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CIA whistleblower TESTIFIES on COVID 'cover-up'

Fox Business May 13, 2026 1h 32m 14,439 words
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About this transcript: This is a full AI-generated transcript of CIA whistleblower TESTIFIES on COVID 'cover-up' from Fox Business, published May 13, 2026. The transcript contains 14,439 words with timestamps and was generated using Whisper AI.

"The committee will come to order. The COVID-19 pandemic was one of the most consequential events of our lifetime, and to this day, the American people have never received a full accounting of where it came from, what our government knew, and why they had to fight their own government to find out...."

[0:00] The committee will come to order. The COVID-19 pandemic was one of the most consequential events [0:07] of our lifetime, and to this day, the American people have never received a full accounting [0:13] of where it came from, what our government knew, and why they had to fight their own government [0:17] to find out. Today, the committee will hear from an intelligence community whistleblower about [0:22] these questions. The witness will testify that the CIA scientific analysts repeatedly [0:28] concluded that a laboratory leak was the most likely origin of COVID-19, and that those [0:34] conclusions were buried, softened, or withheld from Congress while the public was told to trust a [0:40] different story. For years, Americans were told to trust the experts, trust the agencies, trust the [0:46] intelligence community, and trust the officials who assured us that they were following the science. [0:53] But the evidence before the committee tells a very different story. [0:56] Today, we will expose a system in which a small circle of officials, scientists, grantees, [1:03] and intelligence advisors move from agencies to agency, meeting to meeting, briefing to briefing, [1:10] reviewing one another's work, and shaping one another's conclusions, and presenting those [1:15] conclusions to Congress and the public as if they were independent conclusions. Only it was not [1:21] independent, it was a circle. One part of that circle is a body most Americans have never heard of, [1:27] the Biological Sciences Expert Group, known as BSEG, or the B Group. BSEG operates under the office of [1:36] the Director of National Intelligence. Its stated purpose is to give the intelligence community access [1:42] to outside scientific experts on biological threats. Sounds reasonable, but not if those experts are not [1:49] independent. For example, Dr. Ralph Baric collaborated with Dr. Zhengli, Xi, and Wu Han to create gain-of-function [1:57] coronaviruses. But Dr. Baric was also part of BSEG and an active consultant to intelligence agencies on the [2:05] origins of COVID-19 pandemic. Likewise, Peter Daszak received hundreds of millions of dollars from the U.S. [2:13] government and worked with Dr. Xi also on these gain-of-function experiments. Daszak was even sent to [2:19] China with the WHO to investigate the origins of COVID. So the very scientists that were commissioned [2:27] to investigate COVID were, in some cases, the very scientists who were complicit in the origins of the [2:33] gain-of-function experiments that may well have created COVID. In essence, the intelligence community [2:40] pays researchers to review work and write papers. NIH funds their grants. The CIA then consults them [2:48] and gives them access to classified information. The national academies publish their work. [2:54] Policymakers then cite the result as a consensus. But it's a circle. At the center of the government [3:00] side of this circle was Dr. Anthony Fauci. For years, Dr. Fauci was not merely a public health official [3:07] speaking from the NIH. He had a long-standing relationship with the national security and [3:12] intelligence apparatus on biological threats, dangerous pathogens, classified life sciences [3:18] researches, pandemic preparedness, and COVID origins. Again and again, documents show him being brought [3:26] into national security discussions far beyond ordinary public health messaging. During COVID, [3:33] intelligence officials arranged for Dr. Fauci to review highly classified intelligence assessments that [3:39] could not even be sent outside the White House complex. But how can Anthony Fauci objectively comment [3:45] on a discussion of COVID origins when he approved the very funding that may have caused the pandemic virus? [3:53] From the outset of the pandemic, Dr. Fauci shaped the conclusions. Dozens of times, [4:01] he referred to the idea that the pandemic originating in the lab was a conspiracy, that it was a conspiracy [4:07] theory. Dr. Fauci convened the now infamous February 1st, 2020 call. Some scientists on that call [4:15] privately raised serious concerns about a laboratory origin. Yet ironically, those same scientists later [4:22] co-authored the proximal origin paper, which publicly dismissed the lab leak hypothesis. One author [4:28] received a $9 million grant from Dr. Fauci's own agency after he changed his opinion from lab leak on the [4:36] private phone call to natural origin in public. At the same time, Dr. Fauci coordinated with the national [4:42] academies on coronavirus origins and public facing messaging. These were not independent experts reaching a [4:51] consensus. They were part of the same machine designed to reach the same conclusion. The question is not whether the [4:59] government may consult experts. The question is whether those experts were independent, whether [5:05] conflicts were disclosed, whether dissenting views were preserved, whether the lab leak possibility was [5:12] fairly evaluated, and whether Congress and the American people received the truth or a curated result. [5:19] When Congress asked these questions, government officials lied to our face. They classified the documents. [5:25] They suppressed the information. They changed the definitions. They invoked sources and methods. [5:31] They told Congress only what they wanted Congress to know. In 2023, John Ratcliffe, the former director [5:39] of national intelligence, testified before Congress with a stark warning. He said a lab leak was the only [5:45] explanation credibly supported by intelligence, science, and common sense. He warned that partisan politics [5:53] and analysts' disagreement with Trump administration policy, Trump derangement syndrome, had created [6:00] illegitimate roadblocks to the truth. I agree. He said the COVID-19 Origin Act, which Congress passed [6:07] unanimously, should finally make intelligence on COVID's origins public. I couldn't agree more. [6:15] Despite a unanimously passed law, though, requiring the declassification of all information related to COVID [6:21] origins, the deep state still resists this congressional mandate. Our witness today will explain what [6:28] happened inside the CIA. According to his testimony, CIA scientific analysts concluded multiple times [6:35] between 2021 and 2023 that a lab leak was the most likely origin of COVID-19. Yet those conclusions [6:44] never shaped the official narrative, never made the intelligence report. Congress was never told. [6:50] It was not until after the 2024 election that the outgoing Biden administration directed the CIA [6:57] to issue an assessment, not because of new intelligence, but so officials could walk out [7:03] of the door claiming there was nothing left to find. That is not analysis. That is a cleanup operation. [7:10] This hearing is about more than one witness, one assessment, or one agency. It's about a federal apparatus [7:17] that told the American people to trust the science while hiding the machinery that shaped the science. [7:24] It's about an intelligence community that relied on outside experts whose conflicts were never disclosed. [7:31] It's about public health officials with access to intelligence that Congress has struggled to obtain. [7:38] It's about researchers and advisors cycling through grants, contracts, classified briefings, [7:43] federal service and advisory committees and presenting the results as independent, even though they weren't. [7:50] The cover up is not just about protecting one research grant. It's about protecting an entire network of labs, [7:57] grants, intermediaries and bureaucratic architecture quietly engineered to outlast any moratorium, any congressional inquiry [8:05] and any election. After millions died, children lost years of learning, small businesses were destroyed, civil liberties were restricted, [8:15] and dissenting Americans were censored and smeared. The government owes its people the evidence. [8:22] Our witness is testifying publicly today at great personal risk. He and other brave whistleblowers have come forward [8:29] because the truth was being buried, because government secrecy cannot become government impunity. [8:35] I want to acknowledge the Trump administration officials who made good on their commitment to transparency [8:42] and cooperated with this investigation. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, [8:47] Director of NIH Jay Bhattacharya, Director of the National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, and former Secretary of Homeland [8:55] Security Kristi Noem. They set a standard. I expect the rest of the administration to meet it. We owe the American people [9:03] a complete record. We owe every family harmed by this pandemic a government that does not hide behind secrecy, [9:10] conflicts and curated science when the stakes are life and death in public starting today. [9:18] I want to note for the record that Mr. Erdmann is appearing today pursuant to a subpoena issued by this [9:27] committee on May 5, 2026. This is a public hearing. The witness is a current CIA employee and has previously [9:36] provided testimony to the committee in a classified setting. If a question calls for classified information [9:43] or if the witness believes any answer may implicate classified information, the witness should advise [9:48] the committee before answering and the committee will address the matter through the appropriate [9:51] procedures. The transcript of the witness's prior classified deposition has not been finalized [9:58] and has not completed classification review. Members and the witness should not quote from, [10:03] characterize or seek confirmation of deposition testimony that may contain classified information [10:09] in this public setting. It is the practice of this committee to swear in the witness. Will you please [10:16] stand and raise your right hand? Do you swear that the testimony you will give before this committee will [10:23] be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth? So help you God. Thank you. You may be seated. [10:34] James E. Erdmann III is a CIA senior operations officer. He's a decorated officer with decades of [10:42] intelligence and national security experience. Before joining the CIA in 2013, he served with the [10:47] 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, and as a foreign services officer at the Department of State. [10:54] He recently completed a joint duty assignment with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence [11:00] Director Initiatives Group. Mr. Erdmann holds a Bachelor of Science in