Illegal Biolabs in California
Hazardous Conditions in California Labs owned by Chinese
Nationals
Americans should know that dangerous biological research doesn’t just
occur in Wuhan. It is happening in the United States.
We received 29
pages of records through the California Public Records Act
confirming that illicit labs owned by Chinese nationals housed biologicals
in hazardous and non-compliant conditions, multiple infectious agents, and
starving and dead mice. Our investigators also uncovered court
documents which detail the deplorable conditions at the lab (which
conducted “COVID” research), including photos of dead mice.
The documents were produced by the Fresno County Department of Public
Health (FCDPH) in response to a request for:
Records and / or communications maintained by the Fresno County Public
Health Department, including emails, email chains, email attachments, text
messages, meeting minutes, interviews, voice recordings, video recordings,
photographs, correspondence, statements, letters, memoranda, reports,
briefings, affidavits, inspections, presentations, notes, or other form of
record, regarding Prestige BioTech and Universal Meditech
Inc.
Prestige Biotech reportedly runs
Universal Meditech, Inc.
The records show that, on May 31, 2023, Dr.
Rais Vohra, then-interim health officer for the Fresno County
Department of Public Health, had issued an
order to Prestige to close its operations in Reedley, CA, and
clean up dangerous materials at the site:
This Order is issued as a result of the City of Reedley’s attempts at
gathering authorized representative contact information, repeated requests
of complete lists of biologicals present, and an inspection pursuant to
Health Officer Order dated April 21, 2023, which revealed biologicals in
hazardous and non-compliant conditions, the presence of multiple infectious
agents and pursuant to Title 17 California Code of Regulations Section
2500, and multiple City of Reedley building and fire code violations,
including but not limited to, failing refrigeration, and documented out of
compliance electrical additions.
The records include an August 2023 PowerPoint presentation titled “Healthy
Fresno County, Better Together, Reedley Lab Update” written by Fresno
Co. Asst. Dir. Joe
Prado. The presentation includes a section titled “City of Fresno
Chronology of Events,” which reports:
August 26, 2020 – Universal MediTech location experienced a
small fire.
August 31, 2020 – Environmental Health CUPA inspection performed at
Universal Meditech at 1320 E. Fortune Ave #102 in Fresno.
EH Inspector conducted onsite visit and noted violations: failing to
prepare and implement a hazardous materials business plan (HMBP) for
storage of hazmat (ethanol) over state thresholds
Permit was completed and valid from 9-1-2020 through 8-31-2021.
Inspections are every 3 years from initial inspection,
unless complaint is received.
October 31, 2022 – FCDPH staff received a complaint from City of
Fresno Code Enforcement and City Fire Department regarding chemicals stored
at the Universal MediTech facility in Fresno.
November 1, 2022 – FCDPH staff visited
Universal MediTech site at 1320 E. Fortune Ave #102 in
Fresno. Were not able to access facility.
November 3, 2022 – FCDPH staff met City of Fresno Code Enforcement
officer and property management at facility.
November 8, 2022 – No response from general manager. FCDPH staff again
visited Universal MediTech site but were again not able to access
facility.
November 8, 2022 – FCDPH staff received an email after visiting
facility from Xiao XiaoWang, President/CEO of
Universal MediTech Inc. regarding status of facility.
November 10, 2022 – Email response to Xiao Xiao Wang
regarding the hazardous materials storage and transportation
requirements.
November 23, 2022 – No response back from operators or CEO/President.
FCDPH staff visited Universal MediTech facility and were again
not able to access facility.
The presentation includes a section titled “Reedley
Chronology,” which details the investigation of the lab after it
relocated to Reedley, CA:
December 19, 2022 – City of Reedley Code Enforcement Officer contacted
FCDPH regarding business found operating at 850 I Street.
December 20, 2022 – Reedley Code Enforcement citing multiple code,
building, and zoning violations for business, and had concerns regarding
possible hazardous materials stored at facility.
Emails with the Reedley Code Enforcement, CDPH, and FDA to coordinate a
response.
Reedley Code Enforcement and FCDPH contacted FBI regarding
potential public safety risks.
December 20, 2022 – FCDPH contacted FDA and CDPH requesting assistance
regarding suspicious medical test manufacturing company.
December 21, 2022 – FBI coordinated meeting with State, Federal and
Local agencies and instructed the agencies to standby until conclusion of
their investigation.
January 2023 through February 2023 – Ongoing regular
communication with Federal and State agencies.
February 9, 2023 – FCDPH is informed by DTSC that FBI has given State
and Local agencies approval to resume civil investigation.
February 9, 2023 – Universal MediTech issues a nationwide
recall of its COVID-19 test kits.
