In 1985 Monsanto purchased G.D. Searle, the chemical company
that held the patent to aspartame, the active ingredient in
NutraSweet. Monsanto was apparently untroubled by
aspartame's clouded past, including a 1980 FDA Board of
Inquiry, comprised of three independent scientists, which
confirmed that it "might induce brain tumors."
The FDA had actually banned aspartame based on this finding,
only to have Searle Chairman Donald Rumsfeld (currently the
Secretary of Defense) vow to "call in his markers," to get
it approved.
On January 21, 1981, the day after Ronald Reagan's
inauguration, Searle re-applied to the FDA for approval to
use aspartame in food sweetener, and Reagan's new FDA
commissioner, Arthur Hayes Hull, Jr., appointed a 5-person
scientific commission to review the board of inquiry's
decision.
It soon became clear that the panel would uphold the ban by
a 3-2 decision, but Hull then installed a sixth member on
the commission, and the vote became deadlocked. He then
personally broke the tie in aspartame's favor. Hull later
left the FDA under allegations of impropriety, served
briefly as Provost at New York Medical College, and then
took a position with Burston-Marsteller, the chief public
relations firm for both Monsanto and GD Searle. Since that
time he has never spoken publicly about aspartame.
The Aspartame/NutraSweet Timeline
Aspartame/NutraSweet: The History of the Aspartame
Controversy
By James Turner, ESQ. Director of the National Institute of
Science, Law, and Public Policy (NISLAPP)
Timeline
December 1965-- While working on an ulcer drug, James
Schlatter, a chemist at G.D. Searle, accidentally discovers
aspartame, a substance that is 180 times sweeter than sugar
yet has no calories.
Spring 1967-- Searle begins the safety tests on aspartame
that are necessary for applying for FDA approval of food
additives.
Fall 1967-- Dr. Harold Waisman, a biochemist at the
University of Wisconsin, conducts aspartame safety tests on
infant monkeys on behalf of the Searle Company. Of the seven
monkeys that were being fed aspartame mixed with milk, one
dies and five others have grand mal seizures.
November 1970-- Cyclamate, the reigning low-calorie
artificial sweetener -- is pulled off the market after some
scientists associate it with cancer. Questions are also
raised about safety of saccharin, the only other artificial
sweetener on the market, leaving the field wide open for
aspartame.
December 18, 1970-- Searle Company executives lay out a
"Food and Drug Sweetener Strategy' that they feel will put
the FDA into a positive frame of mind about aspartame. An
internal policy memo describes psychological tactics the
company should use to bring the FDA into a subconscious
spirit of participation" with them on aspartame and get FDA
regulators into the "habit of saying, "Yes"."
Spring 1971-- Neuroscientist Dr. John Olney (whose
pioneering work with monosodium glutamate was responsible
for having it removed from baby foods) informs Searle that
his studies show that aspartic acid (one of the ingredients
of aspartame) caused holes in the brains of infant mice. One
of Searle's own researchers confirmed Dr. Olney's findings
in a similar study.
February 1973-- After spending tens of millions of dollars
conducting safety tests, the G.D. Searle Company applies for
FDA approval and submits over 100 studies they claim support
aspartame's safety.
March 5, 1973-- One of the first FDA scientists to review
the aspartame safety data states that "the information
provided (by Searle) is inadequate to permit an evaluation
of the potential toxicity of aspartame". She says in her
report that in order to be certain that aspartame is safe,
further clinical tests are needed.
May 1974-- Attorney, Jim Turner (consumer advocate who was
instrumental in getting cyclamate taken off the market)
meets with Searle representatives to discuss Dr. Olney's
1971 study which showed that aspartic acid caused holes in
the brains of infant mice.
July 26, 1974-- The FDA grants aspartame its first approval
for restricted use in dry foods.
August 1974-- Jim Turner and Dr. John Olney file the first
objections against aspartame's approval.
March 24, 1976-- Turner and Olney's petition triggers an FDA
investigation of the laboratory practices of aspartame's
manufacturer, G.D. Searle. The investigation finds Searle's
testing procedures shoddy, full of inaccuracies and
"manipulated" test data. The investigators report they "had
never seen anything as bad as Searle's testing."
January 10, 1977-- The FDA formally requests the U.S.
Attorney's office to begin grand jury proceedings to
investigate whether indictments should be filed against
Searle for knowingly misrepresenting findings and
"concealing material facts and making false statements" in
aspartame safety tests. This is the first time in the FDA's
history that they request a criminal investigation of a
manufacturer.
January 26, 1977-- While the grand jury probe is underway,
Sidley & Austin, the law firm representing Searle, begins
job negotiations with the U.S. Attorney in charge of the
investigation, Samuel Skinner.
March 8, 1977-- G. D. Searle hires prominent Washington
insider Donald Rumsfeld as the new CEO to try to turn the
beleaguered company around. A former Member of Congress and
Secretary of Defense in the Ford Administration, Rumsfeld
brings in several of his Washington cronies as top
management.
July 1, 1977-- Samuel Skinner leaves the U.S. Attorney's
office and takes a job with Searle's law firm. (see Jan.
26th)
August 1, 1977-- The Bressler Report, compiled by FDA
investigators and headed by Jerome Bressler, is released.
