Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Prosecute the DDT dumpers

Re “Off L.A.’s coast, a DDT dump of staggering size,” April 27

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It’s dishearten­ing to learn that people treated the ocean as a toxic dumping ground for years, like something straight out of a scene from “The Simpsons.” When I read in your article that scientists compared the amount of DDT waste barrels on the ocean floor

near Southern California to the stars in the Milky Way, I couldn’t help but think about how criminal this is.

Through our research at the Marine Mammal Center, we’ve seen how DDT and other toxic pollutants affect marine mammals and are, in fact, the leading cause of an aggressive cancer in a startling number of sea lions. This pollution has very real consequenc­es for not only marine mammals, but for humans as well, who share the same water and eat the same seafood.

The U.S. Department of Justice should find out who is ultimately responsibl­e for this catastroph­e and prosecute them to the full extent of the law.

Jeff Boehm Sausalito, Calif. The writer is a veterinari­an and chief executive of the Marine Mammal Center.

“What else did they get away with?” Do we really want to raise this question about the companies that dumped toxic chemicals into our coastal waters for decades with impunity? What else aren’t we being told?

Are there, say, barrels of nuclear waste leaking in the Mariana Trench, in the western part of the Pacific Ocean? The trench is 1,554 miles long, 44 miles wide and, in places, more than seven miles deep. It is 120 times the size of the Grand Canyon.

How could any kind of toxic dumping have been going on for decades in Southern California and no one spoke up? What kind of monsters are evolving in the deep blue sea? Sounds like an idea for another Hollywood blockbuste­r.

Jon Mann Santa Monica

 ?? David Valentine UC Santa Barbara ?? A DISCARDED DDT barrel sits on the ocean f loor 3,000 feet below the surface near Catalina Island.
David Valentine UC Santa Barbara A DISCARDED DDT barrel sits on the ocean f loor 3,000 feet below the surface near Catalina Island.

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