attendees – Radio Free https://www.radiofree.org Independent Media for People, Not Profits. Tue, 29 Jul 2025 10:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.radiofree.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-Radio-Free-Social-Icon-2-32x32.png attendees – Radio Free https://www.radiofree.org 32 32 141331581 A Las Vegas Festival Promised Ways to Cheat Death. Two Attendees Left Fighting for Their Lives. https://www.radiofree.org/2025/07/29/a-las-vegas-festival-promised-ways-to-cheat-death-two-attendees-left-fighting-for-their-lives/ https://www.radiofree.org/2025/07/29/a-las-vegas-festival-promised-ways-to-cheat-death-two-attendees-left-fighting-for-their-lives/#respond Tue, 29 Jul 2025 10:00:00 +0000 https://www.propublica.org/article/peptide-injections-raadfest-rfk-jr by Anjeanette Damon

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up for Dispatches, a newsletter that spotlights wrongdoing around the country, to receive our stories in your inbox every week.

They went to a Las Vegas conference this month that promised pathways to an “unlimited lifespan.” But at least two attendees left in ambulances and were hospitalized in critical condition, requiring ventilators to breathe.

The two women, who are recovering, fell ill after receiving peptide injections at a conference booth. The doctor who ran the booth was a Los Angeles physician specializing in “age reversal” therapies who did not have permission to practice medicine or dispense prescriptions in Nevada. Public health investigators are trying to determine if anyone else who attended the Revolution Against Aging and Death Festival experienced a similar illness.

The investigation comes as peptides grow in popularity, thanks in part to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s promotion of the amino acid chains as a way to fight aging and chronic disease. Since becoming Health and Human Services secretary, Kennedy has vowed to end the Food and Drug Administration’s “war on peptides” and other alternative health therapies. Kent Holtorf, the doctor overseeing the booth where the women became ill, also has called for less regulation of alternative therapies and has criticized the FDA for blocking compounds he sees as lifesaving.

Holtorf told ProPublica he is cooperating with the investigation. “Of course, I want to get to the bottom of it. But almost assuredly it will come out that it was not the peptides.”

He said he became convinced the peptides weren’t the cause of the severe reactions after plugging everything he knows about the incident into an artificial intelligence app, which he said gave him a 57-page report that “basically says that it is impossible it was the peptides.” He refused to comment on what the report attributed the illnesses to.

“I don’t think it was the peptides, but I don’t want to try and push the blame and say it wasn’t us,” he said. “We are reassessing everything we are doing.”

Holtorf acknowledged he is not licensed in Nevada but said he hired a practitioner who is and did not personally write prescriptions or administer therapies at his booth. “I knew what was going on but was not hands on,” he said.

He described the situation as “horrific” and “unacceptable” and said he’s “terribly sorry.”

The FDA has approved dozens of peptide-based medications for treating serious health problems such as cancer, obesity and diabetes. But peptide therapies for anti-aging and regenerative health are largely made by compounding pharmacists who use peptide components to formulate drugs that aren’t commercially available or approved for that particular use. Compounded drugs are not reviewed for safety and efficacy by the FDA. The agency also has found “significant safety risks” with at least 18 of the most popular peptide compounding components.

“Anyone who undergoes any sort of medical treatment, no matter how benign, needs to be very wary that even the most benign intervention can have fatal side effects,” said Dr. Amy Gutman, a Florida emergency room doctor who speaks about metabolic research and ketogenic diets and appeared at RAADFest. “And if you are in a hotel and don’t have lifesaving equipment near you, then that is a risk you have to be aware of.”

The two women, a 38-year-old from California and a 51-year-old from Nevada, received injections on July 13 at RAADFest, which is organized by an Arizona-based nonprofit that has built a community hoping to cheat death. According to a police report, both were injected at a booth run by Holtorf, who is licensed in California but not Nevada. Holtorf’s advocacy for alternative therapies has invited controversy in the past, including his criticism of the H1N1 swine flu vaccine in a Fox News interview in 2009. More recently, his practice was advised by the Federal Trade Commission to cease making claims on its website that his peptide therapies could treat or prevent COVID-19. Holtorf said he removed the claims from his website even though he still believes certain peptides can be beneficial in treating COVID-19 and other viral infections.

Both the Southern Nevada Health District and the Nevada Board of Pharmacy confirmed they are investigating what led to the hospitalizations after being notified by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police that possibly as many as seven people at the conference were hospitalized. According to the police report, detectives were unable to confirm whether additional attendees got sick.

