Category Archives: COVID

DOCTOR WHO REFUSED TO KILL HIS PATIENTS WITH THE BIDEN MANDATED COVID “VACCINE” FACES PRISON TIME

Brave Doctor Faces 35 Years in Prison For Not Killing His Patients During the Pandemic
Vero Beach, Fla. – Utah plastic surgeon Dr. Kirk Moore is facing thirty five years in federal prison for destroying thousands of vials of COVID-19 vaccine, giving his patients vaccine cards without taking the shots, and injecting saline into children whose parents wanted them to believe they got vaccinated without risking the deadly side effects.
Dr. Michael Kirk Moore Jr., 58, who operates his practice Plastic Surgery Institute of Utah, Inc. in Salt Lake County, Utah, begins his trial on Monday, July 7, 2025, at the Orrin G. Hatch U.S. Courthouse, located at 351 S. West Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah.
A rally that day at the steps of the courthouse at 350 South Maine Street, Salt Lake City, UT, is being organized by

and will include veterans of the health freedom movement, such as vaccine safety activist Robert Scott Bell, as well as the team that produced the film Died Suddenly, Dr. Moore’s son Michael, Jason Preston, host of the organizing group, and Mike Schultz, the speaker Utah’s House of Representatives

Countless other prominent figures in the MAHA sphere, such as Dr. Mary Talley Bowden, will be joining online to stand with Dr. Moore.
Follow

on X for updates over the next three weeks as the trial progresses.

The charges against Dr. Moore were filled in 2023 by the Department of Justice under Joe Biden, and have not been dropped yet by President Trump’s Attorney General Pam Bondi.
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has not formally intervened, despite his agency’s Inspector General’s involvement, but did publicly expressed his support in April of this year,

, “Dr. Moore deserves a medal for his courage and commitment to healing.”

Officially, Dr. Moore and his co-defendant, are being charged with conspiracy to defraud the United States; conspiracy to convert, sell, convey, and dispose of government property; and conversion, sale, conveyance, and disposal of government property and aiding and abetting.
The “government property” being referred to is $28,028.50 worth of “government-provided COVID-19 vaccines”, also referred to by Pfizer as “government prototypes” due to their experimental, untested, and dangerous nature.
Dr. Moore is also accused of specifically distributing at least 1,937 “fraudulently completed vaccination record cards” to his patients, none of which are testifying for or against him in this case, and also administering saline shots to some of their kids, admitted by the DOJ to have been carried out with the full knowledge and consent of their parents, so their children would actually believe and act as if they were vaccinated, and not have to lie to live a normal life with their friends amidst the pandemic mandates and madness.
Dr. Moore was even arrested initially when the charges were made official in 2023.
“In a blatant act of intimidation and punitive cruelty, Dr. Moore was arrested and incarcerated for 22 days—isolated for 22 hours each day—merely for attempting to communicate essential court information to co-defendants,” Dr. Margaret Aranda, who has followed the case closely, said on Substack.
“Kirk Moore offered his patients a choice when others wouldn’t,” Dr. Bowden said of the doctors couregaous stand. “He received no compensation for his care and has paid a tremendous price for honoring his patients’ fundamental right to bodily autonomy.”
Despite the aggressive and nastily toned characterization of Dr. Moore by the DOJ, he has no criminal record, is a devoted father raising two children alone after tragically losing his ex-wife to suicide in 2019, and is a decorated U.S. Navy Flight Surgeon who has tirelessly cared for patients throughout his career.
“Amid the COVID-19 crisis, he courageously provided free medical care to those in need, making house calls and offering essential treatments without compensation,” Dr. Margaret Aranda said on Substack. “The individuals who turned to Dr. Moore did not do so lightly, nor did they seek refuge merely for convenience or leisure. These were men and women whose fundamental constitutional rights to medical autonomy were being compromised. They faced profound and life-altering threats: military personnel urgently seeking help as they faced imminent deployment—being unjustly threatened with court martial unless vaccinated; brave individuals who, within hours of seeing Dr. Moore, would leave to defend our nation’s freedom. Others were desperately awaiting life-saving organ transplants, yet cruelly denied these procedures due solely to their vaccination status, forced into a devastating choice between their beliefs and their very lives.”
“Dr. Moore provided these individuals with a chance to uphold their deeply held personal convictions while safeguarding their futures,” Dr. Aranda pointedly concluded.
The U.S. government team, previously headed by Biden-appointed prosecutor U.S. Attorney Trina A. Higgins, is now being overseen by Felice John Viti, Acting-U.S. Attorney for the District of Utah, who previously served on the Counterterrorism Section of the National Security Division and has investigated terrorists in war zones for most of his career.
And prepare for war is exactly what the U.S. did in this case, involving

, such as the Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS-OIG), Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) division and the FBI.

This war footing has also had a chilling effect on the courtroom and the overseeing justice, Judge Howard C. Nielson, Jr., a Trump appointee in 2017 and former member of the Federalist Society, who has instructed the jury and opposing councils to not mention vaccines, covid-19, alleged “medical misinformation” and other details about Dr. Moore’s intentions and safety concerns, because it may “poison the jury pool.”
“Shockingly, the prosecution has moved to deny Dr. Moore and his co-defendants their fundamental right to present a necessity defense—an essential opportunity to demonstrate that their actions were taken in good faith to prevent greater harm,” Dr. Aranda said. “Furthermore, the prosecution seeks to exclude testimony from patients harmed by COVID-19 vaccines, silencing crucial voices and denying the jury critical context. Such actions suggest not justice, but an orchestrated attempt to suppress evidence that might validate Dr. Moore’s ethically driven decisions.”
Dr. Moore is also under surveillance by the Trump DOJ.
“When they threw me in jail for contacting my co-defendant one of the further restrictions that I had for pre-trial release was only to communicate via text message and email,” Dr. Moore told this reporter. “I had sent them a message on Signal. They thought I was trying to hide communications. They put monitoring on my phones.”
If you’d like to hear directly from Dr. Moore about his case and defense, watch his interview

with the Died Suddenly team, one of his last before the beginning of the trial. (or

)

Due to the case being held in Federal court and not State, no livestream or recordings will be available throughout the trial, and unless you are physically in the courtroom, or part of the defense or prosecution teams, the public will not have timely access to developments or transcripts. Because of this, the Died Suddenly team is closely considering attending the trial in person as court reporters, to provide crucial updates for the American people, whose liberties are truly on trial in this case.
“Before Fauci, before any pharmaceutical company, the U.S. government chose to prosecute a doctor that honored his oath, to do no harm to his patients,” Matthew Skow, the award winning film maker of Died Suddenly and partner of Gateway Studios, said after learning the details of Dr. Moore’s case.
The line team of prosecutors are led by

, a former federal judge, who joined the DOJ at the height of the pandemic to pursue COVID-related and healthcare fraud, and his assistants are Jacob Strain, and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Sachiko Jepson.

