Doctor: U.S.
Army Rejected Successful Ebola Drug 2 Weeks Before
Outbreak
Exclusive: Former flight surgeon had been working with Ft. Detrick to
develop treatment
Image Credits:
CDC Global
by Paul Joseph Watson |
October 16, 2014
doctor claims that he developed a successful drug to combat Ebola with the
U.S. Army at Ft. Detrick Maryland but that the research was inexplicably shut
down two weeks before the first outbreak of the virus in West Africa.
Richard C. Davis, M.D., a former flight surgeon with the U.S. Navy, told
Infowars that he was leading a project to develop a drug called RC-2Beta, which
according to Davis works, “at the core of our cells to enhance mitochondrial
efficiency and promote gene signaling to stimulate cellular self-repair and
pathogen destruction.”
In the fall of 2013, Davis’ company began collaborating with the US Army at
their Level 4 bioweapons facility at Ft. Detrick, Maryland to develop the drug,
with astounding success.
According to Davis, the drug “Killed four of the world’s deadliest viruses
in a dose-dependent fashion. The Army also noted that uninfected cells in the
same cultures were untouched by the drug (i.e., it was non-toxic).”
“Everyone was very excited about these results since there has never been a
broad-spectrum anti-viral drug that killed so many different viruses without
affecting normal (uninfected) cells in this way,” writes Davis.
However, after the Army initially indicated to Davis and his team that they
were ready to move ahead quickly with further testing, communication completely
ceased.
Army research data shows effectiveness of RC-2Beta in fighting the
Ebola virus.
“Our once close communications and cordial relationship with the Ft. Detrick
team went totally and inexplicably silent. Our phone calls went unanswered and
emails unreturned,” writes Davis, adding he was “stunned” when the first
reports of Ebola emerged in Africa just two weeks later.
The doctor also desperately contacted mainstream media outlets in an effort
to get the story out, including CNN, ABC, MSNBC, CBS, the New York Times, the
Washington Post, the LA Times and others. After making initial contact and
agreeing to provide documents, Davis was subsequently stonewalled and every
outlet dropped the story.
Davis then turned to Florida Congressman David Jolly in an effort to reopen
lines of communication with Ft. Detrick, a process that is ongoing.
While health authorities and the media aggressively promoted ZMapp and other
less successful drugs and vaccines to fight Ebola, Davis set about anxiously
contacting the World Health Organization, which in June announced that
experimental treatments for Ebola would be fast tracked.
“Out of concern and frustration, I made it my personal priority to obtain
the two necessary documents (Humanitarian Use Exemption and Export Certificate)
needed to ship our drug to the medical teams working desperately in Africa,”
writes Davis. “So I began calling, and writing and faxing everyone who might be
able to help. Since May, I have reached out over 200 times to every head of
every organization in the world involved with this crisis. This includes the
World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control, the various teams
at the FDA, the National Institutes of Health, DARPA, multiple private relief
and aid organizations (like Doctors Without Borders), and dozens just like
them. The response was always the same… Silence…”
The doctor also slammed the Obama administration’s response to the Ebola
outbreak.
“The response of the American government has been patently absurd,” writes
Davis. “Every protocol that has been put in place to prevent the spread of the
disease has been ignored. Our borders remain open, infected patients are being
brought into our hospitals, and no truly effective countermeasures have been
erected to stem the tide of infectious risk.”
Davis’ conclusion on the government’s handling of the Ebola crisis and the
fact that a potentially successful cure for the virus was shut down by Ft.
Detrick immediately before the outbreak in West Africa left him to draw a
sobering conclusion.
“I am left to conclude that America’s leadership is either guilty of gross
misconduct, dereliction of duty, criminal negligence or worse – treason,”
writes Davis, warning that the “crisis will undoubtedly spiral out of control”
if the advice of incompetent public health authorities, the government and the
media continues to be followed unquestionably.
Davis boasts an impressive Curriculum Vitae, having authored over 400
patents and trademarks while also being awarded commendations from the Chief of
Naval Operations.
“The inescapable conclusions of negligence or corruption or both cannot be
simply swept aside for the sake of political correctness when the lives of
every one of us are at stake,” writes Davis, adding, “Ebola is real. It is
here, now. There is no more time to waste.”
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*********************
Paul Joseph Watson is the editor at large of
Infowars.com and
Prison Planet.com.