Investigators are examining whether the illnesses were caused by an infection, contamination related to the injections or an issue with the medication itself, according to documents obtained by ProPublica. The two women who were taken by ambulance to the hospital reported feeling as if their tongues were swelling and had trouble breathing and increased heart rates. By the time they reached the hospital, one was already intubated and the other had lost muscle control in her neck and couldn’t open her eyes or communicate with doctors, according to the police report.

Holtorf said he was “so freaked out” by what happened because none of the women’s symptoms “made any sense.” In 30 years of providing such treatments, he said he’s never seen such a reaction.

Event organizer James Strole, an Arizona businessman who has built a 50-year career selling the promise of eternal life to followers, said the two patients are recovering after several days in the hospital. He said “it’s not clear the people got sick as a result of treatment from Dr. Holtorf,” adding he’s “anxious” for the illnesses to be “deeply investigated.” He said nothing similar has happened in the 10 years he has been producing RAADFest.

This is the first year Holtorf offered therapies at the conference, Strole said. He added that Holtorf provided the therapies to 60 people at the event and has attempted to reach them to learn whether they experienced any problems. Holtorf said only six patients received peptides.

Strole said the coalition’s science board scrutinizes therapy providers before granting them permission to operate a booth in the conference’s exhibition hall, which organizers referred to as a clinic.

“The big concern is safety,” he said. “We look at who is doing the administering, whether it’s an injection or supplement. We look at the person and the company itself, what the efficacy is, how they operate, their safety measures. We look at all that.”

Strole said peptides are considered “generally safe” when taken under the direction of a doctor, adding that he takes them regularly. Holtorf also said he believes they are safe and that they saved his life when he was a young man suffering from a severe illness.

A review by ProPublica of both the pharmacy and medical board license databases showed no Nevada licenses for Holtorf or his medical practice. Out-of-state doctors who come to provide care at a conference such as RAADfest are required to obtain a special event license from the Nevada Board of Medical Examiners. (As of Friday, 103 doctors had obtained such a license.) To dispense or possess pharmaceuticals, practitioners must also be licensed by the Nevada Board of Pharmacy. RAADFest’s organizers, however, said they were unaware that Holtorf is not licensed to provide medical care or dispense medications in the state.

“In order to practice medicine in the state, you must be licensed,” said David Wuest, executive secretary of the Nevada Board of Pharmacy.

The Nevada Legislature has passed stricter laws as alternative therapies have become popular outside traditional medical settings. In 2017, for example, the state banned so-called Botox parties, requiring the anti-wrinkle injections only be administered in a medical office or spa equipped to deal with life-threatening emergencies. But beyond its standard medical licensing requirements, the state doesn’t have rules governing an event like RAADFest, where attendees receive an array of anti-aging therapies including gene therapies, peptide injections, dialysis-like blood detoxification, bone scans and light therapy.

Strole said he wasn’t aware that providers need a special in-state license to provide the type of therapies Holtorf offered, which he described as “neutraceuticals.”

“I’ve never heard they had to get from the state permission to do that under the auspices of giving a treatment of that nature, that’s not actually treating some disease or something,” Strole said.

According to the police report, Holtorf contracted with a Nevada-licensed nurse practitioner, who administered the injection to one of the women. He also contracted with another doctor, who mixed the vials and administered the injection to the second woman, the report said. That doctor does not appear to have the necessary Nevada licenses.

Holtorf declined to comment on the practitioners he hired for the event, other than to say he had worked with the doctor in the past.

Wuest said multiple providers might be investigated, but he wouldn’t confirm whether Holtorf is a subject of the probe. The board also is investigating whether the therapy provided to the patients required a medical or pharmaceutical license. The FDA is assisting in the investigation to determine what was in the injections, including whether it was a manufactured pharmaceutical or a compounded medication, Wuest said.

Holtorf’s medical practice and the peptide company he founded are affiliated with an organization, Forgotten Formula, that asserts a constitutional right to provide treatments as they see fit. On its website, the private membership association warns “all bodies in the public sector” that they “do not have any jurisdiction” over their doctors. “All doctors, healers, and members are protected under the shield of this organization,” the website says. “We operate member to member. Ignoring this disclaimer can lead to legal consequences against the party at fault.”

According to the police report, Holtorf told officers he obtained the peptides dispensed at the festival from Forgotten Formula. In the interview with ProPublica, however, he denied that, saying he’s not sure which of the many manufacturers he works with provided the peptides used at the booth.

The women received different peptide concoctions, according to the police report. Both included at least one component described by the FDA as posing significant risks when compounded. Holtorf said it is difficult to keep up with which peptides are banned and which are still acceptable for compounding.

