Long an opponent of COVID-19 safety mandates, Texas Attorney Generalย Ken Paxtonย said Monday he will investigate three major pharmaceutical companies for deceptive practices, arguing that they may have misrepresented the effectiveness of vaccines and the likelihood of becoming infected after receiving a vaccine.
Paxton said in a news release that his office would investigate whether โprofit motive or political pressureโ played a role in any of the โpandemic interventions forced on the public.โ
The investigation will also look into the potential manipulation of trial data by Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson, said Paxton, a fierce opponent of mandates on lockdowns, vaccinations and masking prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
โIf any company illegally took advantage of consumers during this period or compromised peopleโs safety to increase their profits, they will be held responsible,โ he said in a statement.
โIf public health policy was developed on the basis of flawed or misleading research, the public must know. The catastrophic effects of the pandemic and subsequent interventions forced on our country and citizens deserve intense scrutiny, and we are pursuing any hint of wrongdoing to the fullest,โ Paxton said.
In a statement, Pfizer spokesperson Sharon Castillo defended the companyโs practices, saying โregulatory agencies across the world have authorized the use of our COVID-19 vaccine.โ
โThese authorizations are based on robust and independent evaluation of the scientific data on quality, safety and efficacy, including our landmarkย phase 3 clinical trial,โ Castillo wrote. โData from real-world studies complement the clinical trial data and provide additional evidence that the vaccine provides effective protection against severe disease.โ
The COVID vaccines, she added, โhave saved millions of lives, tens of billions of dollars in health care costs, and enabled people worldwide to go about their lives more freely.โ
Moderna and Johnson & Johnson did not respond to a request for comment.
According to theย Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 672 million doses of a COVID-19 vaccine were given in the United States between December 14, 2020 and March 1, 2023, with rare adverse effects.
Deaths after vaccination also have been rare, and the CDC stresses that the benefits of the vaccine outweigh the known and potential risks.
โCOVID-19 vaccination remains the most effective way to prevent SARS-CoV-2โassociated serious illness, hospitalization, and death,โ theย CDC said in January. โAll persons, including those who are immunocompromised and their household members and close contacts, should stay up to date with COVID-19 vaccination, and receive the updated (bivalent) booster dose, when eligible.โ
Paxton said the pharmaceutical companies had โrecord-making financial successโ in recent years that came largely as a result of the products they developed during the COVID-19 pandemic. He said that โvested interestโ in the success of their products required โaggressive investigationโ into whether the companies made decisions to profit from the pandemic.
Paxton said his office would investigate if the pharmaceutical companies went awry of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act and would look at activity that would fall outside of the legal immunity granted to manufacturers of the COVID-19 vaccine. He said he aims to produce documents that would help shed light on the decision making over COVID-19 precautions taken by the federal government.
He said pharmaceutical companies have had โunprecedented political power and influence over public health prioritiesโ since COVID-19 was first discovered and should be held accountable if they took โdangerous, illegal actions to boost their revenues.โ
Dr. David โDaveyโ Smith, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases and Global Public Health at University of California San Diego Health, said the emergency authorization the U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave COVID-19 vaccines in late 2020 had a lower standard of proof than the traditional route for authorization. He said, however, that such approval was given with the caveat that scientific study must continue on the treatments.
Since the vaccines received emergency authorization, Smith said, โthe evidence is very clear that it is very effective in preventing serious illness from COVID-19.โ
Smith also said the emergency use was granted based on the vaccineโs ability to prevent serious illness after contracting an infection, not on its ability to prevent the disease or transmission of the disease altogether.
โYou can get an infection and you donโt die from it or get hospitalized from it,โ he said. โThe FDA thinks thatโs a win.โ
Paxtonโs investigation into the vaccineโs efficacy goes against the claims of his political ally, former President Donald Trump, who as recently asย January dismissed claims about potential safety concernsย with the COVID-19 vaccines and defended the governmentโs use of emergency authorization for the vaccine.
โI was able to get something approved that, you know, that has proven to have saved a lot of lives,โ Trump said in an interview on the conservative podcast โThe Water Cooler.โ โSome people say that I saved 100 million lives worldwide.โ
Pressed by podcast host David Brody about whether he had concerns that the vaccines were not as safe as the medical community had initially said, Trump said that reports of people having issues with the vaccine are โrelatively small numbers.โ
In December 2020, as Trump was still contesting the results of the presidential election he lost to Democrat Joe Biden, his administration was touting the administrationโs delivery of aย โsafe and effective vaccine.โ
In the aftermath of the vaccineโs production and widespread distribution, Paxton fought local and federal policies aimed at controlling the COVID-19 virusโ spread in public. He sued the Biden administration forย requiring large businesses to mandate vaccines for their employeesย and alsoย filed suit against multiple Texas school districtsย for attempting to require masks in school.
Paxtonย tested positive for COVID-19ย in January 2022. At the time, his office did not say whether heโd been vaccinated for the disease.
This article was written byย JAMES BARRAGรNย of The Texas Tribune.ย The Texas Tribune is a nonpartisan, nonprofit media organization that informs Texans โ and engages with them โ about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.ย This article originally appeared at: https://www.texastribune.org/2023/05/01/ken-paxton-investigate-covid-vaccines/