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  • 2021-02-09 (xsd:date)
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  • Facebook posts falsely report 'arrest' of discredited US researcher who featured in 'Plandemic' video (en)
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  • Multiple Facebook posts shared in February 2021 claim police have detained discredited US researcher Judy Mikovits for discovering evidence that deadly retroviruses are transmitted through vaccines. This is false: Mikovits has not been arrested in 2021. She was arrested and briefly jailed in 2011 for unlawfully taking data from her former employer, court documents show. The charges against her were dropped in 2012, according to US media reports. A 2009 study she co-authored on retroviruses did not focus on vaccines and was retracted. There are no credible reports that Mikovits has been detained in 2021. The claims were shared in this Facebook post on February 1, 2021. It features a photo of Mikovits, who has previously falsely claimed that flu vaccines contain coronaviruses and that Covid-19 jabs could kill 50 million Americans. She appeared in the viral 2020 documentary Plandemic, which was widely discredited for making false claims about Covid-19. A screenshot of the misleading post, taken on February 3, 2021 Thanks to Anthony Fauci, she was arrested without charges and placed on a 5 year gag order, destroying her reputation, career, and personal life, the post reads. Molecular biologist Dr. Judy A. Mikovits was thrown in jail after discovering evidence that deadly retroviruses are transmitted through vaccines given to humans. Identical posts have been shared on Facebook around the world during the pandemic, including Canada , the US and the Philippines . The claim is false. There are no credible reports that Mikovits has been detained in 2021. In 2011, she was arrested and briefly jailed in California. According to documents from a California district court, however, she was arrested on charges of theft from the laboratory that performed the ill-fated study, not for research on retroviruses. Plaintiff Judy Anne Mikovits... (was terminated) as a researcher with the Whittemore-Peterson Institute (WPI), located in Reno, Nevada, and (subsequently arrested on allegations) that she stole propriety information from the research facility. On November 18, 2011, plaintiff was arrested Ventura County , this court filing reads. She was earlier charged in Reno with possession of stolen property and unlawful taking of computer data, equipment, supplies, or other computer related property. The same details surrounding her arrest were reported by the New York Times , Science magazine, ABC News , and the Chicago Tribune . The charges against her were eventually dropped, the New York Times reported on June 14, 2012. Discredited research The claim that Mikovits was jailed for her allegedly discovering evidence that deadly retroviruses are transmitted through vaccines is also misleading. Keyword searches on Google Scholar did not yield any reliable academic publication indicating she made such a discovery. Mikovits’s discredited study on retroviruses found that the retrovirus XMRV was frequently present in the blood of chronic fatigue sufferers, without establishing a causal link. The findings of the research were published in the academic journal Science in 2009 and aroused great interest at the time as it provided a possible explanation for the origins of chronic fatigue syndrome, a debilitating disease that had long baffled scientists. The study did not find that deadly retroviruses are transmitted through vaccines. The paper was retracted in 2011. Academic journal Science cited sample contamination and failure by multiple laboratories to replicate its findings. Multiple laboratories, including those of the original authors, have failed to reliably detect (the retrovirus) or other... related viruses in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) patients, the retraction read. In addition, there is evidence of poor quality control in a number of specific experiments in the report. (en)
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