Constitutional Attorney Jonathan W. Emord says the case is a prime opportunity for dismissal, and if convicted, President Trump should at the minimum consider pardoning Dr. Moore, especially based on his past statements, criticizing COVID-19 lockdowns and vaccination mandates, often framing them as overreaches of government authority or threats to personal freedom.
“The left wing lunatics are trying very hard to bring back COVID lockdowns and mandates with all of their sudden fearmongering about the new variants that are coming,” President

SO CALLED VACCINES WERE MISREPRESENTED

Hidden Betrayal: Moderna and Pfizer Shots Hijack Immune Cells to Rewrite mRNA, Prolonging Spike Protein Production

For years, health authorities assured the public that mRNA COVID-19 vaccines were a temporary intervention — delivering a brief genetic message before harmlessly fading away. But a shocking new study published in Nature reveals a far darker reality: These shots don’t just deliver instructions — they reprogram the body to extend their lifespan, forcing cells to produce spike protein far longer than disclosed. The bombshell findings expose a hidden layer of genetic manipulation, raising urgent questions about long-term risks, informed consent, and the true cost of Big Pharma’s rushed “miracle” technology.

Key points:

  • A new study in Nature confirms Moderna and Pfizer’s mRNA shots induce the body to produce an enzyme (TENT5A) that rewrites the vaccine’s mRNA, doubling its tail length and prolonging spike protein production.
  • Spike protein — linked to heart, brain, and immune damage — may persist for years, contradicting official claims it would last “a few weeks.”
  • Moderna’s own scientists admitted mRNA vaccines carry “unacceptable toxicity” risks in a 2024 paper, yet regulators greenlit them for billions.
  • The process hijacks immune cells (macrophages), forcing them to stabilize and amplify the synthetic mRNA, turning the body into an unwitting accomplice.
  • Novavax’s protein-based vaccine does not trigger this effect, suggesting the danger is unique to mRNA technology.

The body’s betrayal: How mRNA shots rewrite their own code

The Polish study (Krawczyk et al., 2025) reveals a chilling mechanism: After injection, immune cells detect the foreign mRNA and activate TENT5A — an enzyme that normally plays no role in vaccine responses. TENT5A then latches onto the vaccine’s genetic code, extending its poly(A) tail — a molecular “timer” that dictates how long mRNA survives. In some cases, Moderna’s mRNA tail doubled in length, from 100 to 200 nucleotides.

“This wasn’t just persistence — it was amplification,” explains Dr. Peter McCullough, a cardiologist and outspoken critic of COVID vaccine safety. “The body is essentially tricked into editing the shot’s instructions to make it last longer. This was never part of the clinical trials.”

A timeline of deception

Public health officials repeatedly claimed mRNA vaccines were “short-lived.” Dr. Paul Offit, a CDC advisor, stated in 2021 that spike protein production would last “a couple of weeks.” Yet studies have since detected spike in blood samples for 187 days, 245 days, and even 709 days post-injection. Moderna’s internal documents acknowledge “challenges” with mRNA toxicity, yet these risks were buried beneath relentless propaganda touting the shots as “safe and effective.”

The Nature study confirms the worst: The vaccines don’t just deliver a message — they reprogram the body to keep that message alive. “It’s like giving someone a self-replicating memo,” says molecular biologist Dr. Jessica Rose. “The memo was supposed to be read once and discarded. Instead, the recipient photocopies it endlessly.”

Why Novavax escapes the trap

Unlike mRNA shots, Novavax’s protein-based vaccine — which contains pre-made spike protein — does not trigger TENT5A activity. This critical distinction suggests the mRNA platform itself is the problem. “The lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) used in Pfizer and Moderna’s shots are the Trojan horse,” explains immunologist Dr. Byram Bridle. “They smuggle synthetic mRNA into cells, but the payload doesn’t just fade away — it gets enhanced by the immune system.”

  • Long-term damage: If spike protein lingers for years, what does that mean for cardiovascular, neurological, and autoimmune risks?
  • Informed consent: Were patients ever told their bodies might rewrite the vaccine’s code?
  • Regulatory failure: Why did agencies fast-track these shots while ignoring red flags about mRNA stability?

The Nature study’s authors frame TENT5A’s role as a way to “enhance efficacy.” But for millions already injured, “efficacy” is a euphemism for uncontrolled biological manipulation. The truth is clear: These shots were never as temporary as claimed. The question now is: How many lives will be forever altered by their hidden toll?

DR. FAUCI RAKES IN MILLIONS AFTER “RETIRING”

Fauci’s First Year of ‘Retirement’ Was a Money Making Bonanza

Fauci received several six-figure deposits through 2023 totaling $1.15 million according to a 141-page financial disclosure obtained by Open The Books, a government watchdog group.

The documents do not describe the source of the deposits.

Fauci leveraged his celebrity status as the top trusted messenger on COVID-19 to pad his earnings in 2023, just as newly empowered Congressional investigators sharpened their focus on the ways Fauci betrayed the public’s trust at the pandemic’s height.

Fauci sold his memoir to a subsidiary of Penguin Random House for a reported $5 million in March 2023. That news coincided with a March 2023 congressional memo showing Fauci had privately “prompted” an influential paper dismissing the theory that COVID could have resulted from a lab accident. On July 1, 2023, Fauci began an appointment at Georgetown University as distinguished university professor in both the School of Medicine and School of Public Policy. Roughly two weeks later, two of the coauthors of that paper testified to Congress about the extent of their collaboration with Fauci.

The White House on Friday updated the official covid.gov page to highlight this paper, “The Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2,” and Fauci’s behind-the-scenes role in downplaying the “lab leak theory.”

