David Daleiden writes:
Big news--next week on TUESDAY, March 19, I will testify at a Congressional hearing in Washington, DC on "Investigating the Black Market of Baby Organ Harvesting".
The hearing will be live-streamed at 2PM Eastern time, and you will be able to watch it here.
I will testify alongside Terrisa Bukovinac, the founder of Progressive Anti-Abortion Uprising (PAAU), who along with Lauren Handy recovered the bodies of 5 late-term aborted infants—who appear to have been born alive—from a 3rd-trimester abortion clinic in Washington, DC, where they were being shipped to a "waste-to-energy" facility to burn for electricity. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia will chair the hearing.
I will discuss some of the latest findings in CMP's investigative reporting, including the new video report we released last week about Planned Parenthood's explicitly-contracted sale of "proprietary" aborted babies for the "valuable consideration"--a federal crime—of owning the University of California's patents and intellectual property developed by experimenting with them.
Big news--next week on TUESDAY, March 19, I will testify at a Congressional hearing in Washington, DC on "Investigating the Black Market of Baby Organ Harvesting".
The hearing will be live-streamed at 2PM Eastern time, and you will be able to watch it here.
I will testify alongside Terrisa Bukovinac, the founder of Progressive Anti-Abortion Uprising (PAAU), who along with Lauren Handy recovered the bodies of 5 late-term aborted infants—who appear to have been born alive—from a 3rd-trimester abortion clinic in Washington, DC, where they were being shipped to a "waste-to-energy" facility to burn for electricity. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia will chair the hearing.
I will discuss some of the latest findings in CMP's investigative reporting, including the new video report we released last week about Planned Parenthood's explicitly-contracted sale of "proprietary" aborted babies for the "valuable consideration"--a federal crime—of owning the University of California's patents and intellectual property developed by experimenting with them.
Never-before-seen documents released under a public records request show Planned Parenthood transferring “proprietary” aborted fetal body parts to UC San Diego explicitly for “valuable consideration”—a violation of federal law—in exchange for ownership of the university’s “patents” and “intellectual property” developed by experimenting with them.
The incriminating terms of this relationship are spelled out in a “Biological Materials Transfer Agreement” (MTA) contract between Planned Parenthood of San Diego (PPSD) and UC San Diego. The contract, made for “valuable consideration”, grants UCSD “access” to “fetal and placental tissue, which are proprietary materials of PPSD”. The parties agree that in granting “access” to the “proprietary” aborted fetal body parts, “PPSD shall retain all right, title, and interest in and to the Material, including but not limited to all right, title, and interest in patents and patent applications and other intellectual property rights relating to the Material”.
The transfer of any aborted human fetal tissue for “valuable consideration” is a federal felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison or a fine of up to $500,000 (42 U.S.C. 289g-2).
The incriminating terms of this relationship are spelled out in a “Biological Materials Transfer Agreement” (MTA) contract between Planned Parenthood of San Diego (PPSD) and UC San Diego. The contract, made for “valuable consideration”, grants UCSD “access” to “fetal and placental tissue, which are proprietary materials of PPSD”. The parties agree that in granting “access” to the “proprietary” aborted fetal body parts, “PPSD shall retain all right, title, and interest in and to the Material, including but not limited to all right, title, and interest in patents and patent applications and other intellectual property rights relating to the Material”.
The transfer of any aborted human fetal tissue for “valuable consideration” is a federal felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison or a fine of up to $500,000 (42 U.S.C. 289g-2).