46, a Russian who moved to the U.S. in 1989, focused on the part of the human molecular structure that could be affected best by medicine.

She was killed by fellow microbiologist Guyang (Matthew) Huang, 38, who shot her seven times when she opened the door to a pizza delivery. Then he shot himself.

The final two deaths came one day after the other in March. David Wynn-Williams, 55, a respected astrobiologist with the British Antarctic Survey, who studied the habits of microbes that might survive in outer space, died in a freak road accident near his home in Cambridge, England. He was hit by a car while he was jogging.

The following day, Steven Mostow, 63, known as Dr. Flu for his expertise in treating influenza, and a noted expert in bioterrorism, died when the airplane he was piloting crashed near Denver.

So what does any of it mean?

“Statistically, what are the chances?” wondered a prominent North American microbiologist reached last night at an international meeting of infectious-disease specialists in Chicago.

Janet Shoemaker, director of public and scientific affairs of the American Society for Microbiology in Washington, D.C., pointed out yesterday that there are about 20,000 academic researchers in microbiology in the U.S. Still, not all of these are of the elevated calibre of those recently deceased.

She had a chilling, final thought. When microbiologists die in a lab, there’s a way of taking note of the deaths and adding them up. When they die in freakish accidents outside the lab, nobody keeps track. Suspicious deaths

The sudden and suspicious deaths of 11 of the world’s leading microbiologists.

Who they were:

1. Nov. 12, 2001:

Benito Que was said to have been beaten in a Miami parking lot and died later.

2. Nov. 16, 2001:

Don C. Wiley went missing. Was found Dec. 20. Investigators said he got dizzy on a Memphis bridge and fell to his death in a river.

3. Nov. 21, 2001:

Vladimir Pasechnik, former high-level Russian microbiologist who defected in 1989 to the U.K. apparently died from a stroke.

4. Dec. 10, 2001:

Robert M. Schwartz was stabbed to death in Leesberg, Va. Three Satanists have been arrested.

5. Dec. 14, 2001:

Nguyen Van Set died in an airlock filled with nitrogen in his lab in Geelong, Australia.

6. Feb. 9, 2002:

Victor Korshunov had his head bashed in near his home in Moscow.

7. Feb. 14, 2002:

Ian Langford was found partially naked and wedged under a chair in Norwich, England.

8. 9. Feb. 28, 2002:

San Francisco resident Tanya Holzmayer was killed by a microbiologist colleague, Guyang Huang, who shot her as she took delivery of a pizza and then apparently shot himself.

10. March 24, 2002:

David Wynn-Williams died in a road accident near his home in Cambridge, England.

11. March 25, 2002:

Steven Mostow of the Colorado Health Sciences Centre, killed in a plane he was flying near Denver.

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Alison Young
USA TODAY
A CDC microbiologist wearing a full-body positive-pressure suit undergoes a decontamination shower before exiting a biosafety level 4 lab at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. The process involved a four-minute chemical shower followed by a three-minute rinse with water, according to the CDC.

Encased in spacesuit-like gear needed to protect them from the world’s deadliest viruses, four scientists at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stepped into their lab’s decontamination chamber where a shower of chemicals was supposed to kill anything on them and make it safe for them to exit into an adjacent changing room.

But the shower wouldn’t start, and warning lights appeared as a cascading series of safety systems began to fail inside one of the world’s most advanced biosafety level 4 labs. That’s the highest level of containment and security, reserved for work with deadly Ebola and smallpox viruses and other pathogens that lack vaccines or reliable treatments.

The gasket seal around the exit door to the changing room deflated to the point that the scientists could see light coming in. And as they held that door shut and started an emergency chemical deluge, things got even worse.

The shower’s door back into the infectious disease lab “forcefully” burst open again and again – and they couldn’t even hold it shut. Meanwhile, air pressure alarms were blinking and monitors displayed the lab as “red,” according to records of the February 2009 incident recently obtained by USA TODAY under a Freedom of Information Act. The CDC took 3 ½ years to fulfill the request.

