Fauci-backed research team omitted key information from ANOTHER report linking ... trends now A bombshell study heralded as 'the strongest evidence yet' that Covid emerged naturally omitted key information that undermined its findings, experts claim. The report, published online Monday, found DNA from raccoon dogs in the same location at an infamous Wuhan wet market where genetic material from Sars-CoV-2 was clustered in 2019. Because raccoon dogs are known harborers of Covid, the research team concluded the finding 'contributed to the large body of evidence supporting a natural origin.' The paper was first leaked by The Atlantic last week with the headline: 'The Strongest Evidence Yet That an Animal Started the Pandemic.' What is not mentioned in the study's manuscript is that all of the DNA samples from raccoon dogs tested negative for Covid via PCR test. Dr Steven Quay, a microbiologist in Seattle, Washington, who has spent the past two years investigating Covid's origin, said this showed a 'willingness to be untruthful'. Researchers identified stalls in the southwest corner of the market where Covid is most prevalent. A large portion of Covid samples gathered from the area were from raccoon dogs, they determined Racoon dogs made up more than 80 percent of Covid samples that researchers could identify a species for with 99 percent confidence or more The omission of that caveat adds to growing concerns about the reliability of the report, whose main authors include scientists who shut down debate about the lab leak theory - which the FBI and Energy Department have said with varying degrees of confidence was likely the genesis of the pandemic. Dr Kristian Andersen, an evolutionary biologist at Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, was the lead author of a February 2020 paper some have said was designed to squash the theory that Covid may have escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV). That paper, now infamous, was titled 'Proximal Origin'. Emails revealed earlier this month showed that Dr Andersen was prompted by former White House doctor Anthony Fauci to publish the paper, despite privately expressing concern that the virus showed hallmarks of human engineering. In the latest research, which is still pending peer review, researchers used data that was uploaded — and quickly taken down— to a database called the Global Initiative on Sharing Avian Influenza Data (GISAID). This is an international database of virus information accessible to experts across the world. The data included swab samples taken from surfaces, floors and walls from stalls in of the Huanan Seafood Market in epicenter Wuhan in January 2020. Dr Steven Quay (pictured) said that the paper is 'completely dishonest' in saying it was evidence for a natural spillover The Chinese Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CCDC) has kept this data under wraps since it was collected. Now with it available, researchers were able to access and study the swab samples for the first time. Their analysis found genetic material from raccoon dogs and Covid from the same southwest corner of the market. Raccoon dogs act as intermediate hosts of the virus — meaning they catch pathogens from the wild and harbor it without falling ill themselves. There is a risk they can spread viruses to humans — or any other animal they come into contact with. The research team claims that Covid and the raccoon dog specimens being detected in the same place is too eerie to be a coincidence. But the study does not prove the animals had Covid, instead just showing the virus existed on the same surfaces. Dr Quay accused the team of using an imperfect testing method to detect the Covid genetic material. The raccoon dog sample PCR tested negative for Covid but was positive when next-generation sequencing was used. This process can rapidly read thousands of lines of DNA and RNA to determine the genome of collected samples. Each sequence has a cycle threshold (CT), which is representative of the number of strands of DNA or RNA tested. The higher the score, the less reliable the test. Dr Quay explained the CT score of the raccoon dog samples that tested positive for the virus was too high to be reliable. The reliability of a PCR test — the most accurate Covid test used around the world — is the equivalent of around 40 CT. To find a raccoon dog sample that was positive for Covid, Dr Quay said the researchers had to reach a CT score into the thousands. 'We don't have an environmental specimen that looks positive for infection,' he told DailyMail.com. He went on to say that the specimens that did test positive for the virus via PCR were 'mostly human'. He explained that once the number has reached the thousands, the amount of DNA being sequenced is so high that scientists could purport to find anything. Meanwhile, the same raccoon dog sample in question tested negative by PCR test. Other experts have also cast doubts on whether this paper is of any value. Dr Simon Clarke, a microbiologist at Reading University, in the UK, told DailyMail.com: 'You're supposed to point that out. Nothing dodgy about it, but should've been highlighted. 'It's incumbent on scientists to keep an open mind and push in either direction.' 'Poor practice and no way they get that past a good quality journal, they would put it in the limitations and discussions section.' Dr Franois Balloux, chair of computational biology at University College London, told DailyMail.com: 'In light of the media furore that has preceded its release, the report feels remarkably underwhelming. 'The analyses confirm that wild animals, including raccoon dogs, were on sale at the Huanan market. Though, this was not really in dispute, and there was evidence for this before, including photographs of caged raccoon dogs.' He goes on to say that the report only confirms that there was Covid present at the market — not that the animals themselves had it. This means that it does not 'improve our understanding of the early stages of the pandemic,' he continued. Professor Balloux even says the report, and its subsequent coverage, could cause harm to the cause of finding the virus's origins. 'The drama surrounding the report risks undermining serious investigations of the origin of COVID-19,' he continued. 'There is in particular a risk that the Chinese scientists, who seemed prepared to share their raw data with the world, may now have changed their mind. I don't believe there has been any winner in this unedifying saga.' Dr Richard Ebright, a molecular biologist at Rutgers University, in New Brunswick, New Jersey, told DailyMail.com: '[The report] contains almost no new information, and it contains absolutely no new information that permits new conclusions.' 'To call the report a "nothing burger" would be generous.' Dr Jesse Bloom, a virologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in New York City, said on his Twitter that the time the samples were collected is a concern too. Dr Richard Ebright (pictured), a microbiologist at Rutgers, told DailyMail.com the paper did not provide any new evidence 'Overall, main thing we learn is details of which animals or products (eg, meats) were in market before it closed on [January 1, 2020]' he wrote. 'This doesn’t tell us if any infected [with Covid]. But knowing more about animals could help trace [the] supply chain, which is valuable line of investigation. 'However, human SARS2 infections started in Wuhan no later than [November] 2019. So we have to be circumspect about environmental samples from [January] 2020.' He continued: 'We are unlikely to get conclusive answers about origin of an outbreak that started in [November] 2019 (or earlier) by looking at samples collected in [January] 2020.' Among the report's authors are some figures who were embroiled in controversy when Dr Fauci's emails from early in the pandemic were made public. Dr Andersen wrote in one Febraury 2020 email: 'The unusual features of the virus make up a really small part of the genome (