“There is so much gray area,” he said. “People know they just get patients better.”

Despite the FDA warnings, peptides were popular among RAADFest attendees who were promised “beautiful life-saving therapies” at the event’s clinic. Event organizers touted that 70 longevity experts would be on hand during the four-day event at the Red Rock Casino Resort Spa but did not list the vendors providing treatments on the event website.

“We have a RAAD clinic, where people will be able to come in at discounted prices and try and do these therapies safely with doctors,” Strole told a Las Vegas TV news program while promoting the event.

Strole is executive director of the Scottsdale, Arizona-based Coalition for Radical Life Extension, one of a cluster of for-profit and nonprofit entities devoted to helping people achieve immortality founded by Strole and two “immortalist” business partners. Of the three co-founders, only Strole, who is in his 70s, is still alive.

Charles Brown, the original founder, claimed to have had a spiritual experience in the 1950s that showed him the path to immortality and proclaimed he could share that path with others, according to an Arizona Republic story. Brown died of Parkinson’s disease in 2014. His wife, Bernadeane “Bernie” Brown, who operated the for-profit People Unlimited with Strole, died of breast cancer in 2024. Her body is said to have been cryogenically preserved.

The nonprofit organizes the annual anti-aging festival, which charges more than $400 for a ticket, while People Unlimited offers monthly memberships for as much as $255 a month, according to its website. Members get access to weekly meetings, where Strole delivers motivational sermons on immortality and age reversal, as well as talks by guest speakers on wellness, discounts on “longevity protocols” and access to a community of people who “want you to live as much as they want to live.”

Gutman, the Florida emergency room doctor, spoke at the event earlier this month, her first time attending RAADFest. She left before the last day, when the two women were hospitalized, and hadn’t heard about the incident before a reporter called. But she said their symptoms — swollen tongue, trouble breathing, increased heart rate — sounded like an allergic reaction, which she said isn’t terribly common in peptide injections. But she cautioned that before injection the drugs are mixed with an agent that can sometimes pose problems.

Although she was skeptical of some of the therapies provided at the festival’s clinic, she said everyone she met there seemed to have “their heart in the right place” and genuinely wanted to help others “live their best lives.”


This content originally appeared on ProPublica and was authored by by Anjeanette Damon.

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Town Hall Attendees Demand Rep. Victoria Spartz Call for Signal Chat Group’s Resignations https://www.radiofree.org/2025/05/19/town-hall-attendees-demand-rep-victoria-spartz-call-for-signal-chat-groups-resignations/ https://www.radiofree.org/2025/05/19/town-hall-attendees-demand-rep-victoria-spartz-call-for-signal-chat-groups-resignations/#respond Mon, 19 May 2025 14:00:15 +0000 http://www.radiofree.org/?guid=e09e1a90873571b2b28a0016b12004c0
This content originally appeared on The Intercept and was authored by The Intercept.

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Egypt Accused of Using ‘Cartoon Super-Villain of an App’ to Spy on COP27 Attendees https://www.radiofree.org/2022/11/06/egypt-accused-of-using-cartoon-super-villain-of-an-app-to-spy-on-cop27-attendees/ https://www.radiofree.org/2022/11/06/egypt-accused-of-using-cartoon-super-villain-of-an-app-to-spy-on-cop27-attendees/#respond Sun, 06 Nov 2022 18:44:01 +0000 https://www.commondreams.org/node/340872

Climate campaigners and digital privacy advocates expressed alarm Sunday over revelations that the official app being used at the COP27 could be exploited by the Egyptian government hosting the global climate summit to spy on those using it, including domestic dissidents and outside critics of the regime's brutal human rights record.

As the Guardian reports:

The official COP27 app, which has already been downloaded more than 5,000 times, requires sweeping permissions from users before it installs, including the ability for Egypt's ministry of communications and information technology to view emails, scour photos and determine users' locations, according to an expert who analyzed it for the Guardian.

This data could be used by Abdel Fatah al-Sisi's regime to further crack down on dissent in a country that already holds about 65,000 political prisoners. Egypt has conducted a series of mass arrests of people accused of being protesters in the lead-up to COP27 and sought to vet and isolate any activists near the talks, which will see governments attempting to hammer out an agreement over dealing with the climate crisis.

Gennie Gebhart, the Electronic Frontier Foundation's advocacy director, told the Guardian the platform "is a cartoon super-villain of an app."