The records release comes as the CDC has faced two congressional hearings since a series of high-profile lab incidents in 2014 with anthrax, Ebola and a deadly strain of avian flu, and amid mounting concerns in Congress about the effectiveness of lab regulation and whether a lack of transparency keeps serious lab safety problems hidden from the public.

Despite the dramatic series of equipment failures in the 2009 CDC biosafety level 4 (BSL-4) lab incident, the newly released records include emails showing some within the agency sought at the time to avoid reporting to federal lab regulators in another division at the agency, though they eventually were notified.

“The incident summary reads like a screenplay for a disaster movie,” said Richard Ebright, a Rutgers University biosafety expert who reviewed the report at USA TODAY’s request and called it a major incident.

“Overall, the incident shows that failures — even cascading, compounding, catastrophic failures of BSL-4 biocontainment labs occur,” said Ebright, who has testified before Congress about CDC safety issues. “And the attempted cover-up within the CDC makes it clear that the CDC cannot be relied upon to police its own, much less other institutions.”

CDC officials say there was never any risk posed by the lab’s equipment failures. Although the scientific team just finished conducting an inventory of a freezer in the lab that contained numerous frozen virus specimens — likely including Ebola and smallpox viruses, no work with live agents had yet been done in the lab, which was still new at the time.

CDC's Building 18 houses numerous labs, including a suite of biosafety level 4 labs. Documents released under the Freedom of Information Act reveal a dramatic 2009 incident in a decontamination chamber in one of the BSL-4 labs.

After the four scientists called for help, building engineers were able to operate the chemical shower manually, allowing for a safe exit from the lab, the CDC said. The failures were traced to a software error in the lab’s operating system and it was fixed the same day. Additional alarms were added to the lab to notify engineering staff if such a malfunction were to occur again, which it hasn’t, the agency said.

“Yes, there was some malfunction, but there was a clearly established protocol for how to deal with the malfunction and that was quickly and rapidly executed,” said Steve Monroe, who last fall was permanently appointed to head a new CDC lab safety office charged with improving the safety culture at the Atlanta-based agency. Even if work with live pathogens had been underway inside the lab, he said, “the potential risk would have been exceedingly small.”

Last month, USA TODAY revealed that a subset of labs at the CDC’s Fort Collins, Colo., infectious disease facility are among a handful of labs nationwide that have had their federal permits secretly suspended in recent years for serious safety violations while working with bioterror pathogens.

Yet USA TODAY has now learned that CDC kept even Congress in the dark about the Fort Collins incident and some others — despite an oversight committee asking the agency in 2014 for a list all incidents at CDC labs since 2002 involving bioterror pathogens found in unauthorized areas. The CDC says the information was “inadvertently omitted.”

Inside America’s secretive biolabs

According to an August 2014 letter CDC Director Tom Frieden sent to the chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, recently obtained by USA TODAY, the CDC did not include the Fort Collins incident when it responded to the committee’s questions in the wake of a hearing that summer on CDC safety lapses. The letter listed 10 other incidents, but not the incident involving specimens of Japanese encephalitis virus found in an unauthorized CDC lab in Fort Collins. Although the virus was considered a “select agent” — the government’s term for certain viruses, bacteria and toxins that have the potential to be used as bioweapons — at the time of the incident, it was delisted in 2012.

“We’re very concerned that there could be some gaps in CDC’s responses to our pointed oversight inquiries,” U.S. Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., the committee’s chairman, told USA TODAY.

In response to new questions from the committee, Monroe said the CDC has identified “a handful” of other incidents that also were not disclosed in Frieden’s 2014 letter, which was sent before his new safety office had created a centralized reporting system for lab accidents and “near-miss” incidents at the agency.

