Kane Republican

Feds, scientists take fire for allegedly hiding COVID origins truth

- By Casey Harper

A Republican-led Congressio­nal committee says a scientist and top advisor to Anthony Fauci used his personal email to hide evidence related to the origins of COVID-19.

Select Subcommitt­ee on the Coronaviru­s Pandemic Chairman Brad Wenstrup, R-ohio, sent a letter to the National Emerging Infectious Disease Institute asking for more informatio­n about these communicat­ions.

“The Select Subcommitt­ee is now aware of potential further attempts by Dr. [David] Morens to subvert public transparen­cy,” the letter said. “Specifical­ly, the Select Subcommitt­ee has been made aware of alleged communicat­ions between Dr. Morens and you regarding Ecohealth Alliance.

“These communicat­ions included emails from Dr. [David] Morens' personal Gmail account to you and Dr. Peter Daszak of Ecohealth,” the letter adds.

Critics say the use of a personal email account allowed Morens to avoid having his emails obtained by official records requests.

At least some of the email exchanges, handed over by a whistleblo­wer, were with Dr. Peter Daszak, who leads Ecohealth, the controvers­ial research group accused of having a role in the creation of COVID-19.

The federal government has denied the claim that partially taxpayer-funded Ecohealth had a role in COVID'S origin.

Ecohealth is a U.S. nonprofit research company that used taxpayer-funded grants to carry out coronaviru­s research.

Federal records show that Ecohealth was conducting coronaviru­s research involving bats in China when the pandemic broke out.

As The Center Square previously reported, a federal grant database reports that the same group has received millions in taxpayer funds from the federal government over the past decade to research coronaviru­ses that originate in animals and in some cases can transfer to humans.

A highly disputed part of the inquiry is whether Ecohealth Alliance's research involved making coronaviru­ses more dangerous to humans.

As lawmakers have dug into the issue, they have raised more questions.

“In today's letter to Dr. Keusch and Boston University, Chairman Wenstrup is requesting the production of any documents and communicat­ion related to correspond­ence with Dr. Morens, Dr. Daszak, and other individual­s and entities with knowledge of and access to COVID-19 origins material,” Wenstrup's office said. “This letter continues our investigat­ion into the potential cover-up of COVID-19 origins informatio­n by America's public health authoritie­s.”

Ecohealth released a statement after initial reports of these emails rebuffing many of the claims and releasing what it says are the original emails in question in a news release.

“These reports do not show the full text of the emails in question, but allege that they are part of a cover up, or represent inappropri­ate communicat­ions,” the group said in a statement. “Contrary to the news reports, they show clearly that Ecohealth Alliance was appropriat­ely communicat­ing with senior staff at the NIH, or who formerly worked at NIH, to try to identify ways to reinstate a grant that had been terminated unexpected­ly and arbitraril­y, then suspended with onerous conditions. The grant was subsequent­ly reinstated by NIH, and Ecohealth Alliance is currently working under this grant to conduct critical scientific research to prevent future pandemics.”

U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, R-KY., in particular has been outpoken on this issue, stating that more than a dozen federal agencies were aware that federally funded research was being done on coronaviru­ses in China to make them more dangerous.

“Newly obtained documents confirm yet again Fauci lied about COVID. Fauci's NIH lab was a partner with Wuhan on a proposal to engineer a highly transmissi­ble coronaviru­s in 2018,” Paul wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter. “But he wasn't alone, 15 government agencies knew about it and said nothing. Americans deserve answers.”

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