Leaked Barrister Report: Operation Wellbeing

 


Leaked Barrister Report: Operation Wellbeing

A leaked legal opinion has surfaced regarding the activities of Wellbeing International Foundation Ltd (hereafter “Wellbeing”), a company promoting supposed stem cell-based therapies. The report was prepared to advise whether the company’s trading activities breach criminal law in England and Wales.

Key Findings

  • Bogus Medical Claims:
    Wellbeing presents itself as a leader in stem cell innovation, claiming its therapies — based on so-called “extracellular vesicles” (EVs) — can repair tissue, reverse ageing, treat degenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s and Multiple Sclerosis, and even combat cancer.

  • Unverified Science:
    Independent scientific review concluded that Wellbeing’s processes are medically meaningless. The laboratories they reference do not have the equipment or authorisations needed to perform what is claimed, and no clinical trials or peer-reviewed data exist to support the treatments. At best, any perceived effect would be placebo.

  • Covert Evidence:
    Undercover meetings with company representatives revealed direct offers of “miracle cures” for sports injuries, neurological diseases, and cancers, often quoted at tens of thousands of dollars per course. Testimonials from unnamed celebrities and sports stars were used to bolster credibility, but no verifiable proof was ever provided.

  • Targeting the Vulnerable:
    Marketing has been directed towards desperate individuals suffering from chronic or terminal conditions. Families have been persuaded to part with large sums for treatments that offer no proven medical benefit, only false hope.

The Legal Perspective

The barrister’s report concluded that Wellbeing’s conduct amounts to:

  • Fraud under the Fraud Act 2006, due to knowingly false representations made for financial gain.

  • Breach of the Cancer Act 1939, which prohibits the advertisement of supposed cancer treatments.

  • Potential conspiracy to defraud, with serious criminal liability for those involved.

The opinion was unequivocal: Wellbeing’s activities are “a particularly despicable fraud” targeting the helpless. The company has relied on scientific jargon, glossy marketing, and prestigious addresses to mask the absence of genuine medicine.

Why This Matters

The leaked advice highlights deep concerns about how companies like Wellbeing can exploit regulatory grey areas and slip beneath enforcement radars. Vulnerable patients — often willing to do or spend anything for relief — are misled into believing in miracle cures.

The report stresses that urgent legal action is in the public interest. Without intervention, such enterprises will continue to profit from suffering, selling nothing more than hope disguised as science.

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