Behind the Bastards - Part Two: How Tainted Human Blood Became A Major U.S. Export
Episode Date: March 27, 2025Robert, who is looking better than ever these days wow what great hair, finishes telling Ben Bowlin the harrowing story of how the U.S. murdered thousands of our nation's closest friends and poisoned ...incarcerated people for a modest payout.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome back to the podcast that this is, which is Behind the Bastards, a podcast about
how to mine prison labor for their sweet, sweet blood.
Uh oh, hepatitis.
That's the story we're telling today.
Whoops, all heps.
Yeah, whoops, all heps.
B, C, all of the heaps.
Collect them all, folks, if you're doing blood donations with needles that have been used
on dozens of other people in the prison.
Anyway, Ben Bowlin, my guest today.
Ben, ridiculous history, stuff they don't want you to know.
Podcast Maven, impresario.
Oh my gosh. Yeah. How are you doing? How are you feeling? I Podcast Maven. Impressario. Oh my gosh. Yeah.
How are you doing?
How are you feeling?
I'm doing well.
I got to tell you, Robert, I got a little bit of epaulette envy right now because your
jacket's pretty sick.
I got a jacket like that, but it's, you know, it's stored away for specific purposes.
I apologize.
I'm like some guy rocking up to the White House without a suit on.
I live in a place where you get to wear clothing like this regularly because it's cold.
So it's part of why I left Texas.
I really like jackets and boy, very few places are worse for needing a jacket than Texas.
You heard it here first, folks.
Yeah, yeah.
In Mississippi, Yazoo Clay keeps secrets.
Seven thousand bodies out there or more.
A forgotten asylum cemetery.
It was my family's mystery.
Shame, guilt, propriety.
Something keeps it all buried deep until it's not.
I'm Larysen Campbell and this is Under Yazoo Clay.
Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up, y'all?
I'm AJ Andrews, pro softball player, sports analyst, and the first woman to win a Rawlings
Gold Glove. On my new podcast, Dropping Diamonds, we dive headfirst into the world of softball by sharing
powerful stories, insights, and conversations that inspire and empower.
It's time to drop bombs and diamonds.
Dropping Diamonds with AJ Andrews is an iHeart women's sports production in partnership with
Athletes Unlimited Softball League and D-Blue Sports and Entertainment. Listen to Dropping Diamonds with AJ Andrews on the iHeart Radio app, Apple
podcast or wherever you get your podcast.
Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports Network.
Hey, you're listening to On Purpose with Jay Shetty. And today my guests are none other
than Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco.
What I felt for Benny, it was everything about him was honest.
He'll tell me anything that he's feeling and it made me feel like I could do the same.
If we would have met each other when we were younger, it would have never worked.
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My husband cheated on me with two women! He wants to stay together because he has cancer. Should I stay?
Okay Sam, that has to be the craziest story in OK Storytime Podcast history.
Well John, that's because it's Dump'em Week and this user writes,
Last week we had an attempted break-in. I asked my husband, who was supposed to be at his mom's, to come over and change the locks,
but his mom told me he wasn't with her.
And it took me less than an hour to find the first two women he was cheating on me with. Did she leave him? supposed to be at his mom's to come over and change the locks, but his mom told me he wasn't with her.
And it took me less than an hour to find the first two women he was cheating on me with.
Did you leave him?
Well, to find out how this story ends, follow the OK Storytime podcast on the iHeartRadio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So I, you know, let's, let's get back into talking about talking about blood, the big
B. So as I mentioned in part one, back in 1983, HMA,
that's the company that is doing all of the healthcare
and managing all the blood donation
for the Arkansas prisons.
They've just been shut down, but then they got reopened
after some people who were close to the administration
got put in positions in both the prison board and at HMA.
Oh, and HMA is Health Management Associates, Associates Incorporated.
What do we always say about innocuous names, right?
Yeah, that's the worst thing ever.
Yes, they're just killing people.
You really want to just invest in a company called Murder Co.
Because Murder Co. probably just produces like cat food or something.
They're founded by Janine Murder.
Yeah, Janine Murder.
You know, she's a great cat food scientist of the New Hampshire murders.
Of the New Hampshire murders, yeah, the Granite State. As I mentioned in part one, in 1983 HMA had sold a bunch of tainted blood plasma for inmates
who were known to be positive for hepatitis.
38 units of blood, to be exact.
Now one unit of blood, there's actually varies, because it depends on how it's produced.
It's like roughly a pint, right?
That's what you should keep in mind in your head when you're hearing about a unit of blood.
Now, in the grand scheme of things, 38 pints or so of blood that's tainted doesn't sound
like a lot, maybe.
However, as I stated in the last episode, all of these are being mixed with tens of
thousands of other blood donations. And so these 38-ish pints-ish of tainted blood can wind up being turned into medicine for
tens of thousands of people, right?
Because any given dose of the plasma being given to hemophiliacs is factor VIII, would
be made from the blood of as many as 60,000 donors.
And just one tainted donor can spoil the batch.
So that's great.
So from just 38 pints of donated blood, at least 40,000 doses of dangerous tainted medicine
were made and shipped overseas.
At least, probably significantly more than that.
Many made their way into the hands of hemophiliacs who required regular injections of factor
rate. Many made their way into the hands of hemophiliacs who required regular injections of factor eight.
In 1985, the same year that Clinton's state cops cleared the company of most wrongdoing,
a UK hemophiliac sufferer named Peter Longstaff tested positive for HIV.
Now, because of the way this all works, we don't know that Peter's tainted plasma came
from Arkansas prison inmates, right? Because you can't,
they're just mixing it, they're not keeping track of, here's every individual whose blood is in this
batch of factor VIII, right? But he'd been taking blood products, including factor VIII and factor
IV since the 70s. And by then Arkansas was a huge part of the US blood economy. And the odds that
blood from Cummins prison made it into his body are about 100%, right?
Just given the way things worked at that time.
