FC: Feds raid unapproved cloning lab in attempt to stifle research

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Sun Jul 01 2001 - 13:01:28 PDT

  • Next message: Declan McCullagh: "FC: More on Feds, Raelian cloning lab, and trying to stifle research"

    Also see this editorial:
    
    http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1963-2001Jun29.html
    THOUGH STILL publicly wavering on whether to support funding for stem cell 
    research, the Bush administration has begun wading into the tangle of 
    issues that accompany the new reproductive technologies. A health official 
    testifying before Congress last month signaled the administration's support 
    for a bill to ban all human cloning. [...]
    
    ---
    
    Date: Sun, 1 Jul 2001 10:00:55 -0700
    To: cypherpunksat_private
    From: Tim May <tcmayat_private>
    Subject: Banned Research and Raids on "Secret Labs"
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed"
    
    Here's an item about the Feds banning certain types of biological research. 
    More evidence that government is flexing its muscles to interfere in 
    research it has decided is not acceptable...or that it is not controlling 
    for its own purposes. I wonder what Thomas Jefferson, a noted amateur 
    scientist, would have thought of the federal government raiding labs and 
    subpoening records when it decided it wanted to? His cryptography research, 
    for example? So much for the real spirit of the First and Fourth, amongst 
    others.
    
    (Note: I realize, for you lawyers, that the Fourth was technically met, in 
    that a valid court order was issued for the subpoenas and raids. It still 
    sucks, though, to use a nonlegal term. Warrants and orders are issued 
    freely. Fishing expeditions is what they really are. There's not a single 
    one of us who could not have our possessions and papers sifted through if 
    one of tens of thousands of prosecutors and investigators decided they 
    wanted to. So much for "secure in one's papers and possessions" and "a 
    man's home is his castle.")
    
    I'll include a few paragraphs, marked with <<   >> enclosers.
    
    http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/010709/usnews/clone.htm
    
    <<U.S.News 7/9/01
    
    The God game no more
    The feds crack down on a human cloning lab
    
    By Nell Boyce and David E. Kaplan
    
    
    For Brigitte Boisselier, cloning a human being isn't just good science 
    -it's a religious imperative. As a trained chemist and a bishop of a sect 
    that believes scientists from another planet created all life on Earth, 
    Boisselier and other followers of the "Raelian" religion say cloning is key 
    to humanity's future. Despite warnings from scientists who say such 
    practices are fraught with potential health risks, some Raelians have built 
    a secret U.S. laboratory and vowed to create the first human clone this 
    year. They also believe the feds have no legal right to stop them.
    
      Washington, unsurprisingly, disagrees. U.S. News has learned that a 
    federal grand jury in Syracuse, N.Y., near Boisselier's home, has 
    subpoenaed telephone records and other documents in what appears to be an 
    unprecedented probe into the sect's activities. Food and Drug 
    Administration agents visited the lab recently and ordered any human 
    cloning experiments to cease. Says one official: "There's a timeout in 
    force." >>
    
    Comment: So, someone who _says_ they are interesting in human cloning can 
    face a subpoenaing of records and documents. Interesting. So much for free 
    scientific inquiry.
    
    And what's the significance of the "secret lab" language? Was it just the 
    "U.S. News" reporter's take on the situation, or does having a "secret lab" 
    enter into the gubment's case?
    
    How long before we see _crypto_ treated the same way? For example:
    
    "For Joe Cypherpunk, developing digital money isn't just good science, it's 
    an imperative. Not surprising, Washington disagrees. A federal grand jury 
    in Sunnyvale, CA has subpoenaed telephone records and other documents. FCC, 
    SEC, and FBI agents visited the secret lab recently and ordered any digital 
    money experiments to cease. Says one official: "There's a timeout in force.""
    
    (Oh, so now we have "timeouts" for banned research? So much for another of 
    the rights enumerated in the BOR, the right to a trial. Yeah, I know about 
    temporary injunctions and restraining orders, given exigent circumstances, 
    blah blah. This sounds more like the harassment and road block issue, 
    though. A "crackdown," as the reporter notes below.)
    