February 24, 2023 – Multi-agency meeting to coordinate investigation
of Prestige Biotech.
CDPH Food & Drug Branch to take lead on investigation of medical
devices.
March 3, 2023 – FCDPH staff met at City of Reedley Fire Department
with CDPH, DTSC, City of Reedley Police, Fire, Code Enforcement, and
Building Inspector.
***
City of Reedley posted Unsafe to Occupy Notice on front door of
building.
***
March 16, 2023 – FCDPH staff met with CDPH, DTSC, and City of Reedley
and briefed on inspection warrant.
Met with Consultant for Prestige Biotech.
CDPH Food & Drug Branch staff went through and embargoed the unapproved
medical test kits and medical supplies.
***
March 22, 2023 – FCDPH meets with Health Officer, CAO, and BOS member
on the Reedley Lab situation.
State and Federal authorities stated that abatement is the
County’s responsibility
FCDPH emailed Prestige President requesting complete inventory of all
materials onsite that pose a public safety risk.
Communication and requests for inventory continued through April with
incomplete and delayed responses from business representative.
***
June 15, 2023 – Filed with Superior Court an Abatement Warrant to
destroy all biologicals.
June 23, 2023 – Judge of the Superior Court signs Abatement
Warrant.
June 26, 2023 – Abatement warrant issued by Superior Court.
July 5-7, 2023 – Biological materials in approximately 36
refrigerators/freezers were properly removed and transported for
destruction by licensed contractor.
***
Under the heading “Next Steps,” the presentation notes that
investigations by the health department, FDA, California Department of
Public Health, the health department’s Food and Drug Branch, and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency were ongoing.
Our investigators also uncovered court documents that include
an abatement
warrant. Exhibit 2 of the declaration of Code Enforcement
Officer Jesalyn
Harper contains graphic
images of dead mice from the “mouse room” at the Reedley
facility:
Upon entering the mouse room, Code Enforcement and Dr. Hahn observed a
large amount of mice feces on the floor. It was undeterminable if
the feces were from wild mice or if the mice in the cages had begun to kick
up feces out of the cages, but photos of the feces were taken regardless
because according to Dr. Hahn it was very likely a mixture of both.
Dr. Hahn confirmed the mice were in server distress because of
“barbering” taking place, the high number of visible carcasses in the
cages, and the lack of “pinkies.” Barbering is a social activity with
mice consistent with over grooming. When under stress the dominant mice
will begin to rip the hair and skin off the less dominant mice. The lack of
pinkies can be related to starvation or stress, because Code
Enforcement had been trying to provide adequate food and
water it is believed the cannibalism is due to stress.
Dr. Hahn recommended euthanasia due to
the animal’s suffering and the lack of ability to provide
adequate care for the animals.
In November 2022, we uncovered the Defense Department funding anthrax
laboratory activities in Ukraine. The records show over $11
million in funding for the Ukraine biolabs program in 2019.
In June 2022, we uncovered records from
the National Institutes of Health (NIH) revealing over two dozen cases
where research involving recombinant or synthetic nucleic acid (r/sNA)
molecules was conducted in America without proper approval and in violation
of NIH guidelines.
In April 2022, we received records and communications from the Federal
Select Agent Program (FSAP) that revealed safety
lapses and violations at U.S. biosafety laboratories that conduct
research on dangerous agents and toxins.
Breaking: Impeachment Inquiry into President Joe
Biden
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy initiated an impeachment inquiry into
President Joe Biden this week – a necessary step for
accountability and justice. The American people have a right to know
whether their president is a crook.
It is well past time for the House to use its full constitutional
authority to investigate the catalog of credible allegations of corruption
that crosses international borders – from Ukraine to Russia and
China.
These Biden corruption issues have created a national security crisis,
led to a border invasion, thoroughly corrupted the Justice Department and
other federal agencies, and have resulted in wildly abusive efforts to jail
former President Trump and other innocents.
This new impeachment inquiry is necessary but not sufficient.
Impeachment must be accompanied with a serious effort to defund abuse by
Biden’s agencies, and Congress must add oversight to curtail weaponized
government.
In the meantime, Judicial Watch will continue its independent
investigations and lawsuits into the Biden corruption issues.
We have at least 10 federal lawsuits focused on Biden family
corruption.
We are pursuing a
lawsuit for information regarding the gun owned by Hunter Biden
that reportedly was thrown in a trash can behind a Delaware grocery
store.
In June 2023, we sued the
CIA for all communications of the spy agency’s Prepublication
Classification Review Board (PCRB) regarding an October 19, 2020, email
request to review and “clear” a letter signed by 51 former intelligence
community officials characterizing the Hunter Biden laptop story as having
“all the earmarks of a Russian disinformation campaign.”
