Police officers were lied to by MHRA staff to obtain their services for the raid on the Founder of Triamazon.comThe MHRA also lied to press officers and the general public in an attempt to cover up a safe natural Viable anti-cancer product manely Triamazon.
The head of the MHRA Enforcement team Mr Danny Lee-Frost and the MHRA Case Officer EX G M Police Detective Inspector DAVE GOTH who used to pound the beat for the drug squad in the Ashton area of Greater Manchester, now have some serious questions to answer after Lee-Frost confessed to a member of the public that the Triamazon anti-cancer pills were in fact safe.
LETTER FROM MEMBER OF PUBLIC TO LEE-FROST BELOW:
Dear Danny Lee-Frost,
So, in the ongoing absence of any official information (and even
your current refusal to disclose) about any risks or side effects
of Triamazon that the MHRA obviously were hoping to find, then we
can only assume that the individual testimonies of former cancer
patients, now cured, are true. Presumably it was taxpayers' money
that paid for the secret report to be written.
We can now see that the MHRA have decided to block information that
could actually benefit the health of British citizens, all for the
sake of an Act of Parliament dating back 70 years that was not
thought out clearly at the time and is in dire need of repeal and
reform. I feel sorry for your legal victim(s) - whoever they are.
May I add that I have yet to receive a reply from the Senior Policy
Manager (MB) that I telephoned this morning, or the Scientific
Assessor (LH) who was given the responsibility of answering my FOI
question in the first place.
As Head of Operations of Enforcement Group, I do hope you will do
your best to sort this out. It may be low on your list of
priorities. However, a natural cure for cancer is not, to the
British public.
Thank you.
Yours sincerely,
Grace Filby
Grace Filby BA(Hons) Cert Ed FRSA
Vice-Chairman, Surrey and West Sussex Association of Churchill
Fellows
Science & Engineering Ambassador
Following the MHRA's reply, the Head of Enforcement at MHRA telephoned the next day and offered an apology. He said this simple FOI question created a huge audit trail because they didn't know about Triamazon and ended up looking it up on Google. This explains the lateness of their reply to my FOI question.
He then informed me that the MHRA have found there is "no risk," with Triamazon, "as far as we can tell. It did not contain anything harmful. We have not analysed every single pot we have seized."
He said it is OK for people to sell it as a food supplement. It is OK for people to buy it on the internet from the USA - Florida. It is definitely OK for university hospitals to do clinical trials on Triamazon. The MHRA want to know more about the "novel ingredients" that it contains - alkaloids.
Sourced from:
http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/triamazon#comment-7139
FOR MORE INFO GO TO www.triamazon.com