cogreslab said:
To Prag:
The orignal report re Liburdy may have been submitted by LBL in 1995, but the original charge by ORI was only made in 1999, and Liburdy responded immediately. I do not believe either he or anyone else was aware of it before the 1999 BEMS meeting.
Sigh.. Keep digging Roger!
I did a bit more research to be sure of the point. Apparently the original complaint by his lab assistant was first filed in 1994 and concerned his research of THAT time, not the 1992 research. LBL then started an investigation and had concluded by mid 1995 that he had committed research fraud (in respect of which work I don't know). So they filed a request with the ORI for an independent investigation. As part of that investigation ORI had to obtain further research data from Liburdy.
Here is an extract from the Federal Register (my emphasis):
Federal Register: June 17, 1999 (Volume 64, Number 116), Notices, Page 32503-32504
Robert P. Liburdy, Ph.D., Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory: Based on an investigation report by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) dated July 7, 1995, and an analysis of the data and information from Dr. Liburdy obtained by ORI during its oversight review, ORI found that Dr. Liburdy, former staff biochemist at LBNL, engaged in scientific misconduct in biomedical research by intentionally falsifying and fabricating data and claims about the purported cellular effects of electric and magnetic fields (EMF) that were reported in two scientific papers: (1) Liburdy, R.P. ``Biological interactions of cellular systems with time-varying magnetic fields. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 649:74-95, 1992 (``ANYAS paper''); and (2) Liburdy, R.P. ``Calcium signaling in lymphocytes and ELF fields.'' FEBS Letters 301:53-59, 1992 (the ``FEBS Letters paper''). The ANYAS and FEBS Letters papers were supported by a National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Institutes of Health (NIH), grant.
So you want us to believe that he is found guilty of research fraud by LBL, who think it serious enough to call in the ORI, who then contacted Liburdy and demanded his data for review and Liburdy didn't know about it until 4 years later? Oh please!
And then we have the matter of Liburdy's claims after the event which you quoted earlier and the subsequent definitive response by the ORI which I quoted which says that the ORI does NOT accept Liburdy's claims of innocence and misinterpretation. Data was FORGED, not just badly graphed. Experts alleged to have examined the work and supporting Liburdy (2 of them) did NOT see all the data, and the ORI are even offering the full data to anyone who wishes to investigate and/or challenge their findings. We also note that after 5 years NOBODY has offered any legitimate reinterpretation of the data that would support any conclusion other than the one ORI reached - which was that Liburdy's work was fraudulent. I also note that the ORI explicitly say that Liburdy's data is NOT valid and neither are his "scientific" conclusions.
ORI are saying that Liburdy committed fraud. They say his subsequent statements are not true and that he is a liar.
I don't believe Liburdy, and I most certainly don't believe YOU!
cogreslab said:
As for the alleged misquote by me (see Bouncer's post) omitting the word "potentially", I was quoting from a document which also omitted the same word, and there was no intention on my part to strengthen the statement. Bouncer is being overly pedantic as usual imho. Liburdy's study (as well as the three or so replications after then) are important, not just potentially important.
There is no
ALLEGED misquote. The original quote is in the public domain and your rendition of it is NOT correct. There is no "alleged" about it. You misquoted. I don't believe your excuse that it was misquoted in the document you were reading (unless it was a document YOU wrote!). You don't seem to realise that you have lied to us once too often, nobody on here trusts your claims any more.
And as for being "overly pedantic". A quote is either accurate or it isn't. There is nothing pedantic about expecting an accurate quotation, particularly where the omitted word makes a world of difference to the interpretation. Consider the two statements in relation to your "challenge":
1) Roger Coghill is a child killer.
2) Roger Coghill is POTENTIALLY a child killer.
So I take it that if I go around saying the first of those things you would have no objection? Because my omission of the word "potentially" is unimportant and anyone who insists that it has to be there is being overly pedantic? Yeah, right!
Keep digging...
cogreslab said:
Though I am determined to get to responding to Hans et al., I also wish to defend the allegations made against Liburdy. Tomorrow moreover there is an Environment Council meeting in London with the NGT discussing ways forward over the ELF exposure problem to which I am going, and as usual many things on my return from Washington have deprioved me of the time i would like to spend on this thread, but hopefully by the end of the week things will have got back to normal and i can resume full time on these matters.
Diversion noted.
cogreslab said:
I formally claim that the NGT are sitting on their own privately conducted nationwide study (Draper, Swanson et al.) showing a near 2 fold elevation of childhood leukaemia within 100 metres of HV powerlines. Unless they go public on this very soon I and others intend to bring a class action which will make the 1998 cellphone case look like a child's teaparty.
Another diversion noted. Prove it by the way, I don't believe you.