Biology with a minor in Chemistry [11:05] from Western Oregon University and has received the Director of National Intelligence National Intelligence [11:12] Award and the CIA Intelligence Medal of Merit. Mr. Erdmann, you are recognized for your opening statement. [11:23] Good morning, Chairman Paul and other members of the Oversight Committee. Thank you for the complimentary [11:29] introduction and I appreciate the committee's dedication to transparency and accountability. [11:35] I am a career CIA operations officer and, as you mentioned, I was on joint duty assignment at the [11:44] Office of Director of National Intelligence Directors Initiatives Group, or the DIG, between March 2025 and [11:53] April 2026. I was responsible for leading the DIG's investigation into COVID origins, anomalous health [12:00] incidents, and unidentified anomalous phenomena. I'm here today to discuss the COVID cover-up, the national [12:13] security implications associated with the DIG's investigative findings, and CIA refusal to comply [12:19] with lawful oversight, as well as how we remedy these problems. Intelligence community leaders and senior [12:28] analysts downplayed the possibility that the COVID pandemic originated as a result of a lab incident. [12:36] Motives are difficult to define given the scope of the DIG's review. Intentional or not, the IC's actions [12:44] resulted in a cover-up, wasted resources, and a failure to properly inform policy makers. Public health [12:52] policy would have been very different had the American public been made aware that a virus from a lab in [13:01] China was going to serve as the foundation for an emergency use authorization mRNA products being mandated [13:10] by the former administration. Dr. Fauci's role in the cover-up was intentional. Dr. Fauci influenced the [13:22] analytical process and findings by leveraging his position to ensure the IC consulted with a conflicted [13:30] list of curated subject matter experts, public health officials, and scientists. This included some of the [13:39] authors of the paper, The Proximal Origin of SARS-CoV-2, and other public health experts who have been in [13:45] his orbit for the last 20-plus years. Some of the scientists were part of the Biological Sciences Experts [13:52] Group, or the BSEG, an office of Director of National Intelligence Advisory Body whose members often [14:01] received considerable funding from NIAID and public health agencies. The BSEG scientists influenced national [14:13] laboratory WMD research, policy decisions, finished analysis, and other intelligence matters, creating [14:21] misaligned incentives and conflicts of interest, as well as counterintelligence issues. Since 2006, [14:33] the BSEG consulted part-time on biodefense issues for the IC while conducting government-funded research [14:40] and holding academia positions, as well as maintaining roles in public health institutions and serving as [14:46] members in the National Academy of Science. They received funding from NIAID and other agencies for vaccine [14:54] research, USAID's PREDICT project, the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, and even worked with Chinese [15:02] scientists on coronavirus and other pathogen studies pursuing vaccines. There was no oversight monitoring how [15:14] this web of relationships influenced research, policy, and public health in any holistic way for over 20 years. [15:24] In fact, several of the BSEG scientists helped Dr. Fauci rewrite definitions of gain of function in 2015 [15:31] to lift a funding pause on dangerous research. Still others participated in event in planning event 201 in 2019. [15:39] This was a coronavirus pandemic tabletop exercise, curiously similar to the events that played out [15:45] during the COVID-19 pandemic, and it was attended by Dr. Fauci and individuals with IC ties like former DNI [15:52] Avril Haines. The CIA and DNI analytic managers responsible for examining the origin of COVID made decisions [16:04] inconsistent with the conclusions of subject matter experts and analytical tradecraft, consistently favoring [16:11] the theory of zoonosis or natural origin. Following the CIA's COVID relook that culminated in 2023, [16:22] the CIA retaliated against analysts supporting the lab leak hypothesis. CIA analysts were not bribed. [16:35] The analysts that supported the 2023 lab leak conclusion took every administrative measure available [16:41] to them to address their deep concerns regarding the analytic integrity of their finished intelligence. [16:50] CIA managers retaliated against them for their refusal to agree with management's middle-of-the-night [16:58] anonymous rewrite of the analysis, which changed the assessment to a non-call judgment. [17:09] Dr. Anthony Fauci's influence over the IC's COVID origin analysis and the witting and unwitting role [17:16] some BSEG scientists and IC personnel played in the cover-up exposed why this issue is of deep concern. [17:23] Failure to address the United States government's inability to differentiate between public health [17:30] and biodefense and the oversight-resistant ecosystem of life science actors has been fertile ground [17:38] for increasingly dangerous continental United States gain-of-function research as well as similar [17:44] research conducted in U.S. government-supported labs abroad. Post-9-11 changes in public health and [17:54] biodefense roles and responsibilities have blurred the lines between scientists, the military, the [18:00] intelligence community. It has resulted in a deliberately opaque and excessively redundant [18:08] biodefense research policy and financial infrastructure seemingly intended to escalate bureaucratic bloat. [18:16] This is a national security crisis caused by the inability to provide real oversight. The systematic [18:29] failures associated with muddled boundaries between biodefense and public health and an overly complex [18:36] infrastructure have been exacerbated by documented efforts to circumvent oversight. CIA did not comply [18:44] with lawful oversight during the digs investigation. The behavior significantly impacted Director Gabbard's [18:51] implementation of several EOs issued during this administration and tasked to the dig. The CIA refused to [18:59] provide information necessary to understand why analytical standards at the CIA were violated. The CIA illegally [19:10] monitored the computer and phone usage of dig personnel, their investigations, and contact with whistleblowers. [19:17] These were Americans being spied upon illegally while executing duties directed by the President and under the [19:26] authority of the Director of National Intelligence. One CIA contractor assisting with the digs investigation into the [19:34] events that transpired between 2022 and 2023 was fired by the CIA one day after meeting with the dig. [19:43] When the digs ceased operations, the CIA also took back 40 boxes of JFK files and MKUltra files being processed for declassification by DNI Gabbard. [19:59] The legislative and executive branches will continue to be misinformed if this type of behavior is not addressed. [20:09] The partial solution to dangerous gain of function has already been laid out in Executive Order 14292, [20:18] Improving the Safety and Security of Biological Research. We need a comprehensive review of government-funded [20:26] life science research and a move back to pre-9-11 definitions of gain of function and WMD research, [20:32] particularly in the IC and DHS. More broadly, we need effective oversight. We must hold agencies [20:44] responsible for failure to comply with Executive Order 14292 and oversight must have teeth. [20:52] You must be willing to pull the purse strings and, if necessary, convene another church committee. [20:57] The results of our investigation would have been impossible without whistleblowers willing to come [21:11] forward. They are indispensable agents for reform. Despite statutory law, agency regulation, [21:26] and training requirements, whistleblowers are almost never protected. Whistleblower protections [21:35] always seem to protect the agency. Every time the CIA investigates itself, [21:40] they coincidentally find no wrongdoing. When they do identify issues, they hold the system responsible. [21:49] That last statement is a verbatim response from a Europe and Eurasia Mission Center lawyer when the CIA [21:57] Office of Inspector General did identify shortcomings so serious, oversight bodies were holding meetings [22:03] about it three years after the events transpired. It was in response to the question, was anyone held [22:13] accountable? Apparently the system is good enough. The only way we solve this issue is with real [22:24] accountability for failure to comply with executive and legislative branch oversight and an escape valve [22:30] where whistleblowers can continue to contribute to mission free from retaliation. All IG elements need [22:39] to be removed from the agencies and fall under a separate entity controlled by the IC Inspector General. [22:47] The personnel in IG elements should be 1811 certified with regular DOJ and legislative oversight reporting [22:54] responsibilities. Thank you and my written written statement provides far more details related to these [23:02] issues. I look forward to your questions. Thank you Mr. Erdman. Is it your testimony that there is [23:09] still resistance from the CIA to comply with the law we passed to declassify all the COVID information? [23:16] Yes. One of the things that I think is new today that I'm hearing from your testimony [23:26] is that from an early period of time you believe and the information you're aware of is that CIA scientists [23:35] from an early time after the pandemic began 2020, 2021 were concluding that the lab leak was the most likely [23:45] hypothesis? Yes, Senator. I'd like to offer some qualifications on that as well. [23:52] Well, a lot of the issues occurred at the interagency space at the National Intelligence Council, the [24:01] individuals responsible for conducting or writing WMD analysis. So, and many of those individuals are on [24:10] JDA from the CIA. But yes, very early, as early as 2020, there were agencies within the IC circulating papers [24:21] that said, hey, there's, for example, DOE circulated a paper in May of 2020 that said that all the [24:30] conditions were present for a lab leak. And I could go through the timeline, but yes, my short answer is [24:39] yes, periodically throughout 2020 all the way to 2024. Yes. I think the arguments, you know, pro and con for [24:46] what is the evidence on whether this came from a lab or it came from nature are still important. So for [24:52] years we've been asking the CIA to produce the scientists, either in a classified setting or a [24:57] public setting to discuss the arguments. I don't see any reason why the arguments should be classified. [25:02] You know, one of the arguments that's made publicly is that the source looks like it came from a single [25:08] source of RNA, not like five different types of viruses or 20 different types like you had with SARS 2003, but it came from one source. And virtually everybody argues that sort of indicates a lab and not a nature. [25:14] And so those arguments are important scientific arguments to have. But we've been prevented from having them. We've