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For Up To Date Information on this Situation Please browse over to: http://biotechawareness.com

Blood, phlegm and tears
mirrored here for historical purposes from:
http://www.newsreview.com/sacramento/Content?oid=870890
David Bell claims he was sickened while working at a Davis biotech firm, but no one’s listening

By Seth Sandronsky
More stories by this author...
What’s in your medicine cabinet? David Bell uses this arsenal of medications to fight the disease he says he contracted at AgraQuest, a Davis biotech firm.
PHOTO BY DAVID BELL

Former Sacramento resident David Bell was healthy when AgraQuest, a Davis firm that manufactures biological pesticides, hired him as a researcher and technician in August 1998. Five months later, he came down with severe flu symptoms. His face and teeth grew numb. Breathing became difficult and he developed severe headaches. His nose bled and his sputum turned bloody.

Ten years, four sinus surgeries and numerous medical treatments later, Bell remains incapacitated by the illness, which he and his mother, Sandi Trend, of Citrus Heights, claim was caused by bacteria and fungi he was exposed to at AgraQuest. Yet thanks to record-keeping errors and the amount of time that passed before Bell realized what might be causing his illness, he has not been compensated for the wages he lost, nor the six-figure medical expenses he’s incurred since becoming sick.

But Bell and Trend are not giving up their quest. They’ve gone to the workers’ compensation board. They’ve contacted elected representatives. Now, they’ve enlisted famed consumer advocate and Peace and Freedom Party presidential candidate Ralph Nader in their cause. For Bell, it’s as much about restoring his lost dignity as his health.

“I went looking for an honest job with AgraQuest,” said Bell, a Chico High School graduate. He was laid off in June 1999, but quickly found new employment with a biotech firm in Fairfield. It didn’t last. “I had to resign, due to uncontrollable throwing up traveling to and from work on [Interstate] 80,” he said. A husband and father of two youngsters, he could no longer serve as the family’s breadwinner. “That took away my pride.”

AgraQuest was founded in 1995 by Pam Marrone, a respected entomologist who had specialized in agriculture and insects at biotech giant Monsanto. Bell was a semester away from earning a bachelor’s degree in biology from Sacramento State when he started at the company in 1998. According to the transcript from his first workers’ compensation hearing, Bell worked primarily on two biopesticide projects, Laginex and Serenade.

Laginex is the brand name of Lagenidium giganteum, a water mold (fungi), which infects and kills mosquitoes. In a series of experiments, Bell documented what happened in water with mosquito larvae and Laginex and how to lengthen the biopesticide’s shelf life.

Serenade is a biopesticide used to control insects on crops. Its active ingredients are the Bacillus subtilis bacteria, which AgraQuest first found in a Fresno peach orchard. Bell tested soil samples taken from locations worldwide, using a fermentation process to extract the bacteria. He and a co-worker filled 10-kilo bags of Serenade from a larger drum. Bell did not wear a respirator while loading the Serenade.

“I wore only my own lab coat and company-provided safety glasses,” he said. “I was told that everything at work was safe.”

Marrone left AgraQuest in March 2006 to found Marrone Organic Innovations in Davis. She declined to comment for this story. But as recently as October 2002, Marrone wrote that Serenade is “safe to workers and ground water,” in the industry journal Pesticide Outlook. At the workers’ compensation hearing, Denise Manker, AgraQuest’s vice president of global product development, testified that the company and its employees followed proper safety procedures and had tested its strain of Bacillus subtilis to ensure it did not contain a substance that causes allergic reactions. While noting that soil samples in the laboratory can be hazardous if handled incorrectly, she said it was highly unlikely that Bell had become infected by the Bacillus subtilis, since it’s not known to be harmful to humans.

But as Bell discovered during a 2004 visit to the Mayo Clinic in Arizona for his third sinus surgery, that may not be the case. According to peer-reviewed articles in British medical journal The Lancet, and other sources, serious questions have been raised about the safety of Bacillus subtilis for humans and animals.

Sandi Trend, David Bell’s mother, has stuck by her son during his battle to receive compensation from AgraQuest.
PHOTO BY ANNE STOKES

Tests conducted at the clinic determined Bell had histo yeast, a mold found in soil, in his blood serum. He had developed histoplasmosis, which according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention affects the lungs and other organs and can be fatal if not treated.

