The man behind the Moose Jaw health centre that has claimed “a 100 per cent success rate in stopping the progression and in restoring function of people with ALS” says a recent CBC story about his company is evidence that he is seen as “a direct threat to the ALS drug industry.”

Dayan Goodenowe made the comments in a Dec. 5 email he sent out to supporters after a recent CBC investigation into his Dr. Goodenowe Restorative Health Centre.

That investigation told the story of Susie Silvestri, a 70-year-old American who sold her home so she could afford Goodenowe’s $84,000 US “biochemical engineering” program.

Silvestri was convinced Goodenowe could cure her ALS. In one text to her brother, she wrote, “He is such a sweet man. How could I not be healed?”

In late August of last year, Sus

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