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Ex-convict promoted ‘bogus’ blood detox, seen with patients in Auckland clinic

Author
Isaac Davison,
Publish Date
Sun, 23 Mar 2025, 9:05am
Pictures and video posted online showed Iain Clegg promoting health services and showed him inside an Auckland clinic. Photo / Instagram
Pictures and video posted online showed Iain Clegg promoting health services and showed him inside an Auckland clinic. Photo / Instagram

Ex-convict promoted ‘bogus’ blood detox, seen with patients in Auckland clinic

Author
Isaac Davison,
Publish Date
Sun, 23 Mar 2025, 9:05am
  • Iain Clegg described himself as a 鈥渉ealth consultant鈥 and promoted treatments criticised as 鈥渜uackery鈥 by top medical professionals.
  • A whistleblower says they have laid complaints with medical authorities.
  • Clegg was jailed over the death of a police officer in 2011 and was released on parole in 2015. 

A man who was jailed over the death of a police officer appears to have reinvented himself as a health guru promoting treatments that are discredited by medical experts.

Iain Clegg, who was convicted of manslaughter in 2011, plugged alternative health services on a social media page that he deleted shortly after the Herald asked him questions.

He described himself online as a 鈥渉ealth consultant鈥 and a 鈥渟pecialist in advanced detoxification and blood purification鈥.

A healthcare leader told the Herald that the blood screening Clegg promoted was 鈥渜uackery鈥.

Videos posted by Iain Clegg show him handling a syringe inside an Auckland clinic.
Videos posted by Iain Clegg show him handling a syringe inside an Auckland clinic.

On his Instagram page, Clegg promoted the treatments, including 鈥済reen laser therapy鈥 and blood detoxification, to nearly 6000 followers. He posted videos of himself with patients at an Auckland clinic and asked people to book through his direct messages. A now-deleted LinkedIn page in his name said he was 鈥渟pecialising in detoxification from today鈥檚 environmental toxins and modern medical technologies鈥.

The medical clinic that Clegg鈥檚 videos show him at said in a statement that it had never employed or contracted Clegg, and declined to comment further. Clegg also denied any relationship with the facility. The clinic has now also removed its own social media page.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 work at a clinic, but I鈥檝e personally experienced and promote[d] powerful protocols that have made a real impact,鈥 Clegg said in a social media message to the Herald that he subsequently deleted.

Some of Clegg鈥檚 video posts 鈥 which the Herald has copies of 鈥 showed him handling syringes, using medical equipment, and taking blood samples and appearing to discuss screenings with patients.

A whistleblower, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told the Herald they had laid complaints against Clegg and the clinic with medical authorities and police. The whistleblower claimed patients were being charged for expensive 鈥渄etox鈥 treatments that lacked medical legitimacy.

The Ministry of Health said it could not confirm whether it had received a complaint about any individual.

In one post Clegg reshared to his followers, a patient promoted a treatment that involved removing blood clots he claimed were caused by the Covid-19 vaccine.

鈥淚鈥檇 recommend this to everyone, especially if you鈥檝e had chest pains since the Covid jab like I have,鈥 the patient鈥檚 post said.

Videos show Iain Clegg talking through a screening with a patient.
Videos show Iain Clegg talking through a screening with a patient.

The blood screening shown in the videos is known as Live Blood Analysis (LBA) or Hemaview, which involves the use of dark field microscopy to observe live blood cells. It is promoted by alternative medicine practitioners to diagnose a range of medical conditions but is not backed by scientific evidence. LBA is often used by practitioners to convince patients to purchase treatments that they do not require.

鈥淭hese people are quacks, it鈥檚 as simple as that,鈥 said Terry Taylor, former president of the NZ Institute of Laboratory Science.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e operating outside of the regulatory environment that the rest of the health system has to operate under.鈥

He said that a number of alternative medical centres in New Zealand were offering the treatment.

Taylor said there were legitimate ways to screen blood for medical conditions.

鈥淲e can look down a microscope at a blood flow and tell you what鈥檚 wrong with a patient. That鈥檚 not a problem. But it鈥檚 done through a proper, regulated, medical, clinical pathway.鈥

Taylor added: 鈥淭o me, there seems to be a massive problem with oversight. There should be at a very minimum a pathologist involved.鈥

The Auckland clinic where Clegg was pictured said he had never worked there, and he said he only promoted the health services. Videos of him at the clinic were removed soon after the Herald made inquiries. Photo / Instagram
The Auckland clinic where Clegg was pictured said he had never worked there, and he said he only promoted the health services. Videos of him at the clinic were removed soon after the Herald made inquiries. Photo / Instagram

Videos posted by Clegg showed microscopic images of a patient鈥檚 blood. The red cells were clustered or stacked on top of each other and a practitioner indicated this was a sign of illness.

鈥淲here [practitioners] go wrong is the interpretation of this phenomenon,鈥 said Dr Edzard Ernst, a German-British doctor and alternative medicine researcher who has written extensively about Live Blood Analysis.

鈥淚t is the normal tendency of red cells to aggregate. It is not indicative of any of the conditions [scam] practitioners think it to be,鈥 he wrote on his website.

Taylor said he was concerned patients would be duped into paying high prices for unnecessary treatment.

鈥淲e need to knock this thing on the head,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a reason we鈥檙e regulated 鈥 because we can kill people if we put the wrong stuff out there.鈥

Clegg was operating in a complicated legal space. A Ministry of Health spokeswoman said taking blood samples in itself was not a 鈥渞estricted activity鈥 under the law 鈥 meaning it was not limited to registered health practitioners.

However, experts said some of the treatments being offered 鈥 such as the removal of blood clots 鈥 required a medical qualification.

The ministry spokeswoman said providers were breaking the law if they made false or misleading representations about the benefits of their services.

鈥淭hey must also avoid any misrepresentation about their status, including any suggestion they are operating as a health practitioner, when offering or providing health services.鈥

The Herald asked Clegg, through his lawyer, whether patients and the clinic were aware of his criminal record. He was also asked through social media to discuss his treatments further.

鈥淣othing to discuss,鈥 he said, before recommending that the Herald book in for a check-up. This message was later deleted.

Iain Clegg (left) and accomplice John Skinner (right) in the High Court in 2011. Clegg was found guilty of manslaughter after the death of police officer Don Wilkinson, while Skinner was found guilty of murder. Photo / NZPA
Iain Clegg (left) and accomplice John Skinner (right) in the High Court in 2011. Clegg was found guilty of manslaughter after the death of police officer Don Wilkinson, while Skinner was found guilty of murder. Photo / NZPA

Clegg was found not guilty of murder and attempted murder but guilty of manslaughter in 2011 over the death of undercover police officer Don Wilkinson.

Wilkinson and another police officer had attempted to place a tracking device on a car outside a suspected drug lab in Mangere. They were chased by Clegg, who assaulted the unnamed officer, and an accomplice John Skinner, who shot a high-powered air rifle at Wilkinson, fatally injuring him.

Skinner, a suspected methamphetamine manufacturer, is serving a 15-year prison sentence and was denied parole in October.

Clegg was jailed for a sentence of eight years and paroled after four years, in 2015.

Isaac Davison is an Auckland-based reporter who covers health issues. He joined the Herald in 2008 and has previously covered the environment, politics and social issues.

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