Below a support letter by Rafael Cantera, professor of zoology at the University of Stockholm in Sweden, addressed to the leadership of the University Clinic Würzburg. This is because two professors of this German university, Thorsten Walles and Heike Mertsching (now Walles) chose to respond to my inquiries about their earlier trachea transplants made from pig intestine (see my detailed report here) with lawyers’ financial blackmail and right after, with court actions, which had me sentenced guilty with a threat of a prison term of 6 months, without my prior knowledge (see case description here). Such are the peculiarities of German law: internet bloggers are basically legally defined here by default as criminals, and professors as infallible and divine beings (in fact, even Walleses’ former boss and collaborator Paolo Macchiarini is still a protected adjunct professor at their former common place of work, the Medical University Hannover). I received lots of support from my readers, and was also invited to give an interview with the French magazine Mediapart (German version here). Now, I am deeply grateful to Prof. Cantera for his support, and hope other international and maybe even German academics join in and sign below.

A conspiracy of German institutions against freedom of information
The Walleses even admitted to their judge in Würzburg that they did receive my questions in advance, but chose not to reply to them. They instead even revealed to the court their immediate intentions to find out my private address and had me slapped with a costly court injunction and a threat of a prison term, from the very beginning. The judge however apparently saw my act of asking inconvenient questions alone as an act of blasphemy against German professors. The only evidence against me which this Würzburg regional court judge actually bothered to scrutinise was the Walleses’ academic employment situation and their current applications to new professorships. That “evidence” fully sufficed to declare me guilty of slanderous libel against two German professors, what I actually wrote about their trachea transplants on my site was utterly irrelevant in this context. It was enough that the Walleses did not like it.
While they and their pricey lawyer prepared this legal attack on basic freedoms of speech and press, their employers, the University of Würzburg and the Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology in Stuttgart, repeatedly refused to answer any of my questions regarding those 3 tracheal transplants, even when requested to do so under legally binding freedom of information law. Most recently, I asked the Fraunhofer institute to explain if any animal testing at all was performed before their researcher Heike Walles delivered in 2007 and 2009 pig-intestine-derived tracheal grafts which her husband then implanted into two patients. The internet biomedical portal PubMed suggests that to the very least, no animal experiments at all were published by the Walleses in this regard, before or after the method was initially first tested on a human patient together with Macchiarini in Hannover in 2004.
Update 23.01.2017: The Fraunhofer Institute admitted that no animal testing was deemed necessary prior to two patient transplants. Details here.
Instead answering my questions, the University Clinic of Würzburg allowed their two professors to use these affiliations to suggest that they were actually acting in court against me as representatives of the entire University Clinic. It went as far that both the University and the University Clinic Würzburg refused to even acknowledge receiving my administrative complaints about their two professors, never mind processing those. My freedom of information inquiries to the German Ministry of Education and Research and the medicinal product watchdog Paul-Ehrlich-Institut about the Walles’ ministry-funded clinical trial and about the approvals for their previous trachea transplants, are as yet unanswered, even after the legally binding time period of one month to deliver a reply has long expired. It is none of nosy public’s business if human experiments in German research institutions (with none of the affected patients being currently alive) were ever properly approved or, if indeed these experiments actually still take place or are being prepared. The status of the aforementioned federally-funded multi-patient clinical trial with pig intestine-made trachea is confidential and not for us to know. If you want to speak of academic conspiracy in Germany, here is a big and a highly unsavoury one.
In fact, the Walles’ lawyer just sent me another threatening letter, demanding of me to accept the court injunction, pay his clients an unspecified compensation damage and him around €1800 lawyer’s fee.

Open Letter in support of Schneider’s investigation of trachea transplants in Germany, by Rafael Cantera
Prof. Dr. med. Georg Ertl, Medical Director University Clinic Würzburg, Germany.