“It dawned on me that I’d been screwed,” Bell said. “At AgraQuest I became the experiment. That’s not right.”

Working his case backward through time has presented distinct disadvantages.

When he realized why he was sick in 2003, Bell immediately called the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which investigated AgraQuest and found that one of its ventilator hoods didn’t meet state standards. The hood was repaired, but the minor violation had no bearing on his case. Bell also learned that the Sutter Health doctor who performed his first sinus surgery in 1999 had failed to collect cultures of his bodily fluids, making it difficult to prove he was infected at AgraQuest.

But by far the most formidable obstacle Bell faced was the statute of limitations on workers’ compensation cases. When he first began experiencing symptoms in 1999, Bell says AgraQuest did not provide him with a claim form for potential benefits under the state workers’ compensation system, as required by the California Labor Code.

By the time he filed in October 2003, it was too late. Last year, workers’ compensation administrative law Judge Suzanne F. Dugan denied his claim because it had been filed “over four years after his termination of employment.” That, according to the judge, made Bell’s injury claim moot.

Bell appealed the ruling, but lost.

It’s been a debilitating, frustrating ordeal for Bell and his mother, who’s served as her son’s chief researcher throughout. Since Dugan denied Bell’s claim, they’ve desperately attempted to gain the attention of various elected representatives from the state, with little success. They contacted Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. No reply. Trend spoke with Rep. Dan Lungren at a town hall meeting last November. Neither he nor his staff showed much interest. Rep. Lynn Woolsey, chairwoman of the workforce protections committee, told Trend to wait until next year.

This August, the case came to the attention of Ralph Nader, who was in Sacramento for the Peace and Freedom Party’s state convention. Before receiving the party’s nomination, Nader heard Trend present Bell’s story at a candidate forum. Nader, long an advocate for regulating industry in the public interest of consumers and workers, said that he would contact Waxman. Nader plans also to speak about the need for better government oversight of the biopesticide industry in Davis days before the November 4 election.

Meanwhile, Bell continues to fight the debilitating illness. Because his infected lungs can no longer tolerate Sacramento Valley air pollution, he and his family moved to Texas, where the environment is more suitable. Still, headaches, night sweats, vomiting and diarrhea remain a part of Bell’s daily routine. Then there’s the sputum.

“I’ve literally seen pus from my nose in nearly all colors of the rainbow,” Bell said. “I have 1- and 2-foot strands of hyperplastic mucus, which look like huge fish eggs, but are actually polyps of infections.”

To unclog his sinus cavities, he regularly uses a nasal irrigator with 3 liters of saline rinse. As anybody who has swallowed salt water knows, it causes dizziness, a regular occurrence for Bell. It hasn’t been easy on the family.

“My kids are doing fine now, but it’s been bad when I left home for surgeries,” Bell said. “I recall our daughter Sheri asking my wife Melissa, ‘What was Daddy like before he got sick?’”

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Please NOTE:   The following material has been hacked repeatedly since this story began receiving attention.  This began in the same time period as the Downey section also was noticed.  Some of the photographs and some of the wording has been altered.  We apologize for the inconvenience to the reader due to the criminal malice of unknown individuals that resort to such low moral actions. We request that the reader notfy us of any errors or omissions that are identified on this web site.  Contact information is at the top of this web page. - Thank you.

In Northern California, in the town of  a now former employee 
set up three biotechnology companies.  The first company went out of business shortly after it's creator left.   Some employees from the second firm, , became seriously ill. The Agraquest company went out of its way to prevent the very ill people from receiving adequate medical care,  provide for time lost from work and in general did everything possible to mislead the .  

Was it because they were luring and could not chance any negative publicity?
Were the people that participated in what appears to be a genuine coverup also financially involved?   

Read the material and decide for yourself.  Everyone, including the sleepy little town of Davis seems to have forgotten about United Nations 2003 - The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety.  Follow the index down to learn more.  The 3 videos immediately below are provided for educational enrichment.
 This is a new topic for most people, but it is one that people must begin to understand for their own safety.   Genetically altered biological products are not natural.  Both types of products - chemical or biological -  can make people very sick and both types of products can and do kill. NOTE: Credit for the poster  cannot be given as we cannot track down it origins. Great job whoever created it!