In July, we sued the DOJ for records from the Office of the Attorney
General and Office of the Deputy Attorney General regarding the Internal
Revenue Service investigation of Hunter Biden.
In June 2023, we filed a lawsuit against
the Department of Justice for a copy of the FBI FD-1023 form that describes
“an alleged criminal scheme involving then-Vice President Biden and a
foreign national relating to the exchange of money for policy decisions.”
Judicial Watch also asked for communications about the FD-1023.
In May 2023, we filed a FOIA lawsuit against
the National Archives for Biden family records and communications regarding
travel and finance transactions, as well as communications between the
Bidens and several known business associates.
On October 14, 2022, we sued the
DOJ for all records in the possession of FBI Supervisory Intelligence
Analyst Brian Auten regarding an August 6, 2020, briefing provided to
members of the U.S. Senate. Ron Johnson (R-WI) and Chuck Grassley (R-IA)
raised concerns that the briefing was intended to undermine the senators’
investigation of Hunter Biden.
We filed a lawsuit against the U.S. State Department on April 20, 2022,
for messages sent through the SMART (State
Messaging and Archive Retrieval Toolkit) system that mention Hunter
Biden.
In December 2020, State Department records obtained
through our FOIA lawsuit showed that former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine
Marie “Masha” Yovanovitch had specifically warned in 2017 about
corruption allegations against Burisma Holdings.
And in October 2020, we forced the release of State Department records that
included a briefing checklist of a February 22, 2019, meeting in Kyiv
between then-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch and Sally
Painter, co-founder and chief operating officer of Blue Star Strategies, a
Democratic lobbying firm which was hired by Burisma Holdings to combat
corruption allegations. At the time of the meeting, Hunter Biden was
serving on the board of directors for Burisma Holdings.
To Prioritize Equity, DHS Anti-Terrorism Funds Go to
Underserved Groups
Give the Biden bureaucrats your tax money, and they are likely
to transfer it to their favorite special interest groups, rather
than for the original purpose, as our Corruption
Chronicles blog reports.
To ensure “equity
is a key priority,” a Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
anti-terrorism program that annually doles out millions of dollars to
combat violence in local communities is awarding a substantial chunk
of funds to recipients devoted to underserved populations, including a D.C.
nonprofit dedicated to empowering lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and
questioning (LGBTQ) youth. Launched in 2020, the initiative is called
Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention Program (TVTP) and it has
disbursed $70 million to help local communities develop and strengthen the
capability to fight violence and terrorism. This year the Biden
administration is allocating 41% of $20 million in grants to recipients
devoted to underserved populations, compared to 25% last year. Awardees
include a Historically Black College and University (HBCU) among seven
Minority Serving Institutions (MSI), an organization dedicated to
indigenous/Native American persons, a group serving LGBTQIA+, and five that
help rural communities.
The focus on minorities (underserved populations) appears to have been
inspired by last month’s fatal shooting of three black people in
northeastern Florida. The gunman, who killed himself, was a 21-year-old
mentally ill man who had previously attempted suicide and stopped taking
his psychiatric medications. DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas used the
shooting to support allocating such a large amount of funds to underserved
populations. “As the recent racially-motivated shooting in
Jacksonville made painfully clear, targeted violence and terrorism can
impact any community, anywhere,” Mayorkas said, adding that his agency is
“committed to confronting this threat” by funding programs with
communities to prevent “such abhorrent targeted acts from
occurring.”
Let’s examine where the agency created after 9/11 to prevent another
terrorist attack is sending our
taxpayer dollars in the name of combatting violence and terrorism. A
Washington D.C. group called Sexual
Minority Youth Assistance League is getting $530,000 to address
the risk of violence and negative mental health outcomes faced by LGBTQ+
youth in Washington D.C. and Montgomery County, Maryland. The project will
provide in-school support for LGBTQ+ youth, training for school staff and
youth service providers, resilience programming for LGBTQ+ youth ages 6-24,
and support for parents and caregivers. The D.C. nonprofit claims to
empower LGBTQ+ youth in the area through leadership and opportunities to
build self-confidence, develop critical life skills and community
engagement. The more than half a million dollars will help raise societal
awareness by employing a “community-level and behavioral health
approach,” according to the TVTP grant document.
