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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMajor Military Contractor Poisons American Troops, Avoids Accountability
http://www.alternet.org/water/major-military-contractor-poisons-american-troops-avoids-accountabilityIn the spring and summer of 2003, when U.S. troops were guarding cleanup of a neglected water treatment plant in the Basrah oil fields in Qatmat Ali, southern Iraq, they noticed orange dust scattered on the floor and sitting in open sacks. Within weeks, several were suffering nosebleeds, eye irritations, sore throats, and anxiety about the dust's relation to their new maladies.
No danger, supervisors of KBR, the mega military services contractor in charge of the cleanup, assured them; they were just not used to the desert sand. In September 2003, KBR (formerly Kellogg, Brown, Root and a subsidiary of Halliburton) closed the facility. But the physical problems and anxieties about future illness prevailed.
The orange powder, the troops learned, was sodium dichromate, an anticorrosion compound containing hexavalent chromium, a known carcinogen. It's the same toxin that Erin Brochovich found leached into the groundwater near Southern Caliofrnia pipelines, resulting in cancerous tumors. Almost 10 years later, in November 2012, a federal jury in Portland has ruled in favor of the troops, finding KBR exposed troops to poison, acting with reckless and outrageous indifference to a highly unreasonable risk of harm and conscious indifference to the health, safety and welfare of others. The jury awarded the dozen plaintiffs $85 million.
In the two months since the verdict, KBR has come out hooting and hollering. In an interview published this week in the Oregonian, KBR's vice-president for litigation, Mark Lowes, said the Houston-based KBR does not shy away from a rodeo. Certainly to date the military service giant has seized every opportunity to lasso, wrestle and take down every principal in the case -- judge, jury, the soldier plaintiffs, and even the US government. According to KBR, the judge acted badly by conducting a public trial and by refusing to require jurors to submit to defense interviews, in which each juror would explain why he decided as he did, and the jurors behaved badly by blindly accepting the troop's version of facts.
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Major Military Contractor Poisons American Troops, Avoids Accountability (Original Post)
xchrom
Jan 2013
OP
aquart
(69,014 posts)1. How did I know it was KBR?
Murdering Americans for decades and still not called "enemy."
krakfiend
(202 posts)2. no longer american
they relocated the headquarters to dubai so they can avoid taxes. what would you expect from a company that had cheney as ceo.