SOURCE: The Washington Post (AP story)
Jury finds Iraq war contractor negligent for soldiers’ illnesses, orders
$85 million payment
By Associated Press, Published:
November 2
PORTLAND, Ore. — A jury on Friday ordered an
American military contractor to pay $85 million after finding it guilty of
negligence for illnesses suffered by a dozen Oregon soldiers who guarded an
oilfield water plant during the Iraq war.
After a three-week trial, the jury
deliberated for just two days before reaching a decision against the
contractor, Kellogg Brown and Root.
Rocky Bixby, the soldier whose name appeared
on the suit, said the verdict should reflect a punishment for the company’s
neglect of U.S. soldiers.
“This was about showing that they cannot get
away with treating soldiers like that,” Bixby said. “It should show them what
they did was wrong, prove what they did was wrong and punish them for what they
did.”
Each soldier received $850,000 in noneconomic
damages and $6.25 million in punitive damages.
Another suit from Oregon Guardsmen is on hold
while the Portland trial plays out. There are also suits pending in Texas
involving soldiers from Texas, Indiana and West Virginia.
KBR was found guilty of negligence but not a
secondary claim of fraud. U.S. District Court Judge Paul Papak acknowledged
before the trial began that, whatever the verdict, the losing side was likely
to appeal it.
Any appeal must first wait for Papak to
formally enter the judgment.
The company will appeal the verdict, said KBR
attorney Geoffrey Harrison in a statement issued late Friday afternoon.
Harrison said the verdict “bears no rational relationship to the evidence.”
“KBR did safe, professional, and exceptional
work in Iraq under difficult circumstances,” Harrison said in the statement,”
and multiple U.S. Army officers testified under oath that KBR communicated
openly and honestly about the potential health risks.
“We believe the facts and law ultimately will
provide vindication.”
KBR witnesses testified that the soldiers’
maladies were a result of the desert air and pre-existing conditions. Even if
they were exposed to sodium dichromate, KBR witnesses argued, the soldiers
weren’t around enough of it, for long enough, to cause serious health problems.
The contractor’s defense ultimately rested on
the fact that they informed the U.S. Army of the risks of exposure to sodium
dichromate.
KBR was tasked with reconstructing the
decrepit, scavenged plant just after the March 2003 invasion while National
Guardsmen defended the area. Bags of unguarded sodium dichromate — a corrosive
substance used to keep pipes at the water plant free of rust — were ripped
open, allowing the substance to spread across the plant an into the air.
Attorneys for the 12 Oregon National
Guardsmen focused on the months of April, May and June 2003, alleging KBR knew
about the presence of sodium dichromate and took no action.
One of the soldiers’ key witnesses, a doctor,
testified that hexavalent chromium caused a change to soldiers’ genes, leaving
them more susceptible to cancer. KBR’s attorneys challenged that diagnosis,
saying the soldiers’ witness was the only physician in the U.S. prepared to
make such a diagnosis.
Plaintiff Jason Arnold said he understands
that contractors are a necessity for often-specialized tasks, but he hopes the
verdict forces the U.S. military to reexamine its relationship with the private
defense industry.
“For a corporation to come in and have this
much disregard for the health and well-being of men that are shedding blood,
sweat and tears for this country,” Arnold said, “for them to come in and to say
that we mean less than their profit, is wrong.”
During the Iraq war, KBR was the engineering
and construction arm of Halliburton, the biggest U.S. contractor during the
conflict. KBR split from Halliburton in April 2007.
KBR has faced lawsuits before related to its
work in Iraq. One of the more prominent cases, involving a soldier who was
electrocuted in his barracks shower at an Army base, was dismissed.
A second case is still in Maryland federal
court, in which former KBR employees and others who worked on Army bases in
Iraq and Afghanistan allege KBR allowed them to be exposed to toxic smoke from
garbage disposal “burn pits.”
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