Prof. Dr. med. Matthias Frosch, Dean of Medical Faculty, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
c/c Leonid Schneider
January 15, 2017
Dear colleagues,
For months I’ve been reading in the Swedish press as well as on Leonid Schneider’s blog For Better Science many notes about the scandalous trachea transplantations on human patients in which Dr. Paolo Macchiarini has been involved and for which he’s been, and is still investigated in Sweden. This was an extraordinary scandal for the Karolinska Institute and the Karolinska University Hospital; it has already resulted in several resignations and investigations, including a police investigation of Macchiarini himself. Fortunately, the Swedish authorities and academy adopted an open, self-critical and transparent reaction and in due process questions from journalists were answered, documents were made public, investigations were initiated and conclusions were reported to the public. For his fantastic journalistic investigation of this story “of fraudulent research” that “revealed life-threatening ambition in the academic world” the Swedish journalist Bo Lindquist was awarded the Swedish Grand Prize for Journalism in 2016.
In spite of that, according to the Swedish press and academic colleagues of mine in Sweden and other countries this scandal might have negative, perhaps long-lasting consequences on the public trust and confidence in science and medicine and so, in my opinion, it deserves to be investigated to the last link and detail. If the public trust is to be restored, every trachea transplantation in which Macchiarini and his collaborators were directly or indirectly involved should be investigated and the results must be clearly and openly reported to the public. In doing so, which as a scientist I think is necessary and important, Leonid Schneider started to investigate the activities of the German professors Heike and Thorsten Walles, who were also involved in trachea transplantations and had professional links to Macchiarini and his activities (primarily: Macchiarini et al 2004 and Walles et al, 2004).
Now, after reading about the court trial in Bavaria against Leonid Schneider, I have the unpleasant feeling that it is perhaps the intent to punish him for his investigations and to avoid further investigations of possible misconduct in German universities regarding Macchiarini-related trachea transplantations. This feeling will be supported if it was correct, I as was told, that both research institutions involved, namely the Fraunhofer Society and the University of Würzburg refused to answer questions regarding the two experimental trachea transplants on human patients they performed and later on published (Mertsching et al 2009 and Steinke et al, 2015 ). Moreover, it appears that Professors Walles acted apparently with full approval of their academic employer by using their academic affiliations with the University Clinic Würzburg. The outcome was a court injunction passed in absentia against Leonid Schneider forbidding him to state facts which Professors Walles themselves had been repeating often and widely just some years ago in interviews, press releases, books and research publications.
Leonid Schneider can count with my support and I hope you will also help him in his important investigation, answering his questions and providing as much information as you can disclose.
Yours sincerely,
Rafael Cantera, PhD
Professor
Zoology Institute, Stockholm University
Stockholm, Sweden
Dear readers, If you wish to express your support as well, please comment with your full name and institutional affiliation below.
If you would like to support my court litigation financially, donation amount doesn’t matter, please go to my Patreon site or contact me.

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Update 4.02.2017. The signatories of this letter have been subjected to an “alternative facts” campaign by Walles’ employee Jan Hansmann. Details here.


Count me in.
Benjamin Schwessinger PhD.
Discovery Early Career Research Award Fellow
Rathjen Lab
Division of Plant Science
Research School of Biology
College of Medicine, Biology, and Environment
Linnaeus Building (134), Linnaeus Way
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT 0200 Australia
LikeLiked by 1 person
I strongly support Professor Cantera’s letter and Leonid Schneider’s right to report these issues. We have a duty to humanity to be open and transparent on these issues.
Laura Machesky FRSE, FMedSci
Professor of Cell Biology
CRUK Beatson Institute Glasgow
University College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences
Garscube Estate, Switchback Rd. Bearsden, Glasgow, G61 1BD
LikeLiked by 1 person
I support Prof. Cantera’s letter. I hope that the University Clinic Würzburg will perform a full investigation on the ethical issues surrounding the trachea transplants and will reconsider their role in the court case against Leonid Schneider.
