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Agraquest's Pam Marrone's Cover-up "AgraQuest's Davis lab was nonchalant about safety"

by repost
In a growing scandal, Pam Marrone the owner of the Davis biotech company Agraquest has conspired to cover-up the contamination of David Bell, a biotech worker at the company. Marrone denied her liability and conspired to prevent him from getting healthcare for his injuries. She also lied to OSHA and her firm illegally imported fungus and bacteria from other countries without proper certification.
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Agraquest's Pam Marrone's Cover-up "AgraQuest's Davis lab was nonchalant about safety" And Injured Biotech Worker David Bell Paid The Cost
http://www.councilforresponsiblegenetics.org/GeneWatch/GeneWatchPage.aspx?pageId=254
TEATIME IN THE LAB
By Sam Anderson

The cautionary tale of David Bell begins when he was a college student in 1998, a biology major and aspiring biotech researcher at California State University, Sacramento. In his final year of college, he was hired to work for AgraQuest, a venture biotechnology company in Davis. His stay at the company would not be long, but its impact would be long-lasting. Over a decade later, he and his mother, Sandi Trend, are still looking for justice.

David had worked at AgraQuest just over five months when he fell ill. Earlier that week he had been asked to clean a barrel used for a previous fermentation experiment, containing a gallon of leftover materials. Although he was assured at the time that the barrel would be safe to work with, the researcher who helped him wore a HEPA mask. The barrel's contents were dumped into a storm drain next to the building and David cleaned it with household bleach.

Early the next week David had to leave work with serious sinus problems, and shortly afterward was admitted to an emergency care clinic. He would later discover that the rest of the office became ill too, and that within the week AgraQuest sent its employees home and locked its doors. David would not discover this until later-much later, because he was unable to return to work for five weeks. But David's sinus problems lingered, his immune system was seriously weakened, and he continued to show some rather graphic symptoms involving, as David bluntly puts it, "the crap coming out of my face." After four sinus surgeries, David's health is still in question-and AgraQuest has yet to accept any responsibility. In court, its lawyers openly questioned whether David had even received those surgeries, and if he had, whether they were really necessary. It would seem David has earned the right to be blunt.

* * *

From where Sandi and David sit, the deck was stacked against them from the start. When David first visited the hospital with mysterious symptoms, he asked the doctor to run a culture in order to discover what might be infecting him; later, the doctor said she had forgotten to run the culture. It happens that AgraQuest founder Pam Marrone sat on the board of that hospital, and that David's doctor would have known Marrone from sitting on the same community women's council.

When they eventually went to court in an attempt to get workers' compensation, the judge assigned to David's case had previously worked for a firm that represented Liberty Mutual - the defendant. David's own attorney had trained under the opposing lawyer, and she asked David to dismiss her. David says that his eventual lawyer, John Overton, was so dismayed by what he called a "kangaroo court" that he considered leaving the legal profession.

All of this may very well have been coincidence. The more compelling-and more serious-accusations of misconduct are reserved for David's employer, AgraQuest.

AgraQuest was founded in 1995 by Pam Marrone, a former Monsanto pesticide researcher. Marrone aimed to discover and commercialize biopesticides as alternatives to chemical pesticides. The company's approach, in the words of Marrone: "We move very fast. We focus on getting things to the market quickly." AgraQuest still exists today-sans Marrone-and appears to have shifted much of its focus toward agrichemicals. The company's website touts a corporate culture which encourages employees to "maintain an environmentally conscious work environment." It may be true today, but in 1998, when David Bell began work at AgraQuest as a college senior, this was not exactly the case.

Marrone set up shop in an office suite in a residential neighborhood of Davis, California. Whether the businesses renting the adjacent offices knew at the time that their neighbor had converted Suite 4 into a lab is unclear, but David says that at one point other offices did complain about the smell from a project he had been assigned. David was assigned to conduct experiments using an evaporator set up in a room with only an open window for ventilation. After neighbors complained about the smell, the device was moved into a bathroom, which featured an upgraded ventilation system: the bathroom fan. Neither David nor anyone else, save one coworker, wore protective masks.