Pam MarroneSOME BASIC BACKGROUND ON THE TOPIC:  The French documentary, named “The world according to Monsanto” which was directed by independent filmmaker Marie-Monique Robin, paints a grim picture of a company with a long track record of environmental crimes and health scandals.

From 1983 to 1990, Pam Marrone was in charge of the Insect Control group at . Her group was instrumental in pioneering projects in genetically engineered microbial pesticides and transgenic crops for insect control.  After Monsanto, Pam was founding president of . Later, Pam left to start up a new company called

INDEXPERTINENT INFORMATION
Medical Documentation
Scientific Documentation
The Investors
The Bell WC Documents
Federal Government Financial Aassistance For AGRAQUEST
Government 
Historical News Articles
Relevant Legal Documents pertaining to Workers Comp Issues at Agraquest
Pam Marrone, PhD auto bio
Dr. Marrone Research Papers
Agraquest Board Members
Government Permits and Violations
The Patents
Relevant Web Links



Government Violations 

OSHA Violations

State of California business filings
OTTER AGRAQUEST LLC
Agraquest
MARRONE ORGANIC INNOVATIONS, INC.


EPA 
•Regulating Biopesticides FIFRA 6(a)(2) Before a pesticide can be marketed and used in the United States, the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) requires that EPA evaluate the proposed pesticide to assure that its use will not pose unreasonable risks of harm to human health and the environment. This regulation involves an extensive review of health and safety information. 

The Bell WC Documents



Also in html form







Medical Documentation




An oomycotic pathogen in the genus Lagenidium was isolated from tissues....

Is AG Biotechnology Safe or UnSafe? - Genetically Modified/Engineered Organisms - Flyer

See also:
: U.N. - Tue May 27, 2008
- Reuters
Mirrored here for historical purposes.
biotechtrade.html


The Investors




company

Little Rock, Miss Investment banker


 





Berndt Trusts


The Agraquest Board Members
William Kane Reilly
Former Director of the EPA

William McGlashan Jr.
Texas Pacific Group


Halcyon
Scientific Documentation


and explained in layman terms here:

There are many studies refuting the alleged safety of this fungi or zoospore.  Lagenidium Giganteum is a lifeform that is known to eat bugs, particularly mosquitos from the inside out.  Lagenidium giganteum is not a pesticide - it is a fungus type organism that once was known to live only in a remote part of the SouthEastern US!


Relevant Web Links

Workers Comp at the Kaiser Papers

downey.kaiserpapers.info

bellflowermold.
kaiserpapers.info

As OSHA's director of health standards, Finkel was in charge of establishing permissible exposure limits for toxics in the workplace.


of Deregulation and Bio-Tech Worker David Bell By Steve Zeltzer lvpsf@igc.org
"This industry is also one of the most important industries in California, receiving hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer money for research at the University of California at Davis and other campuses. Over 2/3 of the biotech companies are also within the state of California. The development and research on these products is also funded by the US military for warfare."

David Bell was working Laginex Project and although Laginex (lagenidium giganteum) had already been registered with the EPA and a patent had already been issued by the US, David was employed to find a viable agent to extend the shelf life of this fungi.


Some background information on lagenidium giganteum:



======================











One of the Agraquest employees was a young man; David Bell.  He was a student at CSU Sacramento  and had accepted a job with Agraquest in .  He was one semester away from receiving his Bachelor of Science degree from California State University, Sacramento, with a major in biology and a minor in chemistry.  's
was working on the Project and although Laginex () had already been and a had already been issued by the U.S., David was employed to find a viable agent to extend the shelf life of this fungi type organism.