been preventing from getting all of the declassified information. [25:26] But what I think is is of importance that's new today is that your testimony is that the CIA scientists were concluding that it was lab. But then when this there was a 90 day [25:32] study in 2021. And this study was done by NIC led by NIC. Tell us what NIC is again. It's the National Intelligence Council and individuals responsible for writing various WMD and and and bio related issues. [25:44] So when they had this study, they had CIA scientists telling them look the evidence. The scientific evidence looks like came from the lab, but then they brought in Anthony Fauci. [25:54] And is it your opinion that Anthony Fauci. [26:00] was able to overrule the scientist or get NIC to conclude somehow that there wasn't a conclusion to be added here, we're going to be neutral contradicting what the scientists were telling them? [26:10] So there's two questions there and I want to break them up into two. One is, what does the scientific evidence look like the scientific evidence, the scientific evidence of the scientific evidence of the scientific evidence of the scientific evidence. [26:21] So when they had this study, they had CIA scientists telling them, look, the evidence, the scientific evidence looks like it came from the lab. But then they brought in Anthony Fauci. [26:27] there, and I want to break them up into two. One is, where were the injection [26:31] points Dr. Anthony Fauci, where did Dr. Anthony Fauci, and when, did he inject [26:36] himself into the IC? And the other half of that question, if I'm, if I'm, and I [26:40] don't want to extrapolate too much here, is, okay, what happened with, with, why [26:45] was there a change in analysis? So I'll start with the, if it's okay, Dr. Paul, [26:49] Senator, I'll start with Dr. Anthony Fauci. There were two instances. On 3 [26:56] February 2020, and for June 2021, Anthony Fauci had contact with the [27:02] interagency, and what, how to sort of broadly generalize this, is that, that [27:09] contact was happily pursued within the IC. They wanted that contact, and he [27:16] provided a curated list of subject matter experts, which coincidentally wrote the [27:21] proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2. So it's, it's not like he came in and said, you [27:26] have to do X, Y, and Z. He provided recommendations. It's when you look at, when [27:32] you look at what has already been publicly released about Dr. Fauci, and then what [27:38] you're seeing under the curtain at the IC, where you realize, okay, there is a [27:41] narrative that was being generated by his contact, not just with experts here in [27:46] the United States, but experts in Australia and the UK, and that's the public [27:51] facing piece. And, you know, he, he tries to, he had tried to sort of keep his hands [27:56] clear of, I didn't, I didn't have anything to do with the proximal origin of [28:00] SARS-CoV-2. But in the meantime, he's pushing those authors and individuals that [28:05] have been in his orbit into the IC as experts. And I'll jump to, to June 2021. We, we as the IC at the [28:16] NIC, happily pursued those recommendations. And in one email, which I'll describe to [28:24] you, the person in charge of leading the 90-day study, you know, he introduced [28:31] himself to the community that, on what they, what they were supposed to be doing. [28:35] And then the community said, he said, listen, we've got these people we should be [28:41] talking to. And, uh, another very senior NIC officer sent a direct email to him [28:47] saying, hey, considering that Dr. Fauci is a public health expert, are you sure we [28:53] should be relying on this? Shouldn't we, shouldn't we have a separate set? And in [28:58] this instance, the, the individual responded, no, in this case, um, Dr. Anthony [29:03] Fauci is a subject matter expert. However, that's directly contradicting his public [29:09] testimony of being a subject matter expert. [29:10] Part of the job in intelligence when you interview someone is assessing their [29:14] truthfulness, their, um, potential biases or conflicts of interest. Did anyone ever [29:20] bring up that Anthony Fauci approved the research that went on in Wuhan and that it [29:25] might not be in his interest for the conclusion to be that it came from a lab [29:28] that he had funded? That there might be a conflict that was, did any of everybody [29:32] ever bring up that he might not be an objective, uh, witness? [29:35] That was one example of an email. No one laid it out quite that clearly. You're [29:39] piecing it together. We were piecing it together from multiple emails, from [29:43] multiple agencies, multiple documents. It was, it was, it was more subtle than that. [29:49] Nobody said, this is happening. And unfortunately, I think they probably [29:53] should have. It was all, it was all out there. [29:55] But your conclusion is that, um, changing from the scientific consensus of it being [30:01] from a lab to a neutral position by the CIA was significantly influenced [30:06] by Anthony Fauci. It was significantly influenced by Anthony Fauci's, uh, injecting [30:12] himself into the IC. And to go to the second part of your question about what [30:17] happened, uh, particularly during the 90 day study, uh, we have documentation, uh, that [30:24] shows that as of August 12th, uh, the CIA was considering calling this a lab leak, August [30:29] 12th of 2021. And then, um, that changed on August 17th of 2021. [30:36] Right. And unfortunately, because the CIA would not provide us documentation that we [30:39] asked for, we, we can't, we have no idea why that changed. And that, that's. [30:44] And they weren't alone because we know the FBI was coming to the same conclusion that [30:47] it was lab leak as well as, um, the FBI. Uh, Senator Ernst. [30:52] Thank you, Mr. Chair. Really appreciate you being here today. Um, I know that this has [31:01] been a topic for many of us for many years, and we continue to get pushback from the federal [31:08] government as we're trying to uncover, uh, the truth to this matter. Um, for years, folks [31:15] who discussed a possible COVID lab origin were dismissed as conspiracy theorists. They were [31:22] censored. Um, some were even fired from their jobs. If there was or is a conspiracy, then [31:27] U S government officials and U S funded scientists keeping secret should be publicly questioned [31:36] under oath about what they knew and when they knew it. But U S funded scientists somehow are [31:43] still protected from being questioned publicly, even though they received millions of taxpayer dollars [31:48] from NIH, DHS, DOE, and DOD. And look, folks, um, I've long warned about a potential [31:55] government cover cover cover up of the truth, which our brave witness again. [32:00] Thank you, Mr. Erdman, uh, has confirmed to us today. I've called for answers [32:05] from Dr. Ralph Baric, an expert virologist who showed the intelligence community [32:08] in January 2020 before the pandemic. [32:12] The American people knew about the pandemic that quote We may be on the verge [32:19] of a global pandemic, end quote. Yet nothing was done to share this information [32:24] with the American people. I exposed that the Wuhan lab received $1.4 million [32:29] in federal funds fought to cut off every single cent flowing to that lab, [32:34] $1 million in federal funds fought to cut off every single cent flowing [32:40] to that lab. And I won on this for the taxpayers. And I haven't [32:44] backed down from fighting for more information on the true COVID [32:48] origins. And yet Congress is still here. Six years later, begging [32:53] agencies to share answers and for committees to make relevant [32:58] documents public. We are tired of Washington cover ups and if they [33:03] aren't our screw ups here in the U. S. Why would the U. S. Government [33:07] cover up for the CCP and other countries? So, Mr Erdman, Americans [33:13] would have been angry to learn in early 2020 that their government may [33:18] have played a role in COVID-19 creation. Would you say such thinking [33:23] influenced the intelligence community to suppress a lab leak origin [33:28] theory? I would say that there there's evidence in the emails [33:34] that it was part of the calculus. I wouldn't say so. It's it's it's very [33:39] difficult. It's more subtle. There's sort of a zeitgeist that runs [33:44] underneath the analysis. And I'll provide a conversation I had with [33:50] one of our whistleblowers. And I asked and he this individual was is [33:56] an incredibly talented scientist. And I said, I asked that individual, why [34:03] don't you actually go forward, go public? There's a lot of reasons not [34:07] to do that. There's a whole bunch. His comment was nobody wants the lab. [34:12] Nobody wanted the lab. Nobody wanted the lab. [34:18] Lee conclusion. And I'm concerned that there's too many people willing [34:23] to make excuses for China in this organization for the wrong reasons. [34:29] That that's that was pervasive. And so the individuals we talked to, [34:37] they never said, you know, one for one, you know, it's because they disliked [34:44] the sitting president or they were they were trying to cover up like managers [34:50] were trying to cover up for China. But it was a pervasive undercurrent [34:55] is how they described it. And I think I think to answer your question, [35:01] there's certainly reluctance to reluctance to provide information that would be [35:14] geopolitically destabilizing or provide ammunition ammunition for actions that [35:21] maybe they thought would be unwise. Did I answer your question, Senator? [35:24] Yes, you did. And it's it's troubling to hear that there's an undercurrent [35:28] of making excuses for China as well. I deeply troubling. [35:34] We spend millions of dollars to have an early warning intelligence system. [35:39] And yet today I'm hearing the system may have been alerted, [35:44] but no one was acting on the information. [35:47] Do you think that's an accurate statement? [35:50] I can't speak to the health agencies. I can say that the IC was certainly where [35:55] early on that that looked like there might be an issue. [35:58] And so the intelligence that had come in, I don't think they sat on it. [36:02] I don't think they sat on the intelligence. [36:04] Now that speaks to maybe a broader issue with the interaction between IC elements and non IC elements. [36:13] Maybe there's there's some improvements that could be made there. [36:15] But I I didn't see the IC sitting on information extraordinarily long. [36:21] OK, it could have been agencies then extraneous to the IC. [36:25] Right. And you know, the bureaucracy is real. [36:29] I mean, there's it's just every day sometimes feels like a fight just to get simple things done. [36:34] And that's just part of working in a large organization. [36:37] So I'm not making excuses. I'm just saying from the intelligence perspective. [36:41] I think they identified fairly quickly that this might be an issue. [36:46] And with this as an issue, typically we go back. [36:50] We do after action reviews. [36:51] Do you think this is something that the U.S. government has learned from? [36:56] I see you grimace, maybe share a little bit about that, because if this is a system wide