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Strategies & Market Trends : BIOP <--------------- MEDICAL SCAM or CURE ?? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Judgement Proof.com who wrote (33)2/17/2001 11:54:23 AM
From: Judgement Proof.com  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 66
 
BioPulse to sell its cancer lab in Tijuana
signonsandiego.com

By Penni Crabtree and Sandra Dibble
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITERS

February 17, 2001

BioPulse International yesterday announced that it will sell its controversial
Tijuana cancer clinic -- a move that comes one day after Mexican authorities
ordered the company to stop treating patients with experimental therapies.

In a brief news release, which did not mention the ban on its treatments or the
closure of part of its clinic by health authorities, the San Diego company said it
has entered into a "letter of intent" to sell its clinic assets.

BioPulse also announced it will change its name to California BioScience.

Although BioPulse did not
publicly acknowledge its
problems with the Baja California
Health Department, word of the
setback spread quickly yesterday
through media accounts and Internet message boards.

The company's stock, which trades over the counter, plummeted 44 percent
to close at $2.94.

BioPulse's planned exodus from the clinic -- the company cautioned that there
is no guarantee it can conclude the sale -- raises questions about BioPulse's
financial viability.

The clinic, which offered such unorthodox treatments as insulin-induced
comas and unproven cancer "vaccines," accounts for about 90 percent of
BioPulse's revenues and profit, according to a filing with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. The company reported $3.1 million in revenues in
fiscal year 2000.

BioPulse said it will focus on developing a diagnostic blood test and a cancer
vaccine. The company raised $3 million from a private investor earlier this
month.

Baja California health authorities say they believe there are 20 to 30 clinics in
Tijuana that practice alternative medicine and treat patients from north of the
border almost exclusively. They say they plan to inspect all the clinics they
learn about and verify whether they are operating legally.

Yesterday afternoon, they moved against a second Tijuana clinic, Century
Nutrition, which for the past three years has been operating from the bottom
floor of a pink stucco house near the San Ysidro border crossing.

While BioPulse had permission to operate as a short-term clinic and offer
traditional medical care, it appears that Century Nutrition has been operating
without any license, inspectors said.

The occupants of the unmarked clinic initially refused to allow the inspectors
into the facility. Tim Bolen, a spokesman for the clinic, said clinic staff were
too frightened to open the door because they did not realize who the
authorities were.

The staff opened the door after a dozen soldiers joined a team of federal,
state and municipal police outside the clinic.

"We closed them down because they are not registered," said Dr. Alfonso
Gruel Culebro, who oversees hospitals and clinics for the Baja California
Health Department. "The kinds of treatments that our personnel saw are not
treatments that at first sight appear to be authorized.

"We are going to keep studying the case and analyze their documents and
come up with a final decision in a few days," he said.

Bolen said it is operated by Dr. Hulda Clark, and that she acts as the facility's
primary researcher.

"Dr. Clark and the clinic have made every effort to comply with Mexican
laws," Bolen said. Bolen said he is uncertain whether the clinic has the
necessary permits.

Gruel said Clark is allowed to come into Mexico as a nutritional adviser,
according to her immigration papers.

Clark, who is well known in alternative medicine circles, maintains that toxins
and parasites weaken the body's resistance to disease and must be eliminated.
She developed the "Zapper," a low-voltage device that supposedly kills
parasites, bacteria and viruses with electrical energy.

Clark emerged from the clinic as inspectors moved to seal its exits. She was
smiling, but evasive and brief in her answers.

Asked whether she was registered with Mexican health authorities, she said,
"Of course ... I'm perfectly legal."

Asked what is done inside the clinic, she answered: "Ask me something more
important ... like how effective this is." Then, answering her own question, she
said, "95 percent."

Elizabeth Sorrell identified herself as the clinic's manager and praised the
clinic's therapy.

"It's far better than anything mainstream," said Sorrell, a 70-year-old San
Diego resident.

Sorrell said that her health and her husband's health had improved
dramatically under Clark's care.

In September 1999, Clark was arrested in San Diego on a fugitive warrant
from Indiana, where she faced charges of practicing medicine without a
license
. Last spring, a judge dismissed the case on grounds that too much time
had elapsed between the filing of the charges and Clark's arrest.



To: Judgement Proof.com who wrote (33)2/17/2001 11:02:50 PM
From: Anthony@Pacific  Respond to of 66
 
Hey JP.com, its nice to make your aquaintance..

nice post ..

:-)