In the following short video some of the material that has infected these microbiologists that are being denied WC coverage. This material came out of one of the AgraQuest employees that was exposed to their products.
http://biotechnology.kaiserpapers.info/media/P8080325.MOV


When David became infected from the organisms in the lab Agraquest, willfully violated :  
EPA  Regulation - FIFRA 6(a)(2) •Regulating Biopesticides FIFRA 6(a)(2)

[THE WORKPLACE INJURY/ILLNESS/DISEASE of David Bell and others, WAS NEVER REPORTED BY AGRAQUEST AS REQUIRED BY

One of the life forms that Marrone and her crew were genetically modifying is Lagenidium giganteum.  Around the time that this  life form was being altered, a new disease emerged that has been named .  Prior to this manipulation of the genetic structure of  Lagenidium giganteum it was unheard of or "unrecognized" for it to cause illness in humans. At the same time no one known had ever mixed in a genetically modified brew of "Swamp Cancer" Child with pythiosis in Texas- with Lagenidium giganteum before either.  See:
  The following is some background information on lagenidium giganteum.  Please note that some of this is contrary to outdated so you can understand why while it may sound as if it is innoculous, some people believe that it  can be very dangerous:

Lagenidium giganteum is an which is pathogenic to a number of mosquito species, including Aedes,  Culex,  Anopheles and Culiseta (Tanada and Kaya 1993).

. The life cycle begins with a motile zoospore (asexual stage) that seeks out mosquito larvae, attaching to and penetrating the cuticle via a germ tube. The fungus grows inward, eventually filling the body cavity and killing the mosquito larva. The fungus can then be released from the infected cadaver, generating more zoospores that can infect other larvae. The sexual cycle produces oospores that can maintain the fungus during unfavorable conditions, such as long periods of drought. Upon flooding, oospores release infective zoospores to start the cycle again.

[. Only one species of the genus Lagenidium is known to be a facultative parasite of mosquito larvae, namely Lagenidium giganteum. It consists of two stages: oospores (sexual), and zoospores (asexual) (See Fig. 1). Although this fungus has been named Lagenidium culicidum Umphlett in some publications (Umphlett and Huang 1970; McCray et al. 1973), this was later shown to be Lagenidium giganteum (Couch and Romney 1973).]

The that the FDA refers to resulted in hospitalization of at least one of the employees involved in studying this product!  The FDA either was not aware of this information when they made their report or do not care. - This particular fungi/water mold needs water to live.  Humans and animals are composed of water, just like the inside of insects.  
To your left you may view - Workers Comp, The Destruction Of CAL-OSHA/EPA And The Case Of David Bell - 58 min - May 13, 2008.  This is a very powerful video in which 
former Senior Public Medical Officer for and part of the  UCSF  Occupational
Environmental Medicine Department discusses the lack of CAL/OSHA standards with respect to oversight within the industry
 
"Labor On The Job" focuses on the case of Agraquest biotech worker David Bell. Bell who worked in Davis, CA at a biotech laboratory owned by former Monsanto scientist was infected with fungus and bacteria while working. He and his family have faced a terrifying battle for healthcare and justice from injuries on the job. The  material found to be growing in his body  was found to be earlier patented by scientists at the laboratory.   He has since been prevented from getting full healthcare needed to save his life. The corruption and breakdown of the workers compensation system is connected to the deregulation of workers compensation and the elimination of all medical doctors at Ca-OSHA. Joining the show is his mother Sandi Trend,   Larry Rose, the last Ca-OSHA doctor and , author of "."

David Bell was working with the Liginex project.  Laginex is the now packaged life form
L. giganteum.

"LAGINEX ASŪ": It is EPA registered (No. 69592-Y) as an aqueous suspension with the trade name Laginex ASŪ . The product label contains the signal word "CAUTION."  The package goes on to say that this is safe to humans but do not discharge it into lakes, ponds, etc., without a permit.


Received: 26 December 2006  Accepted: 7 February 2007  Published online: 4 March 2007

The above is very interesting and raises the question of where are the actual test results showing this water fungus to be safe?  Employees of Agraquest are sick from it and there is medical documentation standing behind that statement.  See:
http://biotechnology.kaiserpapers.info/pdfs/MEDICALPATENTFLOW.pdf

The following study on dogs show that it isn't very good for them either.


An oomycotic pathogen in the genus Lagenidium was isolated from tissues....

