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Strategies & Market Trends : BIOP <--------------- MEDICAL SCAM or CURE ??

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To: Anthony@Pacific who started this subject8/10/2001 10:39:51 AM
From: Judgement Proof.com  Read Replies (1) of 66
 
BIOPULSE PAYS $220,000 FINE TO MEXICAN GOVERNMENT

Alternative Tijuana clinic shut down by Baja officials |
Chicken livers reportedly used in cancer treatments

The San Diego Union - Tribune; San Diego, Calif.; Jul 27, 2001; Enrique
Garcia Sanchez and Penni Crabtree;

TIJUANA -- A clinic that used chicken liver extracts, tissue from guinea pigs
and human tissue to treat cancer patients, most of them Americans, was shut
down by the Baja California health department yesterday.

The investigation began after an unidentified patient complained about the San
Martin Clinic, which is in the city's La Mesa district, about 15 minutes from the
San Ysidro border crossing.

Health officials Dr. Alfredo Gruel Culebro and Dr. Agustin Escobar Fematt,
said that when their investigators went to the clinic they found that chicken
livers and tissue from guinea pigs had been mixed with the human tissue of
cancer patients. Derivatives of this combination were then injected into the
patients.

The doctor in charge of the clinic, Geronimo Rubio, could not provide
research protocols for the treatments, as required by Mexico's federal health
department, the officials said. The clinic has operated since 1996 under a
hospital license.

"We don't have proof that these therapies are scientifically based, nor are they
authorized by the Mexican government," Gruel said.

The San Martin Clinic appears to be the same clinic that is advertised on the
Internet and in various U.S. publications as the American Metabolic Institute.

American Metabolic, operated by Rubio and American William Fry, has its
administrative headquarters in Bonita. A staff worker there, who declined to
be identified, confirmed the two clinics are the same. Gruel said investigators
found an American Metabolic promotional video with images filmed at the San
Martin Clinic.

Another staff worker at American Metabolic, who also declined to be
identified, described the action by Baja authorities as a "routine health
inspection."

She said Rubio and Fry, American Metabolic's director, were unavailable for
comment.

Rubio and American Metabolic are well-known on the Tijuana alternative
health care scene, where numerous clinics, often controlled by U.S. operators,
offer unproven and disproven treatments.

On its Web site, American Metabolic claims to have a 65 percent to 75
percent success rate in "reversing" late-stage cancers with a regimen that
includes rectal infusions of an oxygen derivative, enemas that include snake
and chicken cartilage, and a device that emits electronic pulses that
"deactivate" cancer cells.

Patients, mostly from the United States and Western Europe, pay thousands
of dollars for the therapies.

The Baja California inspectors said they found a warehouse that operated like
a pharmacy in front of the clinic. There, they found three units of blood that
had apparently come from the United States. Rubio could not provide proof
that the blood was legally imported, the officials said.

According to Gruel, if the blood was brought illegally into Mexico, the clinic
also committed the federal offense of trafficking in organs and tissues.

Yesterday afternoon, people could be seen inside the clinic, which operates
out of an ordinary looking house that bears a small sign saying "San Martin
Hospital." The health officials said the facility would be closed by the end of
the day.

No one from the clinic staff would comment.

Since January, the state health department has closed 20 clinics that offer
alternative treatments for cancer to clients from the United States, England,
Germany and Russia.

"We welcome them to Mexico, but we want them to receive a normal,
regulated, accepted treatment," Gruel said.

Two alternative clinics that were shut down in February -- Biopulse and
Century Nutrition -- are owned by Americans. Both were allowed to reopen
this month but have been forbidden to practice alternative medicine.

Biopulse paid a $220,000 fine, Gruel said. Century Nutrition is contesting its
$166,000 fine. In both cases, Gruel said, "we'll be closely watching their
work."
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