across the federal government, you know, how do we stop this from happening again? [37:09] What lessons have we learned from this? [37:11] If any, you're still coming forward as a whistleblower. [37:15] So what have we taken away from this and how do we prevent this from happening in the future, whether it's, you know, the spread of a pandemic or, you know, what happened within the agency? [37:26] So I really don't want to go beyond. [37:30] I see too much because I'm not part of like the health establishment. [37:33] I'm not I'm not in that organization. [37:36] But part of the reason the dig was pulled together as a task force. [37:41] It was a temporary tool to perform something like an after action review and get at the bottom of what happened. [37:49] And if you're asking me, did we learn anything? [37:51] Well, the problem is we did not receive support from the CIA in terms of and I documented in my transcribed interview and I don't want to go into the specifics of that. [38:02] But there were very specific lists of information we needed so that we could put into context what happened. [38:09] And so, no, I don't think we've learned our lesson when it comes to transparency and reform. [38:18] We didn't get the documents we needed. [38:20] Senator, your committee issued, what was it, 14 subpoenas in January of 2025 requesting documents. [38:28] And Director Gabbard did her absolute best to try and force the IC to start producing these documents. [38:34] And a bunch of them got sent over to ODNI. [38:38] But we still didn't get all of them. [38:40] And so what I'll say is we did not get the documents we needed from the CIA, state INR. [38:48] And so the lessons in terms of the transparency and reform, I don't think those occurred. [38:55] And they can only occur. [38:57] And they can only occur if we actually do a full review of what happened during COVID. [39:02] And again, there's a fair question. [39:05] How long do you want to be backwards leaning looking at COVID? [39:08] That's a fair question. [39:09] You only have limited resources, limited time, limited personnel. [39:13] And we have limited experts that work within the CIA, and they've got forward-facing threats. [39:19] The reason COVID is so important is because what we did find is that there is a much larger meta-problem sitting on top of COVID. [39:31] The fact that we have these scientists, and again, I'm not vilifying any of these scientists we contracted in to come to the IC. [39:41] We desperately need their expertise. [39:44] And so when we invite them in, we're inviting them in because we want their help. [39:49] And so we need them. [39:51] But those same scientists, it's this ecosystem that has a lot of money involved. [39:57] They're involved with the National Academy of Science, for example, some of them. [40:03] And, you know, National Academy of Science also helps with our WMD policy for the U.S. government. [40:09] Unfortunately, the National Academy of Science also has a great number of Chinese researchers that co-publish. [40:16] And so if we're not careful, we're going to have Chinese researchers helping us draft U.S. WMD policy. [40:24] That's not a good thing. [40:26] You've got the Counter-Threat Reduction Program that involves some of these IC scientists. [40:30] And once you start cross-pollinating like that, being able to tease out and really provide proper oversight becomes so, so difficult. [40:39] And you're talking about also multiple funding streams from multiple different places. [40:44] It's a very complex problem. [40:46] COVID. [40:47] We need the AAR so that we... [40:50] And it already pointed to the bigger problem. [40:52] So maybe that's enough. [40:53] Great. [40:54] Okay. [40:55] Thank you, Mr. Erdman. [40:56] Thank you, Mr. Chair. [40:57] Senator Ernst, one thing I would interject as far as lessons from my perspective is the scientists overseeing gain-of-function research [41:05] can't be the scientists receiving the money. [41:07] Right. [41:08] So we voted last year on the Risky Research Review Act. [41:11] It would be a presidential commission, but the scientists that oversee gain-of-function would not be receiving NIH grants. [41:17] Part of it is that Fauci had a fiefdom, this enormous fiefdom, and he was controlling the funds. [41:22] But then there was a danger of that he doles it out to people who agree with him, and I think that was happening. [41:27] Senator Moreno. [41:28] Point well taken. [41:30] Thank you, Mr. Chairman. [41:31] Mr. Erdman, first of all, thank you for your service to our nation in the past, current, and future. [41:36] Quick question for you, because I've obviously never been in the CIA. [41:41] Is it easy to be a whistleblower? [41:44] Is it easy to kind of think about, hey, I'm going to go outside the normal chain of command? [41:49] Or does it come with personal risk, career risk, et cetera? [41:52] I do not believe whistleblower protections are sufficient to protect whistleblowers. [41:58] So it's not easy? [41:59] So it's not easy for you to be here? [42:00] It is not easy. [42:01] Especially you're serving now today. [42:02] What is your reaction when you look at the diocese and you see that there's not a single solitary Democrat member here to listen to your testimony? [42:09] How does that make you feel? [42:10] My goal in being here is threefold. [42:16] You know, I want to talk about COVID. [42:18] I get that. [42:19] But I'm saying, I wish they were there. [42:21] I wish they were there. [42:22] You're taking personal risk. [42:23] You're serving the country. [42:24] You're not partisan. [42:25] This is not about politics, but somehow it's become about politics because the Democrats don't even want to hear the conversation about what obviously was a grave error that this country made during COVID. [42:37] And unlike previous situations, there's never been a situation, certainly not in my lifetime where you had decisions made that affected generations of America of Americans, kids that were absolutely deprived of their childhood businesses that were destroyed families that were torn apart memories that you'll never get back trillions of dollars of economic loss. [42:59] We should at least have a conversation that isn't partisan. And yet just for the record, there's not a single solitary Democrat senator that's willing to sit in this chamber and listen to your testimony. I think that's an outrage and insult to people like you. So I'm gonna bring a little more levity to what I just said. [43:17] Back in June of 21, you talked about that, which is interesting. June of 21. I remember June of 21 as something that came up during a comedy show. [43:27] I'm not somebody who listens to Stephen Colbert, but he had Jon Stewart on and he said, I'm paraphrasing Jon Stewart. I will not deliver it with the same kind of comedic punch. But it said, Oh my God, there's been an outbreak of chocolatey goodness near Hershey, Pennsylvania. What do you think happened? Like, Oh, I'm going to get into it. [43:36] I don't know. Maybe the steam shovel made it with a cocoa bean or it's maybe the expletive deleted chocolate factory. Maybe that's it. And simple joke talking about or maybe the simplest solution is maybe the virus leak happened from the virus lab in the city of Wuhan or maybe that's it. [43:58] Chain of events of animals mating to each other all over the world resulted in this virus. [44:05] What ended up happening is that Jon Stewart was immediately tortured. The Washington Post called his his joke a dangerous weapon of propaganda. They called him conspiratorial and he got massive [44:13] personal backlash that was in June of 21 of 21 of 21. So does it turn out that the chocolatey goodness came from the chocolate factory in Hershey, Pennsylvania? [44:34] this came from the chocolate factory in Hershey, Pennsylvania? [44:37] Yeah, just as Director Ratcliffe said in 2020, it sure looks like the chocolatey factory [44:44] is actually where the chocolate came from. [44:47] In fact, it's funny that we're all sitting here today because in that same torture of [44:52] Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert said that maybe Jon Stewart was somehow a spy of Senator Johnson. [45:01] Because Senator Johnson was the one senator that was saying this in the very beginning. [45:07] It's continued to hold that accountability. And I applaud Senator Johnson for his absolutely [45:13] relentless pursuit of the truth in all this. But let me just spend the last few minutes here [45:19] talking to you about something that you mentioned, which is near and dear to my heart. [45:23] And I think all these hearings are important. What you said is super critical. And again, [45:27] I applaud you for taking and having the courage to come here and your detailed and methodical [45:33] review of all this. But where's the accountability? [45:37] This is this is what I hear from my constituents all over Ohio. It's like great. [45:42] You got a hearing. You said this and that happened. But they want to see the perp walks. [45:47] Where are the people who made these decisions and where how do we hold them accountable? [45:53] Anthony Fauci sitting probably sipping margaritas somewhere with his multimillion dollar [45:59] financial success as a result of duping the American people into putting an experimental [46:05] virus in their vaccine into their bodies or risk losing their jobs. [46:10] He's not accountable to anybody. He's having a great life. He was featured on Vogue magazine. [46:15] He sat there for a cover shot for a day trying to get beauty shots of him, which I imagine the photographer found difficult. [46:22] Where do you think? Where do you think we are on a path to accountability? [46:26] So I don't work at DOJ. And so I can't speak to prosecutions or perp walks or any of that stuff. [46:32] But what I'll say is and I want to go back to the first thing you mentioned here about the American public. [46:38] The American public, I think, and this is my opinion. I'm not expressing myself as a CIA officer or on loan to DNI, whatever it is. [46:48] I think we really want both Democrats and Republicans to show up and communicate and cooperate on issues. [46:56] Because part of the most important, and you all know this, I'm sorry, legislative branch, they have some power of oversight. [47:06] You guys are not, you can't make DOJ prosecute anybody. [47:12] You can reach across the aisle and you can try and get these people to pull the purse strings when agencies are behaving poorly. [47:22] And, you know, from my perspective, and I don't mean to criticize anyone, we need the legislative branch to start pulling purse strings. [47:32] It's got to be with teeth if you want accountability. And this is perfect. This form here is perfect. [47:40] It's about the transparency piece. Can't act unless people know. [47:44] On the accountability side, I can tell you that Director Gabbard is doing her best to pursue accountability [47:51] with all of the investigations that were undertaken by the dig. [47:55] And, you know, we can serve everything up and it's up to DOJ to take action at that point. [48:02] And I can't speak to, I can't speak to DOJ, but yeah. [48:05] No, I understand that. And I think what the American people would even expect at a minimum is a, just an apology. [48:12] An apology for putting