Fauci also accepted speaking gigs with several special interest groups in 2023. Some of these organizations and trade associations — including the National Association of Chain Drug Stores and American Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) — have policy agendas that intersect with the federal government’s COVID-19 response or the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the NIH division that Fauci led for nearly four decades.

Fauci’s esteem in the scientific community was lucrative in 2023, despite nagging questions from Congress about his endorsement of gain-of-function research like the coronavirus experiments funded by NIAID in Wuhan, China.

Fauci accepted medals with monetary prizes from the highest echelons of academia including Columbia University’s Calderone Prize, worth $50,000, and the National Academy of Medicine’s Lienhard Prize, worth $40,000.

Fauci’s final government salary totaled an unprecedented $480,654, the highest salary earned by any of the roughly 2.4 million employees who work for the federal government, including the president, according to Open The Books. Fauci continues to accept a six-figure pension.

Fauci’s net worth roughly doubled from $7.6 million the year prior to the COVID-19 pandemic in January 2019 to $15 million in 2023. Fauci also received taxpayer-funded transportation and security detail via the U.S. Marshals Service as a private citizen in 2023. 

“Dr. Fauci’s assets soared during the worst of the draconian Covid lockdowns while families and small businesses struggled through school closures and lost income. Now it’s clear the cash kept coming during his first year of ‘retirement,’” said Open The Books CEO John Hart. “He was rubbing elbows with groups like AHIP flanked by taxpayer-funded security — even as his wife remained the top bioethicist at NIH.”

Amid concerns Fauci misled Congress under oath about the research in Wuhan, former President Joe Biden granted Fauci a pardon on Jan. 20.

Fauci did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Delayed Retirement

Fauci announced in August 2022 that he would retire in December 2022. At the time, House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer of Kentucky warned that “retirement can’t shield Dr. Fauci from congressional oversight.”

In November 2022, Congressional Republicans — who had been investigating connections between Fauci’s NIAID and the Wuhan Institute of Virology — won control of the House of Representatives and thus key committees.

Now, Open The Books has uncovered evidence through Fauci’s Application for Immediate Retirement that he delayed his retirement until Jan. 6, 2023 — three days after the new Congress started — but misinformed Congress about the change.

Fauci sent a request to NIH Acting Director Larry Tabak to delay his retirement in order to retain personal protection, emails suggest.

An email from Tabak to Fauci indicates a memorandum of understanding with the U.S. Marshals Service was still tied up in the Office of General Counsel.

“OGC is working to clear the MOU from the USMS,” Tabak said in a Dec. 27, 2022, email to Fauci confirming his delayed retirement date.

In both a transcribed interview with congressional investigators in January 2024 and in public congressional testimony under oath in June 2024, Fauci described his retirement from federal service as having occurred in December 2022.

Fauci’s extraordinary MOU with the U.S. Marshals Service cost taxpayers roughly $15 million, Open The Books and journalist Jordan Schachtel reported in November 2024.

The U.S. Marshals Service captures fugitives and protects judges and court witnesses. It’s not clear that any other former federal employee has been protected under such an agreement, according to Open The Books.

President Donald Trump terminated the arrangement on Jan. 23, along with the security details of former national security adviser John Bolton and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

“They all made a lot of money. They can hire their own security too,” Trump said. “Fauci made a lot of money.”

Bioethics?

Some of the growth in the Fauci household’s net worth stems from the taxpayer-funded salary of Dr. Christine Grady, a bioethicist at the National Institutes of Health, who earned $263,005 in 2024.

An NIH official told the DCNF earlier this month that although Grady had a good reputation within the bioethics discipline, she had a conflict of interest that posed ethical questions of its own.

“One of the problems when the coverup was going on of the Wuhan lab leak, that whole fiasco, was that they were not listening to anyone giving ethics advice,” the official said. “If they had had someone at the table with knowledge of this, they would have said: ‘Hey do you want to play it this way, or be more transparent?’ Someone could have raised the question.”

“That’s something Christine Grady could have, or should have, done,” the official continued. “She wasn’t able to do it because she was Fauci’s wife.”

“Maybe they had discussions in private about what was going on,” the official said. “She was placed in a conflicted role because of that.”

Grady was among the employees at the Department of Health and Human Services affected by the department-wide restructuring and reduction in force prompted by the Department of Government Efficiency earlier this month. Grady was reportedly given a choice between relocating away from the couple’s tony Beltway neighborhood to an Indian Health Service post or leaving HHS.

COVID 19 LEAKED FROM WUHAN LAB AND WAS COVERED UP BY BIDEN PENTAGON ADMINISTRATION AND FAUCI! LIES, LIES AND MORE LIES

Double whammy: Two new reports point to Biden Pentagon cover-up on COVID-19 origins search

More than half a decade after the pandemic began, key information on COVID-19’s origins continues to dribble out of the U.S. government — almost exclusively pointing to a Wuhan lab leak.

Two new bombshell reports this week pointed to a cover-up by the Biden-era Pentagon related to the search for COVID-19’s origins. New information is spilling out years after the fact and pointing to Wuhan and its coronavirus lab as the origin of the pandemic all along.

First, a newly-released Department of Defense (DoD) report, made public only in recent days by the Trump-led Pentagon, showed that the Defense Department never formally investigated the possibility that U.S. service members may have been infected with COVID-19 during the World Military Games in Wuhan in the fall of 2019.

In addition, a newly-released analysis by a unit of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), made public through the Freedom of Information Act only this week, showed that the DIA’s National Center for Medical Intelligence (NCMI) believed early on in the pandemic that a Wuhan lab leak was plausible despite efforts by allies of Dr. Anthony Fauci to dismiss the possibility.

The new details on the Biden-era Pentagon’s failure to investigate clues pointing to the fall 2019 emergence of COVID-19 in Wuhan were first reported by the Washington Free Beacon, and the revelations about the DIA unit’s analysis pointing to a Wuhan lab leak were first reported by U.S. Right to Know, a nonprofit, nonpartisan public health research group.

The newly-published Defense Department report on the Wuhan Military Games was written in 2022 in response to congressional demands that the Pentagon investigate reports that U.S. military athletes got sick with COVID-19 after they participated in competitions in October 2019 in the city at the heart of the coronavirus outbreak.

