Re: The College has recognized that Lyme disease is a major clinical and research interest on this campus. The main players in the development of the program were Fish, Wormser and Connolly," Dr. Weinstein advises. The entrepreneurial trio are Durland Fish, Ph.D., former director of the College's Lyme Disease Center and now a research scientist at Yale; Gary P. Wormser, M.D., still professor of medicine and pharmacology and chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at the College; and John J. Connolly, Ed.D., former College president and current chairman of the board of the American Lyme Disease Foundation, Inc., which had its genesis on the Valhalla campus in 1990.




Kathleen wrote:
> It was a BUSINESS, get it?
>
> An "ENTERPRISE."
>
> A "RACKET;" cornering the market on vector borne diseases
> test kits and vaccines; cornering the market on all the national
> blood testing for Lyme and other tick borne diseases; a "MONOPOLY"
> on national and international testing and patenting new antigens.
>
> ALDF.com and the EUCALB.
>
> http://www.nymc.edu/intouch/spr98/lyme.htm
>
> It was a commercial enterprise, supported by defrauding the
> federal government over what was a positive test for Lyme, and
> they intended to continue, and *did* continue the practice of spin.
>
> Fully meeting the criteria for Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt
> Organizations, due to the harassment of patients and physicians
> and the denial of benefits.
>
>
> Now Pat Smith will announce that she discovered that "Lyme
> disease" is RICO and scientific fraud and apply for the Qui Tam
> reward.
>
> Kathleen

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