Biden Impeachment Update
At Least Six Deaths Possibly Linked to Abortion Drug Between
2000 and 2002
Government health bureaucrats have been trying to hide safety issues
about a controversial abortion pill, but we’ve begun to prevail against
them thanks to our court action.
In collaboration with the Lozier Institute and Susan B. Anthony ProLife,
we received 588
pages of records from the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS), revealing that during the two-year period 2000 to 2002 at
least six women’s deaths were possibly linked to the abortion
drug Mifeprex (Mifepristone,
formerly known as RU-486).
(Seven deaths were detailed in the records released to us, but one of those
deaths may have been reported twice.)
The records were forced out thanks to our October 2022 Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit filed
after the Food and Drug Administration (a component of HHS) failed to
respond to three February 2022 requests for records, including
correspondence with the manufacturers of Mifeprex regarding the drug’s
stability and for all FDA reports from assessments of DANCO and GenBio
manufacturing facilities; investigational and new drug applications, and
stability test results (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (No. 1:22-cv-03152)).
The records include an “Annual
Report for Mifepristone,” covering the period September 28, 2000, to
September 27, 2001, produced by the Population Council/Danco Laboratories,
LLC. The summary indicates that during the testing period 32
“adverse events were reported to Danco and reported by Danco to FDA in
periodic reports.” (The existence of adverse event reports does not
necessarily establish causation.)
Of the 32 reported adverse events, two were 15-day reports (the others
were not serious and/or not unexpected). One of the 15-day reports was
reported as “hemorrhage due to a ruptured ectopic pregnancy
and death.” [Emphasis added] The other was
reported as “post abortal parametritis/endometritis, adult respiratory
distress syndrome and bilateral pneumonia.” This latter 15-day report and
one case where fever was reported represent the total reports on the
marketed drug suggesting infection. In addition, one infection was reported
in the Population Council’s 200 mifepristone study
and one death [Emphasis added] due to
clostridium sordelli infection was reported in the Canadian study.
A post-marketing study dated
September 28, 2001, titled “Comparison of abortions induced by
mifepristone followed by vaginal versus oral misoprostol up to 56 days
gestation,” reports on the “safety results” for 940 women. One person
required a blood transfusion, two required administration of intravenous
fluids, one required hospitalization, and one
died. [Emphasis added] The study reports an overall
“success” rate of 97.8 percent.
A September 27, 2002, report on
mifepristone indicates that in a study of 971 women administered a
combination of mifepristone and misoprostol to induce abortions, one
subject needed a blood transfusion, two were administered IV fluids, one
was hospitalized, and one died. [Emphasis
added]
In an April 19, 2002, “Dear Health Care Provider” letter from
Danco Laboratories, in a section titled “New Safety Information,” the
company notes:
We have received a small number of reports of ruptured ectopic
pregnancies (including one
death [Emphasis added] from hemorrhage due to a ruptured
ectopic pregnancy). As you will recall, Mifeprex* and misoprostol are not
an effective treatment of ectopic pregnancy. Confirmed or suspected ectopic
pregnancy is a contraindication for the use of Mifeprex and should be ruled
out prior to initiating Mifeprex treatment. Because ectopic pregnancy may
be present despite your best efforts to rule it out before starting
Mifeprex treatment, you should be mindful of the possibility of an ectopic
pregnancy throughout the treatment period and have a plan for its
management.
***
Two cases of serious systemic bacterial infection (one
fatal) [Emphasis added] following treatment with Mifeprex and
misoprostol have been reported.
***
We have also received a report of a myocardial infarction [heart attack]
occurring in a 21-year-old woman three days following use of Mifeprex and
misoprostol.
A periodic safety
update for mifepristone under the brand name Mifegyne that was
conducted by Exelgyn Laboratory for the period June 1, 2001, to May 31,
2002, reports:
[T]he Medical Department of Exelgyn recorded from health professionals
and authorities 23 spontaneous reports (of
which 12 cases of serious adverse events, 11 non serious
events and no case from clinical
trials) in association with Mifepristone.”