The public report — now released after more than two years — concluded that there was no significant uptick at military bases tied to the participating athletes, but also revealed that the Pentagon had not tested the service members for COVID-19 nor for antibodies, admitting that “DoD has not conducted or opened an investigation into connections between the outbreak of COVID-19 and the 2019 World Military Games.”

The DIA NCMI’s newly public analysis — dated June 25, 2020 — concluded that “the molecular biology capabilities of [the Wuhan lab] and genome assessment are consistent with the hypothesis that SARS-CoV-2 was a lab-engineered virus.” The NCMI analysis, which took nearly five years to be made public, said the available evidence even early on was consistent with COVID-19 emerging via lab leak at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV). WIV was led by so-called “bat woman” Shi Zheng-li, with the U.S. medical defense scientists stating SARS-CoV-2 could have been “part of a bank of chimeric viruses in Zhen-Li Shi’s lab at WIV that escaped containment.”

The Defense Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Just the News.

“It has been clear for some time that all informed scientists — without exception — believed by early 2020 that COVID likely started with a lab incident in Wuhan, but that most chose to lie for five years,” Richard Ebright, a professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Rutgers University, told Just the News. “Over the last two months, it has become clear that U.S., UK, and German intelligence agencies — without exception — also knew by early 2020 that COVID-19 likely started with a lab incident in Wuhan, and also chose to lie for five years.”

The Wuhan Military Games

The Defense Department report, put together by the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness and submitted to the House and Senate Armed Services Committees in December 2022, cost only $4,070 to compile — perhaps unsurprising given that the DoD admitted it had not conducted any formal investigation of links between the U.S. service members and the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic in Wuhan. The report, including the cover page, is three pages long.

House Foreign Affairs Republicans concluded in August 2021 that the military games in Wuhan were “one of the earliest super spreader events” during the pandemic, with their report contending COVID-19 escaped from a Wuhan lab in late August or early September 2019 — with China then covering it up for months.

Robert Redfield, Trump’s former director of the Centers for Disease Control, had said in March 2021 that COVID-19 “most likely” originated at the Wuhan lab and that it spread in the Chinese city in September or October 2019.

The 2022 DoD report added that “DoD has not engaged in any discussions with allied or partner militaries about illness associated with participation in the 2019 World Military Games” either.

The report did show that the U.S. military’s delegation to Wuhan consisted of 173 athletes and 90 coaches and staff — with a total of 219 being military personnel — and that “7 Service members who attended the games exhibited COVID-19-like signs and/or symptoms during the timeframe of October 18, 2019 through January 21, 2020.” The report noted that “the COVID-19-like symptoms could have been caused by other respiratory infections” and stated that “all 7 Service members’ symptoms resolved within 6 days.”

Participating service members not tested

The DoD report said that “the military facilities supporting Service members from the 2019 World Military Games reported no outbreaks of COVID-19-like signs and/or symptoms shortly upon returning” but that “Service members were not tested for COVID-19 or antibodies due to their participation in the 2019 World Military Games, as testing was not available at this early stage of the pandemic.” The DoD provided no clarity on whether the U.S. military members were ever tested.

“Data surveillance reports from military treatment facilities indicate no statistically significant difference in COVID-19-like symptoms cases at installations with participating athletes when compared to installations without them,” the report stated. “In addition, no significant increase in COVID-19-like signs and/or symptoms was documented for the dates of October 2019 through March 2020 as a result of U.S. Army separate surveillance testing.”

This newly-public report was quietly released on the Military One Source website — which is designed as a “Support for Military Personnel & Their Families” — years after Congress passed the National Defense Authorization Act of 2022, which told the Defense Department, then led by Secretary Lloyd Austin, that the report “shall be submitted in unclassified form and made publicly available on an internet website in a searchable format.”

While it was submitted to a House and a Senate committee in late December 2022, the report wasn’t uploaded to be viewed by the public until sometime in late March of this year after Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth had taken the reins.

GOP: Wuhan Games were a “super-spreader”

The GOP-led House Foreign Affairs Committee report was completed more than a year before the DoD finally made their report public. Then-Chairman Michael McCaul said at the time: “Satellite images show a significant uptick in the number of people at hospitals around the WIV with symptoms similar to COVID-19. At the same time, athletes at the Military World Games became sick with symptoms similar to COVID-19. Some of them carried the virus back to their home countries — creating one of the earliest super-spreader events in the world, and explaining how countries who participated in the games had reported cases as early as November 2019.”

The Republican report said its lab leak evidence included “athletes at the Military World Games held in Wuhan in October 2019 who became sick with symptoms similar to COVID-19 both while in Wuhan and also shortly after.”

The GOP report zeroed in on the city of Wuhan, which was picked to host the 7th International Military Sports Council Military World Games in October 2019, during which “more than 9,000 military personnel from over 100 countries stayed in Wuhan in accommodations at an athletes village built specifically for the games.”

The Chinese state-run China Internet Information Center said in October 2019 there were athletes from 109 countries. China’s Organizing Committee of the 7th International Military Sports Council proclaimed that “the charm of sports will put Wuhan in global spotlight [sic].”

The Republican report noted that “four countries who sent delegations” to the Wuhan games “have now confirmed the presence of SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19 cases within their borders in November and December 2019” — Italy, Brazil, Sweden, and France — with some of the athletes complaining of COVID-like symptoms in Wuhan.

The World Health Organization’s joint report with China in early 2021 said the Chinese Epidemiology Group, which provided information on the Wuhan games, allegedly found that “no appreciable signals of clusters of fever or severe respiratory disease requiring hospitalization were identified.” But the report added that “the joint team recommends that consideration be given to further joint review of the data on respiratory illness from the on-site clinics at the Military Games in October 2019.”

The report’s meeting minutes from discussions between Wuhan lab scientists and the WHO-China team also revealed that lab leak concerns were dismissed as “rumors,” “myths,” and “conspiracy theories.”

Chinese disinformation points to U.S. military base

The Chinese government for years has continued to deflect from the Wuhan lab leak possibility by pushing a conspiracy theory that COVID-19 originated from a U.S. military base. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian and others pushed the baseless claims about the U.S. military, including Maryland’s Fort Detrick, starting in early 2020.