If these do not sound like descriptions of a high security biolab, that's because this wasn't one. The Center for Disease Control "recommends" a Biosafety Level 3 setup for the type of work AgraQuest was doing, but does not require it. David supposes the office suite was "technically" a Level 2 lab; however, CDC guidelines on Level 2 labs call for the use of biological safety cabinets to contain potential airborne contaminants, and a bathroom with a fan hardly qualifies.

Much of the work happening in the AgraQuest lab involved a sort of biological treasure hunt. Researchers brought in soil samples from around the world, then combed through them, searching for natural pesticides. David recalls AgraQuest coworkers pulling bags of soil out of a briefcase, boasting about getting the samples through airport security.

The hunt for exotic pest-killing organisms went on amid safety precautions David compares to those of a high school chemistry lab. The company did not provide its workers with a safety manual, although it created a short manual in time for David's workers compensation trial. In addition to the lax use of protective masks and the potentially hazardous experiments conducted without the benefit of a safety hood, employees were allowed to wear their lab clothes home without cleaning them first. The waste disposal system was no better, as AgraQuest workers often dumped leftover materials into a storm drain outside the building. After David 's illness, Sandi went to 1105 Kennedy Place and took pictures of the drain. She found, ominously, a dead crow crumpled beneath a faucet covered with chemical deposits. Even more ominously, when she returned two weeks later with mold expert Doug Haney, the bird was still there-and showed no signs of decomposition. Haney was surprised: "After two weeks I would have expected to see almost bones and a little bit of feather."

Many of AgraQuest's slipshod safety controls might have been corrected had there been any federal regulatory oversight; but David and Sandi say the CDC failed to investigate David's claims, and OSHA waited months before making a visit to the company, citing them only for a few faulty hoods. In fact, the one agency which followed up David and Sandi's reports was the Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, which did not take the matter of soil smuggling lightly.

In the absence of inspections, the culture in AgraQuest's Davis lab was nonchalant about safety. Almost any place within the office suite was inbounds for lab work, from the bathroom to the break room. Employees ate and experimented in the same space, washing dishes and lab equipment in the same sinks. David was particularly surprised to discover a workplace tradition at the lab: each afternoon the researchers would gather, there in the workspace amongst tropical soil cultures and anti-malaria experiments, and have teatime.

* * *

Sandi and David filed complaints with over a dozen agencies, from the Yolo County Health Department to the Attorney General of California to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. First they reported the lab conditions and the company's treatment of David; then they reported the lack of investigation into these issues. To this day David has not received compensation for his illness; AgraQuest has not admitted fault in David's condition and has not been formally reprimanded; and Sandi and David still do not know exactly what made David sick.

"God only knows what he was exposed to," Sandi says. "Doctors don't even know what to look for."

David's research career is long over and his immune system has yet to recover, but he has started looking for jobs in a new field. Yet all this time, even after all legal avenues for compensation seem to have closed, Sandi has lost none of her drive to expose what happened to David and warn other workers of what they are up against. "We can sit around and get mad all we want," she says, "but somebody's got to change this."

David remembers a professor telling his class not to be concerned about the safety hazards of lab work. "My old professor assured me: 'Don't worry. Your scientist brethren are going to take care of you, because it could be them instead of you.'

That's not what happened in my case. Not at all."

Sam Anderson is Editor of GeneWatch.
§David Bell
by repost
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David Bell was contaminated at Pam Marrone's Agraquest laboratory in Davis, California. She has conspired to cover-up her criminal activity.
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GeneWatch Editor, "This may be one of the most important GeneWatch issues in recent memory”

Sam Anderson's article on David Bell, "TeaTime in the Lab" appears in the MARCH-APRIL 2010 issue of the Council For Responsible Genetics; GeneWatch magazine; BioLab Safety (Volume 23 Issue 2).

