NIH argues in court it cannot release information about COVID-19 origins because there's too much misinformation out there



A whistleblower support group that is suing the National Institutes of Health has filed a motion objecting to a federal judge's order in favor of the government agency, which asked for the name of a Chinese scientist to be sealed. But the name of this scientist was already made public by the NIH in 2020, and critics say the agency's request is part of a haphazard and aggressive attempt to redact documents and hide information related to the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Empower Oversight on Thursday filed a motion in federal district court objecting to an order issued by Magistrate Judge John Anderson granting the NIH's request to have South China Agricultural University scientist Kangpeng Xiao's name sealed, even though the agency previously disclosed Xiao's name in a public records requests made by U.S. Right to Know in 2020 and in a records requests made by Empower Oversight later.

The records concerned Xiao's June 2020 request to the NIH to have certain pangolin coronavirus sequences he submitted to the National Center for Biotechnology Information's sequence read archive deleted.

As TheBlaze previously reported, the NIH was found to have deleted certain sequences of coronavirus data from the agency's Sequence Read Archive at the requests of Chinese researchers early in the pandemic. Dr. Jesse Bloom, a virologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, published a study in June 2021 that identified the missing sequences and recovered the files from the Google Cloud, from which he performed an analysis to learn more about the origins of the virus.

Bloom's analysis cited an example of another Chinese scientist requesting the deletion of two "sequencing runs" of a pangolin coronavirus from the National Center for Biotechnology Information's sequence read archive. This scientist, Kangpeng Xiao, requested numerous changes to data he submitted to the SRA, a public records request from U.S. Right to Know revealed in December 2020. “These revisions are odd because they occurred after publication, and without any rationale, explanation or validation,” USRTK observed at the time.

Responding to media inquiries on Bloom's study, the NIH explained that scientists who make submissions to the database "hold the rights to their data and can request withdrawal of the data."

But lawmakers and watchdog organizations have sought more information from the NIH about these data deletions, which they believe may provide answers to the still unknown origins of COVID-19.

Empower Oversight filed a lawsuit against the NIH in November 2021 seeking to force the agency to comply with various detailed Freedom of Information requests made for documents related to the Chinese researchers' requests to remove genetic sequences of the SARS-CoV-2 virus from the sequence read archive. The group has since entered into a protracted legal battle with the NIH, which has fought tooth and nail to keep records redacted.

In a July 11 court filing, Empower Oversight accused the NIH of improperly redacting documents in response to its FOIA requests, independent journalist Paul Thacker reported. The group cited an email the NIH had turned over, dated October 12, 2021, in which Jesse Bloom wrote the NIH inquiring about a Chinese scientist's request to delete SRA virus sequences. The names of both the scientist and an NIH official were redacted, although it was clear based on previous records disclosures the scientist was Kangpeng Xiao.

The NIH claimed the names had been redacted for privacy concerns in a declaration to the court, according to Thacker's newsletter, the Disinformation Chronicle.

"Exemption 6 mandates the withholding of information that if disclosed 'would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.' 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6). Exemption 6 was applied here due to the heightened public scrutiny with anything remotely related to COVID-19," NIH FOIA officer Gorka Garcia-Malene wrote.

Garcia-Malene also claimed that the information needed to be redacted "because of the amount of misinformation surrounding the pandemic and its origins."

"If released, this type of information could be used by the public to send threatening and harassing messages," he wrote.

Thacker was highly critical of the NIH's reasoning.

"Seriously, the NIH is now arguing in court that because there is so much misinformation about how the pandemic began, they can’t release facts that might clear up misinformation about how the pandemic began," he wrote in a scathing report.

\u201cSeriously, NIH is arguing in court that because there is so much misinformation about how the pandemic began, they can\u2019t release facts that might clear up misinformation about how the pandemic began https://t.co/Nfk6bEedLA /6\u201d
— Paul D. Thacker (@Paul D. Thacker) 1658834309

What's more, Thacker reported, is that in a second production of records in response to Empower Oversight's FOIA request, the NIH provided the exact same email from Jesse Bloom but did not redact the names.

Empower Oversight made note of this in its court filing, arguing the NIH was abusing the fear of "threatening and harassing messages" to redact information that doesn't need to be sealed. "[The] NIH used this approach in instances where there was no legitimate threat of such harassment. NIH repeatedly redacted the official NIH email address of Dr. Francis Collins, even though he had retired months before [the] NIH’s May 13th production of responsive records," the group told the judge.

