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- From PsychoSpy@aol.com Mon Aug 15 15:03 EST 1994
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- From: PsychoSpy@aol.com
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- Message-Id: <9408150053.tn1109521@aol.com>
- Date: Mon, 15 Aug 94 00:53:43 EDT
- Subject: Second Groom Lawsuit
-
- [Supplement to the Groom Lake Desert Rat]
-
- According to an article in Saturday's Las Vegas Review-Journal, a
- second lawsuit will be filed on Monday in the Groom Lake toxic
- dumping case. The full text of the article is below.
-
- We can speculate that the first suit, which was filed against the
- EPA, was a tactical move by lawyer Turley. Perhaps, by filing
- against the EPA first, he can prevent it from coming to the AF's
- rescue.
-
- CNN will run a story on this latest suit, probably in its Monday
- evening newscasts (Aug. 15).
-
- -- ed.
-
- -----------------
-
- TITLE: SECRET BASE TO BE HIT WITH LAWSUIT
-
- SUBTITLE: A Washington lawyer alleges various agencies have
- violated hazardous waste laws at Groom Lake
-
- PUBLICATION: Las Vegas Review-Journal
-
- DATE: Aug. 13, 1994
-
- AUTHOR: Keith Rogers
-
- [Reproduced without permission.]
-
- Defense and intelligence agencies will be sued on Monday in U.S.
- District Court in Las Vegas by a Washington, D.C., law professor
- who claims they violated hazardous waste laws at the secret Groom
- Lake air base in Lincoln County.
-
- The lawsuit will name Secretary of Defense William Perry, National
- Security Advisor Anthony Lake and Air Force Secretary Sheila
- Widnall, Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University law
- professor who is representing employees and former workers at the
- Groom Lake base, said Friday.
-
- The lawsuit is the second that will be filed this month on
- allegations that hazardous wastes were illegally burned in open
- trenches at Groom Lake, 35 miles west of Alamo.
-
- In an Aug. 2 lawsuit Turley files in U.S. District Court in
- Washington, he claimed the Environmental Protection Agency failed
- to inspect the Groom Lake base, where workers said they were
- denied protective clothing for handling hazardous wastes.
-
- That lawsuit named EPA Administrator Carol Browner as defendant
- and six John Doe plaintiffs. Chief Judge John Garret Penn allowed
- the plaintiffs to use fictitious names because Turley said they
- feared reprisal from the government.
-
- Concerning the case he will file Monday, Turley said, "We hope to
- show that military and intelligence agencies cannot unilaterally
- create a secret enclave through which they can violate
- environmental and criminal laws with impunity."
-
- He said his clients in Monday's filing will include six John Does
- and one named plaintiff, Helen Frost, a Las Vegas widow, whose
- husband was a former base worker who died in 1989.
-
- Frost claimed in a 1993 lawsuit that her husband's death was
- linked to inhaling toxic fumes while he worked atop hangars and
- buildings downwind of trenches where former workers have said
- hazardous materials, including radar-absorbing stealth coatings,
- were routinely burned during the 1980s.
-
- A federal judge dismissed the wrongful death suit, ruling that
- Frost did not prove dioxins in the fumes hastened her husband's
- death from a liver disorder.
-
- Turley said Helen Frost is representative of a large number of
- widows and family members who have asked him for legal assistance.
-
- "We have decided to use only one of the widows and only six of the
- workers because of possible concerns with reprisals. The
- government has already threatened my clients with severe reprisals
- if they ever broke their silence about what happened at the Groom
- Lake base," Turley said.
-
- The Groom dry lake bed is the site of an active government
- installation where high-altitude, high-speed spy planes and other
- military aircraft have been tested, including the F-117A Stealth
- fighter, according to aviation industry sources and witnesses who
- have observed the base.
-
- Turley said, "Our Nevada filing will go to the heart of the
- allegations. We believe the Air Force will ultimately be forced
- to acknowledge the existence" of the Groom Lake base, also known
- as Area 51.
-
- "It is clear that secrecy at Groom Lake became a magnet for
- illegal activities that could never have occurred at conventional
- federal facilities," he said.
-
- "The use of secrecy in this case has little to do with the
- national security purpose of the facility. The military is using
- secrecy to hide what are environmental and, possibly, criminal
- violations," Turley said in a telephone interview from his office.
- He is director of the pro bono Environmental Crime Project at the
- university's National Law Center.
-
- Turley said the Groom Lake base became "something of an
- irresistible temptation for certain agencies and contractors in
- the Stealth program."
-
- ###
-
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-