[Emphases in original]
The 12 cases of serious events reported during the period of review are
classified as follows:
3 serious unlabeled. In which 1 case of unintended pregnancy with fetal
malformation, 1 case of death[Emphasis
added] and 1 case of thoracic pain (ischaemic accident).
9 serious labeled with 5 cases of unintended pregnancy, 2 cases of
allergic reaction, 1 excessive bleeding and 1 septicaemia
to Streptococcus.
These revelations come on the heels of an August 16, 2023, decision by
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in which the Court was
asked to consider whether the FDA “overlooked important safety risks in
approving mifepristone and amending its restrictions.” The Appeals Court
held:
In loosening mifepristone’s safety restrictions, FDA failed to address
several important concerns about whether the drug would be safe for the
women who use it. It failed to consider the cumulative effect of removing
several important safeguards at the same time. It failed to consider
whether those “major” and “interrelated” changes might alter the
risk profile, such that the agency should continue to mandate reporting of
non-fatal adverse events. And it failed to gather evidence that
affirmatively showed that mifepristone could be used safely without being
prescribed and dispensed in person.
The Biden administration is seeking Supreme Court review of the Fifth
Circuit’s decision.
It is outrageous that we have had to sue in federal court for basic
safety information about the abortion pill. The revelations in the records
explain why the Biden administration is so desperate to bury this damning
information – this drug is potentially dangerous to the mothers as well
as the intended victims, the unborn babies.
In February 2023, we filed an amicus
curiae (friend of the court) brief in support of Texas-based
Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine (AHM) in its lawsuit against the FDA over
the its approval of Mifeprex/Mifepristone. In our brief, we described the
FDA’s approval process as “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of
discretion and not in accordance with the law.”
(In April 2023, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk in Amarillo,
Texas suspended
approval of Mifepristone, which essentially made sales of the
abortion pill illegal in the United States while the Biden
Administration’s legal
challenge of the court’s ruling proceeded. Subsequently, the
Supreme Court granted emergency
requests by the Justice Department and the pill’s manufacturer Danco
Laboratories to put the District Court’s suspension order on hold while
litigation continues.)
In October 2007, we reported on a court victory that forced the FDA to
release records about
the abortion drug, which included confirmation that the drug was being
manufactured in China.
In May 2006, we released a Special
Report, containing records that shed light on the Clinton
administration’s aggressive drive to push RU-486 to market in the United
States. We obtained the documents from the National Archives at the Clinton
Presidential Library in Little Rock, Arkansas, in February 2006, shortly
after the archives allowed public access to Bill Clinton’s presidential
papers.
Many more documents are due to us on the abortion pill, and we will be
sure to report back to you on any significant findings!
Biden Impeachment Inquiry: Scoundrels, Sleaze, and
Corruption
“Oh, what a tangled web we weave / When first we practice to
deceive.” Sir Walter Scott could very well have been referring to Joe and
Hunter Biden. Using Judicial Watch and House committee discoveries, Micah
Morrison, our chief investigative correspondent, pulls
apart the intricate strands of Biden corruption in
our Investigative Bulletin:
Investigations into the Biden family are gaining steam. On September 12,
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy opened an impeachment inquiry into President
Joe Biden. House Republicans, McCarthy said, have uncovered “serious and
credible allegations” that “paint a picture of a culture of
corruption.” On another front, on September 14, David Weiss,
the conflicted
special counsel in the Hunter Biden probe, indicted the
presidential son on three
gun-related charges.
Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton called the impeachment inquiry “a
necessary step for accountability and justice.” JW’s own investigations
into the Bidens will continue. We’ve been at it for years. In 2020, JW
Freedom of Information actions revealed new details about Ukraine
corruption. We have repeatedly sued the State Department, Justice
Department, FBI, CIA, and National Archives for information related to the
Bidens. Read more about JW’s investigations here.