In response on July 15, the NIH asked the court to seal Xiao's name and the name of an NIH official he communicated with from filings in the case, even though those names had been disclosed years earlier. The NIH claimed that it had "inadvertently failed to redact the two names."

“[T]he individuals have a substantial privacy interest in avoiding harassment or media scrutiny that would likely follow disclosure,” an NIH attorney wrote to the judge. “Sealing is therefore necessary to protect this information from any further public dissemination.”

Empower Oversight objected to the motion to seal on July 22, arguing the redactions would be absurd since Xiao's name had already been made public.

"Even if this Court were to grant NIH’s motion to seal portions of Empower Oversight’s opposition to summary judgment, 'the proverbial cat is already out of the bag,'" Empower Oversight argued. "NIH has not asked the Court to 'claw back' the records purportedly lacking the agency’s intended redactions that it claims to have mistakenly failed to make. And even if the Court were to construe the agency's motion as requesting that relief, NIH has not carried its 'heavy burden to obtain such an order.'"

Nevertheless, the judge sided with the NIH on July 22, ruling that the "targeted and limited sealing" was "the least drastic alternative available," and that First Amendment concerns in favor of public access to records were outweighed by the NIH's privacy concerns, the Epoch Times reported.

Empower Oversight's response on July 28 argues that the judge "prematurely" granted NIH's request to seal Xiao's name without having received or considered the group's counterarguments.

"Empower Oversight opposes this request by NIH simply because NIH has not given a good enough reason to seal two names from the record, and this information has already been available to the public for years," the group said in a statement.

The lengths the NIH has gone to to obscure information from watchdog and oversight groups has frustrated Republican lawmakers. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) cited Thacker's reporting in a letter to the NIH demanding that the agency cease "improperly withholding information from the public related to COVID-19 for political reasons."

"NIH has repeatedly disregarded its responsibilities under FOIA and the American people's right to agency records. For almost two years, public interest groups and media organizations have been forced to engage in protracted litigation to obtain documents related to NIH's involvement in COVID-19. The records NIH has produced have been heavily redacted," Paul wrote.

He continued, "Of particular concern is NIH's recent admission in Court that the agency is withholding portions of emails between employees because they 'could be used out of context to serve and amplify the already prevalent misinformation regarding the origins of the coronavirus pandemic.' This suggests NIH is censoring the information it releases to the public about the origins of the pandemic.'"

Paul demanded that the NIH respond to several questions about how the agency processes FOIA requests no later than August 3.

NIH argues in court it cannot release information about COVID-19 origins because there's too much misinformation out there



A whistleblower support group that is suing the National Institutes of Health has filed a motion objecting to a federal judge's order in favor of the government agency, which asked for the name of a Chinese scientist to be sealed. But the name of this scientist was already made public by the NIH in 2020, and critics say the agency's request is part of a haphazard and aggressive attempt to redact documents and hide information related to the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Empower Oversight on Thursday filed a motion in federal district court objecting to an order issued by Magistrate Judge John Anderson granting the NIH's request to have South China Agricultural University scientist Kangpeng Xiao's name sealed, even though the agency previously disclosed Xiao's name in a public records requests made by U.S. Right to Know in 2020 and in a records requests made by Empower Oversight later.

The records concerned Xiao's June 2020 request to the NIH to have certain pangolin coronavirus sequences he submitted to the National Center for Biotechnology Information's sequence read archive deleted.

As TheBlaze previously reported, the NIH was found to have deleted certain sequences of coronavirus data from the agency's Sequence Read Archive at the requests of Chinese researchers early in the pandemic. Dr. Jesse Bloom, a virologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, published a study in June 2021 that identified the missing sequences and recovered the files from the Google Cloud, from which he performed an analysis to learn more about the origins of the virus.

Bloom's analysis cited an example of another Chinese scientist requesting the deletion of two "sequencing runs" of a pangolin coronavirus from the National Center for Biotechnology Information's sequence read archive. This scientist, Kangpeng Xiao, requested numerous changes to data he submitted to the SRA, a public records request from U.S. Right to Know revealed in December 2020. “These revisions are odd because they occurred after publication, and without any rationale, explanation or validation,” USRTK observed at the time.

Responding to media inquiries on Bloom's study, the NIH explained that scientists who make submissions to the database "hold the rights to their data and can request withdrawal of the data."

But lawmakers and watchdog organizations have sought more information from the NIH about these data deletions, which they believe may provide answers to the still unknown origins of COVID-19.

