Opinion: He Jiankui is going to jail. Would the U.S. criminally prosecute a rogue gene-editing researcher?
Using CRISP or other gene-editing tool to alter the DNA of an embryo is illegal in the U.S., but not by law. A 2015 rider to the FDA budget has…
by Josephine Johnston
Dec 31, 2019
3 minutes
On Monday, 13 months after He Jiankui announced that he had created the world’s first gene-edited babies, the Chinese scientist was sentenced to three years in prison and fined $430,000.
Working with two embryologists, who were also sentenced to fines and imprisonment, and an He used in vitro fertilization to create single cell embryos, whose DNA he then altered with the gene editing tool CRISPR-Cas9 to carry a gene variant thought to confer resistance to HIV. Couples recruited for the experiment included HIV positive men, who, He reasoned, would understand the value of resistance to the virus.
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