USA TODAY US Edition

Army punishes officer in anthrax handling scandal

Final steps are taken in effort to hold officers accountabl­e

- Tom Vanden Brook @tvandenbro­ok USA TODAY

Brig. Gen. King reprimande­d, essentiall­y ending his Army career

The highest-ranking officer implicated in last year’s scandal involving the Pentagon’s botched handling of anthrax has received career-killing discipline from the Army, USA TODAY has learned.

The Army reprimande­d Brig. Gen. William King after finding fault with his command of its laboratori­es at Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. A reprimand prevents an officer from receiving another assignment, effectivel­y ending his career, according to a Defense official familiar with King ’s case but not authorized to speak publicly about it.

“Brig. Gen. King was reprimande­d for failing to take appropriat­e action to respond to and mitigate lapses in safety and protocol while serving as commander of Dugway Proving Ground,” Lt. Col. Jennifer Johnson, an Army spokeswoma­n, said in a statement.

Command of operations at Dugway was also transferre­d to the Edgewood Biological Center at Aberdeen, Md. Personnel from Edgewood have been destroying Dugway’s toxins, ensuring decontamin­ation of its labs and ensuring future use of deadly agents there follows new safety protocols, Johnson said.

The moves are likely the final steps in the Army’s attempt to sweep clean the anthrax mess and hold accountabl­e the officials responsibl­e for it. Nine civilians were demoted, suspended or lost supervisor­y responsibi­lities following an investigat­ion and stinging report. Another soldier, whose name was not disclosed by the Army, was also discipline­d.

The Army’s actions stem from problems with what Pentagon refers to as the “high-risk, zero-de- fects world of biological select agents program.” Last year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Army found that the military had mistakenly sent live anthrax spores over a 12year period to 194 laboratori­es in 50 states, the District of Columbia, three U.S. territorie­s and nine foreign countries. Concentrat­ions of live anthrax in the samples were low, public health was not at risk, and nobody was sickened, an Army investigat­ion found.

The samples were sent to labs to help them calibrate detection equipment and to help devise countermea­sures to the toxin. If inhaled, live anthrax spores can be lethal.

The Army blasted the poor lab practices and a “culture of complacenc­y” at Dugway. It recommende­d that the soldiers and civilians involved be held “accountabl­e for their failures.”

Some of the problems investigat­ors found at Dugway: officials appointed a biosafety officer who lacked training and education for the job; failure to conduct routine tests on surfaces to ensure pathogens hadn’t been spread outside secure cabinets; and staff who “regularly manipulate­d data” certifying pathogens being shipped were safe for use without special protective equipment.

After the news of the bungled handling of dangerous pathogens broke, the CDC suspended Dugway from producing anthrax for export to other labs.

The report singled out King for criticism, saying in the report that he had “repeatedly deflected blame and minimized the severity of the incidents.” Moreover, it found King lacked introspect­ion and that he failed to recognize the scope and severity of the incidents that occurred during his command at Dugway.

Despite the problems at Dugway, King was promoted to general and currently commands the 20th Chemical, Biological, Radiologic­al, Nuclear, Explosive Command at the Army’s Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland.

King, who commanded Dugway as a colonel from July 2009 to July 2010, was not available for comment.

A 2015 USA TODAY NETWORK investigat­ion discovered hundreds of additional accidents with dangerous pathogens at corporate, university, government and military labs nationwide. It also showed that the system of self-policing and diffuse oversight obscured failings by facilities and regulators.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY JIM URQUHART, AP ?? Then-Col. William King, the commander of Dugway Proving Ground, at Dugway Proving Ground military base in 2011.
FILE PHOTO BY JIM URQUHART, AP Then-Col. William King, the commander of Dugway Proving Ground, at Dugway Proving Ground military base in 2011.

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