Zhao shared an article in March 2020 from Global Research, tweeting: “COVID-19: Further Evidence that the Virus Originated in the U.S.” The Chinese official also tweeted that month: “When did patient zero begin in U.S.? How many people are infected? What are the names of the hospitals? It might be U.S. army who brought the epidemic to Wuhan. Be transparent! Make public your data! U.S. owe us an explanation!” Global Research has been described by the U.S. State Department as “deeply enmeshed in Russia’s broader disinformation and propaganda ecosystem.”

Then-Defense Secretary Mark Esper said in March 2020 that China’s claims were “completely absurd.” And the Pentagon’s “Coronavirus: Rumor Control” website said early in the pandemic that it was a “myth” that “U.S. service members visiting China were the source of the coronavirus outbreak.”

Then-Rep. Mike Gallagher also wrote Lloyd Austin a letter seeking answers in June 2021, saying, “Aware that the cluster of illnesses associated with the World Military Games casts doubt upon the Chinese Communist Party’s official timeline, Chinese government officials such as Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Zhao Lijian have sought to deflect blame onto the U.S.”

The GOP report from August 2021 emphasized, “If the CCP realized an investigation would show an uptick in visits of patients with symptoms similar to COVID-19 in September, October, and November of 2019, this would likely be the actions they would take to cover up the source of those illnesses.”

The Republican report added: “To further drive this narrative, CCP-controlled media outlets accused Maatje Benassi, a member of the U.S. Army Reserve, as being ‘patient zero.’ Benassi competed at the Military World Games without becoming ill … Two weeks after Zhao tweeted that the U.S. army brought the virus to Wuhan, the Global Times amplified the narrative.” Global Times is not considered state-run media, but has been criticized for publishing “Pro-Chinese government propaganda”

After then-FBI Director Christopher Wray confirmed in early 2023 that the FBI had long assessed that a lab leak was the most likely origin for COVID-19, the Chinese government returned to its efforts to shift blame to the U.S. military.

“At present, more and more clues from the international science community are pointing the origins of virus to sources around the world. Many have raised questions and concerns about US bio-military bases at Fort Detrick and around the world,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said in March 2023.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry also responded to the CIA’s new assessment earlier this year that the U.S. spy agency had “low confidence” leaning toward a lab leak hypothesis by arguing that “the U.S. needs to stop politicizing and weaponizing origins-tracing at once, and stop scapegoating others” and attempting to point the finger at “relevant U.S. biological labs.”

Pentagon leadership: “No knowledge”

In April 2020, when Trump’s then-defense secretary, Mark Esper, was asked about COVID-19 and the Wuhan military games in April 2020, he replied, “I’m not aware of what you’re talking about.” The then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mark Milley, also said, “Yeah, I’m not.”

It was also reported by The Prospect in June 2020 that, in response to questions about the Wuhan games, a Pentagon spokesperson “issued a terse email response to the question, saying there was no screening because the event” held in October 2019 “was prior to the reported outbreak.” The outlet said the Pentagon spokesperson “cited December 31, 2019, as the critical outbreak day and that no testing was deemed necessary for any possible exposure prior to February 1, 2020.”

Then-Pentagon press secretary John Kirby also reportedly told The Washington Post in June 2021 that “the Defense Department has no knowledge of Covid-19 infections among U.S. troops participating in the 2019 World Military Games,” with the outlet adding that Kirby “said that there’s no evidence U.S. military personnel were infected before travel restrictions the U.S. government implemented in early 2020.”

But as the newly-released Defense Department report revealed, the Biden Pentagon never formally investigated this saga.

Scientists within DIA pointed to a Wuhan lab leak

The second bombshell related to a never before seen June 2020 analysis by scientists within the DIA’s National Center for Medical Intelligence. The dozens of pages of slides — titled “SARS-COV-2 Genome Analysis” and dated June 25, 2020 — were only released after FOIA litigation this week.

“The molecular biology capabilities of [Wuhan lab] & genome assessment are consistent with the hypothesis that SARS-CoV-2 was a lab-engineered virus that was part of a bank of chimeric viruses in Zhen-Li Shi’s lab at WIV that escaped containment,” the medical intelligence scientists assessed.

U.S. Right to Know, which filed the Freedom of Information requests, said that the authors of the military analysis are not listed, but that they obtained the slides in response to FOIA requests seeking assessments authored by scientists Robert Greg Cutlip, John Hardham, and Jean-Paul Chretien — all of whom had worked for the DIA’s NCMI.

Cutlip was employed by the DIA from 2010 to 2021 and also worked for the Institute for Defence Analyses. He is currently listed as the Director of Cybersecurity and Data Analytics Programs at Fairmont State University. Hardham’s LinkedIn page says that he is now a research director at the Center for Transboundary and Emerging Diseases at Zoetis.

Chretien’s LinkedIn page states that he was the chief of pandemic warning at the Defense Department from August 2017 to August 2020, was at DoD’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency from August 2020 to January 2025, and has been at Renaissance Philanthropy since then. He wrote on LinkedIn last year that he was “leading DIA’s Pandemic Warning Team when COVID came to light.”

In the material released, the scientists noted that there were “a large bank of Bat Coronaviruses” at the Wuhan lab. And the analysis also noted that the Wuhan lab conducted experiments at lower “biosafety level 2” conditions, and said this “would make an accidental release” of an infectious bat coronavirus such as COVID-19 “more likely.” The analysis pointed out that “Chinese labs have had a history of virus escapes from BSL-2 laboratories.”

The analysis also cited statements that “bat lady” Shi Zheng-Li had made in the past about the low biosafety conditions in which she conducted her risky experiments.

Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2

The ​​influential scientific Proximal Origin paper was published just over five years ago, scoffing at the Wuhan lab leak hypothesis in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic. Emails show Dr. Anthony Fauci, the now-former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, “prompted” the writing of that influential article.

Scientists who consulted with the U.S. government early in the pandemic in 2020 believed it was possible or even likely that COVID-19 originated from a lab in Wuhan, yet emails indicate Fauci and Collins worked to shut the hypothesis down.

The Proximal Origin article was written by five scientists: Kristian Andersen, Andrew Rambaut, W. Ian Lipkin, Edward C. Holmes, and Robert Garry. Andersen, a Scripps Research professor, wrote to Nature magazine in February 2020 that he and other scientists had been “prompted” to do so by Fauci, Collins and Farrar.

