‘Respond to our requests now or face a subpoena,’ the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic said.
The House committee that is investigating circumstances around the COVID-19 outbreak has threatened to issue a subpoena for more answers from the scientist who worked closely with the Chinese lab in the city where the first infections occurred.
He maintains he’s innocent and has denied that EcoHealth ever funded or conducted gain-of-function research, which involves altering the properties of a pathogen, such as its virulence, in order to study its potential impact on human health.
“I want to remind everyone that we have not yet had been given a chance to respond to allegations. We will contest every one of them, with substantial evidence, both to the HHS & publicly,” he wrote.
This prompted a response from the House committee—along with the subpoena threat.
“Dr. Daszak—we have been asking for your purported ’substantial evidence’ for more than a year,” the committee wrote. “Yet, @COVIDSelect has not received anything that proves your innocence and @NIH has moved to debar you.”
Further, the House committee wrote that EcoHealth under his direction “facilitated dangerous gain-of-function research in China and repeatedly violated the terms of its NIH grant,” referring to the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
“Respond to our requests now or face a subpoena,” the panel added.
Mr. Daszak was not immediately reachable for comment.
Proponents of gain-of-function research argue it can help scientists better learn how the virus behaves and spreads, and so come up with counter-measures more effectively. Opponents say the potential benefits are outweighed by the risks such research poses as it makes viruses more lethal.
More Details
EcoHealth Alliance and Mr. Daszak have been accused of supporting and funding research in China that collects bat viruses from the wild and conducts research on them at the Wuhan lab.
After new rules were introduced in 2016, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of NIH, said the Wuhan project could continue but that EcoHealth must immediately notify U.S. officials if any of the experiments increased virus growth by greater than one log.
Testing in the last year of the grant made mice infected with a modified bat coronavirus sicker than mice infected with the original virus, but EcoHealth did not tell the institute of the revelation until 2021.
EcoHealth claimed that it tried submitting the annual report containing details of the experiments in 2019 but was locked out of the government system. A forensic analysis undertaken by the government showed no evidence supporting that claim.
EcoHealth was also unable to provide laboratory notebooks and other documents that would shed more light on the experiments, with Mr. Daszak blaming Wuhan scientists.
Mr. Daszak defended his actions during a congressional hearing on May 1.
“In all of our federally funded projects, we have maintained an open, transparent communication with agency staff … [and] rapidly provided information critical to public health and agriculture,” he said.
An EcoHealth spokesperson told The Epoch Times in an earlier email that the proposed debarment is “based on false assumptions, misrepresentations, misunderstandings of the science involved, and selective use of the evidentiary record.”
Mr. Daszak has 30 days to present information challenging the findings to the HHS that led to his suspension and disbarment proposal.
EcoHealth has said evidence would be provided proving that debarment is not warranted.
Gain-Of-Function and COVID-19
The question of whether U.S. tax dollars were used to fund gain-of-function research in China on coronaviruses has been in the spotlight for some time and remains steeped in controversy, in part because the definition of what exactly constitutes such research is a matter of some debate.
Dr. Robert Redfield, former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has insisted that taxpayers ended up unknowingly funding risky gain-of-function research at the Wuhan lab.
“I think there’s no doubt that NIH was funding gain-of-function research,” Dr. Redfield told Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.), who then asked the former CDC official, “Is it likely that American tax dollars funded the gain-of-function research that created this virus?” referring to the hypothesis that the pathogen behind COVID-19 leaked from a lab in Wuhan.
He replied in the affirmative, adding that he believes funding came from the NIH and other federal agencies.
This has been disputed by Dr. Anthony Fauci, former NIAID director, as well as by former NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins, Mr. Daszak, and others.
“The NIH has not ever and does not now fund gain-of-function research in the Wuhan Institute of Virology,” Dr. Fauci said at a Senate hearing on May 11, 2021.
In his testimony on Capitol Hill, Dr. Redfield said that the COVID-19 pandemic presented a “case study” on the potential dangers of gain-of-function research and called for such work to be halted.
Zachary Stieber contributed to this report.