Los Angeles Times

Judge in Hawaii to hear suit over pollution

Military families say they were poisoned by jet fuel that leaked into drinking water.

- By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher Kelleher writes for the Associated Press.

HONOLULU — A trial for a mass environmen­tal injury case began in Hawaii on Monday, more than two years after a U.S. military fuel tank facility under ground poisoned thousands of people when it leaked jet fuel into Pearl Harbor’s drinking water.

Instead of a jury, a judge in U.S. District Court in Honolulu will hear about a lawsuit against the United States by 17 “bellwether” plaintiffs: a cross-selection of relatives of military members representi­ng more than 7,500 others, including service members, in three federal lawsuits.

According to court documents, the U.S. government has admitted that the Nov. 20, 2021, spill at the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility caused a nuisance for the plaintiffs, that the U.S. “breached its duty of care” and that the plaintiffs suffered compensabl­e injuries.

But they dispute whether the residents were exposed to jet fuel at levels high enough to cause their alleged health effects, including vomiting and rashes.

The plaintiffs have submitted declaratio­ns describing how the water crisis sickened them and left them with ongoing health problems, including seizures, asthma, eczema and vestibular dysfunctio­n.

Nastasia Freeman, wife of a Navy lieutenant and mother of three, described how the family thought their vomiting and diarrhea was Thanksgivi­ng food poisoning. “I had developed a rash on my arms with sores and lesions on my scalp, feet, and hands accompanie­d by a headache,” she wrote. “I had a very strange sensation that I had never had before — I felt like my blood was on fire.”

On Nov. 29, a nurse told her she received multiple calls all with a common theme: the tap water.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs argue Navy officials knew there was fuel in the water and failed to warn people not to drink it, even while telling residents the water was safe.

“It felt like we were being gaslit,” Freeman’s declaratio­n filed in the case said. “We knew the water wasn’t safe, but the Navy was telling us that it was. They said they didn’t know what was in the water and that they were ‘investigat­ing.’ ”

A Navy investigat­ion report in 2022 listed a cascading series of mistakes from May 6, 2021, when an operator error caused a pipe to rupture and caused 21,000 gallons of fuel to spill while it was transferre­d between tanks. Most of this fuel spilled into a fire suppressio­n line and sat there for six months, causing the line to sag. When a cart rammed into this sagging line on Nov. 20, it released 20,000 gallons of fuel.

The military eventually agreed to drain the tanks after the 2021 spill, amid state orders and protests from Native Hawaiians and other Hawaii residents concerned about the threat posed to Honolulu’s water supply. The tanks sit above an aquifer supplying water to 400,000 people in urban Honolulu.

A lot is riding on this trial. “A bellwether trial helps attorneys to understand the likely success or failure of the cases that are in the pipeline,” said Loretta Sheehan, a Honolulu personal injury attorney not involved in the case.

The outcome can help determine future damages to be awarded or settlement­s, she said.

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