the country through this, not giving the proper information. I think that would go a long way. [48:18] But certainly there was clearly bad actors. Mr. Chairman, you talked about the conflicts of interest. [48:23] The way you described it is very nice, but ultimately it's corruption. [48:26] I mean, when somebody is getting paid to give an opinion that's not fact based and that leads to personal gain, that's just flat out corruption. [48:35] And what makes America unique is that we don't allow that kind of corruption in our government. [48:39] And so I think ultimately where this all has to land is there has to be explicit accountability for individuals who profited off of the misinformation, the shaming of Americans and the systematic destruction of lots of lots of things in this country. [48:57] Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you, Senator. Senator Johnson. [49:02] Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Another excellent hearing. [49:06] I feel your pain and frustration in terms of trying to do oversight investigation and issuing subpoenas that are not responded to. [49:14] So they're not in full. Barely responded to generally. What responses we get are generally non-responsive responses, just a bunch of bureaucratic gobbledygooks. [49:24] So, again, I appreciate your efforts, though. [49:28] Mr. Erdman, I appreciate you coming forward. [49:31] One thing I know as former chairman of the full committee and now as chairman of the subcommittee investigations is we do not protect whistleblowers. [49:41] We have laws dating back over 100 years and the government is the worst offender in terms of retaliating against whistleblowers, even though there's all kinds of these legal protections. [49:52] So I appreciate you doing this. [49:54] I'll also note because I've nothing shocks me anymore with our colleagues from the other side of the aisle, but I'm shocked that not one of them showed up here. [50:04] I think one showed up to register as tenants and then gone. [50:09] I agree with you. It is well past time for us to have a church committee. [50:14] We're not going to get bipartisan support for church church committee. There's there's no curiosity on the other side about what's happening inside the deep state. [50:23] And that's really my question. Who is running the deep state? I've got example after example in agency after agency. Very, very legitimate oversight request. I subpoena documents. You don't get squat. [50:39] Now I asked for your testimony last night and I realized that I really appreciate the fact that the committee staff and chair and Paul is very, very concerned about retaliation against you. Apparently they didn't clear your testimony here at the CIA. Is that true? No. So you're appearing as a real as a true whistleblower publicly right off the bat. I'll do and I'm sure Senator Paul and the staff will do everything we can to prevent retaliation. What what is your game plan after this? You're done with the the in DNI. [51:01] And the dig organization. What do you plan going back to CIA? I returned to CIA on was it April. I'm back at CIA. I just took a couple weeks vacation after the it was a long year and I was tired. So I took some time off. So where are you welcome back? [51:14] I just I just I just arrived and I'm I've got a desk and I'm there. They're talking to me about what comes next. I mean, do you have any concerns about me keeping this? [51:32] Because originally we said you can't keep this after the hearing, but it sounds like now I can keep it. I mean, do you have any concerns about me keeping this? [51:37] about me keeping this? [51:39] Because originally we said you can't keep this after the [51:41] hearing, but it sounds like now I can keep it. [51:43] I mean, do you have a concern? Because, again, I don't want [51:45] to harm you in terms of what you've written here. [51:47] I haven't had a chance to go through it yet. [51:49] You can keep it. [51:51] Should we distribute this publicly? [51:54] Please hold on that. [51:57] For the time being, I will. [52:01] John Radcliffe was very helpful when he was in that position [52:04] at D&I. [52:06] Now he's director of the CIA. [52:13] How are you preventing the CIA from totally cooperating [52:15] with the D&I? [52:18] I don't know. [52:20] You've been in the CIA. [52:22] Who's running this show? [52:27] Here's what I'll say. We had requests. [52:29] We have a formal process that we sent those requests over [52:31] and I detailed in the transcribed interview [52:33] the dates and what those requests [52:35] were for. [52:37] It appeared to be bureaucratic slow rolling [52:39] until the government shutdown happened. [52:41] That is the technique they use? [52:43] Yes. [52:45] Every administration or every director of CIA. [52:47] If they don't agree with them, this too shall pass. [52:49] They just wait them out. [52:51] That's happening right now in both of our investigations. [52:53] Again, I'm calling for a church-like commission. [52:58] We'll call it the Paul Johnson Commission. [53:00] We need to figure out who runs a deep state. [53:04] In my final three minutes, because I held what I thought [53:06] was a blockbuster hearing two weeks ago. [53:10] It was very good. [53:12] And this is on my investigation in terms of [53:15] the harms done by the COVID injection. [53:18] And I'm going to talk about it right now because [53:20] it's not being covered by the legacy media. [53:25] Alternate media, yes. [53:27] Fox News, Fox Businesses had me on. [53:29] I went on, supposed to be on CNN last week. [53:31] And I sent him my report and told him that's what I want [53:36] to talk about. [53:38] They canceled the appearance. [53:40] Oh, that's not why. [53:41] Sure it is. [53:42] So this is what, and I can do this in two minutes and 20 seconds. [53:46] This is what we uncovered. [53:47] This is what is being covered up by now the legacy media. [53:50] On March 1st of 2021, Dr. Peter Marks, head of CBER, the organization [53:59] then FDA that approves vaccines and also supposed to surveil those [54:04] vaccines post market for safety, was given a multi page briefing [54:10] by the main data mining analysts within FDA working with the inventor [54:13] of the algorithm they used to analyze the VAERS, the Vaccine Adverse [54:18] Event Reporting System. [54:19] That briefing told Dr. Marks that the current algorithm because of the [54:25] the nature of the massive number of claims coming into VAERS. [54:29] By the way, from 1990 until 2020, on average, about 280 deaths [54:35] were reported in VAERS associated with the vaccine. [54:40] 2021 is over 21,000. [54:42] Nothing to see here. [54:45] But anyway, so they're using an algorithm. [54:47] They warned that this algorithm, because the Moderna and Pfizer [54:51] are so close together, the way they're analyzing is going to mask [54:54] and hide safety signals. [54:56] That's March 1st, 2021. [54:57] 26 days later, a new state of the art algorithm developed by the [55:04] inventor of the original algorithm was presented to senior FDA [55:07] officials showing 49 cases of extreme masking, 25 safety signals, [55:14] including sudden cardiac death, pulmonary infarction, Bell's palsy, [55:19] different types of strokes. [55:20] Month after month after month, they continue to do this data mining. [55:23] They continue to show additional safety signals. [55:26] Did Peter Marks? [55:29] Did Anthony Fauci? [55:30] Did President Biden go to the American public and say, hang on here? [55:35] We've got some data. [55:36] We've got some concerns. [55:37] No, no. [55:38] They blame the unvaccinated for causing for continue the pandemic. [55:44] This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. [55:46] We need we need to mandate this. [55:48] This is what government does. [55:55] This is what this is what the deep state does. [55:57] I can't explain it all. [56:00] My investigation now because I finally got documents. [56:03] This would never have happened if we didn't have documents. [56:07] And by the way, just like we found that David Morin's email [56:11] that now is a result in prosecution where, you know, [56:15] he has a foily, he showed him how to make emails disappear. [56:17] Send me something sensitive to my Gmail. [56:19] We have the same types of evidence in our report. [56:22] We need to get the bottom of this. [56:25] And right now I'm just using this moment. [56:27] I need the mainstream media, CBS, ABC, CNN, [56:32] to step forward and start covering what is a major scan. [56:37] How many thousands, tens, hundreds of thousands of people [56:41] are permanently disabled or possibly lost their life [56:44] because our FDA hid the fact that there were safety signals [56:50] screaming at them with the COVID injection. [56:53] So again, you can't answer all my questions in terms of who's. [56:57] But we need to figure out who is running this deep state. [57:01] Thank you, Mr. Chairman. [57:02] Senator Johnson, I completely concur with the call for a church committee, [57:06] but I'll tell you how difficult it is. [57:08] Church committee was like 1975, 50 some odd years ago. [57:12] I've been trying to get the classified version of the church committee [57:15] for over two years, but I'm being blocked by the Intel committee, [57:19] including someone from our own party is blocking having me. [57:22] They've shown me a room with 400 boxes and I can go look in all the boxes [57:26] to see if I can find it. My staff's not allowed to go in the room, [57:29] but they will not reveal to me something that's 50 years old [57:32] that should be declassified for the public, much less for me. [57:35] Maybe we should go together. It probably only takes us about [57:37] four or five years to dig through all the boxes. [57:39] That's right. Senator Holling. [57:41] Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Erdman. [57:43] Thank you for being here in March of 2023. [57:46] The Senate unanimously passed legislation requiring the Office [57:50] of the Director of National Intelligence to declassify all. [57:53] I believe the exact language is declassify any and all information [57:57] related to potential links between the Wuhan Institute of Virology [58:01] and the origins of COVID-19. I have some familiarity with this [58:04] legislation because I wrote it. It passed the House unanimously. [58:09] President Biden signed it into law under, I think, popular duress. [58:13] As you may remember. Well, first of all, are you familiar with this law? [58:17] Of course. Yes. As you may recall, it set a statutory deadline [58:20] of just a couple of months later, which the Biden administration [58:22] promptly ignored and blew through when they finally did release the report. [58:26] I think we've got a picture of it here that will appear over my shoulder. [58:29] It was all of five pages. Here it is. Wait for it. Five pages. [58:33] Remember, the law says any and all information. Five pages heavily redacted. [58:38] Even the five pages. I think one of those pages like a cover, a cover note or something. [58:43] Yeah, here it is. The executive summary. Five pages. [58:46] This is according to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. [58:50] This is this is any and all information related to COVID-19 and the Wuhan Virology Lab. [58:57] Now you've been on this task