Empower Oversight filed a lawsuit against the NIH in November 2021 seeking to force the agency to comply with various detailed Freedom of Information requests made for documents related to the Chinese researchers' requests to remove genetic sequences of the SARS-CoV-2 virus from the sequence read archive. The group has since entered into a protracted legal battle with the NIH, which has fought tooth and nail to keep records redacted.

In a July 11 court filing, Empower Oversight accused the NIH of improperly redacting documents in response to its FOIA requests, independent journalist Paul Thacker reported. The group cited an email the NIH had turned over, dated October 12, 2021, in which Jesse Bloom wrote the NIH inquiring about a Chinese scientist's request to delete SRA virus sequences. The names of both the scientist and an NIH official were redacted, although it was clear based on previous records disclosures the scientist was Kangpeng Xiao.

The NIH claimed the names had been redacted for privacy concerns in a declaration to the court, according to Thacker's newsletter, the Disinformation Chronicle.

"Exemption 6 mandates the withholding of information that if disclosed 'would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.' 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6). Exemption 6 was applied here due to the heightened public scrutiny with anything remotely related to COVID-19," NIH FOIA officer Gorka Garcia-Malene wrote.

Garcia-Malene also claimed that the information needed to be redacted "because of the amount of misinformation surrounding the pandemic and its origins."

"If released, this type of information could be used by the public to send threatening and harassing messages," he wrote.

Thacker was highly critical of the NIH's reasoning.

"Seriously, the NIH is now arguing in court that because there is so much misinformation about how the pandemic began, they can’t release facts that might clear up misinformation about how the pandemic began," he wrote in a scathing report.

\u201cSeriously, NIH is arguing in court that because there is so much misinformation about how the pandemic began, they can\u2019t release facts that might clear up misinformation about how the pandemic began https://t.co/Nfk6bEedLA /6\u201d
— Paul D. Thacker (@Paul D. Thacker) 1658834309

What's more, Thacker reported, is that in a second production of records in response to Empower Oversight's FOIA request, the NIH provided the exact same email from Jesse Bloom but did not redact the names.

Empower Oversight made note of this in its court filing, arguing the NIH was abusing the fear of "threatening and harassing messages" to redact information that doesn't need to be sealed. "[The] NIH used this approach in instances where there was no legitimate threat of such harassment. NIH repeatedly redacted the official NIH email address of Dr. Francis Collins, even though he had retired months before [the] NIH’s May 13th production of responsive records," the group told the judge.

In response on July 15, the NIH asked the court to seal Xiao's name and the name of an NIH official he communicated with from filings in the case, even though those names had been disclosed years earlier. The NIH claimed that it had "inadvertently failed to redact the two names."

“[T]he individuals have a substantial privacy interest in avoiding harassment or media scrutiny that would likely follow disclosure,” an NIH attorney wrote to the judge. “Sealing is therefore necessary to protect this information from any further public dissemination.”

Empower Oversight objected to the motion to seal on July 22, arguing the redactions would be absurd since Xiao's name had already been made public.

"Even if this Court were to grant NIH’s motion to seal portions of Empower Oversight’s opposition to summary judgment, 'the proverbial cat is already out of the bag,'" Empower Oversight argued. "NIH has not asked the Court to 'claw back' the records purportedly lacking the agency’s intended redactions that it claims to have mistakenly failed to make. And even if the Court were to construe the agency's motion as requesting that relief, NIH has not carried its 'heavy burden to obtain such an order.'"

Nevertheless, the judge sided with the NIH on July 22, ruling that the "targeted and limited sealing" was "the least drastic alternative available," and that First Amendment concerns in favor of public access to records were outweighed by the NIH's privacy concerns, the Epoch Times reported.

Empower Oversight's response on July 28 argues that the judge "prematurely" granted NIH's request to seal Xiao's name without having received or considered the group's counterarguments.

"Empower Oversight opposes this request by NIH simply because NIH has not given a good enough reason to seal two names from the record, and this information has already been available to the public for years," the group said in a statement.

The lengths the NIH has gone to to obscure information from watchdog and oversight groups has frustrated Republican lawmakers. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) cited Thacker's reporting in a letter to the NIH demanding that the agency cease "improperly withholding information from the public related to COVID-19 for political reasons."

"NIH has repeatedly disregarded its responsibilities under FOIA and the American people's right to agency records. For almost two years, public interest groups and media organizations have been forced to engage in protracted litigation to obtain documents related to NIH's involvement in COVID-19. The records NIH has produced have been heavily redacted," Paul wrote.