The report finds that 98 of the 196 animals died during one
of Searle's studies and weren't autopsied until later dates,
in some cases over one year after death. Many other errors
and inconsistencies are noted. For example, a rat was
reported alive, then dead, then alive, then dead again; a
mass, a uterine polyp, and ovarian neoplasms were found in
animals but not reported or diagnosed in Searle's reports.
December 8, 1977-- U.S. Attorney Skinner's withdrawal and
resignation stalls the Searle grand jury investigation for
so long that the statue of limitations on the aspartame
charges runs out. The grand jury investigation is dropped.
June 1, 1979-- The FDA established a Public Board of Inquiry
(PBOI) to rule on safety issues surrounding NutraSweet.
September 30, 1980-- The Public Board of Inquiry concludes
NutraSweet should not be approved pending further
investigations of brain tumors in animals. The board states
it "has not been presented with proof of reasonable
certainty that aspartame is safe for use as a food
additive."
January 1981-- Donald Rumsfeld, CEO of Searle, states in a
sales meeting that he is going to make a big push to get
aspartame approved within the year. Rumsfeld says he will
use his political pull in Washington, rather than scientific
means, to make sure it gets approved.
January 21, 1981-- Ronald Reagan is sworn in as President of
the United States. Reagan's transition team, which includes
Donald Rumsfeld, CEO of G. D. Searle, hand picks Dr. Arthur
Hull Hayes Jr. to be the new FDA Commissioner.
March, 1981-- An FDA commissioner's panel is established to
review issues raised by the Public Board of Inquiry.
May 19, 1981-- Three of six in-house FDA scientists who were
responsible for reviewing the brain tumor issues, Dr. Robert
Condon, Dr. Satya Dubey, and Dr. Douglas Park, advise
against approval of NutraSweet, stating on the record that
the Searle tests are unreliable and not adequate to
determine the safety of aspartame.
July 15, 1981-- In one of his first official acts, Dr.
Arthur Hayes Jr., the new FDA commissioner, overrules the
Public Board of Inquiry, ignores the recommendations of his
own internal FDA team and approves NutraSweet for dry
products. Hayes says that aspartame has been shown to be
safe for its' proposed uses and says few compounds have
withstood such detailed testing and repeated close scrutiny.
October 15, 1982-- The FDA announces that Searle has filed a
petition that aspartame be approved as a sweetener in
carbonated beverages and other liquids.
July 1, 1983-- The National Soft Drink Association (NSDA)
urges the FDA to delay approval of aspartame for carbonated
beverages pending further testing because aspartame is very
unstable in liquid form. When liquid aspartame is stored in
temperatures above 85 degrees Fahrenheit, it breaks down
into DKP and formaldehyde, both of which are known toxins.
July 8, 1983-- The National Soft Drink Association drafts an
objection to the final ruling which permits the use of
aspartame in carbonated beverages and syrup bases and
requests a hearing on the objections. The association says
that Searle has not provided responsible certainty that
aspartame and its' degradation products are safe for use in
soft drinks.
August 8, 1983-- Consumer Attorney, Jim Turner of the
Community Nutrition Institute and Dr. Woodrow Monte, Arizona
State University's Director of Food Science and Nutritional
Laboratories, file suit with the FDA objecting to aspartame
approval based on unresolved safety issues.
September, 1983-- FDA Commissioner Hayes resigns under a
cloud of controversy about his taking unauthorized rides
aboard a General Foods jet. (General foods is a major
customer of NutraSweet) Burson-Marsteller, Searle's public
relation firm (which also represented several of
NutraSweet's major users), immediately hires Hayes as senior
scientific consultant.
Fall 1983-- The first carbonated beverages containing
aspartame are sold for public consumption.
November 1984-- Center for Disease Control (CDC) "Evaluation
of consumer complaints related to aspartame use." (summary
by B. Mullarkey)
November 3, 1987-- U.S. hearing, "NutraSweet: Health and
Safety Concerns," Committee on Labor and Human Resources,
Senator Howard Metzenbaum, chairman.
Survey of aspartame studies: correlation of outcome and
funding sources,"
1998, unpublished: http://www.dorway.com/peerrev.html
Walton found 166 separate published studies in the peer
reviewed medical literature, which had relevance for
questions of human safety. The 74 studies funded by industry
all (100%) attested to aspartame's safety, whereas of the 92
non-industry funded studies, 84 (91%) identified a problem.
Six of the seven non-industry funded studies that were
favorable to aspartame safety were from the FDA, which has a
public record that shows a strong pro-industry bias.
Ralph G. Walton, MD, Prof. of Clinical Psychology,
Northeastern Ohio Universities, College of Medicine, Dept.
of Psychiatry, Youngstown, OH 44501, Chairman, The Center
for Behavioral Medicine, Northside Medical Center, 500 Gypsy
Lane, P.O. Box 240 Youngstown, OH 44501 330-740-3621
Suggested reading: Sweet
Poison How The World's Most Popular Artificial Sweetener Is
Killing Us - My Story - , New Horizon Press, ISBN;
0-88282-164-4, Janet Starr Hull began counseling
aspartame victims worldwide through her web site
www.sweetpoison.com. and as the Director of the GoldStarr
Research Foundation. Dr. Hull grants numerous speaking
engagements, lectures, and media interviews on the topic of
aspartame dangers and the benefits of alternative medicine,
and recently hosted the radio talk show HEALTHY
ALTERNATIVES®.