His brother also suffered from hemophilia and his brother, Stephen Longstaff, would
be infected in 1986 and became one of the first people to die of AIDS in the UK.
Given the hysteria at the time, this meant not just that the Longstaffs weren't just
dealing with the fact that two of, you know, both of their sons had gotten sick and, you know, in 86 one of them died, but it meant that they
also became the targets of mob panic. Per the Guardian, during Stephen's final days in hospital,
the windows had to be blacked out to prevent people taking pictures. On the day of the funeral,
the family house was daubed with paint which read AIDS, get out of here. It was devastating to the family, his mother said.
Pete himself recalled being rescued from his house by his GP and the police because there
was a mob outside trying to get him because he had HIV.
Jesus.
So when we talk about how many people are getting sick, it's not just that they're getting
a deadly or potentially deadly disease that changes or ends their life.
It's also, they're dealing with this kind of shit because that is where the culture
is at the time, you know?
The secondary infection of a mass outbreak.
Yeah.
Of dickishness.
Yeah.
So we could say then, we could say then that not only is this family being targeted unfairly through some groundswell
of mob rule, but they're being targeted at one of the worst possible moments of their
lives.
Yeah, I remember when I was in school in like the 90s, we had like school lectures about
how like, yeah, there was a kid with HIV, I think, because you'd gotten it through a
blood donation.
And you could still use the water fountain that he used. It wasn't a danger with HIV, I think, because he had gotten it through a blood donation, and you could still use the water fountain that he used.
It wasn't a danger to you, you know?
Which might sound silly to us now.
It sounds wild now, but no, I remember this, yes.
You were there.
Yeah.
Just like you were there at the JFK assassination.
We know.
You know, Robert.
I know who was there, and I know that he is currently a well-regarded US politician, but
Bernard Montgomery Sanders has a lot of unanswered questions about it.
That's all we need to say.
That's all we need to say.
All right.
We're keeping it on air.
Bernie, come find us.
Buy some catalytic containers.
Yeah.
So HMA ultimately settled with the FDA over the blood recall that resulted from this.
Their share of the liability was about a quarter of a million dollars.
Now we don't know how much money HMA was making off of this program in part because they weren't
really required to let people...
The regulations about this are like, you don't really need to say in the sense that most
companies do, but at least a couple of million dollars a year is probably a fair guess based
on what the company that takes over for them is going to make.
Now, the state police investigation largely cleared the department of any serious wrongdoing
in their plasma problem.
HMA was eventually given the go ahead to continue operating it with new safeguards in place.
Thankfully, the growing panic over HIV and the news of what had happened to the long
staffs in the UK prompted some re-examination.
Even though they were allowed to continue in like 84, 85 doing this plasma donation
program, in the summer of 1986, a hero emerged.
Unfortunately in this case, the hero was an insurance company. But like HMA's
insurance company after they looked into the evidence was like, oh, absolutely not. No,
you people are going to get us fucked. Like, you're so reckless. We're dropping your asses.
Right? This meant that the Arkansas prison plasma donation program was again,
forced to shut down. And this is going to lead to some of the less irresponsible actions than we've had so far.
One of the things that happens once HMA gets shut down by their insurer, the prison board
in which the guy we heard from last episode, Clinton aide Bobby Roberts is a member of
the board.
They actually, they might come to the that that state police investigation might have been
shit, and they hire an outside organization to do a better version of the internal investigation
into what had happened.
Now, the group they picked was the Institute for Law and Policy Planning from Berkeley,
California, which is a lot better than having the state police do it.
But the subject of the investigation wasn't the plasma donation program itself.
It was just the behavior of HMA.
So part of what they're doing here, it's good that we get this info, but part of what they're
doing is like, well, we don't, we don't want to be like shitting on the prison system.
We want to make this company who we already can't work with anymore into a scapegoat.
So they scoped in and cauterized the wound essentially.
Right.
Exactly.
Yes.
Yeah.
And this is how the paper concludes.
HMA originally may have diverted the Department of Correction payments to support acquiring
plasma centers or to other purposes that may well warrant further inquiry.
In any event, it was early in the five-year contract period that HMA established a pattern
of contract shortfalls and the ADC accepted them.
For HMA, this must all be viewed as profit-motivated business decision-making at best.
At worst, it calls for further inquiry."
So just like so many crimes are going on here.
Even though it has concluded this again, it's just blaming HMA.
So the people running the prison system still want to make money off of blood.
So the Arkansas Department of Corrections makes a deal with a new company, Pine Bluff
Biological Products, a for-profit business.
And obviously one that's not going to continue the same problems.
These guys are finally going to be ethical.
Finally, on the up and up.
On the up and up.
Someone doing blood money the right way.
Yes, exactly.
Ethical, just like the ethical blood diamonds
that I wear in my all diamond chiffon.
I don't know what a chiffon is.
But you know, yours is diamond encrusted.
That's the important part of the story.
Yes.
And they're not blood diamonds, they're blood plasma diamonds, which is much more ethereal.
Think about it.
That's why I made my money off a platelet emerald bind.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Platelets make the best emeralds, I assume.
So Robert's, Bobby Roberts would later allege of Pine Bluff Biological Products getting
the new blood contract, quote, I think it was an insider Pine Bluff deal.
Those were companies set up specifically for doing business with the ADC.
Basically, people who were running the Department of Corrections went to rich, you know, entrepreneur
friends of theirs and were like, here's what you need to do to set up a company to like
make this work, right?
Now I know what you're asking now.
How much money was in this business for the prison system?
And the answer is wait, wait, wait, let me do it.
Hey Robert, how much money was in this for the prison system?
The answer is less than you'd think.
Here's the Arkansas Times.
According to Robert's records, PBBP reported collecting an average of 960 units of plasma
a week in fiscal year 1986, calculated at a conserving selling rate of $50 a unit that
volume of plasma grows to approximately $2.5 million that year.
