Murupara GP can‘t have his seized Ivermectin

Murupara’s Dr Bernard Conlon imported thousands of Ivermectin pills but they were seized by Medsafe. He’s pictured at a rally in Murupara in November 2021. Photo: Tony Wall.

A controversial Murupara GP won't get the stockpile of Ivermectin he imported to treat Covid-19 after losing an appeal against Medsafe's seizure of the pills.

Between September 15 and October 19 last year, Dr Bernard Conlon imported 14,300 Ivermectin tablets from companies in India, across nine separate consignments.

The drugs were intercepted by Customs at the border, tested by Crown Research Institute ESR, and some were found to be contaminated.

Conlon took Medsafe to court in March asking that the drugs be returned, but lost the case and subsequently appealed the court's decision.

But that has also been rejected, in a reserved judgement by Judge Robert Spear, made in the Rotorua District Court on July 12.

The judge says Conlon had 'no reasonable excuse to import the medicine”.

'Dr Conlon was unable to or declined to provide particulars of a patient to whom he intended to supply the Ivermectin that he imported,” says Judge Spear in his decision.

'Dr Conlon accepts that it was his intention to stockpile the medicine so that he had a ready supply of the medicine available to be administered to any patient that presented to him with Covid-19 symptoms and whom he considered would benefit from that medicine.”

Ivermectin is not approved for use against Covid-19, and Medsafe – the country's medicines safety regulator – says there was no clear evidence it was effective to treat or prevent the virus, and it may instead cause serious harm.

Conlon's lawyer Sue Grey argued he 'always intended to have everything tested” but the seizure made it impossible. Photo: Stuff.

Conlon's lawyer, Outdoors & Freedom Party co-leader and anti-Covid-19 vaccine mandate campaigner Sue Grey, argued at a hearing at the Tauranga District Court in March that Conlon always intended to test the products himself before prescribing.

She says he 'always intended to have everything tested whether or not it was taken by Medsafe”.

'The seizure has meant it has been impossible for him to get any testing done,” she says.

Grey is under investigation by the New Zealand Law Society regarding her activities concerning claims she has made during the pandemic.

Grey says Medsafe's seizure of the medicines was 'an attempt at an unconscionable overreach by the regulator” and that, under the Medicine Regulation Act 1984, 'if he had a reasonable excuse, there was no grounds to seize the medicines and there is no grounds why the court cannot release them”.

She also says the antiparasitic medicine Ivermectin was safe and 'had been used for decades, unlike so many of the other medicines available”.

Dr Bernard Conlon is a longtime GP at Murupara Medical Centre. Photo: Tom Lee/Stuff.

However, Medsafe's lawyer Sam McMullan says a key element of the act was a requirement for doctors to have a clearly identifiable patient for any such medicine.

'He had to specify he had a specific, identifiable patient in mind [for Ivermectin],” he says.

'It is not for a medical professional to stockpile medicines for the purpose of treating future patients.”

In his July 12 decision, Judge Spear says Dr Conlon was 'prohibited from prescribing or administering this new medicine in the circumstances that applied when he imported it”.

'That being so, he did not have a reasonable excuse to import the medicine.”

Conlon was suspended from practising medicine by the Medical Council of New Zealand in February this year, but had his licence temporarily renewed on May 20.

His licence will expire again on August 31, and depending on the outcome of an investigation into his conduct by the Professional Conduct Committee, may or may not be renewed.

Conlon, a long-standing and well-respected GP, is being investigated regarding comments he made about Covid-19 vaccinations, and his refusal to get vaccinated himself.

- Stuff.co.nz/Matthew Martin.

3 comments

Medsafe says unsafe

Posted on 17-07-2022 10:17 | By fair game

and shouldn't be used. It is used to treat parasitic infections in humans and animals, and has been found to be ineffective and dangerous to treat with COVID. Sorry, but I trust Medsafe over a random GP. Should he actually be practising??


Protocols

Posted on 17-07-2022 15:04 | By Yadick

He has protocols that govern his license to practice. He deliberately stepped outside of these. He has proven he is untrustworthy to hold a Medical Practicing License. This is the one he got caught for. The question therefore remains, how often has he stepped outside his medical protocols and gone off on his own, possibly life-threatening tangent?


@Medsafe

Posted on 17-07-2022 19:39 | By morepork

It really doesn't matter what you or I think; people should have options. This doctor is known and trusted by the whole community. There is a huge mass of dis-information around Covid and its treatments, and, sadly, some of this is from official sources. Here's a doctor who thinks the "party line" is wrong, and has his career destroyed for saying so. Whether he is right or wrong, I don't want to live in a society where you can't speak your mind and act on your opinions (as long as they don't harm others.) The contention here is that Ivermectin is harmful, but that is controversial enough to be left to the judgement of the people who want to take it. If the shipment was contaminated, they should return to him the part that wasn't. It was confiscated on the strength of an opinion which is VERY suspect.


Leave a Comment


You must be logged in to make a comment.