The electronic version of GeneWatch magazine; BioLab Safety is available free online at http://issuu.com/genewatchmagazine/docs/genewatch23-2?mode=embed&layout=http%3A%2F%2Fskin.issuu.com%2Fv%2Flight%2Flayout.xml&showFlipBtn=true

This 28 page electronic version can be read as you would a “printed” magazine issue. Once you are in the internet electronic version please note:

At the bottom of the screen there are two buttons.  
The first button is the cover through page 19.  
The second button is from page 20 to the back cover of the magazine
It is BEST look at this electronic version in a full OR enlarged you screen

GeneWatch Articles:

A Cruel and Unusual Corporation
By Ralph Nader
 
A Roach in the Kitchen
By CRG staff - interview with Becky McClain
 
Commentary: GM Crops
By Eric Hoffman
 
Dedication: Tony Mazzocchi
By Jeremy Gruber
 
Give Them an Inch...
By Michael Siciliano
 
One Bug, One Drug
By Lynn Klotz, Edward Sylvester
 
The Lab in My Backyard
By Beth Willis
 
Teatime in the Lab
By Sam Anderson
 
Book Review: Breeding Bio Insecurity and Germs Gone Wild
By Andrew Thibedeau
 
Flushing It Down the Rabbit Hole
By Andrew Thibedeau
 
Topic: Genetic Discrimination
By Jeremy Gruber
 
Topic: Forensic DNA Databanks
By CRG Staff
 
The Case of Dr. Malcolm Casadaban
By CRG Staff
 
Editorial
By Sam Anderson
___
To subscribe and have print issues of GeneWatch delivered to you six times a year; please go to http://www.councilforresponsiblegenetics.org/GeneWatch/SubscribeGeneWatch.aspx
by Strend
The following bacteria and fungi have been identified in David Bell's cultures of his sinuses, sputum, nose and/or tested from positive to HIGH POSITIVE in IgG MAST tests. ALL of these microorganisms are related to his occupational exposure at Agraquest in Davis, California.

4+Acinetobater - Sourse Sinus
Acremonium species - Source Sputum
Curvularia - Source Sinus
Penicillium - Source Sputum + HIGH POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Pseudomonas - Source Numerous
Staph - Source Numerous
Rare mucus - Source Urinalysis
Histoplasma - Source Blood Serum
Alternaria - Source POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Aspergillus - Source POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Botrytis - Source POSITIVE
Cladosporium -Source HIGH POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Eppicoccum - Source POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Fusarium - Source HIGH POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Helminthosporium - Source HIGH POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Mucor - Source POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Pullularia - Source POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Rhizopus - Source POSITIVE IgG MAST testing
Stemphylium - Source POSITIVE IgG MAST testing

To view the list and see the Agraquest Connections please see CROSS-OVER INFECTIONS FROM BIOLAB
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/21733928/CROSS-OVER-INFECTIONS-FROM-BIOLAB


The fungus; histoplasma capsulateum; which causes the human disease histoplasmosis, was identified in David Bell's blood serum by the Mayo Clinic laboratory in Rochester, Minnesota.

Although Agraquest denied any and all connections to histoplasma being related to David Bell's employment with the company; it was discovered that four (4) days after David Bell became ill on January 18, 1999, the Agraquest scientists on Pam Marrone's United States Patent 6,004,774 began signing away their interest rights on this patent. The patent states, "Additionally, an antifungal composition comprising an extract produced by B. subtilis strain ATCC 55614 may be used to treat human fungal diseases in which the disseminated disease propagule is a conidia, for example, Aspergillus sp., HISTOPLASMA sp., and Tinea sp."
Documents are provided below (all images enlarge):

HISTOPLASMA & DAVID BELL's MEDICAL RELATED TO AGRAQUEST WORKPLACE/LAB
http://www.biotechawareness.com/index~option~com_content~view~article~id~239.php
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