According to PBBP's contract, the ADC was to receive $5 for every unit of plasma collected.
So here's how the numbers looked in a year when the median income in Arkansas was half
of what it is today and when the scourge of contaminated blood products was being felt
around the world.
Of PBBP's $2.5 million in annual gross sales, 350,000 went to pay inmates their $7 a unit
fees.
The state of Arkansas collected $249,600 for prison operations and PBBP had gross revenues of almost 1.9 million.
Now that sounds weirdly small for this.
First off, this is not all the money that's coming in through the program.
But second, what's happening here is the state and the prisons are getting a little bit of
this money.
And most of that prisoner money is also going back into the Department of Corrections because
they're using it to buy things from the prisons.
Most of the money is going to PBBP.
Again, this is a company that has been set up specifically to interface with the Department
of Corrections, generally by people who had relationships with people in Arkansas government
who were responsible for making these calls.
They basically created a free company to siphon off money from the prisons, right?
That's kind of what's happened here.
Yeah, that's the question.
I think all of us hearing this are going to be asking naturally, is this a cutout?
Is this like a proxy to move or sluice some money through?
That's kind of, that's an element of what is going on.
And there's also serious debates as to these numbers.
This is what the Arkansas Times suggests.
Sophia Chase wrote for the William and Mary Business Law Review that the value of a unit
of blood to the prison was about a hundred bucks.
And the prison kept half of that as opposed to like $5 per unit.
So there may have been a lot more going into the system.
The fact that the money on this is so unclear in its precise details is one of the things that's shady.
Soxaphone.
Yeah.
Detector.
Now, even if let's say it's about $2 million that PBBP is grossing. Now that's gross not yet net,
but they effectively have almost no costs because they don't build
their own facilities.
They are using a Plasma Faresa Center built into Cummins Prison for free.
That's part of the contract.
The Department of Corrections handles all utilities and all janitorial work.
It's also guards who are reaching out to prisoners to get them to sign on to the program and
busing them to Cummins, and it's still a lot of inmates doing the work.
So really, PBBP is just skimming $2 million out of this program and handing it to some
people who have connections to folks who are close to the ADC, right?
So as far as I can tell, all PBBP, the company did was sell blood without checking to make sure it was safe
and pocketed the money. On paper, they were supposed to assume liability for all plasma
products produced through this and ensure they provided staff to handle the draw and
that those staff were licensed professionals who would check the product. But the ADC also
kept giving them inmates to do blood draws and other work that by the text of the contract,
professional PBBP employees ought only to have been doing.
Roberts described the PBBP looking at the inmates as, quote, sort of as little cows,
right?
You hear this description a lot that they're like, yeah, these are animals that we are
mining for the products of their body.
Now, by 1986, when PBBP starts, we are four years past the point where the US has essentially
soft banned the use of domestic inmate blood.
However, it continues to be used for export products.
Cutter Laboratories, which is one of the companies involved in the nuts and bolts parts of turning
whole blood into like blood products, publishes an internal memo around
this time that highlights the attitude many in the industry had to the idea of excluding
prison plasma donations.
There are no data to support the emotional arguments that prison plasma collected from
adequately screened prisoners is bad.
To exclude such plasma from manufacture of our coagulation product would only be a sop
or a gratuity to the gay rights movement and would presage further pressure to exclude
Plasma collected from the Mexican border and the paid donor
See
Yeah, yeah to exclude such plasma from manufacture of our coagulation product would only be a sop or gratuity to the gay rights movement
And would presage further pressure to exclude plasma collected from the Mexican border and the
paid donor.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
Will someone make less money if we have to use blood that isn't taken coercively by people
who have an incentive to lie about whether or not they're sick.
And again, when I talk about there being a lot more money, like what, what PBP is making
is the initial money for selling this plasma, right?
And both the plasma and the whole blood that's coming in through these donation programs
are worth a shitload more once you spin them out into the different blood factors, right?
So this, there's a whole higher level of profit that these companies like Qatar are making, right?
Likewise, the US has said, we're not using this stuff domestically for medicine.
Likewise our foreign friends in the UK and Canada don't allow blood from prison inmates
to be used in medicine.
But a system had been devised to ensure plausible deniability.
The blood that came out of Cummins and other donor programs in the US was sold to
Continental Pharma Criano in Montreal, and this major blood broker resells the whole blood in
plasma all around the world. And it also sells to a Toronto based company, Connett Laboratories,
who effectively played the role of blood launderer and sent this tainted blood to
the Canadian Red Cross. The laundering process was so effective that, as Sophia Chase writes, in at least one case,
the blood was sent back to the United States.
So we are also using tainted blood in the U.S. from inmates, even though we're not supposed
to be, because it's being sold to Canada and then sold back to us sometimes.
Yeah.
Excuse me, waiter, send this blood back.
Yeah, send this one back across the border
to our good friends.
Also blood launderer as a job.
This is blood laundering, yeah.
We're in the wrong business.
Yeah, oh, there's so much money laundering blood.
Oh man.
Do you ever think about that?
Mm-hmm, I do, I do.
You know, I have a shitload of blood in my house. I keep it in-
People always say that.
Yeah, I keep it in my basement.
I don't know if it needs to be refrigerated, but you know, make me an offer, folks.
If you need a shitload of blood, I got it.
Cool blood stored in a dark place.
Cool Zone is getting into the blood business.
You're legally not allowed to ask me where it came from.
It's illegal for you guys to ask Robert that.
It's so important we can't know.
Yeah, it's also important to realize that the fewer questions you ask, the bigger of
a price break you get.
That's right.
And that seems to be an unfortunate truth as this, we could even call it a sort of blood economy begins to arise.
That's right. That's right. And speaking of the economy, I don't know if our sponsors sell blood, but they sell other stuff. So go buy it and then give me your blood.