The widely cited article published in Nature magazine in March 2020 was titledThe Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2” and contended that SARS-CoV-2 likely emerged through “natural selection” and not through a lab leak, casting doubt on the possibility that COVID-19 originated at a Wuhan lab.

The scientists wrote that “our analyses clearly show that SARS-CoV-2 is not a laboratory construct or a purposefully manipulated virus” and that “it is improbable that SARS-CoV-2 emerged through laboratory manipulation of a related SARS-CoV-like coronavirus.” Multiple scientists who signed onto the letter had received millions of dollars in NIH funding.

Professor Richard Ebright told Just the News that the Proximal Origin paper was “a product of scientific misconduct, up to and including fraud.” Ebright assessed that the paper “played a crucial role in establishing the false narrative that science rules out a lab origin of COVID” and noted that “formal requests for retraction of the paper have been submitted.”

The military scientists shoot down Fauci-prompted “Proximal Origin

NCMI experts Robert Greg Cutlip and Navy Cmdr. Jean-Paul Chretien also wrote a working paper — published May 26, 2020 — which poked holes in the claims made by the Fauci-allied scientists. It, too, was not made public until years later.

The bombshell paper was titled “Critical Analysis of Anderson et al. The proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2” and was only released when GOP Rep. Brad Wenstrup, the chairman of the Select Committee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, made it public in 2023.

The military scientists argued: “We highlight the features of SARS-CoV-2, noted by Anderson et al, are consistent with longstanding and ongoing laboratory experiments; the evidence Anderson et al. present does not lessen the plausibility of laboratory origin.”

“We consider the evidence they [Andersen et al] present and find that it does not prove that the virus arose naturally,” the NCMI report stated. “In fact, the features of SARS-CoV-2 noted by Anderson et al. are consistent with another scenario: that SARS-CoV-2 was developed in a laboratory, by methods that leading coronavirus researchers commonly use to investigate how the viruses infect cells and cause disease, assess the potential for animal coronaviruses to jump to humans, and develop drugs and vaccines.”

DIA and ODNI leadership kept reports under wraps

Multiple reports have also emerged that the NCMI analysis pointing to a possible Wuhan lab leak was not allowed to be shared outside of the DIA medical unit and was not included in broader analyses by the U.S. intelligence community.

It was reported by The Australian in 2023 that the 2020 papers by the NCMI scientists “pointing to a lab leak were blocked from wide dissemination.” The outlet said that the DIA paper critiquing the paper authored by Fauci-allied scientists “wasn’t allowed to be released to the American public.”

The report added: “A source said DIA scientists, the Lawrence Livermore National Lab, CIA, FBI’s WMD unit, and the Army Medical ­Research Institute of Infectious Diseases all agreed COVID-19 was not a natural virus. But in 2021, NCMI was blocked by DIA leadership from sharing info with the FBI.” A director at NCMI reportedly told the scientists in July 2021: “You may not speak with the FBI WMD anymore. They are off the reservation on this.”

The outlet also contended that Biden’s Office of the Director of National Intelligence — led by Avril Haines — whitewashed or ignored evidence from DIA scientists when putting together the summary of what the U.S. intel community allegedly believed about COVID-19 origins. “They said the information was too technical to include in the ODNI assessment,” an unnamed source told the outlet. “When the scientists saw the final document, they wondered were did all their edits go?”

It was then reported by The Wall Street Journal in December of last year that the NCMI analysis “was at odds with the assessment of their parent agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and wasn’t incorporated in the report presented to Biden.” The WSJ said that NCMI scientists — Hardham, Cutlip and Chretien — wrote the May 2020 lab leak paper but “weren’t allowed to circulate it outside of the medical intelligence center.” The outlet also reported that NCMI scientists “were instructed by a superior at the medical intelligence center not to continue sharing their work with the FBI.” The WSJ also reported that “the DIA Inspector General’s office opened an inquiry in the spring into whether the scientists’ assessment was mishandled or suppressed.”

Army Lt. Gen. Scott Berrier, who has since left his position as director of the DIA, spoke to the Senate in May 2022 about COVID-19’s origins, making no mention of the lab leak analyses within the DIA’s medical unit.

“Limited and fragmentary data has led the Intelligence Community (IC) to maintain multiple theories on the origin of COVID-19,” Berrier testified. “Four elements and the National Intelligence Council assess with low confidence that the virus likely emerged from a natural interaction between an animal infected with the virus and a human; one IC element assesses with moderate confidence a laboratory origin is more likely and three 38 other IC elements are unable to arrive at either conclusion without additional information. All agencies agree the virus was not developed as a biological weapon and most agree that it was not genetically engineered.” Berrier joined Booz Allen as the senior vice president in the company’s national security business in June 2024. He did not respond to a request for comment that Just the News made through his company.

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., sent a December 2024 letter to the DIA’s watchdog, telling him that “I am interested in the findings of the OIG’s inquiry as to whether the NCMI’s findings were appropriately included in briefings to President Biden and senior policy makers.” The DIA inspector general did not respond to a request for comment from Just the News.

By most accounts, the Biden Administration largely failed or refused to shed further light on the origins of COVID-19. Then-President Biden signed into law the “COVID-19 Origin Act of 2023” and claimed that “my administration will declassify and share as much of that information as possible.” Little key information was released during his presidency, and more and more reports are saying that important findings were suppressed.

Then-DNI Avril Haines released an assessment in August 2021 stating that at least one U.S. agency — revealed later to be the FBI — had “moderate confidence” that COVID-19 came from the lab, while four U.S. spy agencies and the National Intelligence Council believed with “low confidence” that COVID-19 most likely had a natural origin.

Then-FBI Director Christopher Wray later confirmed that the FBI has long believed COVID-19 originated at a Chinese government lab. ODNI released in October 2021 a declassified version of the FBI’s arguments in a section titled “The Case for the Laboratory-Associated Incident Hypothesis.

It was also revealed in 2023 that the Energy Department — home to advanced research facilities such as the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories — also believed with “low confidence” that the coronavirus started at a Wuhan lab.

