‘I’m Not Done’: Arizona Lawmaker Commits to Combating Forced Organ Harvesting After Bill Veto

The bill made it through both chambers of the state Legislature with health insurers on board—only to be killed on the governor’s desk.It was so close. The Arizona bill—aimed to block state funding for Beijing’s state-sponsored forced organ harvesting—made it through both chambers of the Arizona Legislature with health insurers on board, only to be killed on the governor’s desk.The bill’s lead sponsor, state Rep. Leo Biasiucci, said the decision so stunned him that he struggled to find the right words.“I don’t even know what to think anymore,” he told The Epoch Times. “It’s truly sad to think that we can’t even pass a bill that is saying that we’re not going to participate in these heinous crimes.”The killing-for-organ criminal industry in China, victimizing prisoners of conscience such as adherents of the persecuted spiritual group Falun Gong, attracts patients worldwide by offering an impossibly short waiting period—sometimes within days.Three states have enacted laws making clear that their residents should have no part in this grisly act, including most recently Idaho, whose governor signed such the law on April 10, the same day Gov. Katie Hobbs issued a veto to the Arizona version.Ms. Hobbs maintained that her decisions centered on a section blocking healthcare institutions and research facilities from using China-based gears for genetic sequencing, and insurers from funding such an act.Related Stories“While I understand the intentions of the bill, it includes overbroad provisions for genetic sequencing equipment that create compliance challenges for hospitals, healthcare providers, and researchers,” she wrote in the veto letter.Mr. Biasiucci disagrees.“We don’t want our DNA being sold to the government of China, knowing that they’re doing what they’re doing with forced organ harvesting,” he said.China’s military-linked BGI, which operates the country’s state-funded gene bank, now leads the world in genome sequencing, collecting DNA of mothers and fetuses worldwide through its prenatal screening test. Such personal data are valuable both for surveillance purposes and organ matching, experts have warned.If hospitals and universities are using machines from foreign adversaries in ways they should not, asked Mr. Biasiucci, “isn’t it our responsibility to stop getting” them?‘Very Disappointing’Mr. Biasiucci wasn’t the only one feeling disheartened.“To see it go all this way—all the amendments, everything that happened, and then all of a sudden it was vetoed. It’s very disappointing,” Diana Molovinsky of Phoenix Falun Dafa Association, who has pushed for the bill’s passage, told The Epoch Times.“The majority wanted this bill passed. And I would venture to say that the Arizona people want this passed.”She added that doctors, after learning about the issue, have sought their advice on how to do their part.“We were kind of hoping that this would give them that tool.”In March, Ms. Molovinsky spoke at a senate committee hearing on how Falun Gong, which teaches peaceful meditation and inner moral refinement by adhering to values of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance, became a target for abuse by the ruling communist party in China.“They don’t do drugs, they don’t smoke, they don’t drink alcohol, and they live a generally healthy lifestyle,” she said, adding that the group’s vast number, estimated at up to 100 million, means that their “organs were the most abundant and most viable” in China.Han Yu, whose father was killed in China because of his belief in Falun Gong, at a rally at the United Nations Plaza in New York City on Sept. 24, 2019. (Eva Fu/The Epoch Times)In the same hearing, Phoenix resident Ding Huiling, who endured repeated arrests and detention in China as a Falun Gong practitioner, said her husband’s young brother was arrested months ago for refusing to give up the belief and has since disappeared. She worries about his safety.John Zhu of Tucson spoke of his father, an accomplished Chinese engineer currently in a Chinese prison over his practicing Falun Gong. During a previous imprisonment between 2017 and 2019, Mr. Zhu’s father was subjected to blood tests and other health screenings, something other inmates didn’t go through.“Others were envious of him for the special treatment he got in the name of checking his health, but we knew that it was actually for the purpose of organ matching,” he said.“So many Falun Gong practitioners have been persecuted to death in China, including those whose organs were harvested while they were still alive,” he told state lawmakers. “My father could become such a victim someday.”Keep TryingBoth Mr. Biasiucci and Ms. Molovinsky wished the governor had let them know beforehand about her concerns with the bill.“We were kind of caught by surprise with the veto letter,” Mr. Biasiucci said. “You would hope they'd reach out to you during the process of the bill moving in the legislature so that you can at least address issues and correct any problems there might be w

‘I’m Not Done’: Arizona Lawmaker Commits to Combating Forced Organ Harvesting After Bill Veto

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The bill made it through both chambers of the state Legislature with health insurers on board—only to be killed on the governor’s desk.

It was so close. The Arizona bill—aimed to block state funding for Beijing’s state-sponsored forced organ harvesting—made it through both chambers of the Arizona Legislature with health insurers on board, only to be killed on the governor’s desk.

The bill’s lead sponsor, state Rep. Leo Biasiucci, said the decision so stunned him that he struggled to find the right words.

“I don’t even know what to think anymore,” he told The Epoch Times. “It’s truly sad to think that we can’t even pass a bill that is saying that we’re not going to participate in these heinous crimes.”

The killing-for-organ criminal industry in China, victimizing prisoners of conscience such as adherents of the persecuted spiritual group Falun Gong, attracts patients worldwide by offering an impossibly short waiting period—sometimes within days.

