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IPFS News Link • Food And Drug Administration / F.D.A

Amish Father Arrested, Facing Decades in Prison for Selling Products with Essential Oils

• http://thefreethoughtproject.com

Lexington, KY — Samuel Girod, an Amish farmer from Lexington, Kentucky, will go to trial on February 27th, charged with conspiracy, distributing misbranded drugs, and threatening a witness. The reason: he makes a healing salve, an ointment he's been producing for over 20 years, and the Food and Drug Administration isn't happy about how he markets it.

Girod became a targeted individual of the federal government's FDA, since someone from Missouri, in 2013, reported the Amish man to the state health department. At issue, were claims the company made about its balm, which is made from ingredients like rosemary, beeswax, peppermint, chickweed, eucalyptus oil, olive oil, lavender oil, and comfrey.

Officials with the FDA say it's not what's inside his product that concerns them, but rather, the claims the farmer made about his product, principally, that it cures cancer. Girod said that a customer who had skin cancer used the all-natural product and reported to him it had cured his cancer. So the Amish farmer put that report in his advertising of the product.

"He's not allowed to say that…so he changed the label. And then he called it 'Healing Chickweed Salve'," said one supporter. Ultimately, she said Girod was forced to call his product "Original Chickweed Salve." Another of his products, To-Mor-Gone, also made similar claims about its ability to heal cancerous tumors. The product contains bloodroot plant extract, said to be caustic to the skin.

The father of 12, and grandfather of 25 doesn't seem to understand why he cannot make claims about his products, nor does he understand how the oppressive system works to keep innovators like himself, from bringing natural medicines to market.

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While officials use the argument they're protecting consumers from products and manufacturers who make incredible claims about their untested products, even if Girod's healing balm did in fact cure cancer, he could never tell anyone that fact. The first reason he could not do so is the barrier of testing, research, and approvals process the FDA has in place to bring pharmaceuticals to market. It's lengthy, expensive, full of bureaucracy, and would bankrupt any Amish farmer who attempted to get a product certified through the FDA.

One controversial aspect of the FDA's certification process is that it is redundant. For example, GW Pharmaceuticals has already gone through the United Kingdom's certification process to bring their product, Sativex (a cannabis-derived sub-lingual spray for pain, spasms, and epilepsy) to market. But now that the company wants to sell the product in the U.S., the company has to, once again, go through all of the approval processes, a process which has lasted well over 3 years now in the U.S., costing the company millions of dollars. So it's easy to see how and why one lone farmer, whose product has no chemical medicines inside of it, would even care to attempt the approval process.


 


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