Robert Gallo Case
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Original Publication
HEAL Toronto
Walter W. Stewart and Ned Feder preserved the "Dingell Staff Report" from being forgotten. The website archives of Walter Stewart's scientific misconduct vanished from the internet in mid-1999 and have not reappeared. Here, you can access the significant document along with numerous others related to the Gallo Case.
Investigation of the Institutional Response to the HIV Blood Test Patent Dispute and Related Matters
Staff Report Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations Committee on Energy and Commerce U.S. House of Representatives
Full Staff Report
Institutional Response to the HIV Blood Test Patent Dispute and Related Matters
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/17695383
Executive Summary Full Text
Investigation of the Institutional Response to the HIV Blood Test Patent Dispute and Related Matters
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/17531686
Executive Summary Highlights
Investigation of the Institutional Response to the HIV Blood Test Patent Dispute and Related Matters
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/17695408
Commentary
Letter by Serge Lang∙The Dingbell Subcommittee Staff Report
A letter from Serge Lang, 23 January 1995
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/17499062
Extract∙Institutional Response to the Blood Test Patent Dispute and Related Matters
Selection by Serge Lang
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/17695492
The Gallo Case
from Challenges by Serge Lang
This 240-page article reviews the investigations of Robert Gallo's alleged misconduct highlighting many of the most significant revelations from the various reports.https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/17564603
Correspondence∙Documents in the Gallo Case
Here is what the former Chairman of the Subcommittee, John Dingell, had to say to Harold Varmus, Director of the NIH, about the report, along with other letters.
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/75464786
Related Documents
Response to the Charge to the Consultants to the Director of the National Institutes of Health Concerning the investigation of DRS. Gallo and Popovic
January 29 and 30, 1992
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/17499109
Articles in the Press
In Gallo case, truth termed a casualty - Report: Science subverted in AIDS dispute
By John Crewdson, Chicago Tribune 1 January 1995.
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/75202831
Pursuit of Truth was Not an NIH Objective in Gallo Case, Dingell Staff Report Says
The Cancer Letter 6 January 1995.
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/46662059
Feder, Stewart Rapped for Letter on NIH Stationery
Science & Government Report 1 March 1995
In a sparkling display of asininity, the National Institutes of Health has issued an "Official Reprimand" to its long-troublesome duo, Ned Feder and Walter Stewart, accusing them of violating a 1993 order to refrain from pursuing scientific misconduct. Their offense: writing a letter on NIH stationery.
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/75235474
With New Virology Institute, Gallo May Make A Fresh Start In Baltimore
The Scientist, Vol:9, #15, pg.3 , July 24, 1995
With a strong local support network in place to facilitate the transition, renowned virologist Robert Gallo anticipates a fresh beginning, both personally and scientifically, as his Institute of Human Virology prepares to open this autumn. The new institute, aimed at advancing the battle against AIDS and other diseases, will be linked with the University of Maryland at Baltimore. It seems that his colleagues - despite a few dissenting voices - are prepared to move past the allegations of scientific misconduct that have overshadowed his three-decade tenure at the National Institutes of Health over the last decade. In fact, many are backing him and wishing him success in this new venture.
https://studyclub.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/QA/pages/17695532
Additional Readings on Conduct in Science
The following articles appearing in Science Magazine relating to science conduct are categorized by author. You can order these articles - and any others published in Science Magazine - by clicking here.
by Christopher Anderson
NIH fraudbusters get busted," 260, 288 (16 April 1993).
Popovic is cleared on all charges; Gallo case in doubt,'' 262, 981 (12 November 1993).
ORI drops Gallo case in legal dispute," "Survey tracks misconduct, to an extent," 262, 1202 & 1203 (19 November 1993).
Scandal scars Minnesota medical school," 262, 1812 (17 December 1993).
The aftermath of the Gallo case," 263, 20 (7 January 1994).
Academy warns against slipping ethics," 263, 747 (11 February 1994).
How not to publicize a misconduct finding," 263, 1679 (25 March 1994).
Misconduct panel sets ambitious agenda," 264, 1841 (24 June 1994).
by Marcia Barinaga
NIMH assigns blame for tainted studies," 245, 812 (25 August l989).
The missing crystallography data," 245, 1179 (15 September 1989).