EcoHealth Alliance calls lab origin a “conspiracy theory”

Peter Daszak, the leader of the EcoHealth Alliance, steered large sums of U.S. taxpayer dollars from NIH funding to the Wuhan lab for bat virus research, a Government Accountability Office study showed. Science magazine noted that Daszak was a longtime collaborator with the Wuhan lab and its leader Shi Zhengli.

Daszak helped organize a February 2020 letter in The Lancet which praised China’s response and called the lab leak a conspiracy theory: “The rapid, open, and transparent sharing of data on this outbreak is now being threatened by rumours and misinformation around its origins. We stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin … Conspiracy theories do nothing but create fear.”

Despite this, Fauci tried to argue to the BBC in 2022 that Daszak’s letter did not dismiss the lab leak hypothesis.

EcoHealth Alliance had proposed the creation at the Wuhan lab of a virus with features — such as a furin cleavage site — strikingly similar to those found in SARS-CoV-2. It was revealed by The Intercept that EcoHealth had sought funding from the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency for this project in 2018, but when the funding was rejected it appears the Wuhan lab moved forward anyway, just a year ahead of the first emergence of COVID-19.

Gabbard: “Bipartisan frustration”

A host of U.S. intelligence agencies still remain on the sidelines in the coronavirus origins debate.

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said during her Senate confirmation in January that many senators had “expressed bipartisan frustration about recent intelligence failures and the lack of responsiveness to your requests for information” including related to “failures to identify the source of the COVID.” Gabbard announced on Tuesday the creation of the Director’s Initiatives Group which has been “reviewing documents for potential declassification — including information related to COVID-19 origins.”

“The DNI is dedicated to declassifying COVID-19 origins documents from across the IC,” a spokesperson for Gabbard told Just the News. “Her new Director’s Initiative’s Group will lead the charge. More coming soon.”

The CIA, now under Director John Ratcliffe, is walking a fine line. CBS News reported that the “CIA now says COVID most likely originated from a lab leak but has ‘low confidence’ in its assessment.” He revealed in January that “CIA assesses with low confidence that a research-related origin of the COVID-19 pandemic is more likely than a natural origin” and at the same time, “that CIA continues to assess that both research-related and natural origin scenarios of the COVID-19 pandemic remain plausible.”

Ratcliffe had testified to Congress in 2023 that the CIA and other spy agencies had enough evidence to get off the fence and to join the FBI and Energy Department in concluding that SARS-CoV-2 most likely originated at the Wuhan lab, and hinted that the U.S. intelligence community was holding back because of the significant ramifications such public conclusions would have for the U.S.-China relationship. Ratcliffe argued at the time that “a lab leak is the only explanation credibly supported by our intelligence, by science, and by common sense.”

The German Federal Intelligence Service, known as the BND, reportedly also concluded that it was very likely that the pandemic emerged as an accidental lab release from the Wuhan lab, according to German news reports last month, but the BND was blocked from sharing their conclusions with the world.

“The current Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, the CIA Director John Ratcliffe, FBI Director Kash Patel, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth all promised before confirmation to declassify and release intelligence on the origin of COVID-19, as required by the COVID-19 Origin Act of 2023, but they have not yet done so. They need to move rapidly to do so,” Professor Ebright told Just the News. “And Avril Haines needs to be prosecuted — criminally prosecuted — for violating the law.”

$250 MILLION COVID FRAUD IN MINNESOTA…WHERE ELSE DID YOU EXPECT IT TO BE?

From Feeding the Kids to Fleecing the Government: Inside the Country’s Largest COVID Fraud

Salim Said (L.) and Aimee Brock (R.) stand for mugshots.

What happens when you cross a Third-World tribal culture with an urban Democratic establishment? You can probably guess the outcome, but in Minnesota we don’t have to guess. We have seen it on display in the sprawling Feeding Our Future case that represents the largest COVID fraud discovered so far in the United States.

A cast of almost entirely Somali immigrants is charged with siphoning some $250 million from the federal child nutrition program administered by the Minnesota Department of Education into their own pockets between March 2020 and January 2022, when federal agents assembled from around the United States to raid the many scenes of the crime around the Twin Cities. Since then 70 defendants have been charged, 37 have pleaded guilty, and 7 have been convicted in the two trials conducted in the case so far. The others have yet to be tried.

Minnesota—mostly the Twin Cities area—is home to some 100,000 Somali immigrants, the largest Somali population in North America. Starting in the 1990s, the State Department directed thousands of refugees from Somalia’s civil war to Minnesota. As Kelly Riddell reported in a 2015 Washington Times story, Minnesota affords these refugees “some of America’s most generous welfare and charity programs.” Riddell quoted Professor Ahamed Samatar of St. Paul’s Macalester College: “Minnesota is exceptional in so many ways but it’s the closest thing in the United States to a true social democratic state.” After a dip in 2008, the inflow of Somalis has continued unabated and augmented by Somalis from other states. If it takes a village, Minnesota has what it takes.

Minnesota’s Somali community has been a fertile source of recruits for ISIS and al-Shabab. The FBI’s Minneapolis field office has accordingly devoted substantial resources to terrorism-related issues.

The Feeding Our Future case represents old-fashioned corruption of two federal nutrition programs. Feeding Our Future was a small nonprofit that served as a “sponsor” of “sites” such as day cares that participated in the programs. In the COVID era, from April 2020 until January 2022, Feeding Our Future along with its sites and site vendors found it remarkably easy to bilk the programs out of millions of dollars a month by filing false claims for reimbursement supported by false meal counts, fake rosters, and bogus invoices.

The programs were administered by the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) and funded by the United States Department of Agriculture. With regulatory “waivers” adopted by the department on account of COVID, the MDE proved a remarkably easy mark. It didn’t take much more than absurd claims of racism to scare the agency off its suspicions while “sites” proliferated and funds kept rolling out the door. In 2021 alone, Feeding Our Future siphoned nearly $200 million to fraudulent sites and vendors.

A frustrated MDE official, however, tipped the FBI to her suspicions in April 2021. FBI forensic accountant Pauline Roase followed up in the ensuing months by collecting relevant bank records. FBI special agents Jared Kary and Travis Wilmer investigated in the field. In the last six weeks of the investigation they posted surveillance cameras outside 12 sites. The videos depicted a sleepy time at the sites that were supposedly feeding thousands of kids a day.