“Because we don’t want to repeat having omitted any data we supplied to the committee, we are working extensively to make sure we have an absolutely comprehensive answer before we reply to the committee,” Monroe said.

Monroe said his office is committed to being as open and transparent as possible about lab incidents at CDC, and pointed to the agency’s public announcement in March disclosing that a CDC lab worker had become infected with a strain of salmonella used in their work.

Yet getting the CDC to release records about lab incidents under the federal Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) can often take several years.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is based in Atlanta.

In January 2015, in an effort to determine the extent of lab accidents at the agency’s facilities, USA TODAY filed a FOIA request seeking copies of all incident reports at CDC labs in Atlanta and Fort Collins during 2013 and 2014. The CDC granted the request “expedited” processing status because USA TODAY demonstrated a compelling public need for the information. But the agency has said it will likely be 2018 before the records are released.

The newly disclosed 2009 incident in the BSL-4 decontamination shower is among about 4,000 pages of records the agency released in late January  in response to two FOIA requests USA TODAY filed in June 2012. Those requests sought records about airflow and security door incidents at CDC’s $214 million, 368,000-square-foot  Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory in Atlanta, commonly referred to by the agency as Building 18.

Most of these released records — which focus on airflow engineering issues in labs — involve a 2012 incident that USA TODAY reported four years ago based on documents obtained from sources. The issue involved air from inside a potentially contaminated lab briefly blowing outward into a “clean” corridor where a group of visitors weren’t wearing any protective gear. Among other incidents revealed in the records:

  • In 2011, a worker feeding animals in an enhanced biosafety level 3 lab used for studies on dangerous strains of avian flu, was unable to shower out of the lab after a construction contractor mistakenly closed the wrong water valve in a service tunnel. Not knowing when the water would come back on, the worker removed her protective equipment, put on a clean protective suit and left the lab without taking a shower. “I escorted her through the service tunnel to building (redacted) where she signed into our (redacted) select agent laboratory. She disposed of the tyvek suit in a biohazard bag, placed her scrubs in the laundry bin, and took a personal shower.” The CDC told USA TODAY that because the potential for any exposure was considered low risk, a medical evaluation was not required.
  • In 2008 an unvaccinated repair worker was potentially exposed to an undisclosed pathogen when a door containing contaminated items unexpectedly opened in a malfunctioning device, called an autoclave, that is used to sterilize equipment and other items. The infectious materials inside the device included bedding from infected mice and used laundry.  While a report of the incident said that any material that may have escaped through the clean-side door that opened “was likely to be drawn upward toward the exhaust,” the worker was told to shower and his clothes, shoes, wallet, watch and other personal items were disinfected. He was escorted to the clinic for evaluation. The report notes that the autoclave “was installed backwards during building construction” and that as a result, the manual override controls for doors are reversed “which ultimately resulted in the incident.”

Building 18, which opened in 2005 has had a series of significant issues over the years. While the building’s many other high-containment and lower security labs were in operation from the start, its suite of BSL-4 labs did not go “hot” and start working with pathogens until around early 2009. The lab complex made news in 2007 when backup generators didn’t work to keep airflow systems working during a power outage and in 2008 for high-containment lab door that was being sealed with duct tape. The duct tape was applied after a 2007 incident where the building’s ventilation system malfunctioned and pulled potentially contaminated air out of the lab and into a “clean” hallway. Nine CDC workers were tested for potential exposure to Q fever bacteria. None were infected.

Read all the records released by CDC in response to USA TODAY’s 2012 Freedom of Information Act requests here and here.

For full coverage of USA TODAY’s ongoing investigation of safety and security issues in biolabs across the country, go to: biolabs.usatoday.com

Follow investigative reporter Alison Young on Twitter: @alisonannyoung

Aug 18, 2014
More than 1,100 laboratory incidents involving potential bioterror germs were reported to federal regulators during 2008 through 2012, reports show. Details of what happened are cloaked in secrecy

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