Willem van Schaik
Associate Professor
University Medical Center Utrecht
the Netherlands
LikeLiked by 1 person
I stand with Rafael Cantera and support the content of this open letter.
Tim van der Zee
PhD Student
Graduate School of Teaching (ICLON), Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands
LikeLiked by 1 person
In support of the content of the above letter!
Marco Costa, PMHN
Surgical Department
ULS Matosinhos
Portugal
LikeLiked by 1 person
I support this open letter.
Thiago Lopes Carvalho
Editor, Rockefeller University Press.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I fully support Professor Cantera’s letter on Leonid Schneider’s work.
Dr. Rosa Barrio at CIC bioGUNE
LikeLiked by 1 person
Along with Dr. Cantera, I fully support the open and unbiased investigation into ethical concerns surrounding the work of Dr. Macchiarini and participating colleagues, whether from Sweden, Germany or elsewhere. Leonid Schneider and other journalists must be encouraged to ask questions and report in order to maintain scientific trust and transparency.
James D. Sutherland, PhD
CIC bioGUNE
Bilbao, Spain
LikeLike
Science and ethics both rely totally on open discussion. The issues described here urgently need to be examined and discussed in the broad light of day. Not doing so openly is an abnegation of ethics and of scientific truth – everyone needs to do better.
Professor Robert Insall FRSE
Glasgow, UK
LikeLiked by 1 person
I fully support Leonid Schneider! He is a defender of scientific integrity, which is critical for research to function.
Jessica L. Preston, Ph. D
Institute of Ecology and Evolution
University of Oregon, USA
LikeLiked by 1 person
I fully support this open letter from Professor Cantera as well as the important work of Leonid Schneider.
Vicki Vance, PhD
Department of Biological Sciences
University of South Carolina
Columbia, SC, USA
LikeLiked by 1 person
It is extremely important that the University of Wuerzburg investigates these allegations. If these transplants were done in the Macchiarini way, without robust preclinical investigations, there is a serious problem which should not be covered up.
Responding to Leonid Schneider’s investigations with a law suit is an incredible move which is highly detrimental to the trust in science.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I fully support this open letter from Professor Cantera,
Stephen Curry
Professor of Structural Biology
Imperial College London, UK
LikeLiked by 1 person
I fully support Prof. Cantera’s letter and Leonid Schneider’s right to report on these issues.
Dr Laurent Gatto
University of Cambridge, UK
LikeLiked by 1 person
I support the letter by Rafael Cantera and the work of Leonid Schneider.
Threats of litigation in response to journalistic inquiries about research is just… wrong.
Anna Petersson, M.D., Ph.D.
Stockholm, Sweden
LikeLiked by 1 person
As a former academic in America and Germany and the current managing editor of a German-based scientific journal, I personally fully support the letter by Rafael Cantera and the important work of Leonid Schneider.
Wendy M. Patterson, Ph.D.
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
LikeLiked by 1 person
I strongly support Leonid Schneider who is doing an important and difficult task of investigative science journalism. I do believe in law and, therefore, I think that if Leonid was wrongly accused in the court, the case should be fought back in the court. The scientific online community can be asked to support this case by crowd-sourcing to fund a good lawyer and/or by contributing direct legal support.
Dr Vladimir Teif,
University of Essex
LikeLiked by 2 people
Openness and transparency are core values of science. An in absentia court injunction to suppress public domain knowledge is ridiculous. The course of action is a shame for the German court and the University Clinic of Würzburg and should be corrected as soon as possible.
I fully support the support letter.
PD Dr. Felix Schönbrodt
ARaZ
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Germany
LikeLiked by 1 person
I fully support Professor Cantera’s open letter in support of Leonid Schneider and freedom of speech.
Adam Dawe, PhD
Blue Sky Bioinformatics
Cape Town, South Africa
LikeLiked by 1 person
I fully support Professor Cantera’s letter in support of Leonid Schneider as well as freedom of speech.
Henning Langer, MSc
ECRC
Berlin, Germany
LikeLiked by 1 person