House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer—who will lead the
impeachment inquiry along with Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan and
Ways & Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith—has been banging away since
January with an investigation of the Biden family’s foreign business
practices and international influence peddling schemes, most notably
the activities of Hunter Biden. Up to now, there’s little indication that
Comer has gained direct access to the financial records of Hunter and Joe
Biden. Opening an impeachment inquiry supercharges congressional powers and
opens the way to a deeper probe into Biden finances.
But even without direct access to Biden family finances, the Comer
Committee produced a
remarkable array of witnesses, testimony and documents. The outpouring of
facts, documents and witness testimony can be overwhelming to sort out, but
Comer went a long way to clarifying the complex story with the release of a
Biden family “Influence
Peddling Timeline.” It’s an important document, painting an
all-too-human picture of scoundrels, sleaze, and corruption.
According to the committee, Hunter Biden and a web of associated
business entities and family members raked in over $20 million from 2014 to
2017—not coincidentally the last years of the Obama administration, when
then-Vice President Joe Biden wielded considerable influence. The Hunter
Biden hustle has all the hallmarks of a classic Washington
influence-peddling operation: shady characters, murky deals, money moving
between shell companies.
The gravy train started rolling in the spring of 2014, with money first
flowing in from Kazakhstan, Russia, and Ukraine: $142,000 from a
well-connected Kazakh millionaire; $3.5 million from a Russian oligarch;
$6.5 million from Ukraine. In 2015, a Romanian tycoon began payments
eventually totaling $3 million. In 2017, $8 million materialized from
China.
The Kazakh Connection: A Sports Car for Hunter
The first sign that something was not kosher in
Biden World comes in April 2014, when a controversial Kazakh oligarch,
Kenes Rakishev, transfers $142,300 to a key Biden-connected financial
entity, Rosemont. The next day, Rosemont transfers exactly $142,300 to a
New Jersey auto dealership for Hunter Biden’s purchase of a Fisker
electric car, which he quickly trades up for a Porsche.
Rakishev was a close associate of Kazakhstan Prime Minister Karim
Massimov. Around the time of Hunter Biden’s sports car windfall, someone
had arranged for Rakishev and Massimov to be to be photographed at
Washington’s Café Milano with Hunter Biden and a very special guest:
then-Vice President Joe Biden.
Such a photograph is precious coin of the realm in corrupt
countries—an advertisement of power and connections. Corruption in
Kazakhstan is a serious
concern, according to international watchdogs. Of course this was a
fact well known to both Bidens, but it did not prevent them from joining
Rakishev and Massimov for dinner at the Café Milano—twice.
According to a Comer Committee interview of
Biden business partner Devon Archer, Hunter Biden and Joe Biden joined the
Kazakhs for dinner in April 2014 and again in April 2015. It’s unclear
if the
famous photograph is from the first or second dinner. In May of
2014, Hunter Biden traveled to Kazakhstan to try to drum up business
between the Ukrainian energy company Burisma, Kazakhstan’s KazMunay Gas
(where Rakishev served as a director), and a Chinese energy company.
Enter the Russian: A $3.5 Million Payday
The money trail in the Biden inquiry runs through a private investment
firm that began life as Rosemont Seneca Partners and morphed over time into
a web of limited liability companies. LLCs offer participants—legitimate
companies and crooks alike—maximum secrecy. Rosemont Seneca Partners was
founded in 2009 by Biden and two connections from Yale University: Devon
Archer and Chris Heinz. Heinz is the stepson of former Secretary of State
John Kerry and heir to the Heinz food company fortune. He departed the
partnership in 2014.
The Comer Committee offers in its “Second Bank Records Memorandum” a
mind-blowing list of twenty-one financial entities associated with the
Biden enterprise. Most of them are LLCs and many have the name
“Rosemont” or “Seneca” in them. We’ll refer to them simply as
“Rosemont entity,” but the diligent reader can find details of the
myriad Biden-connected LLCs in the three committee bank records memoranda
linked at the end of this report.