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When you peel back the layers of
Mississippi's Yazoo Clay, nothing's ever as simple as you think. The story is much more complicated
and nuanced than that. I'm Larysen Campbell. Listen to Under Yazoo Clay on the iHeart Radio app,
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If we would have met each other when we were younger, it would have never worked.
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on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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So even under PBBP, this new company, the same problems persisted.
Prisoners continue to be involved in running the plasma program.
They regularly over bleed each other because it means more money for them.
And neither the prison system nor the company has a financial interest in stopping that.
Records are regularly falsified and destroyed.
Earlier in these episodes, we quoted from Clinton friend and prison board member Bobby
Roberts.
He's been something of a whistleblower about the program, but just to an extent.
When the FDA published a study alleging that prison plasma was likelier to be tainted with
blood than plasma donated elsewhere, Roberts told reporters from the Arkansas Times this,
I deny the premise.
I disagree that prison plasma blood was more dangerous than it was coming out of the for-profit
centers in the free world.
Out there, anybody could bleed anybody.
But the problem isn't, everyone has blood.
The problem is that it's not being checked
and there's a lot of incentives to lie when you're sick,
when you have no other way of making money
because you're in prison, right?
Also, you can't just say, I disagree with the premise.
Yeah, it's like the FDA, you're not, you're Bobby Roberts.
For one thing, your name's Bobby Roberts.
Ultimately, immediately, I'm less likely
to take you seriously about medical science.
Both of your names are the same.
I just, I love the idea.
Bob Rob.
Of Bob Rob pulling a hot tag base on something
where, you know, like this guy might get arrested
with a bunch of guns with
the serial numbers filed off.
And they're like, hey, we got you with a bunch of guns, you know, in your Honda Civic.
And he's like, officer, I disagree with the premise.
I disagree with the premise.
That article continues to summarize Roberts's argument.
Roberts bases his confidence in the state's plasma program on the fact that unlike downtown
plasma centers, the ADC had medical records on every inmate who participated.
It knew who was safe to bleed, he says, and who wasn't.
Can we take a second to also- Come on, man.
The use of the word bleed like this is just so fucking creepy.
Safe to bleed, right to bleed. Yes. Yeah. It's just so fucking creepy. Safe to bleed. Right to bleed.
Yes. Yeah. And he's right. The prison has records. Oh good. And it often knows when people have
bloodborne illnesses. The issue is that they don't care. Per the paper written by Sophia Chase,
multiple witnesses to the events claim that the plasma center accepted some donations from
prisoners known to fail the required qualifications.
A previous inmate, Louis Soros, described the conditions at the prison.
You had prisoners bribing prisoners, prisoners bribing officials, officials offering certain
deals for them to bleed for extra money or drugs.
Soros himself passed away from hepatitis C shortly after the interview.
He became infected with this disease during his time at Cummins prison.
And because of the previous scandals under HMA, there are more outside investigations
into the plasma program after this point.
A few years after PBBP takes over, an FDA inspector reports them for poor screening
procedures and record keeping.
The prison officials who manage the program for PBBP
were also accused of using prison guards to recruit inmates.
Despite this, in an interview with a local reporter,
prison medical director, John Byas,
who is like the medical director of the prison, right?
Said this, we plan to stick with the plasma program
to the last day, to the drop. We're able to sell
Okay, why?
Give it all of the bad stuff why?
Sounds like it sounds like one of those things where the public wider audience is
somehow different from
the specific audience this guy is speaking to yeah, maybe Now, in 1991, a company from New York takes the contract from PBVP, and they continue
to mine prisoners for blood plasma until 1994.
By this point, not only was the HIV crisis more fully understood, but the consequences
of all those years of tainted blood getting shotgunned out onto the world market had become
undeniable.
And this is where we get to the body count.
Best as we can tell, more than a thousand Canadian hemophiliacs were dosed with tainted
blood from Cummins Prison alone.
During this timeframe, 42,000 Canadians were infected with hepatitis C and
thousands more with HIV through tainted plasma, often including plasma imported from Cummins.
Current estimates expect about 7,000 total deaths of Canadian citizens from contaminated
blood sold by the US during this period. About two 9-11s, a little more.
And to be clear, these are all, for everyone listening, these are all innocent people who
are taking...
Yes, easily preventable deaths too, yes.
Easily preventable deaths. Also, this is medicine that they need to live.
Yes, yes, yes. And the shockwaves in Canada. Canada takes substantial action here, right?
The Canadian Red Cross has to declare bankruptcy and is no longer allowed to collect blood
as a result of the fallout of this.
The Canadian government launched a commission in 1995 to trace the blood that had poisoned
so many of their citizens, which is how we first learned that Canada's blood supply
had been tainted by blood from sick US prison inmates, right?
They trace a lot of it back to Cummins.
Conant Laboratories, which is the Canadian company that's like making the blood product,
was obviously proven negligent and all this, largely because they had avoided checking
any of the plasma collection sites themselves and had relied on FDA records, which were
also deficient.
Subsequent investigation showed that Arkansas, it's a little bit like, if you've heard the
story of like the rust shooting, right? Where like the first AD, the assistant director,
was supposed to check the gun to see if it was empty,
alongside the armorer was also supposed to check the gun
to see if it was empty.
And the first AD didn't really do a check
because he assumed the armorer had done it, right?
And the armorer had not done it.
It's like that, right?
Like Connock was just like, the FDA has probably got it.
We don't need to spend any money checking. And like they really did. The FDA didn't have
it, you know? Subsequent investigation showed that Arkansas prison blood was a significant
contributor to Canada's hep C and HIV crisis in this period. And that both US blood brokers
and the FDA failed to inform Canadian companies where the blood they were buying had come
from and that much of it was being sent from facilities
which had already been linked to tainted blood sales.
There have been attempts at lawsuits over this,
but the difficulties of carrying out such a suit
cross border mostly stymied the efforts
of Canadian hemophiliacs to get justice.