Labstyles of the famous and well funded," 252, 1776 (28 June 1991).
Confusion on the cutting edge" [special news report], 257, 616 (31 July 1992).
by Jon Cohen
John Crewdson: Science journalist as investigator," 254, 946 (15 November 1991).
Now Dingell probes the academy!" 254, 1103 (22 November 1991).
Pasteur wants more HIV blood test royalties," 255, 792 (14 February 1992).
Stormy weather ahead for OSI's Gallo report," 255, 914 (21 February 1992).
Did liability block AIDS trial?" 257, 316 (17 July 1992).
AIDS patent dispute. "U.S. officials say non on royalties," 257, 1855 (25 September 1992).
AIDS funding. "Did political clout win vaccine trial for MicroGeneSys?" 258, 211 (9 October 1992).
Lobbying for an AIDS trial," 258, 536 (23 October 1992).
Army investigates researcher's report of clinical trial data," 258, 883 (6 November 1992).
MicroGeneSys vaccine trial gets a public peer review," 258, 1079 (13 November 1992).
HHS: Gallo guilty of misconduct," 259, 168 (8 January 1993).
Army clears Redfield--But fails to resolve controversy," 261, 824 (13 August 1993).
New fight over fetal tissue grafts," 263, 600 (4 February 1994).
Clinical trial monitoring: Hit or miss?" [special news report], 264, 1534 (10 June 1994).
U.S.-French patent dispute heads for a showdown," 265, 23 (1 July 1994).
NIH-Pasteur: A final rapprochement?" 265, 313 (15 July 1994) (with E.M.).
The Duesberg phenomenon" [special news report], 266, 1642 (9 December 1994).
by David Hamilton
NIH misconduct procedures derailed," 251, 152 (11 January 1991).
Verdict in sight in the `Baltimore case'," 251, 1168 (8 March 1991).
NIH finds fraud in Cell paper," 251, 1552 (29 March 1991).
Did Imanishi-Kari get a fair `trial'?" 252, 1607 (21 June 1991).
Can OSI withstand a scientific backlash?" 253, 1084 (6 September 1991).
What next in the Gallo case?" [special report], 254, 944 (15 November 1991).
U.S. Attorney decides not to prosecute Imanishi-Kari,'' 257, 318 (17 July 1992).
Court orders PHS to reveal names," 257, 1341 (4 September 1992).
by Eliot Marshall
Penn charges Retin-A inventor with conflict," 247, 1028 (2 March 1990).
Who should study radiation effects?" 247, 1404 (23 March 1990).
When commerce and academe collide," "The Florida case: appearances matter," "Harvard's tough new rules," "Should science journals play cop?" 248, 152 (13 April 1990).
A clash over standards for scientific records," 248, 544 (4 May 1990).
Data sharing: A declining ethic?" "Agencies, journals set some rules," "Geneva on the Beltway," 248, 952 (25 May 1990).
Science beyond the pale," 249, 14 (6 July 1990).
Fight over data disrupts Michigan State project," 251, 23 (4 January 1991).
A is for apple, Alar, and ... alarmist?" 254, 20 (4 October 1991).
When does intellectual passion become a conflict of interest?" [special news report], 257, 620 (31 July 1992).
MSU officials criticized for mishandling data dispute," 259, 592 (29 January 1993).
Court orders `sharing' of data," 261, 284 (16 July 1993).
Political fallout: A national bioethics board?" 263, 473 (28 January 1994).
Rules on embryo research due out," 265, 1024 (19 August 1994).
Human embryo research. "Clinton rules out some studies," 266, 1634 (9 December 1994).
Dispute splits schizophrenia study," 268, 792 (12 May 1995).
Dispute slows report on `remarkable' vaccine," " `Better relationships' the Stadtman way," 268, 1712 & 1713 (23 June 1995).
by Paul Selvin
Charlie Cantor gets kicked upstairs," 249, 1238 (14 September 1990).
by Gary Taubes
Misconduct: Views from the trenches," 261, 1108 (27 August 1993).
A costly settlement ends whistle-blower suit,'' 263, 605 (4 February 1994).
Plagiarism suit wins; experts hope it won't set a trend,'' 268, 1125 (26 May 1995).