Lodi News-Sentinel

Military lawyers to sue Pentagon over cancer cases linked to Guantanamo housing, work areas

- By Vera Bergengrue­n

WASHINGTON — A group of military lawyers who work at the Guantanamo Bay prison are expected to file a lawsuit Tuesday against the Department of Defense, saying they have been forced to live and work in facilities with dangerous levels of known carcinogen­s for years.

They charge that the U.S. Navy failed to properly investigat­e health hazards following reports of unusually high cancer cases among otherwise young and healthy personnel at Camp Justice, the war court complex where legal teams work on the cases of war-onterror detainees.

The complaint cites the Navy’s “unreasonab­le delay” in assessing known environmen­tal hazards such as mercury and formaldehy­de, and its “arbitrary and capricious determinat­ion that ... personnel must live and work in contaminat­ed areas of Camp Justice before a proper investigat­ion and appropriat­e remediatio­n are completed.”

The presence of cancer-causing agents has long been a cause of anxiety among the military defense teams who represent the terror detainees at the remote prison.

“This really is having a human level impact on people who have signed up to do this work,” said Daniel Small, a partner at Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll, which is working on the Guantanamo lawyers’ case without charge.

“These are soldiers, sailors, Marines who have signed up to do some of the hardest legal work that exists in my opinion in the Department of Defense, and these people deserve better,” he said. “We should be making sure that we are protecting them, taking care of these soldiers who have signed up to a fairly thankless task.”

The filing comes nearly two years after a former Guantanamo attorney asked the Pentagon in July 2015 to investigat­e whether the war court compound was linked to seven cases of cancer among service members and civilians who’d worked there. One of those seven people, Lt. Cmdr. William Kuebler, had cancer of the appendix and died days after the complaint was filed.

The Miami Herald at that time found a dozen people who’d suffered a wide range of cancers, including brain, colon, stomach and appendix cancer.

Higher-ranking officials, judges and civilian attorneys usually stay in hotel-style guest accommodat­ions known as “hard housing” when they go to the base. But the military defense team assigned to each accused terrorist, which includes lawyers, paralegals, security officers, linguists and others, stay and work in a trailer park set up on an abandoned airstrip.

The so-called Cuzco trailers opened in 2008 and are part of the $12 million facility that includes buildings that were closed down before the Pentagon set up the prison in 2002. In the 1990s, the area was used as a camp for Cuban migrants who’d been picked up at sea during the so-called rafter crisis.

One of the plaintiffs, Michael Schwartz, a former military lawyer who represente­d Guantanamo detainees for more than five years, said in an interview that he was shocked when he first arrived at the legal center in 2011.

“I was just amazed when I walked into my office for the first time and saw (these) work stations for what was eventually one of the most significan­t criminal trials in the history of law in the U.S.,” he said. While he had expected spartan conditions, he said he was not expecting to be worried for his health.

In 2012, he and his colleagues first brought up their concerns “about rat feces and mold and just general filth in the office because nobody seemed to be paying attention,” Schwartz said. “But we weren’t successful in getting much of a response.”

As they grew increasing­ly worried and some staff members sought hospital care, the military sent a base industrial hygienist “with no scientific background or training,” he said.

In addition to lead, mold and asbestos, a 2015 assessment found that “air samples tested positive for mercury and formaldehy­de, and the soil samples tested positive for benzoapyre­ne — all carcinogen­ic substances,” according to the filing.

Although these carcinogen­s exceeded the screening levels, the Navy and Marine Corps Public Health Center said it didn’t have enough data and that the investigat­ion was too limited to be able to assess the health risks.

The Navy also neglected to test 84 out of 100 units in the Cuzco trailers for formaldehy­de, according to the filing.

“It’s in the air that’s breathed all day long by people working and living in those spaces, even though it was determined it was above EPA screening levels,” Small said.

The military said that it would assess the potential impact of this range of cancercaus­ing agent, and check the health files of 700 people who worked at the site.

A promised final report of the health testing never materializ­ed.

“The first and second deadlines came and went, and nothing since,” Small said. “This is a long time for these kinds of serious conditions to go unaddresse­d, and for some reason the Navy does not seem to have any urgency about this.”

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