Other notable grants will go to the University of Illinois at Chicago
School of Medicine which is getting nearly $1 million to also raise
societal awareness and create youth resilience programs by partnering with
clinicians, researchers and staff to reduce the risk of future
violence. The program “will focus on training and capacity building
around diversity, equity, and inclusion practices.” Boise State
University will receive $265,000 to supplement human rights educationfor
kids and teenagers in underserved, rural communities by improving
individuals’ abilities to understand violent content. A Boston
organization will receive $1,140,067 to mitigate misogynistic, racially,
and ethnically motivated violent extremism among at-risk students. The
University of Texas, El Paso is getting nearly $300,000 to create a social
media campaign that includes multiple cultures and languages to counter the
rise of online radicalization. The University of California, Irvine is
receiving almost $700,000 to provide tools and training for elementary,
high school and college students to participate in diverse coalitions that
reach national audiences to target violence and terrorism. Among the goals
is to strengthen diverse civic engagement.
Last year $7 million in anti-terrorism grants went to nonprofits, local
governments, and academic institutions to promote
media literacy and combat what the Biden administration considers
to be “disinformation.” Among the recipients was a center founded by
former President Jimmy Carter to implement a “media literacy
curriculum” designed to mitigate the harms presented by disinformation.
The University of Rhode Island got $701,612 to combat disinformation,
conspiracy theories and propaganda and the Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars received $750,000 to create an “educational digital
game” designed to help students understand different strategies used to
spread disinformation and combat it at the institutional level. The Urban
Rural Action, a group that strives for a “more inclusive democracy”
across ideological and racial differences, got $769,190 to create a
“Local Prevention Framework.”
DHS Loses Track of Illegal Immigrants it Releases in U.S., Many
Give Fake Address
They’re not even trying any more to secure our southern
border. Our Corruption Chronicles blog details the
lack of effort in tracking illegals.
Not only has illegal immigration exploded under the Biden
administration, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) fails to track
migrants it is supposed to monitor after releasing them in the U.S.
Incredibly, the agency created after 9/11 to prevent another terrorist
attack is not making much of an effort to find the missing foreigners who
in thousands of cases were freed despite not providing the agency with a
valid domestic address or after furnishing a bogus location including car
dealerships, bus stations, restaurants or churches.
Between March 2021 and August 2022, DHS lost track of more than 177,000
migrants inside the country, according to a scathing report issued
recently by the DHS Office of Inspector General. The watchdog found that
80% of addresses provided to the U.S. Border Patrol (USBP) by migrants were
recorded at least two times and 54,000 were simply left blank. More than
780 addresses were used over 20 times and seven were recorded by federal
officials over 500 times, apparently without raising any red flags. Some of
the addresses were charities or federal government agencies. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) also got trashed in the report for failing to
always validate migrant addresses prior to releasing them into communities
throughout the United States.
In all, DHS released more than a million migrant individuals and
families into the U.S. during the recent 18-month period examined in the
probe. Investigators stress in the report that it is critical to properly
track the individuals. “ICE must be able to locate migrants to enforce
immigration laws, including to arrest or remove individuals who are
considered potential threats to national security,” the IG writes in the
report, which has several redactions. “The notable percentage of missing,
invalid for delivery, or duplicate addresses on file means DHS may not be
able to locate migrants following their release into the United States,”
the report continues.“As the Department continues to apprehend and
release tens of thousands of migrants each month, valid post-release
addresses are essential.”
DHS releases more than 60,000 illegal immigrants into the U.S. every
month, according to the agency watchdog, and the figure will probably grow.
“In addition to migrants not providing U.S. release addresses, DHS faced
several challenges hindering its ability to record and validate migrant
addresses as required,” the probe found. “USBP did not accurately and
effectively capture valid addresses, in part due to the large number
of migrants apprehended, as well as its limited coordination with ICE and
its limited authority to administer compliance with address
requirements.” The document further explains that “ICE also did not
have adequate resources to validate and analyze migrants’ post-release
addresses.” As an example, the IG offers that ICE deportation officers at
one field office were responsible for 35,000 migrant cases post-release,
averaging to about three minutes of staff time per case annually.
It has been widely reported that when it comes to the famously porous
southwest border DHS has not done a very good job of fulfilling its
mission. What many Americans may not know is that, in the last few years,
the agency has made the problem even worse by dispersing hundreds of
thousands of illegal immigrants throughout the U.S. under a Biden
administration program that issues migrants a Notice to Report (NTR) and
trusts them to show up for hearings. Not surprisingly, many vanish, and the
government tries to keep the stats from the public. Last year a Wisconsin
senator obtained startling
DHS figures showing that, during a five-month period, the Biden
administration relocated 273,396 illegal immigrants throughout the United
States and issued north of 100,000 NTRs to an ICE field office within 60
days. More than 50,000 illegal aliens failed to show up for their hearing
with federal authorities by ignoring the government issued NTR that has
become the laughingstock of the nation’s immigration system.
Until next week,
Tom Fitton
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