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KBR, Guilty In Iraq Negligence, Wants Taxpayers To Foot The Bill

FriendlyFire

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KBR, Guilty In Iraq Negligence, Wants Taxpayers To Foot The Bill

WASHINGTON -- Sodium dichromate is an orange-yellowish substance containing hexavalent chromium, an anti-corrosion chemical. To Lt. Col. James Gentry of the Indiana National Guard, who was stationed at the Qarmat Ali water treatment center in Iraq just after the 2003 U.S. invasion, it was “just different-colored sand.” In their first few months at the base, soldiers were told by KBR contractors running the facility the substance was no worse than a mild irritant.

Gentry was one of approximately 830 service members, including active-duty soldiers and members of the National Guard and reserve units from Indiana, South Carolina, West Virginia and Oregon, assigned to secure the water treatment plant, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Sodium dichromate is not a mild irritant. It is an extreme carcinogen. In November 2009, at age 52, Gentry died of cancer. The VA affirmed two months later that his death was service-related.

In November, a jury found KBR, the military's largest contractor, guilty of negligence in the poisoning of a dozen soldiers, and ordered the company to pay $85 million in damages. Jurors found KBR knew both of the presence and toxicity of the chemical. Other lawsuits against KBR are pending.

KBR, however, says taxpayers should be on the hook for the verdict, as well as more than $15 million the company has spent in its failed legal defense, according to court documents and attorneys involved with the case.

KBR's contract with the U.S. to rebuild Iraq’s oil infrastructure after the 2003 invasion includes an indemnity agreement protecting the company from legal liability, KBR claims in court filings. That agreement, KBR insists, means the federal government must pay the company's legal expenses plus the verdict won by 12 members of the Oregon National Guard who were exposed to the toxin at the Qarmat Ali water treatment plant.

.....

KBR originally claimed it didn’t know about the deadly toxin until the spring of 2003. Documents produced in the lawsuit, however, revealed that KBR knew the chemical was being stockpiled and used in massive quantities at the water treatment facility as early as January of that year. Prior to the U.S. invasion, Iraqi workers would treat water at the plant with sodium dichromate before injecting it under pressure into the ground, driving oil to the surface. Sodium dichromate helped increase the life of pipelines and pumps by preventing corrosion
.....

"They had this information and didn't share it," Gentry said in a deposition two days before his final Christmas, in 2008. "I'm dying now because of it."

....

Roberta said he now requires an oxygen tank because he has less than 60 percent of his lung function and gets migraines stemming from the eye that was exposed to the chemical. He had surgery to fix the muscle at the top of his stomach that prevented food from coming back up.

http://dpc.senate.gov/hearings/hearing49/powell.pdf
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/09/kbr-guilty-iraq-negligence_n_2436115.html

I would laugh if it wasnt so serious.
And Republicans are going ape [censored] over the deaths of four us civilians in Benghazi. Halliburton should be quietly paying the damages and apologizing instead of shafting the dying soldiers, and then covering up the crime like the true patriots they claim to be.
 
I'm more offended that the government would have given out such liability exemptions than I am by KBR's actions.

Well, assuming KBR's challenge is legit.
 
KBR isn't stupid. So let's get GWB and the rest of his administration on the stand to take personal fiscal and criminal responsibility.
 
Nah, legal indemnities like that tend not to protect you from charges of negligence. KBR is almost certainly screwed.
 
You mean like how Dow Chemical, Monsanto, and Diamond Shamrock agreed to a mere pittance of a settlement with agent orange victims after the US government refused to accept any veterans claims for decades?
 
Don't you know? Profits talk, people walk here in the US.
 
I wish I could say I'm shocked... but I'm not.
Leonel hit it right on the head... $$$ is power to do whatever you want in the US of A.
 
Private military contracting companies should just not exist. I'm sure they seem to have their place, but they seem to be nothing but trouble.

I don't even want to ask how much tax payer money ends up in the hands of such companies.
 
It was really just an expensive excuse to not need a draft in order to fight a completely unnecessary and illegitimate war.

It is also part of the absurd notion that one can have "small government" by farming out all the reasons for having a government in the first place to private industry.

Why should enlisted personnel making $30-40K provide security to State Department employees when you can hire ex-SEAL mercenaries to do it for $200K?
 
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