force that has reviewed these documents. [59:02] Is this all the information the United States government had? [59:05] That is not all the information and classified report being written at the time all of this was going on. [59:18] And I assumed as I'm reading through the documents that that they would just take that classified report, which didn't look like that. [59:26] And they would just redact it. And because I'm reading through the documents. But that is not what happened. [59:33] They decided to write a different paper instead of what was already. [59:38] Who do you say they? Who's they? The National Intelligence Council. [59:41] The National Intelligence Council was was at the time that the law passed was was doing a thorough review or doing a review. [59:48] We don't know how thorough how many how many pages you've been on this task force. [59:52] You've gotten a sense of if it's not five pages, how many pages worth of information? [59:56] Would you guess the United States government was in possession of related to Wuhan lab and COVID possible links? [1:00:03] I can tell you that Director Gabbard is working through, I believe, 2,000 pages. [1:00:09] 2,000. They're trying to get released in the in the first batch. [1:00:12] This is a the the the law states, yes, any and all. [1:00:16] But there's still the requirement to run it through the different agencies to ensure that there's not some sources and methods. [1:00:22] But there's there's like 2,000 pages, 2,000 pages, 2,000 pages. [1:00:28] I want to show you what Admiral Haynes, Director Haynes, said to me when I wrote to her. [1:00:31] Senator Braun and I wrote to her following this outrageous, ridiculous report. [1:00:35] She wrote back to me and said, well, we only we classified we declassified only what we could. [1:00:41] Without endangering sources and methods. Only only what we could. [1:00:45] Five pages of summary that itself has redactions. [1:00:49] The five pages have redactions. [1:00:51] And you're telling me there are literally thousands of documents. [1:00:55] Why are they hiding all of this material? [1:00:57] I can tell you that the interagency process of declassification is highly bureaucratic. [1:01:03] And that is being worked. [1:01:05] And I think you'll saw you saw just a few days ago, Director Gabbard released some information about the lab. [1:01:10] Was it was director Haynes, Avril Haynes, was she involved in making the decision not to release the material? [1:01:16] I don't have any proof that she was involved in the direct decision. [1:01:20] I have no emails saying that directly, but. [1:01:24] It's her. It was her. It's her office. It's her signature on the letter to me. [1:01:27] It's her office that sent the five pages. [1:01:29] She's the one who said this is what we have. This is all we have. [1:01:32] You're telling me there were 2,000 plus documents. [1:01:35] No, I'm telling you that the first swath of documents that we're looking to. [1:01:38] There's many, many more than that. [1:01:40] I got you. Many, many more. [1:01:42] Let me tell you what this this so-called five page report, what it said in its substance to the extent there was any. [1:01:48] They said, number one, that nothing that was researched at the Wuhan lab could plausibly be a progenitor of SARS COVID-2. [1:01:56] Number two, they said there is no evidence of any research related incident involving Wuhan employees that might have been related to the pandemic. [1:02:03] Now, in your experience, given what you have seen, are those true statements? [1:02:09] Some of that would have to be covered and classified. But no, they're not true. [1:02:16] If we wanted to get into details, I don't believe that's true. [1:02:20] So the United States government first deliberately violated a law passed by Congress signed by the president that ordered them to release all information related to the Wuhan lab. [1:02:30] Number one. Number two, they then violated the law again by withholding thousands and thousands of pages that they had at the time and knew were covered by the law. [1:02:38] Number three, the conclusion so-called they released to the public are false. [1:02:41] If that is not a cover up, I don't know what is. [1:02:44] And if our elected officials and unelected officials in this case in the IC and ODNI, if they can get by with blatantly violating the statutes of this country and lying to the American people, I'm sorry, but we don't have a democracy anymore. [1:03:02] I don't know what it is, but it's not a democracy because we the people aren't in charge. [1:03:07] These people are in charge and they're lying to us every single day. [1:03:12] You said in your opening statement that Dr. Fauci, speaking of someone who's not exactly a truth teller, that Dr. Fauci intervened to put his thumb on the scale of what information the intelligence community, the IC could review when they did their initial assessments of whether or not the Wuhan lab was linked to COVID. [1:03:34] What exactly did he do? [1:03:36] So let me clarify that. [1:03:38] So he, he reached in and he provided a, this list of scientists and subject matter experts that we should, we should talk to. [1:03:46] And it's not like he's saying you will go talk to them. [1:03:49] He doesn't have the power to do that technically. [1:03:51] It's just that the bureaucracy in place at the time was perfectly happy to pursue those recommendations. [1:03:59] Even when there was a number of individuals who expressed concern saying at least one for sure that said, are you sure we want to do this? [1:04:07] He's, he's a policymaker and we need to have our intelligence cycle. [1:04:12] And he had a point of view, did he not? [1:04:13] He certainly did. [1:04:14] And what was that point of view? [1:04:16] Just refresh our memories. [1:04:17] He, he believes it's natural origin. [1:04:20] He still does. [1:04:21] Of course. [1:04:22] I mean, he said this over and over. [1:04:23] Now he would have reason to, given that he supported gain of function research to the Wuhan lab, lied about it to Congress, lied about it repeatedly to the chairman, as I recall. [1:04:32] So his hands are dirty in this. [1:04:35] And yet here he is intervening behind the scenes. [1:04:38] It's not, it's bad enough that he's out there misleading the public behind the scenes. [1:04:42] He's trying to intervene to stop our own intelligence community who are supposed to work for the public from actually accurately assessing the evidence. [1:04:49] This is unbelievable. [1:04:50] This is unbelievable. [1:04:52] And then people wonder, gee, why are the American people not trustworthy, not trusting of elected officials? [1:04:58] I wonder why are they? [1:05:00] I'll tell you why, because they're repeatedly, we are repeatedly lied to by these people, lied to and lied to and lied to. [1:05:08] I want to thank you, Mr. Erdman, for your testimony. [1:05:10] I just want to note, I think we've only scratched the surface here. [1:05:13] Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for calling this hearing. [1:05:15] And I just want to point out when you've got a witness who's saying under oath that the report that the government issued lied to the American people, that it is false. [1:05:24] We've got a big problem in this country. [1:05:27] We've got a big, big problem and we haven't begun to solve it yet. [1:05:30] Thank you, Mr. Chairman. [1:05:31] Senator Moody. [1:05:32] Senator Moody. [1:05:34] Thank you, Mr. Chairman. [1:05:35] I think this is one of the most important hearings we will hold during this administration. [1:05:41] I think when the world, when the country went mad, and I don't care if you consider yourself a blue state or a red state, the country went mad and people were craving leadership and leadership that truly was based on science, not someone that alleged they were following science and seemed to care more about controlling the public. [1:06:02] I think this is one of the most important hearings and I am. [1:06:08] I think everyone that actually showed up today and I you see who is here involved and taking part in this hearing are the ones that want on behalf of the American people who are, by the way, are supposed to be in charge of the United States of America, want to get to the bottom of what happened and not just because that's right. [1:06:27] So that the people that are in charge of this nation understand understood what happened, but so that this never happens again. [1:06:35] And if we are trying to prevent a government that is trying to control a populace based on nothing based on no justification and making sure that that never happens again. [1:06:46] I just want it to be very clear to everyone in this room or anyone who has taken the time to watch that cares about their country and understands what it means to protect freedom. [1:06:57] I just want them to see who showed up today and who is participating and who has thanked you for coming out bravely and disclosing these facts, what happened and your opinion based on your years, decades of experience. [1:07:13] I for one hailing from the great free state of Florida, Florida used to be known for flamingos were now known for freedom. [1:07:22] That is because what took place over the last administration and when churches were closed, when businesses were closed, when schools were closed, when people were shut up in their apartments, when families were prohibited from socializing and gathering. [1:07:38] Many were kept from their loved ones when they died all under this guidance of government leading based on science. [1:07:50] We we really have to go back and question that because that cannot happen in this country. [1:07:55] And I think many of us that were in charge at the time question how we love or ever allowed that to happen. [1:08:01] And certainly in Florida, I am so proud along with Governor DeSantis, we we led against that tide in many respects. [1:08:11] And when people were still being told to stay at home, don't let your kids go to school, don't go to church, all of these things that seem insane right now. [1:08:20] We didn't. We stood up for the truth. We tried our best to discern what was true, what was not, what didn't make sense. [1:08:30] And let me tell you why things didn't make sense. And we've first of all, you had your secretary of HHS, which was basically invisible, checked out. [1:08:39] Those are words of the Biden administration at the time. Officials from the Biden administration said Secretary Becerra Becerra was invisible, checked out an unfortunate choice for the role. [1:08:49] And then you had Dr. Fauci, who came out and contradicted himself constantly. [1:08:55] At one point, he even admitted later, he told people people shouldn't be walking around with masks on. [1:09:01] And later he said that was because we were trying to control the supply for health care professionals. [1:09:05] It wasn't based on any science. But then later he told everyone to wear masks repeatedly. [1:09:12] The six foot rule seemed to have been just crafted out of thin air with no basis in science whatsoever. [1:09:20] In fact, he said that will sort of just appeared when he testified and that guidance on the shutdown of schools and small businesses was arbitrary and not based on any science. [1:09:36] So I just want to make sure the American