US lawmakers ask FBI for briefing on GenScript Biotech's links to China
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[June 01, 2024]
By Karen Freifeld
(Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives committee on China has
asked the FBI and the intelligence community for a briefing on GenScript
Biotechnology Co and three subsidiaries to determine if the Chinese
Communist Party has influence over their operations.
In a letter dated May 30 to the FBI and the U.S. office of the director
of national intelligence, committee chair John Moolenaar and ranking
member Raja Krishnamoorthi said GenScript's work with U.S. companies and
the government raises concerns about the intellectual property of U.S.
firms and could help improve China's biotech capabilities.
The three subsidiaries cited in the letter are Bestzyme, Legend Biotech
and ProBio.
Drugmaker Legend partnered with Johnson & Johnson in 2017 to develop
cancer cell therapy Carvykti. They sold $500 million of the drug last
year and expect sales to eventually top $5 billion a year.
GenScript, Legend and J&J did not immediately respond to requests for
comment. Nor did the other subsidiaries. GenScript is a pharmaceutical
research and manufacturing service provider with over 200,000 customers
in over 100 countries and sales, manufacturing, and research and
development presence in China, the U.S., Europe and the Asia Pacific,
according to its website.
The lawmakers' interest in GenScript comes two weeks after another
committee in the House approved a bill that would restrict business with
China's WuXi AppTec, WuXi Biologics BGI, MGI and Complete Genomics, and
other possible biotech companies of concern.
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U.S. and Chinese flags are seen in this illustration taken, April
24, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
The bill must still get through the
full House and Senate before President Joe Biden could sign it into
law. But, if passed, it would push U.S. pharmaceutical and
healthcare companies to lessen their reliance on Chinese research
and manufacturing.
"GenScript's role as a Contract Development and Manufacturing
Organization, including services such as the production of custom
gene synthesis for companies and U.S. government entities, raises
concerns about potential risks to the intellectual property of U.S.
firms and GenScript's broader role in advancing the PRC's (China)
biotech capabilities," the letter said.
(Reporting by Karen Freifeld; additional reporting by Mike Erman in
New York; editing by Chris Sanders and Josie Kao)
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