Another guest at the Café Milano dinner in Washington in April 2014,
according to the Comer Committee timeline: Russian oligarch Yelena
Baturina. Two months earlier, Baturina had wired $3.5 million to a Rosemont
entity. The Rosemont entity transferred $2.7 million to a bank account in a
second Rosemont LLC jointly owned by Biden and Archer. Separately, $750,000
was sent from a Rosemont entity directly to Archer.
The Ukraine Connection: A $10 Million Bribe?
2014 was a very good year for Hunter Biden’s finances. In May, Biden
and partner Devon Archer joined the board of Ukrainian oligarch Mykola
Zlochevsky’s embattled energy company, Burisma. Each would be paid $1
million per year.
The committee’s third bank memorandum notes that “then-Vice
President Joe Biden visited Ukraine” on an anti-corruption drive aimed at
Zlochevsky allies “soon after first payments” were sent to Archer and
Hunter Biden. The payments were wired to a Rosemont entity and then
“transmitted in incremental amounts to Hunter Biden’s different bank
accounts.”
By the end of the year, Hunter Biden had met with a high-level Obama
administration official about Burisma. Zlochevsky complained about
“government pressure” and urged Biden to contact his father, the vice
president. In the interview released by the committee, Archer notes that
Hunter Biden “called DC” after being pressured by Zlochevsky and his
associates.
Earlier this year, Senator Chuck Grassley released a
bombshell FBI informant report of a 2016 meeting with Zlochevsky.
In the report, Zlochevsky claimed he had been coerced into paying a $10
million bribe to Hunter and Joe Biden. It “cost 5 [million] to pay one
Biden, and 5 [million] to another Biden,” the FBI informant reported
Zlochevsky saying.
Zlochevsky told the informant the payments were well hidden. It “would
take them ten years to find the records,” he said.
In total, notes the committee, a total of $6.5 million went to “the
Biden family and their associates” from the Ukraine connection.
The Romanian Payout: The Robinson Walker Shell
By November 2015, Hunter Biden had struck up a lucrative relationship
with a controversial Romanian real-estate tycoon, Gabriel Popoviciu.
Meanwhile, over at the White House, Vice President Biden was taking point
on an anti-corruption campaign aimed at Romania. In September, Vice
President Biden had welcomed the Romanian president to the White House,
declaring his support for the country’s “anti-corruption
efforts.”
Popoviciu was fighting bribery and corruption charges connected to a
high-profile land deal near Bucharest. Hunter Biden joined the Popoviciu
defense team. From 2015 to 2017, according to the Comer timeline, Biden met
twice with the U.S ambassador to Romania and traveled at least once to the
country. Meanwhile, more than $3 million from Popoviciu flowed to Robinson
Walker LLC, an account controlled by a close Biden family associate, John
Robinson “Rob” Walker.
According to the committee’s second bank memoranda, the Robinson
Walker LLC is at the center of many payments to the Biden family and
associates. Robinson Walker “received $3 million from Romanian Gabriel
Popoviciu’s Cypriot company and then made payments to the Biden
family,” the memo notes. Among the recipients was Hallie Biden, the widow
of Hunter’s brother, Beau.
The committee noted that “while Vice President Biden advocated
publicly for anti-corruption policies in Romania, bank records show Biden
family members and business associates were simultaneously reaping in
significant amounts of money” from Popoviciu.
China: ‘10 held for the big guy?’
By January 2017, the Obama administration was coming to an end and
Hunter Biden and his associates were angling for their biggest score of
all: China.
The target, cultivated for years, was the giant conglomerate CEFC China
Energy. The Biden business plan was to sell U.S. energy products to CEFC
and expand into other deals. CEFC was interested in a relationship.
The total amount paid to “the Biden family and their associates” by
China, notes the Comer Committee, is “over $8 million.” Payments by
CEFC were sent to the Robinson Walker shell—the same LLC used for the
Romanian payouts—and distributed to various Biden family members and
associates.
