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Outrage as brain disease case finishes
A FRENCH court acquitted six doctors and pharmacists yesterday over the deaths of at least 114 people who contracted a brain-destroying disease after being treated with tainted human growth hormones.
Families of victims, many of whom were children, stared in stunned silence when the verdict was announced in the crowded Paris courtroom.
The verdict followed a laborious 16-year investigation into the deaths from Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, or CJD. The cases did not involve the widely known "Mad Cow" variant of CJD.
The Paris court acquitted the six doctors and pharmacists of manslaughter and aggravated deception, among other charges, in the verdict. "It is a judicially absurd and socially dangerous ruling," said Francois Honnorat, a lawyer for some of the victims.
Jeanne Goerrian, president of a victims' association, called it a "scandal" denouncing "those all-powerful people who take the law into their own hands and kill ... and escape all punishment." She urged an appeal.
The case stemmed from a 20-year program that involved collecting hormones from the pituitary glands of human corpses to treat thousands of French children who suffered from a deficiency in the secretion of growth hormone.
The court, in its ruling, said the investigation "did not provide confirmation" that the pediatricians, biologists and pharmacists who helped make and distribute the growth hormone were aware in 1980 that it posed a risk of contamination.
Families of victims, many of whom were children, stared in stunned silence when the verdict was announced in the crowded Paris courtroom.
The verdict followed a laborious 16-year investigation into the deaths from Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, or CJD. The cases did not involve the widely known "Mad Cow" variant of CJD.
The Paris court acquitted the six doctors and pharmacists of manslaughter and aggravated deception, among other charges, in the verdict. "It is a judicially absurd and socially dangerous ruling," said Francois Honnorat, a lawyer for some of the victims.
Jeanne Goerrian, president of a victims' association, called it a "scandal" denouncing "those all-powerful people who take the law into their own hands and kill ... and escape all punishment." She urged an appeal.
The case stemmed from a 20-year program that involved collecting hormones from the pituitary glands of human corpses to treat thousands of French children who suffered from a deficiency in the secretion of growth hormone.
The court, in its ruling, said the investigation "did not provide confirmation" that the pediatricians, biologists and pharmacists who helped make and distribute the growth hormone were aware in 1980 that it posed a risk of contamination.
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