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Tuesday, 24 March 2020

Former Top HHS Official Claims CDC Lied to President Trump over Readiness of Coronavirus Testing (VIDEO)

Former Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services for Preparedness and Response accused the Center for Disease Control with lying to President Trump over the effectiveness of the coronavirus testing kits. 
Chris Meeks told ABC3340 that in recent discussions with top federal officials and physicians he was told the CDC lied to HHS Secrtary Alexander Azar and in turn President Trump about their preparedness to carry out the mass testing for the coronavirus.
ABC 3340 reported:
As the coronavirus spread to all fifty states over the last two months, the Trump administration faced mounting criticism for the lack of reliable, widely accessible test kits. Now, a former senior federal health official nominated to his post by President Trump, alleges that the delays in testing occurred because leaders at the Centers for Disease Control “lied” to the president, and to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, about the center’s ability to produce the kits.
In making the allegation, Chris Meekins, a former assistant secretary of Health and Human Services for preparedness and response, cited private discussions he has held in recent weeks with top federal officials and physicians and scientists employed in private-sector industries that are active in the anti-coronavirus effort. Meekins described his contacts on the White House Coronavirus Task Force as “friends,” some of whom he has known for many years.
“From my conversations with members of the task force, both inside and outside the administration,” Meekins told Sinclair in an exclusive interview, “The U.S. government, from Secretary Azar to the president relied on the Centers for Disease Control to produce a test; they failed….CDC said they would handle it….What we have found out is that these leaders at the CDC lied to both the HHS secretary and, by extension, the president. And as a result the nation got weeks behind.”
CDC has acknowledged that its initial stab at mass production of the test kits encountered “a problem,” and that federal deployment of safe testing equipment lagged as a result.

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