Pfizer Moves to Dismiss Lawsuit From COVID-19 Vaccine Trial

Pfizer has asked a U.S. court to throw out a lawsuit from a whistleblower who revealed problems at sites that tested Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine.

Brook Jackson, the whistleblower, alleged in a suit that was unsealed in February that Pfizer and associated parties violated clinical trial regulations and federal laws, including the False Claims Act.

In its motion to dismiss, Pfizer stated that the regulations don’t apply to its vaccine contract with the U.S. Department of Defense because the agreement was executed under the department’s Other Transaction Authority (OTA), which gives contract holders the ability to skirt many rules and laws that typically apply to contracts.

That means that Jackson’s claim that Pfizer must still comply with the Federal Acquisition Regulation “is simply wrong,” according to Pfizer.

Warner Mendenhall, a lawyer who is working on Jackson’s case, said in a recent interview that Pfizer has “clearly not followed federal procurement laws.”

“And now they’re saying, ‘Of course we didn’t follow federal procurement laws, we didn’t have to—this was just for a prototype,’” he said.

Mendenhall, who declined an interview request, said lawyers for Jackson are working on figuring out legal ways to counter Pfizer’s argument.

“We may lose on this issue because their contract imposes … none of the normal checks and balances on quality control and consumer protection that we fought for decades in this country,” he said.

The contract in question was outlined in a base agreement and a statement of work for the agreement, which was signed in the summer of 2020.

The government agreed to pay up to $1.9 billion for 100 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, pending U.S. regulatory clearance. That included the manufacturing of the vaccine on top of researching and developing it.

The contract was granted under the “prototype” provision, which falls under the OTA. The rules for prototypes state that just one of four conditions must be satisfied. The condition that was satisfied in the Pfizer contract was the involvement of a “nontraditional defense contractor.”

Federal law defines nontraditional defense contractors as “an entity that is not currently performing and has not performed” a contract or subcontract for the Department of Defense for at least one year preceding the solicitation of the OTA agreement. Pfizer has dozens of contracts with the military.

That means the government certified “an absurd fiction” to use an OTA to grant the contract, Kathryn Ardizzone, counsel with Knowledge Ecology International, told The Epoch Times in an email.

The Department of Defense and other government agencies have increased the use of the OTA over time. Thirty-four such agreements were hammered out in fiscal year 2016; by fiscal year 2018, that number was 173, according to the Government Accountability Office (pdf).

Because the agreements shield contract holders from some regulations and laws, “the increasing use of OTAs, which includes in contexts where it’s inappropriate to do so, is undermining the rule of law and jeopardizing the public’s interests,” according to Ardizzone. The Pfizer contract is an example of an inappropriate context because the contract “was not about producing a prototype,” she said.

As far as Pfizer’s argument about the FAR not applying to the agreement, it’s not clear if that’s the case.

The base agreement only mentions the regulations pertaining to the handling of classified information. The statement of work doesn’t mention any.

“I’m not sure what it means when an OTA is silent on a regulation that appears in the FAR,” Ardizzone said. “That would be up for the judge to decide, and it might side with Pfizer since the prevailing view is that FAR regulations do not necessarily apply for an OTA.”

Pfizer, in its motion to dismiss, noted that the government didn’t join Jackson’s suit—it was filed on the government’s behalf—nor have regulators rescinded clearance of its vaccine, which was authorized by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in late 2020, after Jackson revealed issues at sites managed by Ventavia Research Group, a Pfizer subcontractor.

“The agreement makes no mention of the FDA regulations and FAR provisions cited in relator’s complaint,” the motion reads. “The agreement instead conditions payment, more simply, on Pfizer’s delivery of an FDA authorized or approved product. Pfizer’s vaccine has satisfied that condition since December 2020, as the complaint acknowledges, and the vaccine continues to satisfy that condition today. The Court should reject Relator’s express certification claim for this reason alone.”

See more here: theepochtimes.com

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    hooligan

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    500 million people have “recovered” from being diagnosed as a covid19 “case”. this follows hot on the heels (six weeks) of 500 million people being diagnosed as a “case” (april 11th, 2022).

    how successful were the injections – incorrectly and misleadingly referred to as vaccines, rather than gene modification toxins?

    number of cases and deaths before the administration of the first injection on 10 december 2020

    https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/worldwide-graphs/#total-cases

    cumulative to 10 december 2020 – 71 million cases and 1.7 million deaths

    cumulative to 25 may 2022 529 million cases and 6.3 million deaths

    change since injection roll-out = +458 million cases and +4.6 million deaths.

    in other words, the administration of 11.8 billion doses has increased the number of cases by more than 7 times the number prior to the roll-out of injections and the number of deaths by 4 times the number prior to the roll-out of injections.

    11.8 billion doses costs taxpayers around 25 bucks in direct costs and another 75 bucks in processing and monitoring costs = around 1.2 trillion bucks.

    now, where are the einsteins in the health authorities like the WHO and in government or law enforcement that will spot this “anomaly” and arrange for the public flaying of those involved in perpetrating this killing spree by the criminal racket of FDA/CDC/NIH/NAIAD/WHO/PfizerBioNTech/Moderna/AstraZeneca/Janssen/Johnson&Johnson?

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