Federal agents raid ‘natural healing’ office
1/10/2005 Providence, Rhode Island Felice J. Freyer The Providence Journal The practitioner claims the title of doctor on his Web site along with a medical degree under a charter from the governments of Liberia and Ghana. Federal agents yesterday raided the office of John E. Curran, a practitioner of "natural healing" who does not have a medical license, after the state medical board received a complaint that Curran was "posing as a doctor." Jason Simonian, a special agent of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's office of criminal investigations, who was among those conducting the raid, said that the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Postal Service were also involved in the investigation. But Simonian declined to answer questions about what the agents were looking for. Thomas Connell, spokesman for U.S. Attorney Robert Clark Corrente, said: "I am not in a position to explain why they were there. There is no documentation that is on the public record. There were agents of the Food and Drug Administration and the Internal Revenue Service participating in a law-enforcement initiative." Yesterday, about a dozen agents were searching the office, on the third floor of One Richmond Square, and loading boxes full of bottles and canisters, along with some equipment, into a van. One batch of canisters contained "chocolate almond protein supplement" and another was labeled "BeneFin," with Curran's name printed on the label. Curran's lawyer, Artin H. Coloian, said, "A lot of this stuff is vitamin C. . . . regular stuff, ginger, [...]