Crackpot conspiracy theorists told to stop promising bogus Covid-19 cure

A federal court permanently enjoined a New Jersey entity and its principals from distributing unapproved and misbranded drugs touted as a treatment for COVID-19.

In a complaint filed on Nov. 13, 2020, the United States alleged that Natural Solutions Foundation, along with trustees Ralph Fucetola and Dr. Rima Laibow, violated the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) by distributing a “nano silver” product that they claimed would prevent, treat or cure COVID-19.

According to the complaint, which was filed at the request of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Natural Solutions operated various websites to market “Dr. Rima Recommends Nano Silver,” a product that purportedly contained silver particles in a solution.

Rima E. Laibow, M.D. is a graduate of Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City who partnered with General Albert “Bert” Newton Stubblebine III to recruit “health freedom organizers” that would promote doubt about vaccines and other medical treatment.

Stubblebine was the retired United States Army major general who maintained a keen interest in psychic warfare who was comically depicted in the fictional 2009 satirical dark comedy war film The Men Who Stare at Goats.

Stubblebine was the highest-ranking military official to challenge the fact that a plane hit the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, when 59 passengers aboard American Airlines flight 77 and 125 workers and civilians inside of the Pentagon died in the worst terrorist attack in United States history.

After meeting the General in 1991, Laibow said they fell in love and “We married in 1994 and worked together in my practice of drug-free medicine and psychiatry.”

Laibow said that in 2004, the couple closed the medical practice and “founded the Natural Solutions Foundation (NSF) to contend directly with the globalist agenda focused on taking away our right of sovereign ownership and use of our own bodies.”

The federal complaint further alleged that nano silver is not generally recognized by qualified experts as safe and effective to prevent, treat or cure COVID-19, and that the defendants’ claims were not supported by credible scientific evidence or studies.

FDA Compliance Director William A. Correll alleged that the nano silver products were misbranded drugs, because their labeling failed to bear adequate directions for use, as required by the FDCA.

“Marketing unproven products as treatments for COVID-19 endangers public health and violates the law,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “The department will work closely with the FDA to stop anyone attempting to take advantage of the pandemic by selling unapproved, misbranded drugs.”

“The FDA will continue to aggressively pursue and hold accountable those who jeopardize public health,” said Acting Deputy Director Greg Noonan for the FDA’s Office of Dietary Supplement Programs. “Today’s consent decree demonstrates that we will use all of our authority to stop companies that prey on the public during a global pandemic by selling unapproved new drugs.”

The defendants, who were represented by Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman attorney Neil D. Grossman, agreed to settle the suit and be bound by a consent decree of permanent injunction.

The order entered by the federal court permanently enjoins the defendants from violating the FDCA and requires that they institute a recall for the nano silver products they sold and destroy any such products in their possession.

Before distributing any drug in the future, the defendants must notify FDA in advance, comply with specific remedial measures set forth in the injunction and permit FDA to inspect their facilities and procedures.

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