As I discussed earlier, a good deal of the tainted blood
from the US also went to Great Britain,
where it helped cause what Lord Robert Winston described as
the worst treatment disaster in the history of the NHS.
Oh, all thanks to our American friends.
Oh, good.
The worst.
The young upstarts.
Our shitty cousins, crap the bag oncearts. Yeah. Oh, our shitty cousins.
Yeah.
Cracked the bag once again.
Yeah.
From that article by Sophia Chase, most of the victims believe the blood and clotting
factors they were using came from British donors.
The possibility that the blood might have been imported did not even occur to them,
much less the prospect that it might not meet British health standards.
The disaster left 4,670 British hemophiliacs infected with hepatitis C, and 1243 of those
were also infected with HIV.
About 2,000 have died at this point, right?
Also, many of them spread diseases to partners and children.
We'll never fully have an understanding of the exact cons, but at least 2,000 dead.
And again, there were like, you know, investigations into this as well.
It ultimately determined that A, a significant burden of responsibility for tainted blood
provided at British hemophiliacs rests on American suppliers of factor VIII concentrate.
Now due to the way things were done at the time, it was not possible to determine how
many of those deaths were directly linked to Cummins prison.
Again, there have been changes in how stuff is reported to try and make it easier to trace
back tainted blood, but that didn't exist at the time.
We know at least three, right?
So we know it was happening.
It's got to be thousands more than that, right?
Because it's incredibly hard to actually trace this, right?
In part because one of the things they found when they realized how many British people
had gotten HIV and hepatitis and were dying, they found that most of the records for blood transactions
to import blood into the UK had been shredded in the early 1990s.
Oops.
Accidentally, surely.
Oops.
Oops.
Surely, surely nothing shady there.
Right, right.
Have you ever found yourself in that situation? Oh gosh
You know see doodles. Yeah, whoops you just trip with a stack of papers and fall toward the shredder
I'm always shredding medical documents. That's like 80% of my day job is shredding medical documents from the UK
I don't even know what they're about. You know, they just send them to me in boxes
and I just shred.
That's how you and I got started
before this whole podcasting thing.
We would just hang out and throw some stuff into shredders
and high five each other.
That's the future of media,
shredding British medical paperwork.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We weren't entirely wrong,
but we had too much blood back then.
We did have way too much blood.
So it may seem baffling that there was not more oversight given the way things work with
the NA, especially at this point worked at the NHS, but the blood export industry in
the UK was considered uniquely favored, right?
Which means they were exempt from some of the same oversight because number one, and
this is the same in Canada, not nearly enough British people or Canadians were donating
blood.
They just didn't have enough.
And the US was considered the gold standard planet wide for blood distribution because
no one else could gather and disseminate anywhere.
Again, 70% of the blood products worldwide coming from the US.
The infrastructure is there.
So everyone is just like, they must have this shit figured out, right?
No. But yeah, but because our system was the largest by far, everyone relied on it and became
the global standard and other national healthcare agencies and companies just sort of assumed that US regulators had our shit together because the
only other option was to not have enough blood.
Now that's the bulk of this story.
But before we close out here, I should talk about something.
So there is apparently an exceptional documentary made about all this called Factor 8, The Arkansas
Prison Blood Scandal.
Yes.
It was made by Kelly Duda, a filmmaker and investigative journalist who won a Peabody
Award in 2003 for a Japanese documentary about the coverup by the government of the hep C
epidemic.
She spent eight years researching and five years filming this movie, which prompted an
international response.
And even she gets called into a criminal trial in Naples for a company accused of selling
tainted blood products to Italian citizens.
It's supposed to be excellent.
I haven't seen it and I wanted to.
It is not available anywhere online that I can find.
When you look on like reddits and stuff, it's always blamed on the Clintons, right?
They stopped this documentary from getting out
I know that Duda has alleged she received like harassment and stuff while she was making the documentary that said
When you talk about like the bad things the Clintons did this is especially Bill an incredibly powerful man
Who was involved in a lot of shady stuff?
There's also a whole industry of right-wing content dedicated to lying about shit, including
the Clinton murder list and stuff.
It's just nonsense, right?
It's difficult to parse a lot of stuff out.
Now, there is no doubting that Bill Clinton deserves a massive degree of blame for the
Arkansas blood scandal because he was the governor and because he put people who were
close to him directly in positions to manage the program.
No argument, period, that he does not deserve a meaningful amount of blame for this.
But a lot of these other allegations, like the fact that are the Clintons locking down
access?
Have they used their influence?
It's not a powerful people do that with documentaries, but also a lot
of the time I'm doing episodes, I found out there's a 20 year old documentary about it
and I can't find that documentary because it's not on streaming.
That just happens with media.
So like is the likeliest thing the Clintons locked?
I don't, I don't, I have no evidence of that.
Right?
I've had this happen to a bunch of documentaries over the years. That said, I would love to see this documentary.
So if you've got it, hit us up.
And I don't know, someone put it on fucking streaming.
Now the most credible allegations that I've heard when it comes to like, you know, the
corruption here is that money from this blood program was used to provide positions
to people as political favors where they could profit while doing very little.
It's certainly true that the State Department of Corrections doesn't make a ton from the
blood program, right?
However, other people in and around the state government make an unknown amount of money
acting as grease around HMA and then PBVP's wheels here.
One example is Leonard Dunn.
That is the guy who gets brought in to run HMA right around the time of the first blood
scandal.
He's a banker.
A state police investigator wrote that Dunn had advised him, quote, he was close to Governor
Clinton as well as a majority of state politicians presently in office.
Mr. Dunn explained that he was very fond of politics.
Dunn added that he was the financial
portion of the corporation as well as the political arm. Despite this, he also claimed he never took
an active role in the company on a day-to-day basis. Okay, man. Oh, sure. Sure. Yeah. Good story, bro.
Cool. But Dunn does handle when HMA loses the contract briefly, he is the guy negotiating
with the corrections
board so that it can keep taking and selling plasma.