In March 2017—two months after Joe Biden left the vice presidency—a
$3 million CEFC payment arrived at the Walker shell. Rob Walker distributed
“over $1 million of that money to Biden family members,” notes the
second bank memoranda, including payments to Hunter Biden; Hallie Biden;
Joe Biden’s brother, business consultant and dealmaker James Biden; and a
still-mysterious account simply labeled “Biden.”
Another beneficiary was Hunter Biden’s business partner James Gilliar.
The Walker shell wired him $1 million. The British energy consultant was a
key figure in putting the Biden network together with CEFC—including,
seemingly, Joe Biden.
In a May 2017 email to
Hunter Biden and associates about profit-sharing from the CEFC deal,
Gilliar asks, “10 held by H for the big guy?”
An IRS agent who worked on the Hunter Biden case was pressed about the
Gilliar email in July testimony before Congress. Joseph Ziegler told the
House Oversight Committee that “all I can do is speak to the evidence
there” and “that email, ‘ten held by H for the big guy’ and from
what I understand that to be is his dad, President Biden.”
In August 2017, in the biggest payday of all, CEFC wired $5 million to a
new LLC formed by Hunter Biden and Gongwen Dong—a top aide to CEFC
Chairman Ye Jianming. The new
company would pursue energy and infrastructure deals. Hunter would
receive a $500,000 retainer and a $100,000 monthly payment. James Biden
would be paid $65,000 per month.
Hunter Biden also received an additional $1 million retainer to
represent Patrick Ho, a high-ranking CEFC official in the United
States.
A month after the $5 million CEFC wire, Hunter Biden was busy in
Washington setting up a new office for himself and his CEFC partners.
“Please have keys made available for new office mates,” he emailed
building management. “Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Jim Biden, Gongwen Dong
(Chairman Ye CEFC emissary).” Hunter Biden added: “I would like the
office sign to reflect the following: Biden Foundation, Hudson West (CEFC
US).”
It looked like happy days were here again for the Bidens and their new
Chinese friends. But in fact, the end was near.
The Fall of the House of Hunter
In November 2017, Patrick Ho—the high-ranking CEFC agent—was
arrested in New York on suspicion of bribery and money laundering. Four
months after Ho’s arrest, CEFC Chairman Ye Jianming vanished. According
to news reports, he was suspected of widespread economic crimes at the helm
of CEFC and arrested on the orders of Communist Party boss Xi Jinping. Ye
has not been heard from since. CEFC collapsed into bankruptcy. Ho was
convicted of bribery and money laundering in 2019 in connection with
African oil deals and sentenced to three years in prison.
With Ho’s arrest, Biden business came to a screeching halt. Hunter
Biden, by his own account, spiraled deep into a crack cocaine addiction.
Many of his associates also did not fare well.
Former client Gabriel Popoviciu, the Romanian real-estate tycoon, fought
a six-year, ultimately successful battle to prevent his extradition from
London to Bucharest to face bribery and corruption charges. Ukrainian
oligarch Mykola Zlochevsky has been fending off corruption charges since
2012, accused of large-scale theft of government funds. He is believed to
be living in Monaco. Karim Massimov, the former Kazakhstan prime minister
who dined with Hunter and Joe Biden in 2014 and 2015, was sentenced to
eighteen years in prison for attempting a coup. Business partner Devon
Archer was found guilty of fraud in 2018 in a conspiracy to cheat a Native
American tribe in a bond scheme; he is appealing the conviction.
Doubtless there will be more to come about Hunter Biden as the
impeachment inquiry digs deeper into bank records and the money trail. You
lie down with dogs, you get up with fleas. But what about Joe Biden? Some
questions are obvious.
Who is connected to that mysterious account named “Biden?”
Is Joe Biden “the big guy” and was “10”—or anything—held for
him? Where is it?
Did a Ukrainian oligarch funnel $10 million in bribes to the Bidens?
Where are the records?
Other questions may lead the committee deep into a wilderness of
mirrors.
For example, is there a relationship between Vice President Biden’s
anti-corruption statements and payments to Hunter Biden-connected
accounts?
Are there other, unidentified accounts?
What is the financial relationship between James Biden to his brother
Joe?
Did foreign intelligence services—no doubt tipped off to Hunter
Biden’s activities—play any role in the Biden affair?
Interesting times ahead.
Criminal Actors May Continue to Exploit Our Porous Border, DHS
Says
The Biden administration’s border invasion is placing our country at
risk in several ways. The disturbing numbers continue to pile up:
terrorists, fentanyl, criminals. Our Corruption
Chroniclesblog has the
latest:
Created after 9/11 to prevent another terrorist attack, the Department
of Homeland Security (DHS) keeps slamming Americans with grim news
involving its struggles to fulfill its critical mission. Days after the
agency admitted it lost
track of more than 177,000 illegal immigrants
freed inside the United States, it released a Homeland
Threat Assessment that reveals a record number of people with
terrorist ties have tried to enter the country through the Mexican border,
migrant encounters along the northern border have also reached an all-time
high and that terrorists and criminal actors may continue to exploit the
“elevated flow” and “increasingly complex security environment to
enter the United States.” The situation will only get worse because the
agency responsible for safeguarding the country expects “continued high
numbers of migrant encounters over the next year,” according to the new
assessment which was created with “insights” from the intelligence
community.
DHS is a monstrous federal agency with 260,000 employees and a
whopping $58
billion annual budget that may seem to many like sufficient
resources to succeed in its key mission of countering terrorism and
securing the nation’s borders. The new report documents that the agency
has not only failed miserably to secure the famously porous southern
border, but its northern counterpart as well. Through June illegal
immigrant encounters along the northern border have reached record highs,
the new report states, with over 132,000 migrants compared to 68,000 during
the same amount of time last fiscal year. Among the most concerning
information provided in the document is the increase in foreigners with
terrorism connections trying to sneak into the country. As of July,
approximately 160 individuals that appear on the Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s (FBI) terrorist watchlist attempted to enter the U.S. via
Mexico compared to 100 in all fiscal year 2022.
Adding to the problem, a spike in illegal immigrants from the eastern
hemisphere—which includes countries with terrorist ties—has doubled
from more than 110,000 in fiscal year 2022 to over 228,200 through June of
this fiscal year which ends on September 30. “We expect the influx of
these migrants will continue as they face poor economic, political,
security, and climate conditions in their countries and use uneven visa
policies across the globe to reach the United States,” the Homeland
Threat Assessment says. Mexican drug cartels, known as Transnational
Criminal Organizations (TCO), are also exploiting the U.S. security
failures, referred to as a “complex environment” in the DHS report, to
smuggle huge amounts of deadly drugs across the border. “TCOs almost
certainly will continue to smuggle drugs into our country while also
exploiting migrants for financial gain,” the agency writes, adding that
“these criminal organizations likely will seek new technologies and
develop novel techniques to improve their ability to evade our border
security measures.”
DHS provides the country with a somber projection involving Mexican
cartels, writing that it expects illegal drugs produced in Mexico and sold
in the United States will continue to kill more Americans than any other
threat. “During the past year, US-based traffickers have become more
involved in the mixing and pressing of fentanyl, contributing to more
lethal mixes of this already deadly drug,” the report states. It also
reveals that fentanyl seizures along the southern border continue to
increase throughout 2023 with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) on track
to seize a record amount of the deadly drug before the end of the fiscal
year.
“Transnational criminal organizations (TCOs) in Mexico, particularly
the Sinaloa Cartel and the New Generation Jalisco Cartel, remain the
primary smugglers of fentanyl and other drugs into the United States,”
DHS assessment reveals. “These organizations continue to use bribery and
violence to grow their smuggling and narcotics production operations in
Mexico, and they rely on companies in China to purchase fentanyl precursor
chemicals and pill pressing equipment.”
DHS does not discuss its strategy to combat the unprecedented border
crisis, which it predicts will not improve anytime soon. “The complex
border and immigration security challenges we have faced over the least
year are likely to continue,” the agency writes in its latest
assessment.
Tom Fitton
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