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Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? How About Forty Cents?

November 18th, 2009 | Posted by Mike Kearney
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When looking at The Freedom of Information Act [5 USCS § 552], notice what it states in Section 3:

B) Each agency shall make reasonable efforts to maintain its records in forms or formats that are reproducible for purposes of this section.

C) In responding under this paragraph to a request for records, an agency shall make reasonable efforts to search for the records in electronic  form or format, except when such efforts would significantly interfere with the operation of the agency’s automated information system.

(D) For purposes of this paragraph, the term “search” means to review, manually or by automated means, agency records for the purpose of locating those records which are responsive to a request.

The FDA responded to this by saying such a search for documents sent to and from Richard Pazdur would be complex. Then the FDA mistakenly told the court that such a request would be too costly, not realizing the requester pays for it.  After the search was completed, Richard Pazdur simply declared that he deleted and shredded the documents two years ago and CareToLive had to pay 40 cents for this complex search! 40 cents!

 

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You can’t even purchase one of these for 40 cents!

 

Sadly, the Court in the Southern District of Ohio ruled in favor of FDA.

 

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CareToLive’s fine attorney, Kerry M. Donahue, filed an appeal this past August and last night he filed our Appellate brief (Appellant’s brief) which is our written argument for the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals which they will review and then probably set up for oral argument.

The FDA (Appellee) has 15 days to file their response, but we would not be surprised if they get an extra 2 weeks after that if they need it.

You can read the brief here>>   ctlappealfoia11172009pdf.pdf

 

Here are some highlights:

“The Appelle has consistently argued that the Provenge matter is still an “ongoing process” so the destruction of documents regarding an ongoing process demands further inquiry.

“Either way the FDA did not perform the “complex” search that it promised the Court and Appellant that it was conducting.”

“The search time incurred by the FDA CDER division FOIA office was so slight that it did not even register on the radar as a significant reportable/billable search time. That was the entire “complexity” of the search and response.”

“…the FDA told inquiring members of Congress that they did in fact conduct an internal investigation.”

It does not cost the Defendant anything!

 

 

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WHATS GOING ON

This Is An Emergency!

We rallied outside the FDA building in Rockville, Maryland on September 18th. Now there are buses riding around Rockville and Washington, D.C., further protesting the shenanigans that took place inside the FDA building, as well as outside.

The FDA has gotten caught up with Wall Street. While it is supposed to be busy with evaluating food and drugs, its employees just can't keep their eyes off the money. So that is how decisions are being made these days.
WE'LL BE BACK

These people traveled from all across the country to protest outside the FDA Building in Rockville, Maryland. The FDA has stopped a safe and effective treatment from getting to men who need it now. The treatment is called Provenge and it treats men who have late stage prostate cancer.

The FDA appointed a panel of experts to help it decide on the safety and efficacy of Provenge. That panel voted 17-0 that Provenge was safe. And it voted 13-4 that Provenge showed substantial evidence it worked. And yet the FDA delayed it. Now it could be a year, a year and a half or it could be three years. It could be forever.

These people will keeping coming back to Rockville and they hope others will join them until the courts, the FDA, Congress or somebody does something about this travesty.