Ottawa Citizen

Scientist jailed for attempt to smuggle bacteria to China

- ANDREW SEYMOUR aseymour@postmedia.com

A former federal government scientist and world-renowned expert who tried to smuggle a potentiall­y harmful bacteria out of the country in his carry-on luggage has been sentenced to two years in prison.

Klaus Nielsen was arrested on Oct. 24, 2012, as he headed to the Ottawa airport en route to China with 17 vials of the brucella bacteria packed in a Thermos of ice inside a child’s lunch bag. The bacteria and the contagious disease it causes, brucellosi­s, mostly affect animals such as cows, goats and sheep, but can be contracted by humans.

The improper transporta­tion of the bacteria violated several federal regulation­s, but also represente­d a breach of trust for the former Canadian Food Inspection Agency scientist who had partnered with a Chinese-born colleague named Wei Ling Yu to manufactur­e and sell brucellosi­s diagnostic kits Nielsen helped develop as a government employee — all the while undercutti­ng the U.S.-based company who held the commercial rights to the patents.

Nielsen’s arrest followed an 18-month undercover RCMP investigat­ion and came nearly two years after he and Yu were fired by the CFIA. Yu is still wanted by police.

Nielsen argued his actions were altruistic and helped lower the cost of test kits for developing countries, where the disease is still prevalent, driving the price down to 50 cents from 85 cents and cutting heavily into the normal 90 per cent markup of the kits.

The prosecutio­n conceded there was no evidence Nielsen personally profited from the sale of the test kits, which he and his partner began to market after creating their own company, Peace River Biotechnol­ogy Company, in 2006.

In sentencing the 72-year-old, Ontario Court Justice Heather Perkins-McVey called it a “tragic case of an extraordin­ary man, a scientist who made decisions in his conduct that breached the trust of his employer of 30 years, and acted contrary to the public good.”

Perkins-McVey noted there were acts of dishonesty toward his employer, including the use of coded language in five years’ worth of emails, that suggested a degree of planning and sophistica­tion.

“The motive was to promote the use of Chinese test kits, which would have had the effect of diverting customers away from using the Canadian product,” Perkins-McVey said. “Both Dr. Nielsen and the coaccused used government property to start their own business. As a public servant, he was entrusted with advancing the public good.”

Nielsen acknowledg­ed if his flight had been delayed or his bag was handled by others there was a risk of harm. And if people had become sick, it could have been difficult to diagnose and treat their illness.

However, the judge found the vials were carried for business purposes, not bio-terrorism or to intentiona­lly put the public at risk.

In a letter to the court, Nielsen claimed he didn’t realize the vials contained live bacteria, although an expert testified the manner in which they were packed suggested otherwise. Nielsen also contended there was no criminal intent to his actions, and that he didn’t know the informatio­n he was sharing was a violation of licence agreements.

Nielsen’s lawyer, Solomon Friedman, asked for two years of house arrest, the maximum conditiona­l sentence available.

The judge admitted she “agonized” over whether to send Nielsen to jail.

She acknowledg­ed Nielsen presented a low risk to reoffend and suffered from serious and permanent health issues that require a carefully monitored diet and treatment. She recognized that he pleaded guilty to 11 counts of breach of trust and regulatory offences, sparing the cost of a lengthy trial, took responsibi­lity for his actions and expressed remorse.

The grandfathe­r has worked 1,500 hours of community service since his arrest, is highly educated and has worked to eradicate brucellosi­s, the judge added.

In his letter to the court, Nielsen apologized for his actions and expressed his “deep regret.”

“I know my actions were wrong, even if I justified them to myself at the time,” he wrote. “I know my actions have embarrasse­d the Canadian government, and by extension, my hard-working and dedicated colleagues.”

 ?? MIKE CARROCCETT­O FILES ?? Klaus Nielsen, one of the world’s leading experts on the infectious brucella bacteria, received a two-year prison sentence.
MIKE CARROCCETT­O FILES Klaus Nielsen, one of the world’s leading experts on the infectious brucella bacteria, received a two-year prison sentence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada