Dr. Anthony Fauci’s top adviser, David Molens, once bragged about “how to delete an email,” emails obtained under a congressional subpoena reveal.
Morens, who works at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and has worked as an advisor to Fauci for more than 20 years, once boasted in an email to EcoHealth about how he “deletes” emails. It was revealed. Peter Daszak of Alliance (EHA). EcoHealth Alliance is important because it received grants before the pandemic and later funded coronavirus research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV).
“I learned from FOIA. [Freedom of Information Act] Ladies here, after I receive a FOIA, please tell me how to hide emails before the search begins.” Said Daszak offers tips on how to hide email and concludes that email is “all safe.”
“Furthermore, I deleted most of my previous emails after sending them to Gmail,” he said, adding, “We are all smart enough to know that we will never have conclusive evidence.” .
“Even if we do, we won’t put them in our emails. And if we find them, we’ll delete them,” he added.
The revelations raise further concerns for lawmakers on the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, who have further evidence that these officials were successfully hiding to avoid accountability. I am concerned that this is an alarming lack of transparency.
Moreover, this is consistent with the revelations released by the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic in 2023. In the disclosure, Morens admitted that he used a personal email rather than a government email. [National Institutes of Health] Emails are always FOIA’d. ”
“‘Send it to any of my addresses and I’ll delete anything you don’t want published in the New York Times,'” Morens reportedly wrote.
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This revelation came shortly after the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Paused Funding the EcoHealth Alliance. In a memo explaining the decision, HHS said EcoHealth “did not adequately monitor WIV’s compliance with the terms of the grant award and, by extension, WIV’s own compliance.”
“Thus, given the issues surrounding the administration of EHA’s grants and subawards, we have determined that an immediate suspension of EHA is necessary to protect the public interest.” add.
In a separate letter, HHS Suspension and Debarment Officer Henrietta Brisbon said, “HHS believes that there is sufficient evidence in the record as to the reasons for this disbarment and that immediate action is necessary to protect the public interest.” I think there is,” he said.
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