CHARACTERIZATION OF A PREVIOUSLY UNDESCRIBED LAGENIDIUM PATHOGEN ASSOCIATED WITH SOFT TISSUE INFECTION: INITIAL DESCRIPTION OF A NEW HUMAN OOMYCOSIS
"Immunoblot analysis of the serologic response of three affected dogs to soluble mycelial extracts of L. giganteum and of the previously described pathogenic Lagenidium species was performed, and indicated that each dog’s serum recognized a large number of antigens of both Lagenidium species"

- The best known species of Lagenidium is Lagenidium giganteum, a parasite of mosquitolarvae used in biological control of mosquitoes. Two different species cause disease exclusively in dogs:L. caninum and L. karlingii. Lagenidiosis is found in the southeastern United States in lakes and ponds. It causes progressive skin and subcutaneous lesions in the legs, groin, trunk, and near the tail. The lesions are firm nodules or ulcerated regions with draining tracts. Regional lymph nodes are usually swollen. Spread of the disease to distant lymph nodes, large blood vessels, and the lungs may occur.[7] An aneurysm of a great vessel can rupture and cause sudden death.[17] L. caninum is the more aggressive species and is more likely to spread to other organs than L. karlingii.[2

Contary proven scientific documentation the FDA has reported that this is a safe lifeform for humans to ingest.


Laginex, which is a fungus that infects mosquito larvae in water, has been sold to several counties as well as Disney World. There have been some problems, however...........

See:

1) "Tadeusz Molinski, a professor in the department of chemistry at the
University of California at Davis and a member of AgraQuest's scientific advisory
board.


On  May 1, 1997, the New Active Ingredient for Laginex was DENIED by the EPA - See Item 199 -
http://biotechnology.kaiserpapers.info/may11997.html
Note: The Above material is mirrored from since removed from web page formerlly at:
http://pmep.cce.cornell.edu/regulation/nysdec-lib/actions-decisions/new.reg.dec.97.html

Earlier this year AgraQuest secured $3 million in private financing through an investment group led by
Rockefeller & Co.'s Odyssey Fund -- a New York-based venture capital fund specializing in socially responsible investments.


Pythiosis in the Dog, Horse and Cat and Lagenidiosis in the Dog
Oomycetes cause disease when animals with damaged skin come into contact with zoospores, which encyst in the exposed tissue.(Pythiosis is an uncommon cutaneous/subcutaneous, gastrointestinal, or multisystemic disease caused by a water mold. It has been reported in dogs, horses, cats, cattle, humans and a captive zoo bear.An as yet undetermined species of Lagenidium is responsible for lagenidiosis in dogs. The genus Lagenidium includes more than 50 species of which most are natural parasites of algae, fungi, rotifers, nematodes, crustaceans, Daphne, and mosquito larvae. L. giganteum, a parasite of mosquito larvae, has been approved by the Environmental Protection Agency for use in the United States as a biological control of the adult mosquito population.)  Oomycetes cause disease when animals with damaged skin come into contact with zoospores, which encyst in the exposed tissue.


Bacillus Subtilis  is another Agraquest grown product.
These two documents, prepared and submitted by David Bell's Qualified Medical Examiner (QME), DR NG for the Workers' Compensation case of David Bell CLEARLY shows there is indeed RISKS associated with being around Bacillus Subtilis (FOUND ON NUMEROUS PATENTS ISSUED TO AGRAQUEST, INC. BY THE UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE AS WELL AS INTERNATIONAL PATENTS). 

DR NG STATES: "Nonetheless, he had no history of requiring any surgery until his work at AgraQuest, Inc. It is therefore within medical probability that his exposure at work has aggravated his allergic rhinitis which in turn exacerbated his sinusitis resulting in the need for surgery in 1/99."

Dr. Nagy and
 Dr. V.A. Marinkovich's expert medical opinions, based on proven scientific literature clearly shows the relation of David Bell's iinjury/illness/disease to the Agraquest
Research and Development Company. See: http://biotechnology.kaiserpapers.info/intheory.html

In the interest of public safety and because this product is being grown to kill life forms by the company AgraQuest, the information on bacillus Subtilis is also provided here.

 
There are numerous scientific articles as to Bacillus Subtilis NOT being safe and indeed causing disease and illness.
One of these articles is  the 1997 EPA Final Risk Assessment on Bacillus Subtilis. 

