For three years, we were told to “follow the science.” We were banned from social media for asking questions. We were called conspiracy theorists for suggesting that maybe — just maybe — the virus that emerged from the same city as China’s gain-of-function bat virus lab didn’t come from a guy eating soup at a wet market.
Well, the “science” just lawyered up. A federal grand jury has indicted Dr. David Morens, 78, a former senior adviser to Anthony Fauci himself, on charges including conspiracy against the United States and destruction of federal records. Merry Christmas in April, everyone.
Morens served as a senior adviser in NIAID’s Office of the Director from 2006 to 2022. That’s sixteen years sitting right next to Fauci. And according to the DOJ, he spent a chunk of that time using his personal Gmail account to dodge Freedom of Information Act requests about COVID-19 research, the bat coronavirus grant, and — oh yeah — the origins of the pandemic that shut down the entire planet.
A Gmail account. The guy was running a shadow communication network to hide pandemic records from the American public, and his sophisticated counter-intelligence tool was… Gmail. These are the “experts” who were supposed to be smarter than us.
Here’s where it gets really fun. The indictment says Morens and two unnamed co-conspirators were working to restore a terminated bat coronavirus grant — a grant called “Understanding the Risk of Bat Coronavirus Emergence” that had been awarded to a company with a subaward to the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Yeah, THAT Wuhan Institute of Virology. The one we weren’t allowed to talk about.
NIH had killed the grant over allegations that COVID-19 came from the Wuhan lab. So what did Morens allegedly do? He conspired to get the grant restored AND wrote a medical journal article arguing that COVID came from nature — not the lab. Science!
And the payment for this little bit of “scientific” advocacy? According to the indictment, Co-Conspirator 1 gifted Morens wine and promised meals at Michelin-starred restaurants in Paris, New York, and Washington, D.C. for his “behind-the-scenes shenanigans.” That’s a direct quote from the indictment. “Behind-the-scenes shenanigans.” They were literally toasting each other over how well they’d hidden the truth from you.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche nailed it: “These allegations represent a profound abuse of trust at a time when the American people needed it most.”
No kidding. While Americans were locked in their homes, losing their businesses, missing their parents’ funerals, and watching their kids fall behind in school — this guy was allegedly shredding evidence and collecting fine wine as a thank-you for keeping the cover-up going.
The charges he’s facing aren’t a slap on the wrist, either. Conspiracy against the United States carries up to five years. Destruction of records in a federal investigation? Twenty years per count. Concealment of records? Three years per count. We’re talking about potentially decades behind bars for a 78-year-old man who thought a Gmail account would keep him safe.
And we need to talk about what this means for the bigger picture. Morens didn’t operate alone. The indictment names two co-conspirators and references a “Senior NIAID Official” who received information from Morens. The walls are closing in, and this indictment is the first brick falling. House Republicans had already been investigating Morens’ emails, and now the DOJ is turning congressional findings into criminal charges.
Remember when asking “did this come from a lab?” got you banned from Facebook? When the media called the lab leak theory a “debunked conspiracy”? When every “fact-checker” in America said the science was settled? The science wasn’t settled — it was being actively hidden by the people who were supposed to be giving us answers.
They didn’t just get it wrong. According to this indictment, they allegedly conspired to make sure we’d never find out they got it wrong. They destroyed records, dodged FOIA requests, and wrote fake “scientific” papers to muddy the waters — all while collecting gifts for their trouble.
The FBI and HHS Office of Inspector General ran this investigation. Federal prosecutors in Maryland are handling the case. And somewhere, Anthony Fauci’s phone is buzzing with calls from reporters asking him how his top adviser of sixteen years was running a criminal conspiracy right under his nose.
We waited years for this. Years of being gaslit, censored, and mocked. And now there’s a federal indictment with the word “conspiracy” in it — not from a blog post, not from a podcast, but from the United States Department of Justice.
Pop the cork. The “follow the science” crowd is about to follow a defense attorney into federal court.