Three states have enacted laws making clear that their residents should have no part in this grisly act, including most recently Idaho, whose governor signed such the law on April 10, the same day Gov. Katie Hobbs issued a veto to the Arizona version.

Ms. Hobbs maintained that her decisions centered on a section blocking healthcare institutions and research facilities from using China-based gears for genetic sequencing, and insurers from funding such an act.

“While I understand the intentions of the bill, it includes overbroad provisions for genetic sequencing equipment that create compliance challenges for hospitals, healthcare providers, and researchers,” she wrote in the veto letter.

Mr. Biasiucci disagrees.

“We don’t want our DNA being sold to the government of China, knowing that they’re doing what they’re doing with forced organ harvesting,” he said.

China’s military-linked BGI, which operates the country’s state-funded gene bank, now leads the world in genome sequencing, collecting DNA of mothers and fetuses worldwide through its prenatal screening test. Such personal data are valuable both for surveillance purposes and organ matching, experts have warned.

If hospitals and universities are using machines from foreign adversaries in ways they should not, asked Mr. Biasiucci, “isn’t it our responsibility to stop getting” them?

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‘Very Disappointing’

Mr. Biasiucci wasn’t the only one feeling disheartened.

“To see it go all this way—all the amendments, everything that happened, and then all of a sudden it was vetoed. It’s very disappointing,” Diana Molovinsky of Phoenix Falun Dafa Association, who has pushed for the bill’s passage, told The Epoch Times.

“The majority wanted this bill passed. And I would venture to say that the Arizona people want this passed.”

She added that doctors, after learning about the issue, have sought their advice on how to do their part.

“We were kind of hoping that this would give them that tool.”

In March, Ms. Molovinsky spoke at a senate committee hearing on how Falun Gong, which teaches peaceful meditation and inner moral refinement by adhering to values of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance, became a target for abuse by the ruling communist party in China.

“They don’t do drugs, they don’t smoke, they don’t drink alcohol, and they live a generally healthy lifestyle,” she said, adding that the group’s vast number, estimated at up to 100 million, means that their “organs were the most abundant and most viable” in China.

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Han Yu, whose father was killed in China because of his belief in Falun Gong, at a rally at the United Nations Plaza in New York City on Sept. 24, 2019. (Eva Fu/The Epoch Times)
Han Yu, whose father was killed in China because of his belief in Falun Gong, at a rally at the United Nations Plaza in New York City on Sept. 24, 2019. (Eva Fu/The Epoch Times)

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In the same hearing, Phoenix resident Ding Huiling, who endured repeated arrests and detention in China as a Falun Gong practitioner, said her husband’s young brother was arrested months ago for refusing to give up the belief and has since disappeared. She worries about his safety.

John Zhu of Tucson spoke of his father, an accomplished Chinese engineer currently in a Chinese prison over his practicing Falun Gong. During a previous imprisonment between 2017 and 2019, Mr. Zhu’s father was subjected to blood tests and other health screenings, something other inmates didn’t go through.

“Others were envious of him for the special treatment he got in the name of checking his health, but we knew that it was actually for the purpose of organ matching,” he said.

“So many Falun Gong practitioners have been persecuted to death in China, including those whose organs were harvested while they were still alive,” he told state lawmakers. “My father could become such a victim someday.”

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Keep Trying

Both Mr. Biasiucci and Ms. Molovinsky wished the governor had let them know beforehand about her concerns with the bill.

“We were kind of caught by surprise with the veto letter,” Mr. Biasiucci said. “You would hope they'd reach out to you during the process of the bill moving in the legislature so that you can at least address issues and correct any problems there might be with a bill. We didn’t get that on this bill, unfortunately.”

With the state legislature not accepting any bill submissions until January 2025, the bill proponents have to wait for almost another year before they can have a go again.

The Arizona governor’s office didn’t respond to questions from The Epoch Times by press time.

Ms. Molovinsky said it’s discouraging that Arizonans now lost an opportunity to be “better informed and make a better choice,” because for anyone going to China for organ transplant surgeries, “you don’t know where that organ’s coming from, you don’t know if someone else has to get murdered for that,” which eyewitnesses testify has happened (pdf).
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Falun Gong practitioners commemorate the deaths of adherents who were persecuted to death by the Chinese regime, during a march down Pennsylvania Ave. in Washington, D.C., on June 20, 2018. (Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times)
Falun Gong practitioners commemorate the deaths of adherents who were persecuted to death by the Chinese regime, during a march down Pennsylvania Ave. in Washington, D.C., on June 20, 2018. (Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times)

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But she did see an upside. Thanks to the bill, she said, Arizona legislators learned about forced organ harvesting.

“They now understand that this is something that’s happening, it’s not some rumor, it’s not some doctors in the back alley that are going rogue, this is state-sanctioned from China’s government.”

Mr. Biasiucci underwent such a mental transition himself when he first began digging into the issue.

“It’s one of those things where I think it’s so heinous, and nobody wants to believe that it’s happening,” he said.

He said his next step is to reach out to the governor and see what would get her on board.

That lack of attention is why he found it important to run the bill: at least, he said, it brings media coverage and more public awareness.

“I’m not done trying to get this bill passed,” he said. “We have to put an end to it. And the more people that talk about it, the better [off] we are.”

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