And since his company had just paid out to the FDA for letting tainted blood out of the
country, you might imagine these would be difficult negotiations.
But the main result of these negotiations was that Dunn, in order to get the corrections
board to agree, agreed to bring in an ombudsman to act as a compliance
coordinator to ensure HMA followed the rules going forward.
This ombudsman was Richard Mays, a little rock judge who had been appointed by Governor
Clinton.
His job at HMA was described by the state police as a bribe.
Because again, he's not really doing anything.
They're just like, yeah, just give another guy who like we owe a favor a job and pay him some money.
He doesn't have to do much.
Yeah, let's make it official with our bud.
Yeah, yes.
Now they're an Om's bud.
Yeah, right.
Now the specific choice to bring on Dunn
seems to have been made by the Arkansas board
of Corrections Chairman, Woodson Walker,
who claimed that he discussed it with Governor
Clinton, who was so upset that he held Walker personally responsible for the next provider
chosen and Walker and Clinton jointly suggested Mays, right?
That's what Walker claims.
Obviously he's in trouble here.
But the fact that this guy who Clinton appoints as a judge gets this bribe job, I don't
think Clinton had nothing to do with that. To quote from Susie Parker's article, HMA President
Dunn told investigators, Dunn stated that Walker advised him that Mays was black, a plus in a system
where most of the inmates are black, had good qualifications, and was an outstanding attorney,
according to investigators' notes. I like the order of operations. Yes.
With those commendations.
Yes.
Like, oh, and third, he's pretty good.
He's a good lawyer, yeah.
Yeah, he's all right at that one, but first.
Yeah, now obviously I'm not saying he's not a good attorney,
but he doesn't have qualifications
to monitor a blood plasma donation program.
Oh, geez.
Like, yeah, like, that's like saying, you know, this guy's a great helicopter pilot. Like, yeah, like that's like saying,
you know, this guy's a great helicopter pilot.
Let's put him in charge of making sure all the hearts
we give put in people are working.
It's like, he doesn't know how to do that.
Like, yeah, he's good at something.
You haven't seen him on the bird.
You know what I mean?
Man, the way this guy flies,
he could really pick out a good kidney.
You can just, it's something in the eyes.
You know, it's a vibe.
Simply not the same job.
Now there are other allegations of kickbacks and bribery at high levels in the system.
Mike Gauster was a medical practitioner who worked in Cummins prison during the height
of the HMA days, and he later wrote a fictionalized novel about his experiences and claimed that
he had to leave the company after an HMA associate demanded he give some of his earnings to him in order to keep his job.
The way Arkansas works is that once you are working within the system, the people in charge
make it clear that it is a privilege to have that state contract.
Ultimately, you are expected to pay for that privilege.
This I know," Gauster continues, without the governor's support and protection, this disease
riddled system would have been shut down by 1982.
Again, Clinton doesn't make the system this way, but he is a guy who continues to work
within a system in order to get the stuff done that he wants to get done, right?
And the fact that that system existed before and after him does not exempt him from responsibility
for participating in it.
Nor exonerate, to be quite honest.
And I love the point that we're bringing up here
about how easy it is to heap a probrium on someone
that you already don't care for or disagree with.
But just like the soul crushing thing
where someone you hate makes a really good point,
objectively, you also have to have that moment crushing thing where someone you hate makes a really good point objectively.
You also have to have that moment where even someone you might like does really just unclean
evil shit for a federal judge to say there are evil people involved.
Yes.
And it's this, the issue of both like, it's, it is important to hold Clinton's that, I
mean, he didn't, no one held his feet
to the, but it would have been important for them to have done this as a result of this.
It's also important for it not to be what a lot of people tried to make it where it's
like, well, this is purely a Clinton scandal.
No, I mean, this is like an Arkansas scandal.
It's like a blood industry scandal.
This is a lot of very important.
If you're picking out one of the threads involved in this scandal
Then you're ignoring all of the other ones and you're like it becomes clear. Okay. Well, you hate governor Clinton
But like if different governor you didn't hate had been doing all of the same things you wouldn't have given a shit, you know
Like yeah, you would have been like, you know people like blood
Yeah
these are systemic issues and we both need to blame and punish individual people responsible for them and understand how the systemic part plays into it
so that we don't just put like, well, no, I like this governor, so I'm just not going to pay
attention to what's being done in the Arkansas prisons anymore. You know? Maybe the problem is
monetizing everything. Yeah, maybe the problem is monetizing everything. Like those early reports
said, if you make blood donation be entirely driven by money,
there's a lot of issues you have to deal with.
The other issue is like, well, then how do we get all the blood we need?
Because we don't have enough.
There's never enough.
How do we get the blood we need?
Yeah, there's never an organ surplus.
Right.
Yeah.
And so there's a degree to which, as much as we're critiquing parts of this
There are certain things I know that we shouldn't have been doing like running a blood program the way they did at Cummins prison
But it comes to like how do we get enough blood? Well, nobody's figured that out yet. I don't know
Nobody's figured that out except for except for Robert Evans creator creator of Behind the Bastards, who has several jars of, we'll call it, gently used vintage blood.
Blended vintage blood, maybe a little bit
of lamb's blood in there.
I might have thinned it out with some coconut milk.
You're good, you're good, take it.
You're good, no refunds.
Also contains X amount of ethanol.
Now you know who else doesn't give refunds?
Who's that?
The sponsors of this podcast. That we're hoping to keep, Robert. X amount of ethanol. Now you know who else doesn't give refunds? Who's that?
The sponsors of this podcast.
That we're hoping to keep, Robert.
Maybe they give refunds, I don't know, I never check.
There's a type of soil in Mississippi called Yazoo clay.
It's thick, burnt orange, and it's got a reputation.
It's terrible, terrible dirt.
Yazoo clay eats everything,
so things that get buried there tend to stay buried.
Until they're not.