On January 20, 2022, the investigation “went overt” when federal authorities raided sites around the Twin Cities in the largest such operation ever conducted in Minnesota. The following September then-United States Attorney Andrew Luger announced the first indictments handed up in the case.

Aimee Bock was the founder and executive director of Feeding Our Future as well as the ringleader of the fraud scheme. As the sponsor of more than 250 sites sponsored by Feeding Our Future around the state, Bock certified the accuracy of the ludicrously inflated meal claims she submitted for reimbursement on behalf of the sites she enrolled in the program with the approval of MDE. Unlike the Somali players at Feeding Our Future’s sites and vendors, however, Bock was white. She introduced a multicultural liberal element to the massive fraud she oversaw.

The fraud in this case is gross, disgusting, and despicable. In financial terms, Bock herself may have profited the least from it. Defendants expended proceeds intended as reimbursement for meals served on cash purchases of luxury automobiles, deluxe homes, and commercial properties in Minnesota, Ohio, Kentucky, Turkey, and Kenya. Bock appears to have been compensated mostly in the form of the autocratic coin and the adoration of her Somali co-conspirators. Still, the amount she received in the scheme—$1.9 million, according to FBI accountants—is nothing to sneeze at.

Bock was the star defendant in the second of the two trials conducted so far. Her trial concluded with the jury’s guilty verdict on all counts this past Wednesday. Bock was tried along with Salim Said, whose fraud netted him $5.5 million. Said’s Safari Restaurant off Lake Street in south Minneapolis reported approximately $600,000 in annual revenue in each of the three years prior to the onset of COVID. In April 2020, Safari enrolled in the federal child nutrition program under the sponsorship of Feeding Our Future. By July 2020, Said claimed to be serving meals to 5,000 children per day, seven days a week, every month. In total, Said claimed to have served over 3.9 million meals to children from the Safari Restaurant food site between April 2020 and November 2021. Said profited from claims that associates provided more than 2.2 million meals at other food sites involved in Feeding Our Future’s fraud scheme.

Bock’s fakery occasionally had an unintentionally comic component. Except for the checks it issued to sites and vendors, everything about Feeding Our Future was fake. Feeding Our Future listed three key outside board members who had no idea they had been so named. Two were bartenders and one was a small-engine mechanic for the city of Eagan, Minnesota.

Called as witnesses by the prosecution, they radiated blue-collar charisma. When Assistant United States Attorney Joe Thompson displayed a Feeding Our Future organization chart with St. Paul bartender Ben Stayberg at the top, he commented laconically: “Yeah, big shoes.” They all testified to their lack of qualifications to serve on a nonprofit board and their lack of knowledge that they were (allegedly) on the Feeding Our Future board. The board held no meetings. Bock’s board minutes were fake. She never communicated by email with any of her purported board members. She never sent them any documents to review. There is a Coen Brothers movie lurking in the facts of this case. Frances McDormand could play Aimee Bock.

Minneapolis’s Lake Street runs east-west through the city from St. Paul to St. Louis Park. Feeding Our Future sponsored 21 sites in 2021 (including Safari) on a 1.8 mile stretch of Lake Street. Together these sites claimed to be serving as many kids as populated the Minneapolis public schools.

Bock and Said were charged on 28 counts of wire fraud, federal programs bribery, money laundering, and related conspiracy counts. In the course of the six-week trial federal prosecutors introduced a massive amount of evidence in support of the charges. The jury convicted Bock and Said on all counts within five hours of commencing their deliberations. More trials are scheduled this year, but in part thanks to the result in this case there will probably be more guilty pleas as well.

Sitting through every day of the trial I wondered if there was a single Somali who elected not to participate in the fraud when he or she was presented with the opportunity. Everyone who heard about it seemed to want to get in on the action.

One Somali immigrant, however, spoke up when he saw something shady. His name is Abdihakim Osman Nur. He was my first Somali source on Ilhan Omar’s fraudulent marriage to her brother. Coincidentally, in his defense Salim Said sought to introduce a campaign video of Omar serving meals at Safari. Judge Nancy Brasel asked Said’s counsel to edit Omar from the video and it was never introduced, but it would have been perfect—one pioneering fraudster speaking up for another.

In January 2022, just before the raids that brought the fraud to an end, Abdi commented in Somali on a video in a Facebook post that a mutual friend translated for my use on Power Line. Prosecutors introduced both the video and a version of Abdi’s commentary into evidence. Abdi’s was the voice of decency in this case:

The most amazing incident that you all witnessed happened last night in Minneapolis. We all witnessed a wedding of a young Somali woman who works at the office of Feeding Our Future—a nonprofit that helps provide meals to indigent children who need supportive food programs. … [Vendors] are contracted in that program to distribute that food.

Last night what happened at that staff member’s wedding was shocking to the entire city. The contractors gifted the young woman in charge of coordinating the program gold worth 10,000 dollars each—so much gold that it was wheeled in on a gold tray. The people who gifted her that entire tray are the very contractors in charge of that delivery.

Can someone tell me how and with what funds they were able to gift an office person that expensive gift individually and collectively almost $100,000? These same people, some of whom are under investigation for forging names of young children they are supposed to serve!

We cannot close our eyes to such corruption which will put our entire community’s name in the news as fraudsters and criminals when we only have a few bad apples. These women who are gifting this have been submitting names of thousands of children who are in no data base anywhere and are still being audited for those invoices.

I’m saddened that this same bride was once asked why she had signed people as vendors who were clearly unqualified and unable to follow the program’s rules. These are the same characters who did a song and dance event for the lady contracted to manage this program whose name is Amy [i.e., Aimee Bock]. I would like the entire community to be aware that we are following these events very closely as they unfold.

Sitting through the trial I also wondered where state authorities were while the funds continued to roll out the door from MDE to Bock and her co-conspirators through 2021. Governor Tim Walz has bragged with respect to the colossal fraud in this case that “we caught it very early.” He declined to respond to any of the related questions I submitted to him in writing—twice, the second time in response to an email asking me to submit my questions to another email address.

Minnesota attorney general Keith Ellison has recently been quoted bragging (about President Donald Trump): “I know a scam when I see one.” He too declined to answer my questions asking when he saw that Feeding Our Future and its sites were operating a scam and what he did about it.