Project Veritas has parked an LED van outside the headquarters of pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, playing video footage of statements made by a Pfizer director to a an undercover Project Veritas employee.
In a tweet posted Tuesday morning, Project Veritas revealed that the van had been parked outside Pfizer’s New York City headquarters.
“We rented an LED truck and parked it outside of @pfizer world headquarters in Manhattan today,” the tweet read. “Stay tuned…”
We rented an LED truck and parked it outside of @pfizer world headquarters in Manhattan today⁰⁰Stay tuned… pic.twitter.com/P9waV9vx86
— Project Veritas (@Project_Veritas) January 31, 2023
As Valiant News previously reported, Jordon Trishton Walker, Pfizer’s Director of Research and Development for Strategic Operations and mRNA Scientific Planning, claimed in the Project Veritas video that the Big Pharma titan is currently “mutating” the COVID-19 virus to “preemptively develop new vaccines.”
“Well, that is not what we say to the public, no,” Walker replied. “Don’t tell anyone this by the way, you have to promise you won’t tell anyone.”
“Well one of the things we’re exploring is like, why don’t we just mutate it ourselves so we could, we could create, preemptively develop new vaccines, right?” the Pfizer director continued. “So, we have to do that. If we’re gonna do that though, there’s a risk of like, as you could imagine, no one wants to be having a pharma company mutating f**king viruses.”
Pfizer has responded to the story in an official statement, which notes “Allegations have recently been made related to gain of function and directed evolution research at Pfizer and the company would like to set the record straight.”
“In the ongoing development of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, Pfizer has not conducted gain of function or directed evolution research,” the press release stated.
Pfizer further claimed that “Fact-based information rooted in sound science is vitally important to overcoming the COVID-19 pandemic and Pfizer remains committed to transparency and helping alleviate the devastating burden of this disease.”