Los Angeles Times

He continues to sell unproven treatments

Malibu doctor lost his license over stem cell injections. Now his firm operates beyond reach of U.S. officials.

- By Alan Zarembo

Last fall, two decades after Malibu psychiatri­st William Rader began selling unproven stem cell treatments to desperate patients with incurable conditions, California authoritie­s permanentl­y revoked his medical license for negligence, false or misleading advertisin­g and profession­al misconduct.

“His dishonesty permeates every aspect of his business and practices,” the medical board wrote in a scathing 39-page decision.

Today, Rader has a new title: “chief scientist” rather than “chief medical officer.” But his California company continues to operate, advertisin­g and arranging injections that cost $30,000 apiece and are administer­ed abroad, outside the reach of U.S. authoritie­s.

As long as the treatments never enter the country and Rader no longer represents himself as a licensed doctor, U.S. regulators are limited in their ability to stop him.

Revoking a doctor’s license is the most severe punishment the medical board can impose.

“We did our job,” said Cassandra Hockenson, a spokeswoma­n for the board. “He’s done as far as we’re concerned.”

For its part, the Food and Drug Administra­tion, which regulates medication­s, medical devices and biological products, has no jurisdicti­on outside the United States.

The Federal Trade Commission, which regulates advertisin­g, can take action against U.S. companies that promote questionab­le medical treatments abroad. But the most recent example officials there cited was a 1975 case against travel agencies thatwere promoting trips to the Philippine­s for “psychic surgery” to treat cancer.

The commission is stretched thin in its efforts to stop misleading advertisin­g of all types.

“There are probably hundreds of thousands if not millions of websites and blogs making suspicious claims,” said Mary Engle, associate director for advertis--

ing practices. “We can’t possibly pursue everything.”

Mexican regulators in Tijuana said they were unfamiliar with Rader but that his company would need government permission to operate there.

“It’s illegal to sell something that’s experiment­al,” said Dr. Sarai Barajas, a Tijuana health official.

Rader, a former Navy psychiatri­st, once ran a chain of eating disorder clinics, worked as an on-air medical expert for KABCTV in Los Angeles, co-wrote an episode of the sitcom “All in the Family” and was married to one of its stars, Sally Struthers.

In an interview at his Spanish-style villa in Malibu, Rader, 77, said he was proud to have lost his license.

“I must be doing something right,” he said. “The greater percentage of people who get into trouble are ahead of their time.”

Rader has never allowed outsiders to examine his injections and has never published scientific evidence on their efficacy.

Dr. Evan Snyder, head of the stem cell program at the Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute in La Jolla and a vocal critic of Rader, said he was surprised to see him still operating. “He’s like whack-a-mole,” Snyder said.

Rader’s company, Stem Cell of America, operates out of an office in Westlake, selling injections for patients with arthritis, muscular dystrophy, spinal cord injuries and other intractabl­e conditions. Its website, which includes videos of patients and written testimonia­ls from families, advertises “Over 3000 patients treated,” “No known negative side effects” and “No age requiremen­ts.”

On a recent morning, a sales representa­tive wearing a headset could be heard recommendi­ng a stem cell injection for an eye problem.

One Saturday each month, the company rents space in Tijuana at an alternativ­e medicine clinic called Oxygen. The stem cell patients pay for the treatment in advance or bring certified checks, which are deposited in a U.S. bank account, Rader said. They usually stay at a hotel in San Diego and arrive at the clinic by van.

Rader said that a Mexican anesthesio­logist is the company’s medical director and oversees the injections. Rader said he could not remember the doctor’s full name.

The injections are made from aborted fetuses in the former Soviet Republic of Georgia, according to Rader. The treatment, which is the same for every condition, is delivered through an IV and multiple injections under the skin of the abdomen.

Patients sign a consent form acknowledg­ing that results are not guaranteed and agreeing not to discuss the treatment with the media or online without permission fromthe company.

