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Pharmacist charged in COVID-19 vaccine case to plead guilty

A Wisconsin pharmacist accused of trying to defrost and spoil dozens of vials of COVID-19 vaccine has agreed to plead guilty in federal court

Via AP news wire
Tuesday 26 January 2021 17:39 EST

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A Wisconsin pharmacist accused of trying to defrost and spoil dozens of vials of COVID-19 vaccine agreed Tuesday to plead guilty in federal court

Steven Brandenburg, 46, of Grafton, is charged with two counts of attempting to tamper with consumer products. He faces a maximum sentence of 10 years and a $250,000 fine on each count, according to the plea deal.

Police arrested Brandenburg on Dec. 31 as part of an investigation into how 57 vials of the Moderna vaccine were left for hours outside a refrigerator at Advocate Aurora Health in Grafton, a Milwaukee suburb. The vials contained enough vaccine to inoculate more than 500 people.

Detectives wrote in court documents that Brandenburg is an admitted conspiracy theorist who believed the vaccine would mutate recipients’ DNA. Experts have said there’s no truth to the claims that COVID-19 vaccines can genetically modify humans.

“Distributing the COVID-19 vaccine is critical to overcoming this pandemic which continues to end lives and upend our economy,” U.S. Attorney Matthew Krueger said in a statement. “As these charges show, the Justice Department will pursue anyone — nd especially any medical professional — who tampers with the vaccine.”

Jason Baltz, Brandenburg's attorney, declined to comment Tuesday to The Associated Press.

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