He continued, "Of particular concern is NIH's recent admission in Court that the agency is withholding portions of emails between employees because they 'could be used out of context to serve and amplify the already prevalent misinformation regarding the origins of the coronavirus pandemic.' This suggests NIH is censoring the information it releases to the public about the origins of the pandemic.'"

Paul demanded that the NIH respond to several questions about how the agency processes FOIA requests no later than August 3.

Wuhan lab agreement with UTMB allows 'secret files' to be deleted at request



The Chinese lab at the center of the disputed lab-leak origins theory for COVID-19 had an agreement with a U.S. lab in Texas giving both parties the right to ask their partner to destroy all records of their work, according to a memorandum obtained by the non-profit watchdog group U.S. Right to Know.

The Wuhan Institute of Virology and the Galveston National Laboratory at the University of Texas Medical Branch signed a memorandum of understanding in 2017 that states either lab can ask the other to return or "destroy" any "secret files, materials and equipment."

Both of these labs study the world's most dangerous pathogens, and they have worked together since 2013, making their collaboration formal in 2018. Researchers at UTMB have received federal funding from the National Institutes of Health to conduct bio-safety training with their partners in Wuhan, who operate under the state-run Chinese Academy of Sciences. The objective of the partnership was to promote research cooperation between the U.S. and China to control infectious diseases and protect "laboratory safety and global health security," according to the memo.

The document states that either party "is entitled to ask the other to destroy and/or return the secret files, materials and equipment without any backups."

This confidentiality clause extends to any communications, documents, data, or equipment resulting from the two labs' collaboration and is retained after the agreement's five year term ends in October 2022.

“All cooperation … shall be treated as confidential information by the parties,” the memo states.

SCOOP from @emilyakopp : "The Wuhan Institute of Virology has the right to ask a partnering lab in the U.S. to destroy all records of their work, according to a legal document obtained by @USRightToKnow" full discussion w/ @briebriejoy & @KimIversenShow : https://youtu.be/A45vKmCzzaI\u00a0pic.twitter.com/1xQtH0ktnD
— Rising (@Rising) 1650468657

Experts that spoke to USRTK said the agreement contains broad language that should raise red flags, given that the Chinese government has obstructed international investigations into the COVID-19 pandemic's origins and the Wuhan lab has previously been accused of deleting viral sequences from a NIH database that could shed a light on where the virus came from.

“The clause is quite frankly explosive,” said Reuben Guttman, a partner at Guttman, Buschner & Brooks PLLC who specializes in whistleblower cases. “Anytime I see a public entity, I would be very concerned about destroying records.”

Guttman said that as a public university, the UTMB lab faces high standards for record-keeping under state and federal laws.

“You can’t just willy nilly say, ‘well, you know, the Chinese can tell us when to destroy a document.’ It doesn’t work like that,” he said. “There has to be a whole protocol.”

Legal experts interviewed by the Houston Chronicle agreed that records of the university's collaboration with the Wuhan lab would be subject to record-keeping laws and that the university should not be able to delete them because of a contractual agreement.

“You can’t contract away obligations under a statute,” Austin attorney Bill Aleshire, a specialist in public record laws, told the newspaper. "Those are public records and … Galveston can’t destroy records that are part of a publicly funded document. And Wuhan sure as hell can’t ask Galveston to destroy its records.”

In a statement, UTMB spokesman Chris Smith Gonzalez told the Chronicle that the university "has not been asked to destroy any documents nor would UTMB follow through with such a request.”

“As a government-funded entity, UTMB complies with all applicable public information law obligations, including the preservation of all documentation of its research and findings,“ he said.

The university added that it does not plan to renew the agreement with the Wuhan lab.

The language of the agreement with the Galveston lab raises questions about the Wuhan Institute of Virology's commitment to transparency and potential willingness to delete data on the orders of Chinese Communist Party authorities.

Chinese government officials removed genetic data from 22,000 virus samples from an internet database in September 2019 and has since refused to turn over data, frustrating scientists and U.S. intelligence officials investigating the origins of the pandemic. In June 2021, an American scientist named Dr. Jesse Bloom published research that showed early COVID-19 virus samples from the Wuhan seafood market — where the first major outbreak of the virus was reported — were not fully representative of the viruses actually present in Wuhan at the time. Scientists said that Bloom's work suggested COVID-19 had been spreading in Wuhan earlier than Chinese officials claimed and called for greater transparency from China.

Bloom also discovered that the Chinese scientists had asked an NIH database to remove viral sequences from its database and that the government complied with their request. NIH later confirmed this to the Telegraph.

