The U.S. Justice Department released the below
information:
The U.S. Department of Justice and U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today announced the distribution
of hoarded personal protective equipment (PPE), including approximately 192,000
N95 respirator masks, to those on the frontline of the novel coronavirus
disease 2019 (COVID-19) response in New York and New Jersey.
The FBI discovered the supplies
during an enforcement operation by the Department of Justice's COVID-19
Hoarding and Price Gouging Task Force on March 30 and alerted HHS which used
its authority under Defense Production Act (DPA) to order that the supplies be
immediately furnished to the United States. In addition to the N95
respirator masks, the supplies found included 598,000 medical grade gloves and
130,000 surgical masks, procedure masks, N100 masks, surgical gowns,
disinfectant towels, particulate filters, bottles of hand sanitizer, and
bottles of spray disinfectant.
"If you are amassing
critical medical equipment for the purpose of selling it at exorbitant prices,
you can expect a knock at your door," said Attorney General William P.
Barr. "The Department of Justice's COVID-19 Hoarding and Price
Gouging Task Force is working tirelessly around the clock with all our law
enforcement partners to ensure that bad actors cannot illicitly profit from the
COVID-19 pandemic facing our nation."
"Cracking down on the
hoarding of vital supplies allows us to distribute this material to the heroic
healthcare workers on the frontlines who are most in need," said HHS
Secretary Alex Azar. "Thanks to the quick work of the White House,
the Department of Justice, and HHS, the seized resources were distributed in
days to the doctors, nurses and first responders who need them. President
Trump's all-of-America approach to combating the coronavirus involves an
aggressive approach to stopping hoarding, and the American public can play a
role by being on the lookout for this behavior."
HHS will pay the owner of the
hoarded equipment pre-COVID-19 fair market value for the supplies and has begun
distributing to meet the critical need for the supplies among healthcare
workers in New York and New Jersey.
Specifically, after inspecting
the supplies, HHS arranged for the delivery of the PPE to the New Jersey
Department of Health, the New York State Department of Health and the New York
City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.
"This is the first of many
such investigations that are underway," said Peter Navarro, DPA Policy
Coordinator and Assistant to the President. "Our FBI agents and
other law enforcement agencies are tracking down every tip and lead they get,
and are devoting massive federal resources to this effort. All
individuals and companies hoarding any of these critical supplies, or selling
them at well above market prices, are hereby warned they should turn them over
to local authorities or the federal government now or risk prompt seizure by
the federal government."
Vendors interested in selling PPE
to the federal government should contact the Federal Emergency Management
Agency at https://www.fema.gov/coronavirus/how-to-help.
Anyone who learns of hoarding or price gouging of PPE should report it to the
National Center for Disaster Fraud by dialing 1-866-720-5721 or emailing disaster@leo.gov.
HHS and the Federal Emergency
Management Agency continue to collaborate with private industry to overcome the
shortage of PPE across the country amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Defense Production Act and
Presidential Executive Order are intended to prevent
accumulation in excess of reasonable demands of business, personal, or home
consumption, or for the purpose of resale at prices in excess of prevailing
market prices, also known as hoarding and price gouging, of medical supplies
critical to the COVID-19 response.
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