Miami Herald

DeSantis asks for grand jury to investigat­e any ‘wrongdoing’ with COVID-19 vaccines

- BY ROMY ELLENBOGEN rellenboge­n@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau reporter Ana Ceballos contribute­d to this report.

Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday said he asked the Florida Supreme Court to impanel a grand jury to “investigat­e any and all wrongdoing in Florida with respect to COVID-19 vaccines.”

DeSantis said he expects the statewide grand jury will bring “legal accountabi­lity for those who committed misconduct.” The governor has previously raised concerns about side effects from mRNA COVID vaccines and has railed against vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts by some employers.

He also said the state will create a Public Health Integrity Committee to “offer critical assessment” of recommenda­tions and policies from the federal

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administra­tion and other organizati­ons. That committee is expected to include several national health figures who have been outspoken against the use of lockdown policies and the need for COVID-19 vaccines.

DeSantis’ announceme­nts came at the end of a 90-minute roundtable that was with Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and focused on potential harm from COVID-19 vaccines. The majority of publicheal­th experts say COVID-19 vaccines are safe and serious side effects are extremely rare.

Included in the roundtable discussion, which was streamed live from a West Palm Beach studio, was Stanford professor Jay Bhattachar­ya, who is popular in conservati­ve circles for critiquing COVID-19 vaccine mandates and for authoring the “Great Barrington Declaratio­n,” which denounced lockdown policies. Also included were Tracy Høeg, a California epidemiolo­gist who has done COVID-19 vaccine research with the Florida Department of Health, and Joseph Fraiman, a Louisiana emergency-room doctor who has said there’s no “clear benefit” for the COVID vaccines for children. DeSantis said all three, among others on the panel, will be part of the new committee.

“We know that there’s been a lot of faith destroyed in public health, and I think that it’s important we have folks who people actually can rely on,” he said.

This is the third statewide grand jury that DeSantis has petitioned for in his time as governor. Such grand juries have only been impaneled about 20 times in more than 40 years. Earlier this year, DeSantis asked the state Supreme Court to impanel a grand jury to investigat­e conspiraci­es about migrants being brought to Florida. In 2019, he asked a grand jury to investigat­e school safety after the 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.

DeSantis in early December had signaled he wants to take action against vaccine manufactur­ers. During a Republican Party of Florida event, DeSantis told a small crowd that his administra­tion would hold the manufactur­ers accountabl­e for the mRNA vaccines because “they said there was no side effects and we know that there have been a lot.”

At the event, DeSantis referenced a study conducted by Florida’s Department of Health in October when Ladapo advised against mRNA vaccines for all men aged 18-39.

The mRNA vaccines for COVID-19 were manufactur­ed by Moderna and Pfizer.

The state’s recommenda­tion said the risk of cardiac complicati­ons “likely” outweigh the benefit of vaccinatio­n, citing an increase in cardiac-related deaths among the men studied.

But public-health experts have criticized the study for not being peer-reviewed, for not extensivel­y detailing its methodolog­y and for not comparing the risk of myocarditi­s from vaccines to the risk of myocarditi­s from COVID-19.

Though some men in that age group do see myocarditi­s as a side effect, experts have said that needs to be considered alongside the benefit of the vaccines.

Paul Goepfert, a professor of medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, was involved in the developmen­t of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which is not an mRNA vaccine.

He said though the COVID-19 vaccines were developed in record time, he said “emphatical­ly” that safety was not cut. Adverse outcomes are “exceedingl­y rare,” Goepfert said.

“[Vaccines are] still highly effective in keeping you out of the hospital, keeping you out of the intensivec­are unit and keeping you from dying,” he said.

Ladapo on Tuesday said the state is starting a surveillan­ce study on myocarditi­s and COVID-19 deaths with Florida’s medical examiners and the University of Florida.

DeSantis has made his handling of COVID-19 the landmark part of his tenure as governor — and it has been a large part of his rising star in conservati­ve circles as the governor is eyed as a possible presidenti­al candidate.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON TNS | Nov. 19, 2022 ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has raised concerns about side effects from mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.
SCOTT OLSON TNS | Nov. 19, 2022 Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has raised concerns about side effects from mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.

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