people hear that you had a government who's supposed to be limited and stay out of people's lives coming in and offering guidance. [1:09:44] Many times it was done under mandates to close businesses, people's livelihoods to keep children from being educated, to keep people from expressing their faith and gathering to show freedom of of religion and their faith and expression. [1:10:05] I mean, unbelievable what happened during the covid years. [1:10:10] I was so proud of my state, along with Governor DeSantis, we launched a grand jury investigation because the federal government sure wasn't doing it. [1:10:18] And we got to the bottom of some of this what was being said publicly by those that we had trusted in these positions and how that was not actually the truth in the science. [1:10:32] That was where the name the free state of Florida has come from. And I'm so glad now to be here as the one of the newest United States senators. [1:10:41] Bringing that experience, that grand jury investigation, everything that we did differently in Florida and stood up to the madness, because that is how the people remain in charge of their government in the grand jury investigation that we did. [1:11:01] We followed the evidence. We found that many of those policies, including masking lockdown mandates, they lack sufficient scientific basis and they in fact caused significant harm to Floridians. [1:11:12] The same grand jury found a pattern. I'm quoting the grand jury here. [1:11:16] This is a nonpartisan group acquired from the community to judge facts, a pattern of deceptive and obfuscatory behavior from both big pharma and the federal agencies charged with regulating them with respect to the covid vaccines. [1:11:30] So it appears from everything that we found from our own investigation and unbiased, totally separate review of what was being said publicly by the federal government compared to what was actually based in science. [1:11:45] It found that most of what was said in the events surrounding it was a public health establishment that was fixated on controlling the public and forcing narratives rather than protecting public health or discovering the truth. [1:12:00] And so I am grateful that you are willing to be here today. I know that this is under subpoena, but certainly it takes courage and and to be here and to be a whistleblower that can get accountability for the American people. [1:12:19] You know, Florida was years ahead of the federal government's supposed experts. We're proud of that. But this is so important. [1:12:26] And so I I want to know and I have one question. We're getting to the what what happened. We were glad that Florida led on that even while people remained locked down. We were trying to get to the answers. [1:12:39] What happened? But in all of your reviews and what you've been able to compile and what you're saying today, what is the why? Why? Why did the cover up happen? [1:12:52] I think there's a lot of incentives, misaligned incentives that have been created because of this highly opaque and complex system of laboratories, life science research. [1:13:08] And the IC is just one component of that. Why did it happen inside the CIA and inside DNI and inside the the interagency space when they were doing doing the the analysis over the course of four years? [1:13:24] Part of it is iron rice bowls. You know, your normal bureaucratic issues where one agency has this, another agency has that. [1:13:35] There there was groupthink. You could see it happening in real time as you read from beginning to end. [1:13:42] I'll give you a couple examples. Every time there was an open source publication that came out. [1:13:49] They're very good at grabbing that and kicking it up for the contracted scientists, you know, the BSEG to take a look at and assess. [1:13:58] And the goal, it seemed, it always leaned one direction. They never took some like they never took like the publication [1:14:05] from Sorenson and Dalgleish who came out very early. I think it was July 2020 that one of the best papers written was open source by Sorenson and Dalgleish. [1:14:15] They never took those papers and said, wow, we've got a lot here. We need to make sure we get this added in or Dr. Stephen Quay, for example, who had a lot to say about COVID origins. [1:14:25] It was always one direction. And because the interagency space seemed intent on pushing it that way. And why the interagency space? [1:14:35] I think the interagency space, I'm talking about the National Intelligence Council and the people responsible for that. I mean, these are people who have relationships with the National Academy of Scientists and the National Academy of Sciences. [1:14:47] They've got relationships with the WMD community and they're all part of the same, I don't know, ecosystem. The planet, the planets are all revolving around the same star. [1:14:59] And so you get, you get groupthink. There's, there's a multitude of reasons. I didn't find any smoking gun where they said, well, we got to cover this up because for sure, the US government paid for research in Wuhan, China, but they were certainly well aware. [1:15:20] Well aware of predict. They were well aware of the diffuse proposal that had circulated and they, they, they had those products available to them. I think you get enough people shouting something down, it gets shot, shouted down. And that happened repeatedly. [1:15:36] I do want to just, if I can take just a moment, particularly about the scientists that are brought forward. I, I don't, I really, really want to emphasize a couple of things. And one of it is we can't vilify these scientists. [1:15:50] Um, I, I, I'm going to give a very short anecdote and I hope I'm not going over on time or anything like that. But when I got hired to the CIA, I, I can't tell you how proud I was. [1:16:02] I really couldn't believe that they hired me. I'm sure there's some friends are like, yeah, I can't believe it either. But, uh, but they hired me because they saw potential to be able to be somebody who could recruit spies and steal secrets. That's my job. [1:16:23] So, imagine you're a scientist. Imagine the US government comes to you and says, listen, sir, you are a specialist in a field no one else knows about. And in fact, the PhD is the whole point of a PhD is to push beyond what's known. [1:16:43] Further than anybody else in a very rarefied field. Imagine you're a scientist and the CIA comes up to you and says, or the Nick, the intelligence community comes up to you and says, you're special. [1:16:56] You're special, not because we see potential, but because we know you're special and we need your help. We can't vilify these people who wanted to help. [1:17:06] We can, however, boy, I might be contradicting myself here, but the system definitely needs a look because the system has been put in place now and you've got these same people that we've said you're important to the IC. [1:17:19] We just haven't done the proper work to ensure that those people who are important to the IC aren't cross pollinated all over in other places so that they can incentivize the kind of research that we need done or the white papers we need written. [1:17:33] Um, we, we have to have a holistic overview and I think it's really hard to have like one agency do their review, another agency do their review, the legislative branch do their review. [1:17:45] You know, in this case, it is a team sport. [1:17:49] So, um, one answer also, Senator Moody, your question about the why, you know, people think, well, gosh, was there a conspiracy where people, all these evil people had their hands together and they were conspiring to do something bad. [1:18:03] And I think George Carlin put it the best. He said it isn't required that you come up with a conspiracy where interests converge. And I think the interest is we funded a lot of dangerous research. [1:18:15] Accidents have happened. This was an accident. In all likelihood, this was an accident. Even the Chinese probably didn't want this to happen in Wuhan. [1:18:23] It was an accident. But the interest is that if you funded that research for 10 years, wouldn't I logically want to ask you why, you know, why you did this funding. [1:18:33] And so there are dozens of people throughout government who did cover this up, maybe hundreds, but then don't even know each other necessarily. [1:18:40] But they had a hand in funding this research of the years. They've been in favor of it. It's been a big debate for 20 some odd years. There's been a huge debate, maybe longer. [1:18:49] People think this is the first virus that got out. One of the most is not as much reported, but one of the most famous viruses that got out was the Russian flu of 1977. [1:18:58] And we're not sure it came from Russia or where it came from. But the interesting thing is nobody over 24 got the flu. Zero, not one person. Why? [1:19:05] Because the Russian flu of 1977 had the exact same RNA structure as a flu in 1953 that have been kept in a lab somewhere. [1:19:13] How do you get an identical virus 30 years later? Viruses mutate every every couple of months like COVID has. There is no way to have an identical virus unless you got it from a lab. [1:19:25] So proof positive that the 1977 flu actually came out of a lab an accident. Once again, an accident. There's a woman who's written about this. I think her last name is young. She says that over a period of years like 1500 major accidents that she's catalogued. [1:19:31] So it's not only about malfeasance. It's about safety of these labs. In fact, some people were finally convinced that this came from Wuhan because it was a BSL two instead of a BSL for for much of the time that didn't have enough safety precautions. [1:19:46] But even the safest one, the four still has accidents and the best of the most common ones that the most common ones that are the most common ones that are the most common ones that are the most common ones. [1:19:55] So maybe some of these experiments we ought to reconsider whether we do them. [1:19:58] Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And it just goes to show why it's helpful to have a doctor as our chairman. You could also be a witness. Thank you. We're going to conclude pretty quickly. I'm going to give Senator Johnson another chance if you have another question. [1:20:17] I've got a quick question that I want to go someplace else. [1:20:26] In September 2023, we apparently had a CI whistleblower come forward and there are news articles written about this that six of the seven analysts to describe this were bribed to change their analysis. Is that true? [1:20:38] No. So there's some clarifications on that. What is true? And I thank you for bringing up this question, Senator Johnson, because this is one of the things I wanted to make sure the record was corrected. [1:20:51] So, and if, if I have just a few minutes here to sort of talk through this, there was new information that came out in 2022 and, you know, forced, it forced the community to try and conduct a relook. [1:21:06] There were 10 CIA scientists. I'm talking from the CIA side down, not on the next side, 10 CIA scientists that were said, why don't you go ahead and do a COVID relook? [1:21:16] On that team, there were seven SMEs, subject matter experts, technical experts with, you know, lab