According to Gebhart, the "biggest red flag is the number of permissions required, which is unnecessary for the operation of the app and suggests they are trying to surveil attendees. No reasonable person will want to consent to being surveilled by a nation state, or having their emails read by them, but often people click these permissions without thinking much."

Canadian author and climate activist Naomi Klein tweeted Sunday that, "If you are at #COP27 and have downloaded the official app, you need to assume your phone has been compromised and deleting the app won't close the backdoor."

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, both of which have criticized Egypt's human rights record leading up to COP27, said their experts who examined the app came up with similar finds to that of EFF.

“It can be used for surveillance,” Hussein Baoumi of Amnesty told the Guardian, and explained that the permission settings gave access to the user's camera, microphone, and location data.

Baoumi said the app "is really part of the wider surveillance structure in Egypt," which should not be surprising.

"This is coming from a country doing mass surveillance unapologetically on its own population," he said. "It makes sense that of course the Egyptian government's app can be used for surveillance, to collect data and use it for purposes unconnected to Cop27. It's sad but expected from Egypt."

On Sunday, Amnesty condemned the Egyptian for arrested hundreds of people in the weeks leading up to COP27 based on concerns these individuals were planning or calling for demonstrations to take place during the summit.

“The arrest of hundreds of people merely because they were suspected of supporting the call for peaceful protests raises serious concerns over how the authorities will respond to people wishing to protest during COP27—an essential feature of any UN climate conference," said Philip Luther, Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa research and advocacy director.

Luther said world leaders attending the summit "must not be fooled by Egypt's PR campaign. Away from the dazzling resort hotels thousands of individuals including human rights defenders, journalists, peaceful protesters and members of the political opposition continue to be detained unjustly. They must urge President Abdelfattah al-Sisi to release all those arbitrarily held for exercising their human rights. As a matter of urgency, this should include imprisoned activist Alaa Abdel Fattah, who today escalated his hunger strike to stop drinking water.”


This content originally appeared on Common Dreams - Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community and was authored by Jon Queally.

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Attendees attack, insult 2 German reporters covering public political discussion about energy prices https://www.radiofree.org/2022/09/15/attendees-attack-insult-2-german-reporters-covering-public-political-discussion-about-energy-prices/ https://www.radiofree.org/2022/09/15/attendees-attack-insult-2-german-reporters-covering-public-political-discussion-about-energy-prices/#respond Thu, 15 Sep 2022 14:18:22 +0000 https://cpj.org/?p=229117 Berlin, September 15, 2022 — German authorities must conduct a swift and thorough investigation into the attack on two journalists covering a political meeting and hold those responsible to account, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.

On the evening of September 2, Moritz Gathmann, a reporter for monthly print magazine Cicero, and his female camera operator and photographer, who requested anonymity for security reasons, were insulted and attacked by attendees while they covered a public political discussion at a restaurant in Neukirch/Lausitz, a town in eastern Saxony state, according to a report by daily newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, a Facebook post by Gathmann, and Gathmann, who communicated with CPJ via email.

“German authorities should take the attack on Cicero magazine reporter Moritz Gathmann and his cameraperson seriously, find the perpetrators, and ensure that they are held responsible for this violent act,” said Attila Mong, CPJ’s Europe representative. “Journalists who cover issues of public interest must be able to work without fear of assault.”

During the discussion–about the effects of the energy price increases and purported anti-Semitic conspiracy theories–a man that Gathmann estimated to be between 20 and 25 years old asked the photographer to delete a photo she took of him, according to those sources. Despite immediately complying, the man physically pushed the photographer toward the door and began shouting insults and obscenities but stopped when Gathmann intervened.

Gathmann said he believed the man to be part of the neo-Nazi supporters in attendance, based on their tattoos and shirts with neo-Nazi slogans and insignias. This group later attempted to prevent him and his photographer from returning to the restaurant after the event took a break, shoving Gathmann back from the door and only allowing him to reenter after an organizer intervened.

Gathmann said the group continued to watch him and his photographer; as such, they felt threatened and asked one of the organizers to accompany them to their car. The organizer agreed, but once they left, two unidentified men who covered their faces with scarves appeared and started shouting profanity, according to those reports.

The journalists got into their rental car, and the men tried to open the car’s door, hit the windows, and smashed a side mirror. Neither journalist was injured, but Gathmann rapidly drove away, hitting the door of another vehicle parked on the street.

CPJ emailed questions to the press department of the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution in Saxony but did not receive a reply. The office took the investigation over from local police on September 6, according to the daily newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.


This content originally appeared on Committee to Protect Journalists and was authored by Committee to Protect Journalists.

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