Some of the others do include but are not limited to:
(Flindt et al., Pulmonary disease due to inhalation of derivative of bacillus subtilis containing  
proteolytic enzymes,Lancet I: 1177-1181], 1969) About the same time, Pepys & Coworkers studied three workers  with work-related asthmatic symptoms who were exposed to B subtilis-derived enzymes (Pepys 1969, Allergic reaction of the lungs to enzymes of bacillus subtilis and Lancet I, 1811-1814). 

These workers had prick test reactivity to B-subtilis alcalase and maxatase and exhibited both immediate and lape phase asthmatic response following inhalation challenges.  A study performed in the United States on 38 detergent workers identified immediate onset upper respiratory tract, nasal and ocular symptoms in 11 workers and no respiratory symptoms in 25 workers, which often begins 3-8 hours after leaving work. (Franz et al.,  Clinical, immunologic, and physiologic observation in factory workers exposed to B-subtilis enzyme dust, Journal of Allergies 47; 170-179}. 

There is data in the literature associating  exposure to bacillus subtilis products and respiratory disease as well as rhino conjunctivitis, (Kaner et al., Contact Dermatitis 2001, 45: 49-51, Flindt et al., Occupational Medicine, Volume 52, 2002). 
The best known species of Lagenidium is Lagenidium giganteum, a parasite of mosquito larvae used in biological control of mosquitoes. Two different species cause disease exclusively in dogs: L. caninum and L. karlingii. Lagenidiosis is found in the southeastern United States in lakes and ponds. It causes progressive skin and subcutaneous lesions in the legs, groin, trunk, and near the tail. The lesions are firm nodules or ulcerated regions with draining tracts. Regional lymph nodes are usually swollen. Spread of the disease to distant lymph nodes, large blood vessels, and the lungs may occur.[7] An aneurysm of a great vessel can rupture and cause sudden death.[17] L. caninum is the more aggressive species and is more likely to spread to other organs than L. karlingii.[2
Agraquest's products containing bacillus subtilis have a FOUR (4)  hour RE-ENTRY time.  Meaning lab personnel being exposed to this in the laboratory did not have the luxury of that FOUR 94) hour RE-ENTRY time.

The 4/1999 and 6/1999 submission to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by Agraquest of "new active ingredient" (QST713 - bacillus subtilis) only received a "CONDITIONAL TIME-LIMITED REGISTRATION from the EPA on 6/20/2000 (Janet L. Anderson, Ph.D, Director - Biopesticides and Pollutions Preventon Division) as the EPA themselves found fault.... Storage Stability, Manufacturing Process - toxicity/pathogenicity to; Freshwater Fish, Freshwater aquatic invertebrate, paleomonetes vulgaris (shrimp) and HONEY BEES.

ADDITIONALLY, Identification and Characterization of Novel Genetic Markers Associated with Biological Control Activities in Bacillus subtilis -Raghavendra Joshi and Brian B. McSpadden Gardener Department of Plant Pathology, The Ohio State University, OARDC, 1680 Madison Ave., Wooster 44691. 
Accepted for publication 3 October 2005.

DISCUSSION:  Nearly half of the 149 sequences we analyzed were sufficiently different from those presently in GenBank that no functional assignments could be made

Identification of subtracted genome fragments obtained from Bacillus subtilis QST713 [AGRAQUEST]
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens
Bacillus  cereus
Bacillus  licheniformis
____
2)

NOT all forms of Histoplasmosis are curable as can be found within the CDC, NIOSH just to name a few.  It has been well documented in numerous scientific publications that the disease Histoplasmosis (caused by Histoplasma Capsulateum) can indeed be and has been fatal to humans. 

Histoplasma is NOT only (found) caused by bat guano or bird droppings.  It is well known this fungi is found in soil as well
Mirrored here for historical purposes is self reported information by the creator of these companies that does alter DNA bacterias and fungi for the purpose of  calling their products natural insecticides.  How natural a genetically altered bacteria or fungi can really be is a good question?  Probably it is as natural as any chemical insecticide that is also created from parts of this earth.  The word natural means not altered, not produced artificially, or conforming to the usual or ordinary course of nature.  




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