experience, medical, medical experience. And so they, they began their relook. And by the time they wrote their paper, they wrote a paper and they said, we're assessing this as a lab leak. Eight of the 10, according to multiple whistleblowers, eight of the 10 were definitely leaning in on lab leak. [1:21:47] They sent that paper, that draft paper up to the weapons and counter proliferation center front office and said, take a look. And magically, a new report shows up that allegedly contradicted this, the information that had come in earlier that year. [1:22:09] Uh, the, the multiple people we spoke to said, yeah, it didn't really contradict it, but they were told, go back to the drawing board and do a reassessment. So the interagency got involved. They were having discussions. So they go back to the drawing board. And, uh, by the time 2023 rolls around, they've, they've got their, they've got their answer. They say, you know, six of the seven technical, technical people on that team. So there's 10 people on the team. [1:22:37] Six of the seven technical experts say, yep, we still think it's a lab leak. We still think it's a lab leak. And they were sticking to their guns. Um, management changed the analytic line. [1:22:52] They changed the conclusion to a non consensus call, uh, actually worse than that. They said that, uh, the exact words were, I don't want to get this wrong. Excuse me. [1:23:09] We may never precisely know the origin of SARS-CoV-2. Precisely. Precisely is not a term analysts use. They use like low confidence, medium confidence. Yes, no. [1:23:25] Precisely is a word you use when you want to deliberately end discussion, because do you know how many resources we need to precisely know the origin of SARS-CoV-2? [1:23:36] So, so again, I want the chairman to be a little bit more here. Uh, there's no bribes paid. This is just a management decision. They over, overrode what the, okay. [1:23:46] But the financial piece definitely needs to be looked into because they did receive an EPA. They just, they got it. It's 1,500 bucks. [1:23:53] Okay. So, so it may be true then. No, no, no, no, no. They, I want, let me be very clear. There were no bribes. They received an exceptional performance award. [1:24:00] They were upset with it. And, and it was not a bribe. But what I will say. Okay. The people, they were rewarded for their work. They didn't know they were going to get it. [1:24:10] Okay. I got you. Okay. I got you. And I understand this distinction. Uh, 1.1 question. Uh, just received this, uh, from Liz Lyon, the CIA director of public affairs. [1:24:21] Uh, the committee acted in bad faith by subpoenaing an agency officer for testimony today without notifying CIA. [1:24:27] Despite having already obtained closed door testimony from the individual previously. [1:24:31] The witness testifying today is not appearing as a whistleblower in pursuit of the truth, but instead in response to the subpoena issued by chairman Paul. [1:24:37] This proceeding amounts to nothing more than a dishonest political theater masquerading as a congressional hearing as the CIA has already assessed. [1:24:44] COVID-19 most likely originated from the lab leak and efforts to undermine that conclusion are disingenuous. [1:24:49] I'm calling on CIA director Radcliffe and this person to apologize to chairman Paul and this committee. This is not political theater. [1:24:59] I have years and years and years of built up frustration of agencies like the CIA, Department of Justice, the FBI, HHS snubbing our oversight, giving us the big middle finger. [1:25:13] And that's really leads me into my question. You talked about how proud you were. Okay, I can imagine that I have my belief is there. I'd say most people serving in government. [1:25:25] All these agencies are doing good work. They're they're patriots. Why aren't there more people like you? I mean, you saw Josh Hollies, Senator Hollies, uh, the five page snub, the five page middle finger saying any and all this is it. And people inside the agencies know that's not the truth. [1:25:46] They know that is a big fat lie. What what is going? What what happens inside the agency that the people good Americans, patriotic Americans, people who believe in democracy, witness that and realize agency they're working for is lying bold face to legitimate congressional oversight, legitimate congressional investigations to the American people. What what what is causing this? [1:26:18] Two answers. One, we need more leaders like director Gabbard, who pulls together a task force of people to actually pursue this despite the difficulty in wrangling agencies to do the right thing. I think the second thing I'll say is, it's a minority of officers. I mean, most most of the people join the CIA are barrel chested freedom fighters. Like they're out there wanting to do the right thing. As you matriculate upwards into the [1:26:57] into the into the bureaucracy. I just think that it gets easier and easier to find people who are more willing to to get along and you know, we can if we want to link this back to COVID. [1:27:10] You had a bunch of refuseniks out there that said no. And they were trying to push these people out. And and what you really need in these organizations are you know, you can't have the whole organization saying no to everything because nothing gets done. But you got to retain the people who are sometimes a little more difficult to deal with more willing to say no over and over. [1:27:33] And I think we've we've created a milk toast bureaucracy. You know, when I first joined the agency, the chiefs of offices had a lot of power, you know, and then modernization happened. And they watered everything down and you didn't the accountability piece has to be there. Otherwise, you're this is just going to keep happening. [1:27:56] Well, again, I appreciate you coming forward again. I'm calling on director Radcliffe and that communications person. This committee, this chairman needs an apology. [1:28:03] This is not political theater. This is serious oversight work. This is what the American people need to see. [1:28:08] And I just wish our Democrat colleagues had any level of curiosity what's happening inside the deep state. Thank you, Mr Chairman. Thank you. And I completely concur. And I would also like to respond to the CIA spokesman. [1:28:18] They say that we have already obtained closed door testimony. Well, closed door testimony doesn't provide oversight. Public testimony provides oversight. We have asked them for public testimony and for oversight. We would love to have the scientists who the six or seven scientists that were commissioned to look at this. We'd love to see their report. Why would we not be allowed to see the report? I can't even read that in private. [1:28:35] But that should be public. The science if there are sources and methods, mark them out redact them. But we should be able to see that. But for them to have the gall to say, Oh, we allowed the witness to testify in private and that should be enough. No, you were told by Congress unanimously to declassify this material and you have to say, Oh, we allowed the witness to testify in private and that should be enough. [1:29:00] No, you were told by Congress unanimously to declassify this material and you send us five pages. [1:29:07] Imagine how many you mentioned maybe 2000 pages. DOE has a report that's got to be 40 or 50 pages. But the base documents for DOE's report are probably run into the hundreds of pages just for that one report. And they did a great analysis of this. [1:29:22] But still, most of that is not available to the public. Why does it need to be available? Because this is going to happen again. [1:29:29] And we need to be prepared and we need to talk about it. One of the other things we didn't get to in this hearing, but we need to talk to. How do you prepare for the next pandemic? [1:29:38] Well, one of the things that actually worked was monoclonal antibodies. We need to be talking about how we can quickly produce them again, how we can quickly get started on things like that. What worked and what didn't work. Mask didn't work. [1:29:50] Six feet of distancing. There was no science. They say follow the science. And yet it looks like everything that happened to the at the CIA was the politicians overruling the scientists. [1:30:00] The scientists were concluding this came from the lab from a lab leak in all probability. The politicians were overturning them once at two in the morning. [1:30:08] So that is one of the takeaways from this is that, yes, follow the science and the scientists and that the scientists need to not have a conflict of interest, which leads me to the final point I'll make before we conclude. [1:30:20] I applaud the Trump administration for an executive order saying no more gain of function. It is head and shoulders above anything. The Biden administration really didn't do much of anything on this. The Trump administration is trying to live by that. [1:30:35] The reason it won't work forever is that people who have a Weasley way with words. Let's say Anthony Fauci will come back into play and half of his lieutenants probably still work over there. One of them will get in power again and all of them will get in power again. [1:30:50] And all they will simply say is, oh, creating that new virus that grows 10 times faster and grows better in human cells. Well, that's not gain of function because that's what Anthony Fauci was doing. He was still doing the gain of function research. [1:31:03] He was just saying, oh, the way I look at the definition, that's not really. So we do need a commission. And what I proposed is the Risky Research Review Act. It'd be a presidential commission. It'll have scientists on it. They will be experts, but they will not be currently in the [1:31:20] in the employ of government competing for grants. I think that is a conflict of interest. [1:31:27] They have to be people outside of it. There also will be some people who are national security experts as well. And we have to look at the list of things. One scientist, Dr S felt ordered off the Internet under Biden's policy. He ordered snippets of DNA from here and here chopped him up, put them together and he made the Spanish flu. [1:31:43] Now, he told the FBI he was doing it because he wanted to prove a point. He didn't create the infectious portion of the Spanish flu. But he said, look, I can do it by just ordering DNA. So there are a lot of things that have to be addressed. And unfortunately, it's somehow a partisan issue and we're not getting anywhere. But I want to applaud you for your courage in coming forward. You did come forward at the response of a subpoena. That is a lawful subpoena. And I see no reason that anyone should try to punch the [1:32:13] punish you. If anybody does try to punish you, I can promise you that we will defend you. Thank you very much. Thank you, sir. He's adjourned. Thank you. [1:32:21] Yep. I would like to thank our witness for joining us here today to share his testimony and expertise for the committee. The recording the record for this hearing will remain open till 5 p.m. on Wednesday, May 13th 2026 for the submission of statements and questions for the record. The hearing is now adjourned. Thank you. [1:32:38] Thank you.

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