In 2012, construction crews at Mississippi's biggest hospital
made a shocking discovery.
7,000 bodies out there or more.
All former patients of the old state asylum,
and nobody knew they were there. It was my family's mystery. But in this corner of the old state asylum, and nobody knew they were there.
It was my family's mystery.
But in this corner of the South, it's not just the soil that keeps secrets.
Nobody talks about it, nobody has any information.
When you peel back the layers of Mississippi's Yazoo Clay, nothing's ever as simple as you
think.
The story is much more complicated and nuanced than that.
I'm Larison Campbell. Listen to Under Yazoo Clay on the iHeart Radio app, Apple
Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast. Hey, you're listening to On Purpose with
Jay Shetty and today my guests are none other than Selena Gomez and Benny
Blanco.
I can't wait for you to hear this episode about their love story, about their relationship
like you've never heard it before.
I want to go back to the first time you ever met.
Thank you so much for this.
Benny!
One of the greatest!
Thank you.
I'm Selena, but we're watching Disney's Kids. When you're a pop star like she is and you're a huge entity and people set up all these
walls before and then the first second you like disarmed everybody.
By the way, congratulations on your engagement.
What I felt for Benny, it was everything about him was honest.
He'll tell me anything that he's feeling and it made me feel like I could do
the same. If we would have met each other when we were younger, it would have never
worked. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or
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Is this a good time? It's me, Dylan Mulvaney, and my dear friend, Joe Locke from Heartstopper
and Agatha All Along is my very first guest on my brand new podcast, The Dylan Hour. It's me, Dylan Mulvaney, and my dear friend Joe Locke from Heartstopper and Agatha All Along is my very first guest on my brand new podcast, The Dylan Hour.
It's musical mayhem and it is going to be so much fun.
I like a man.
You like a man.
What do I like, Joe?
You like a man too.
We often-
We have quite a similar-
There's some cross pollination happening in here.
Not like-
No!
Have we?
No.
No. Not yet. Never say never.
I cannot wait for all you girls, gays, and theys to join me on this extremely special
pink confection of a podcast. There is so much darkness in this world,
and what I think we could all use more of is a little joy.
Listen to the Dillon Hour on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your podcasts. Love ya!
Have you ever wondered if your pet is lying to you?
Why is my cat not here?
And I go in and she's eating my lunch.
Or if hypnotism is real?
You will use this suggestion in order to enhance your cognitive control.
What's inside a black hole?
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Well, we have answers for you in the new iHeart Original Podcast, Science Stuff.
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We'll talk to experts, break it down, and give you easy to understand explanations
to fascinating scientific questions. So give yourself permission to be a science geek
and listen to science stuff on the iHeartVideo app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We're back.
So a good deal of the information in this article comes from a 1998 piece published
by Arkansas investigative journalist, Suzy Parker.
She also published an article on the Whitewater scandal for the New York Times, which was
a big scandal for the Clintons while he was in office that like is incredibly boring today
because political scandals have gotten so much worse.
Like it's so quaint that like, oh man,
remember when people were upset about these
like shady business dealings,
the president might be tied to, good Lord.
Guys, this dude may have made a couple hundred thousand
dollars illegally.
So let's rebuild those guillotines.
Anyway, the president said he's a king.
It's just, things are a lot worse.
I'm not saying Whitewater was okay.
I'm just saying things are so much worse now.
Suzy has worked for a number of publications and she has a particular fixation at Arkansas
politics and the Clintons.
Today she runs a local independent publication called The Reckoning and she is quite conservative,
right? She is a right wing, at least, similarly more sympathetic to that.
I think she does portray Clinton's involvement as more direct and puppet mastery than it
was.
I think this was something Clinton acceded to, both because he gained some benefit from
giving some of these positions to people close to him, and because not messing with this
allowed him to do... It was like a politics was a trade
for him.
Right.
Whereas like the other people running the board of corrections and running these, these
were the people who were like directly setting up the system like this.
Again, I think Clinton knew quite a bit of how bad this was and made some choices here,
but he's not the puppet master.
Right. Now, one of the issues here comes that alongside some strong connections, but he's not the puppet master.
One of the issues here comes that alongside some strong connections, which again don't
imply that Clinton operated this program, but do enclay that he deserves quite a lot
of blame.
Or at least willfully ignorant.
Yes.
There's also some specious allegations.
For example, Galster, that former doctor, claims that Vince Foster was hired to squash
the state investigation.
Now this was true, and Vince Foster is a very close Clinton associate.
If this is true, that investigation happened and in fact described some of what was going
on as bribery.
And then there's an independent review ordered by the prison board, which had Clinton allies
on it.
So I don't know how much I believe that this is like a big deal, but the reason this is
seen as a smoking gun, right, by some people is that in July of 1993, after Governor Clinton
became President Clinton, Vince Foster shot himself to death in Washington, DC.
Foster had discussed his depression with his sister over some time, and he was at that
moment in a lot of trouble over a totally different controversy with the White House
Travel Office and there's no evidence of anything here other than that Vince was a serial political operator who was involved in some shady shit and
Got disgraced and who killed himself because he didn't want to live with the after-effects, right?
Mm-hmm and you know this that also the shit he was in, to the extent that it was shady, is very common
among people who are Arkansas politicos, right?
But Vince's death has become a cornerstone of some of the more unhinged parts of the
anti-Clinton movement.
You'll hear allegations that like he was either murdered by the Clintons or that he killed
himself because of the blood scandal, right?
The Clintons had him shot in order to cover this blood scandal up.
And again, it wasn't covered up.
There was a documentary on it.
People didn't care enough, but it wasn't, you know, it got out.
And the reality is that the blood scandal didn't have an impact on Bill and Hillary's
lives or political careers, not in a real massive way.
And I can in fact believe that people as connected as they are, you know, have contacts in the
entertainment industry.
But I also, I just don't see the evidence that this destroyed them or that
this wasn't that dangerous to them.
