Arizona naturopath Colleen Huber is suing me in Germany for defamation over my opinions about her so-called natural cancer treatments and research. The lawsuit was filed in Kiel, Germany (where I live) on September 17th, 2017. This legal action came four weeks after Huber’s lawyers sent me a cease and desist letter that demanded I remove a blog post about Huber and pay Huber’s legal fees. My lawyer responded that allegations laid out in the letter were not correct and therefore, I would not comply. I believe Huber is attempting to stifle my right to freedom of speech with this SLAPP (strategic lawsuit against public participation).

I am fighting this lawsuit with representation by Dr. Daniel Kötz of Kötz Fusbahn Rechtsanwalte in Düsseldorf. His law firm specializes in copyright and media law and intellectual property. Dr. Kötz is the only European member of the First Amendment Lawyers Association. He was recommended to me by Marc Randazza, a prominent First Amendment attorney in the United States.

I need your help: a legal defense fund

I am humbled that the Australian Skeptics, Inc. is organizing an international fundraising campaign to help with my legal costs. If you are interested in donating, please click below:

I will not receive any funds directly. All fund disbursements will be made directly to my lawyer, based on detailed invoices. If, due to the public’s generosity, more funds are collected than required to cover legal costs, the remaining funds will be donated to Sense about Science or put into a general Skeptics legal defense fund.

I will not let Colleen Huber suppress my right to freedom of speech in exposing the problems with naturopathy.

Who is Colleen Huber?

Colleen Huber is a naturopathic cancer crusader and owner of Nature Works Best (NWB) naturopathic cancer clinic in Tempe, Arizona. She is not a medical doctor and, to the best of my knowledge, has no formal training in cancer research. Yet, Huber promotes herself as a cancer expert (here, here, and here) and is an outspoken critic of standard-of-care treatments for cancer. She wrote that “conventional treatments (chemo, radiation, etc.) sicken and weaken you and ultimately strengthen the disease.”

Huber treats cancer using alternative therapies, including intravenous injections of vitamins and baking soda. She staunchly advocates that her cancer patients should follow a strict sugar-free diet. She advertises that a sugar-free diet increases a cancer patient’s overall survival, regardless of cancer stage or type.

Huber has made other incredible claims that are worth scrutinizing:

No other clinic, of any kind, has such a high documented success rate (source) 85% of patients who complete our treatments and follow our food plan go into remission and/or stay well long-term (source) Learn about out 90% success rate (source)

Huber is also the founder and president of the Naturopathic Cancer Society (NCS), which is a non-profit organization with the same address as her clinic that raises money for cancer patients to pay for naturopathic care. In 2017, the charity promoted cancer treatments offered by Huber’s clinic on twitter.

Huber’s clinic solicits donations to help patients pay for naturopathic cancer care. Sponsors can give in the amounts of $1000, $5000, and $25,000, although the links for actually donating money don’t seem to work. The web page does, however, direct donors to Huber’s charity, NCS. This page is currently active on the NWB website and was up throughout 2016.

Huber also is the co-founder of and serves as the secretary of the International Naturopathic Clinical Research Institute (NCRI) / American Naturopathic Clinical Research Institute (ANRI) / Naturopathic Oncology Research Institute (NORI). This chimeric organization functions as an institutional review board (IRB) for so-called naturopathic clinical research. Huber’s lawyers claim that in 2010 this IRB approved her ongoing study on sugar-free diets and cancer outcomes. Huber’s sugar study began in 2006.

I blogged about Huber’s cancer treatments and research after I discovered that domains in various versions of my legal name were purchased by an anonymous party in early 2016. I found that one of these, a “tribute” website formally hosted at BrittMarieHermes.com, was registered to a Wix account with an email address at the domain natonco.org, which is the website for Huber’s charity.

The basis of the lawsuit

The lawsuit centers around my blog post, Is dubious cancer “doctor” Colleen Huber cybersquatting my name?, from December 1st, 2016. Huber alleges that the following statements are defamatory (underlined sections are at issue):

1. “In addition to what appears to be a terrible failure in conducting ethical research because it was/is run out of her clinic and tied her non-profit, Huber completely bungled her analysis. Thomas Mohr, an oncology researcher at the Medical University of Vienna, reanalyzed Huber’s data in her sugar study and commented on my blog in February 2016: Putting aside the ethical issues of the extremely bad study design, the lack of ethics committee approval or patients’ agreement, a quick n’ dirty analysis of the data reveals following odds ratio: 2.1 (95% CI 1.01 – 4.40, p<0.05) in favour of state of the art treatment. In other words, patients under natural care have more than a two-fold higher risk to die. This is criminal. I agree.” 2. “Mohr continued with his independent analysis of Huber’s data: If one removes data of questionable quality and takes into account only those with complete data and in treatment resp. died during treatment (i.e. in remission, not yet in remission, died), the odds ratio gets almost 10:1 in favour of state of the art therapy. This is really nasty.” Indeed, her activities seem suspicious, especially when one looks at what her clinic is advertising based her “research.” Colleen Huber, NMD appears to be a cancer quack.” 3. “Huber and these other naturopaths have perhaps found a legal loophole allowing them to blatantly mislead vulnerable cancer patients. She seems to be drawing naturopaths into what looks like an IRB sham in order to justify the use of fraudulent treatments. In reaction to my April 2015 post for Science-Based Medicine, Huber’s naturopathic IRB has stopped publishing complete transcripts of their minutes. I can only assume that ANRI/NORI is continuing to butcher the IRB process in order to uphold the naturopathic scope of practice, rather than the safety and well-being of cancer patients. As far as I can tell, Huber is the ringleader of what appears to be a naturopathic clinical trial and charity hoax.”