Coronavirus

Pharmacist Could Face Charges For Tampering With COVID-19 Vaccines

Steven Brandenburg removed 57 vials of Moderna's vaccine from refrigeration. Whether he's charged depends on whether the vaccine was damaged.

Pharmacist Could Face Charges For Tampering With COVID-19 Vaccines
Grafton Police Department

“I'm going to order you released on a $10,000 signature bond."

A Wisconsin pharmacist is free from Ozaukee County Jail but not entirely off the hook after telling police he intentionally tried to damage COVID-19 vaccines. Police arrested 46-year-old Steven Brandenburg last week on felony charges of reckless endangerment and property damage. A detective said Brandenburg is an admitted conspiracy theorist who believes the vaccine could hurt people by changing their DNA — a claim experts say is not true. 

“He gave a statement that he'd removed these vials from refrigeration. He'd done so on two occasions. His intent in doing so was to render them inert because he'd formed this belief that they were unsafe.” 

Brandenburg removed 57 vials of Moderna’s vaccine from refrigeration over the holidays at a suburban Milwaukee medical center. Officials say the vials contained enough doses to inoculate 500 people. The now-fired pharmacist’s charges are still pending. 

Ozaukee County’s District Attorney says the decision to criminally charge Brandenburg hangs on whether the vaccines were damaged.  

"If they were not, despite the defendant's intent, there is no reckless endangering safety. You do not have a crime known to law as attempted recklessly endangering safety. You possibly have a crime known as attempted criminal damage to property in Wisconsin that would be a misdemeanor."

Moderna has yet to test the vials, and it’s unclear how long the process could take. 

Lauren Magarino, Newsy, Chicago.