
Local North Carolina News Interviews Those Who May Shed Light On The Camp Lejeune Water Contamination Tragedy
Marines with cancer and their survivors should be aware of the legal options they were granted last month
Wednesday, September 21, 2022 - Local news reports of US Marines that have filed suit under the newly enacted into law Camp Lejeune Justice Act help to get the word out to the public that Marines with cancer and the survivors of those who have died have hope of compensation. The aforementioned may now hire a Camp Lejeune water attorney and file a lawsuit saying that drinking the tap water on the base caused their type of cancer and that the US marines were aware it would and did nothing for more than a decade to warn them. The Spectrum News (SN) podcast interviews a woman who was a child at Camp Lejeune from 1959 through 1961 and whose mother, father, and brother died from cancer allegedly from drinking the Camp Lejeune VOC-contaminated water. The report also speaks with Larry Hall, a state lawmaker, US Marine, and former Secretary of the North Carolina Department of Military and Veterans Affairs according to SN. Hall reports that each military base is a community of hundreds of thousands of servicemembers, their families, and civilians who work on the base and each has its own, sometimes multiple water treatment facilities. He goes on to acknowledge that the military uses a range of toxic materials in conducting training operations including but not limited to solvents, equipment cleaners, fuels for machinery and aircraft, and also firefighting foam. Hall goes on to say that the US military is to blame for failing to take measures to protect the local environment.
Millions of US marines, civilian employees, and outside contractors working at the base drank tap water that for years was known to contain volatile organic compounds, benzene, ethyls chloride, and a cocktail of pollutants that found its way into the water table from improperly disposing of hazardous waste in unlined landfills, leaky underground petroleum storage tanks, and also the illegal disposal of dry cleaning solvent into a nearby storm drain by a local clothing cleaning business. Television, magazine, and online news reporting of those who have filed suit is one of the ways that the forgotten victims of Camp Lejeune tap water poisoning have to discover the most probable cause of their disease. The survivors of Marines that died from cancer are shocked because the victims usually led healthy lifestyles, did not smoke, and did not have a history of cancer in their families. Spectrum News One near Camp Lejeune in Greensboro North Carolina, recently reported on a US Marine that was taking full advantage of the new law that allows Marines to file lawsuits and seek lump-sum compensation. The Honoring Our Pact Act increases the number of illnesses that qualify for enhanced health benefits and increased disability income to include a dozen respiratory-related cancer and illnesses and also includes Vietnam Vets that have developed cancer from exposure to defoliants in Vietnam. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act is a component of the overall larger legislation. Camp Lejeune water lawyers may represent hundreds of victims of the Camp Lejeune water contamination cover-up. With the Honoring Our Pact Act, the military is taking responsibility for the injuries and wrongful deaths they have caused not only at Camp Lejeune but also at hundreds of other bases scattered throughout the US.