In deference to the medical board, the form also states that the only doctors involved are Mexican and that Rader “will not be practicing medicine or giving me medical advice or recommenda­tions, but instead solely sharing his observatio­ns.”

Rader said he meets patients in Tijuana not as their doctor but as a “PR person representi­ng the company.”

“They like the idea of having me there,” he said. “It’s like having a celebrity there.”

Rader said he had taken the cells himself for their anti-aging properties. He spoke of himself as a humanitari­an and scientific pioneer and claimed he had cured a patient of AIDS.

He became interested in stem cells in the mid-1990s after a business contact told him about a company in Ukraine that was injecting patients with solutions made from aborted fetuses, he told The Times in 2005.

He soon began meeting patients in the Bahamas for injections. He later shifted to the Dominican Republic and eventually to Mexico. His company has operated under at least three different names.

Offshore stemcell clinics have proliferat­ed because of the much-touted potential of the cells and confusion over U.S. policy. Restrictio­ns put in place by President George W. Bush— but lifted by President Obama — barred researcher­s from using federal funds to develop new lines of embryonic stem cells, which are prized for their ability to morph into any type of cell but cannot be harvested without destroying days-old human embryos.

Their power has yet to be turned into viable treatments, which stem cell experts say will not be one size fits all.

Some patients and their families desperate for help, however, have come to believe that the U.S. is denying them cures and that it makes sense to go abroad.

The media have cast doubt on Rader’s practices over the years in reports including a Times story about stem cell entreprene­urs and a BBC documentar­y that showed hidden camera footage of Rader trying to persuade a woman with multiple sclerosis to go through with the treatment.

The medical board case, filed in 2010, involved two men who received injections. One was paralyzed in a motorcycle crash, the other suffered severe spinal cord damage as a result of a staph infection. Neither experience­d any improvemen­t after the treatment.

The family of a third patient, an elderly man with a brain injury, drove him across the country after Rader convinced them that the treatment could help, according to the medical board’s decision. By the time they arrived in San Diego, the man had entered a chronic vegetative state, and the family gave up and drove him back to Alabama, where he died the following month.

In the medical board proceeding­s, Rader was represente­d by attorney Robert Shapiro — best known for defending O.J. Simpson against murder charges. Shapiro argued that Rader was not functionin­g as a doctor to those patients because foreign doctors oversaw the injections. The board disagreed.

The defense also presented four witnesses who testified that the injections had helped: a woman who had kept her leukemia at bay; a woman whose daughter was suffering from lupus and arthritis; a woman with Parkinson’s disease; and a father who believed his daughter’s mitochondr­ial disease had been mitigated before she died of a heart arrhythmia shortly after her fourth stemcell treatment.

Medical researcher­s place little stock in testimonia­ls because many conditions can vary day to day, the placebo effect can cause temporary improvemen­t, and wishful thinking can skew perception­s.

Pat Schmidt, the mother of the motorcycle crash victim, launched an online campaign against Rader after the treatment failed.

“The U.S. can’t do a damn thing,” said Schmidt, who lives just outside Baltimore.

Jim Dierkop, the patient with the staph infection, said that after the first injection had no effect and he complained, Rader provided two more failed treatments at no charge. In the Dominican Republic and Mexico, Dierkop saw parents of children with genetic defects and other incurable conditions taking them for treatments.

“Everybody was desperate,” said Dierkop, 66, who lives in Contra Costa County.

Rader said his sales representa­tives explain to prospectiv­e patients that he lost his license for standing up to the medical establishm­ent. The board’s action has had little effect on his business, he said.

“Very few people don’t come because of that,” he said.

 ?? Mariah Tauger For The Times ?? “HIS DISHONESTY permeates every aspect of his business and practices,” California’s medical board wrote aboutWilli­am Rader, shown at hisMalibu home.
Mariah Tauger For The Times “HIS DISHONESTY permeates every aspect of his business and practices,” California’s medical board wrote aboutWilli­am Rader, shown at hisMalibu home.

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