Dr. Zhengli Shi, the lead researcher at the Wuhan lab, has previously denied accusations from Western bio-security experts that her lab deleted records relevant to the origins of COVID-19.

“Even if we gave them all the records, they would still say we have hidden something or we have destroyed the evidence,” she told MIT Technology Review in an interview, calling the accusations "baseless and appalling."

Scientists are divided on the origins of COVID-19, with most believing that the virus naturally evolved, although a lab-leak origin has not been ruled out. The Chinese government's lack of transparency is obstructing the truth.

China's 'bat woman' Shi Zhengli edited a paper denying evidence for the lab-leak theory without disclosing her contributions



A top Chinese researcher at the Wuhan Institute of Virology was consulted on and offered edits to an influential 2020 commentary that claimed there was "no credible evidence" supporting the lab-leak origin theory of COVID-19, a newly released document reveals.

The researcher, Shi Zhengli, is a prominent virologist at the Wuhan lab, which is facing international scrutiny over concerns that risky coronavirus research performed there may be linked to the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic. The commentary, published by Emerging Microbes & Infections in February 2020, was titled, "No credible evidence supporting claims of the laboratory engineering of SARS-CoV-2." The paper was written by Shan-Lu Liu, Linda J. Saif, Susan R. Weiss, and Lishan Su.

A document made public by U.S. Right to Know shows that Shi proposed three noteworthy edits to a draft of the commentary but was never credited by the authors, nor was the potential conflict of interest of having a Wuhan lab scientist contribute to a paper denying the Wuhan lab-leak theory disclosed.

U.S. Right to Know summarizes Shi's edits as follows:

Shi proposed three edits of note. First, she proposed changing the presentation of the number of nucleotides that differed between RaTG13, which was the closest relative of SARS-CoV-2 identified at that time, and SARS-CoV-2. The authors wrote this difference was "greater than 1000 nucleotides." Shi proposed deleting "1000" and replacing it with "1100" nucleotides. This edit appears to maximize the presentation of the difference between the two viruses.

Second, Shi proposed deleting a paragraph discussing the mouse-adapted SARS-CoV virus, MA15 (that had been used in Ralph Baric's lab in collaboration with Shi), and how its serial passage had increased viral replication and lung pathology in mice. This appears to be an effort at distancing from the gain-of-function debate surrounding the research done together by Shi, Baric and the EcoHealth Alliance.

Third, Shi edited a statement on bats as natural reservoirs, and civets as intermediate hosts, of SARS-CoV.

Shi's second edit, in which she appears to hide the connection of her work to gain-of-function research — experiments that intentionally make viruses more transmissible among mammals, and particularly among humans — is especially concerning given the controversy surrounding EcoHealth Alliance's funding for gain-of-function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology and the early observations of scientists who studied the SARS-CoV-2 virus and thought "some of the features (potentially) look engineered."

Among the scientists who raised this possibility were at least two of the authors of the EMI paper. Emails previously released by U.S. Right to Know show the authors privately expressed doubt to each other about its conclusions. Susan Weiss, for instance, wrote to Shan-Lu Liu in a Feb. 16 email expressing her "doubt" that the virus was engineered in a lab but nevertheless noted the SARS-CoV-2 virus has a distinctive furin cleavage site that is atypical of related bat coronaviruses.

It should be noted that Liu is the editor-in-chief of EMI and oversaw the publication of the paper. Five days later, Liu wrote back to Weiss, "Susan, I completely agree with you, but rumor says that furin site may be engineered. Importantly, the virus RNA sequence around the furin site (288 nt), before and after, has 6.6 % differences, but with no amino acid changes at all."

Weiss in turn responded, "Henry and I have been speculating- how can that site have appeared at S1/S2 border- I hate to think to [sic] was engineered- among the MHV strains, the cleavage site does not increaser pathogenicity while it does effect entry route (surface vs endosome) . so for me the only significance of this furin site is as a marker for where the virus came from- frightening to think it may have been engineered[.]"

These concerns were not discussed in the paper.

Importantly, Shi was not the only gain-of-function researcher who consulted on the draft. Dr. Ralph Baric, the leading coronavirus researcher in the United States, was asked to provide comments and revisions, which emails show he agreed to do on the condition that he would not be cited "as having commented prior to submission."

Baric and Shi had previously collaborated on a 2015 gain-of-function study that received federal funding from the National Institutes of Health and was somehow exempted from an Obama administration moratorium on funding for such research.

Neither Shi's nor Baric's contributions to the EMI paper draft were acknowledged once the commentary was published.