In fact, in 1992, Peter Longstaff, who tested positive for HIV back in 1995 after receiving
blood from US donors, tested positive for hepatitis C. This was the same year that Clinton
ran for presidential election.
The Arkansas Times writes, quote, his former chief of staff, Betsy Wright sent a memo titled
prison positives.
That memo mentioned four points, including education into prison by Bill Clinton.
But the first point Wright listed was run cheapest system in the country.
And so you kind of get even in 92, you know, the thing that like the scandal here is not
on their front burner, their front burner, still for him in 92 after it's very clear
how bad a lot of this is was like, the person's system was cheap.
Let's throw that in a bullet point list.
You know, you know, it's a thing to run on.
Right?
Keeping costs down.
Keeping costs down. Keeping costs down.
Is the idea.
Yeah, fairly normal.
Evil.
Fairly normal politics evil as opposed to like incredibly shady conspiracy evil.
That's my opinion on the matter.
Well, I hear you there too, because there's there's this devilishly tempting draw, right?
To find a political force you disagree with
or you already don't care for
and then assign them super villainous agency
where the result is,
without being too controversial,
the result is you ultimately have to ask yourself, is
there any such thing as a completely clean POTUS?
Right?
And what does it take to play that game?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And also just like, perhaps if we keep, if the focus of all of these problems is like, ah, this is, I can use this huge systemic
issue that a lot of people deserve to go down for to attack this one guy. That's all I'm really
interested in. I'm not interested in better treatment for prisoners. I'm not interested
in a safer blood treatment system, right? And likewise, if you're, and to the same extent that
like Bill's only interest in what happened in the prison
system during his time was I need a bullet point of things that I can run on, right?
And like, yeah, I put some educational programs in, system was the cheapest, you know, that
it's ever been.
Bada bing, bada boom.
I'm done thinking about the prisons in the state I run, you know?
Like all of these are parts of the, why all of this kind of shit will keep happening.
Yes. And that is, I think one of our,
look, I know it's your show,
but I think that's one of the key takeaways is,
it is tempting again to look at the headline,
to put a face on a problem, right?
Now I'm mad, insert individual here.
The real problems are systemic, and have always been and shall
always be slow, be so.
And with that, I got to tell you, it's a question that's been on my mind for both of these episodes.
Robert, do you want to, do you want to like buy some blood?
Yes.
Oh my God.
Yes. Do you know, I got to, I want to like buy some blood? Yes. Oh my god. Yes. Do you know I got I want to make sure
Yeah, well I have any idea where the blood comes from or what is in it even better, bro
You're not buying it. We do a subscription service. Oh shit
Awesome, you know, you're well we say leasing. Yeah. Yeah, at least the blood I'll give some back. Yeah
We got a half blood leasing has to be on the organ lease. I mean, we're all going to be doing our best for the
next several decades to like recreate some of like the silliest movies from the 1990s.
I think repo man's next. Oh, my gosh. I'm so excited. You have to you have to come back
on stuff that once you or you've never been on that one come back on ridiculous history
While we can still call it history, right? Yeah
The rent a blood is just like a sequel to Jordan Peele's get out. Yeah
Yeah, yeah got us again. Yeah. Oh my gosh
Anyway, you want some blood have fun. I
Don't know why I ended on that mark. What do you?
Mean you kind of did a plug
Please oh, oh sure other than rent a blood which is clearly our main focus
For both of these episodes.
Please check out Stuff That It Wants You To Know,
which applies critical thinking to allegations of conspiracy.
Please check out Ridiculous History,
where you can hear our own friend Robert Evans.
Robert, pause, Evans, you like that?
Just check it.
Social Security number, beep,
on the show a couple of times.
Most importantly, most importantly,
I think you guys plug something.
I'm just throwing the ball over the court here.
Just doing like a halftime.
Go for it. You know what I mean?
Yeah. Half court.
Find the documentary factor eight so I can watch it.
That's what I'm going to plug.
Somebody's got to have it out there.
Shout out to Kelly Duda, by the way, for standing tall in Italian court.
That's a true story. Good work.
Anyway, that's the episode.
Hey. Behind the Bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonemedia.com, or check us out on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Behind the Bastards is now available on YouTube.
New episodes every Wednesday and Friday.
Subscribe to our channel, youtube.com, slash, at Behind the Bastards.
In Mississippi, Yazoo Clay keeps secrets. 7,000 bodies out there or more.
A forgotten asylum cemetery.
It was my family's mystery.
Shame, guilt, propriety. Something keeps it all buried deep until it's not.
I'm Larisen Campbell and this is Under Yazoo Clay.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up, y'all?
I'm AJ Andrews, pro softball player, sports analyst, and the first woman to win a Rawlings
Gold Glove.
On my new podcast, Dropping Diamonds, we dive headfirst into the world of softball
by sharing powerful stories, insights, and conversations
that inspire and empower.
It's time to drop bombs and diamonds.
Dropping Diamonds with AJ Andrews
is an iHeart Women's Sports production
in partnership with Athletes Unlimited Softball League
and Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment.
Listen to Dropping Diamonds with AJ Andrews
on the iHeart radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports Network.
Hey, you're listening to On Purpose with Jay Shetty.
And today my guests are none other than Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco.
What I felt for Benny, it was everything about him was honest.
He'll tell me anything that he's feeling and it made me feel like I could do the same.
If we would have met each other when we were younger it would have never worked.
Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
My husband cheated on me with two women.
He wants to stay together because he has cancer.
Should I stay?
Okay Sam, that has to be the craziest story
in OK Storytime podcast history.
Well John, that's because it's dump of week
and this user writes,
last week we had an attempted break-in.
I asked my husband who was supposed to be at his mom's
to come over and change the locks,
but his mom told me he wasn't with her.
And it took me less than an hour to find
the first two women he was cheating on me with.
Did you even?
Well, to find out how this story ends,
follow the OK Storytime podcast on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.