    
    << The crackdown marks the first time that investigators have uncovered a 
    secret lab tied to human cloning in the United States, government sources 
    say. >>
    
    Oooh, scary! A "secret lab"! What, all labs are supposed to be public, 
    registering with the government? (There is no evidence the lab is using 
    more dangerous chemicals than are normally found in any hardware store, for 
    example, so "public safety" cannot be a justification.)
    
    The article goes on to talk about Clonaid and how they are not violating 
    any laws, but how they plan to leave the U.S. to avoid this kind of "raid" 
    harassment.
    
    << The federal investigation was prompted by statements Boisselier made 
    this spring, when she said Clonaid was just weeks away from being ready to 
    clone a human being. On March 27, Boisselier received a letter from the 
    FDA, warning that the company might be in violation of FDA regulations. A 
    similar letter was hand-delivered to the office of Panayiotis Zavos, a 
    fertility expert from Lexington, Ky., who also says he plans to clone a 
    human.>>
    
    Yeah, and if I "claim" that I am "just weeks away" from being ready to 
    release a digital money system, can I expect a raid?  Is there no 
    consideration of common sense, or are prosecutors just flunkouts in science 
    who can't separate speech acts from actual violations of the law?
    
    I can see there may be public safety issues in cases where, for example, a 
    credible group--leave the definition of credible aside for now--makes a 
    claim that they are weeks away from completing their own privately-funded 
    atomic bomb, for example. Or weeks away from completing a batch of nerve gas.
    
    Some variants of libertarians and anarchists would disagree even with this, 
    but at least the point is arguable. The issue of whether human cloning 
    research is so intrinsically sensitive or dangerous that it requires 
    preemptive raids and fishing expeditions is a topic worth discussing. For 
    now, I'm pointing out some of the disturbing constitutional issues.
    
    << UFOs. But it was the Raelians who really got the FDA's attention. For 
    months, Boisselier has told reporters that she has three scientists and a 
    physician trying to resurrect an 11-month-old infant-the deceased son of a 
    former state legislator, whom the Raelians refuse to identify-through 
    genetic regeneration. >>
    
    Again, science flunkouts are running the investigations.
    
    
    << Clearly, the agency is trying to flex its regulatory muscle and show 
    Congress that it hasn't been asleep at the switch. FDA investigators have 
    been knocking on the doors of people like Richard Seed, a Chicago physicist 
    who made headlines three years ago when he announced his intention to clone 
    a human. "I think their purpose was to frighten me, and they did," says 
    Seed. >>
    
    Yep. So much for the rule of law, and of valid laws.
    
    Consistent with crypto actions, as when NSA agents told Jim Bidzos that if 
    he didn't play ball and adopt Big Brother's plans, they could just have him 
    run over in his parking lot.
    
    (Threats like this, which are credible and violent threats, are not 
    prosecuted. Meanwhile, Keith Henson faces a year in prison for a joking 
    remark about a "Tom Cruise Missile" aimed at a Scientology compound. Some 
    country we live in, eh?)
    
    
    << ... Alex Capron, professor of law and medicine at the University of 
    Southern California told Congress last month. Capron points out that the 
    FDA is charged with regulating safety concerns only. >>
    
    Indeed, and banning research or raiding "secret labs"--especially those 
    with access to classified UFO data from the Greys living in Area 51!--is 
    NOT a function of a regulatory agency devoted to the efficacy and safety of 
    drugs and foodstuffs.
    
    << Even if a law were passed in the United States, it could prove difficult 
    to enforce because cloning operations are easy to hide. Zavos, for example, 
    says he knows of at least two other groups quietly trying to clone a human. 
    Would-be cloners need only basic lab equipment. "It's not like it's a 
    magical, secret thing," says Mark Westhusin of Texas A&M University, who 
    works on cloning animals. A ban may also simply encourage scientists to 
    pursue their work abroad, as Boisselier plans to. Zavos says his team has 
    already set up two clandestine labs overseas. >>
    
    Yep. All predictable trends. Blacknet has had an active human cloning 
    special interest section for several years.
    
    
    --Tim May
    
    
    
    
    -- 
    Timothy C. May         tcmayat_private        Corralitos, California
    Political: Co-founder Cypherpunks/crypto anarchy/Cyphernomicon
    Technical: physics/soft errors/Smalltalk/Squeak/agents/games/Go
    Personal: b.1951/UCSB/Intel '74-'86/retired/investor/motorcycles/guns
    
    
    
    
    
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