Sale of controversial 'miracle' tonic results in dozens of charges - Action News
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British Columbia

Sale of controversial 'miracle' tonic results in dozens of charges

A B.C. man and an Alberta woman face dozens of Food and Drug Act charges related to the promotion of a so-called miracle tonic touted as capable of curing everything from AIDS to autism. The charges come after Health Canada spent years trying to crack down on the sale of sodium chlorite.

B.C. man, Alberta woman accused of selling bleach touted as solution for autism and AIDS

Stanley Nowak is one of two people facing dozens of Food and Drug Act charges in relation to the sale of sodium chlorite. (The Fifth Estate)

A B.C. man and an Alberta woman face dozens of Food and Drug Act charges related to the promotion of a so-called miracle tonic touted as capable of curing everything from AIDS to autism.

The charges against Stanley and Sara Nowakfollow years of Health Canada warnings aboutthe sale of sodium chlorite, a bleach that a global community of believers is convincedcan eliminate pathogens and poisons from the body when diluted with water.

Sodium chlorite is a chemical used mainly as a textile bleaching agent and disinfectant. Itis authorized for use by veterinarians as a germicide.

But Health Canada has been warning Canadians about the risks associated with consumingsodium chlorite since 2010. That's when the federal agency first warnedabout the presence of the chemical in Miracle Mineral Solution (MMS), an unapproved product widely distributed throughthe internet.

Since then, Health Canada has issued a slew of alerts to both the public and online retailers.

But the underground popularity of MMS and the legend of one of the mixture's chief proponents Jim Humble has spread as rapidly as one of the viruses the American claims he can eradicate.

Jim Humble is the creator and leader of a church that uses MMS as a sacrament. He says he's a god from the Andromeda Galaxy, sent to Earth to save humans. (YouTube)

Humble is quite literally an evangelist for sodium chlorite, asacramentin the church hefounded to spread his belief that a liquid generated from combining the bleach with water "has proven to restore partial or full health to hundreds of thousands of people" afflicted with everything from cancer to Alzheimer's.

Humble also claims to be a billion-year-old god from the Andromeda Galaxy sent to Earth to save humans.

'Pain, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea'

In Health Canada'smost recent warningabout the sale of a sodium chlorite-related product called Aerobic Oxygen, the agency saidingesting sodium chlorite can cause poisoning, kidney failure and harm to red blood cells.

"This in turn reduces the ability of the blood to carry oxygen, among other effects," the agency said in an advisory. "Ingesting sodium chlorite can also cause abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea."

StanleyNowakfaces 29 counts of unlawfully labelling, packaging, selling or advertising sodium chlorite in "a manner that was false, misleading or deceptive or is likely to create an erroneous impression regarding its character, value, quantity, composition, merit or safety."

SaraNowakfaces 19 counts.

The counts against both were sworn in Vancouver provincial court in November. Both were released on bail of$500 each.Their latest court appearance was this week.

Miracle Mineral Solution is being touted by an online 'church' as a cure-all diseases,including cancer, HIV/AIDS and autism. (the fifth estate)

The charges against Stanley Nowakspan a period from January 2012 to January 2017. The charges against Sara Nowakstretch from March 2016 to January 2017. The offences allegedly occurred in B.C., Alberta and Manitoba.

Sara Nowak lives in Okotoks. Reached by phone this week, the 37-year-old declined comment.

Stanley Nowak lives in the tiny community of Riondel, which ison the shores of Kootenay Lake, about 50 kilometres northeast of Nelson.

'It has an effect on you'

He could not be reached for comment about the charges, but spoke with CBC's The Fifth Estate in 2016 about online sales of MMS and sodium chlorite. He claimed to have sold the product through an online business to customers in Canada, the United States, England, and as far away as Japan and Russia.

But Health Canada shut him down in 2012.

He also claimed to have helped a lot of people.

"It has an effect on you," Nowak told The Fifth Estate's Mark Kelley. "I can't see how they can stop this from going in the same direction it's been going for the past 10 years ... it's working."

The Nowaks are believed to be the first Canadians charged in connection with the sale of MMS.

In 2015, a court in Washington state sentenced a Spokane man to 51 months in federal prison for online sales of a Miracle Mineral Supplement.Daniel Smith represented himself during a federal trial.