In the 1980’s over 10,000 Hemophiliacs in the U.S. and over 20,000 internationally were knowingly infected with HIV when several pharmaceutical companies sold them contaminated products and quickly shipped "left-over" stock to lesser developed countries spreading infection even more. The idea was that areas like Hong Kong, Mexico, and Africa wouldn’t be communicating with European countries like France that had already linked Hemophiliac HIV infections to specifically treated batches. Within the U.S. alone, it took Hemophiliac years to even figure out what each other kept dying of until products began getting tested for HIV. By the time a class action group was formed more than 30% of the population had already died.

Decades later Hemophiliacs from Taiwan are just getting organized and figuring out how they are victims, while those lucky enough to live through the first decade of infection successfully settled class actions lawsuits. Some even received various state specifc awards like Senate Bill 358 others never lived to see justice. Too many years to organize, too many lives lost.

Now is not the 80’s. We have Facebook, Twitter, Google, the internet. Maybe a family member has even come in contact with something harmful and there might be others’ like them. Have you had a terrible corporate exposure of abuse? The point of this site is to help others gather quickly and force companies to not abuse its consumers and to take applicable responsibilities for their behaviour or product long-term.

Be heard. Be organized. Be powerful. Submit your complaint