home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- A SECRET AIR BASE BROKE THE LAW ON WASTE 08/02/96
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Wall Street Journal
- Thursday, February 8, 1996
-
- Desert Battle
-
- A Secret Air Base Hazardous Waste Act,
- Workers' Suit Alleges
- U.S. Cites National Security In Fighting Claims Tied to Toxic Disposal Fires
- Plaintiffs Fear Retaliation
-
- By MARGARET A. JACOBS
-
- Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
-
- LAS VEGAS -- One day two years before he died, Helen Frost says, her husband,
- Robert, returned from his sheet-metal job at a top-secret Air Force base with
- flaming-red skin that soon began peeling off his face.
-
- ''He was a pretty tough guy, but he burst through the door yelling in fear,''
- she recalls. ''Every hour, I'd have to take a washcloth'' and take off some
- more skin.
-
- Mrs. Frost is one of two widows who, along with four former civilian workers,
- are suing the Defense Department in a so-called citizen's lawsuit (rather than
- a claim for tort damages). They contend that it violated federal
- hazardous-waste law by repeatedly burning ordinary chemicals and highly toxic
- classified materials in open pits at the base, which is located 125 miles
- northwest of Las Vegas and is commonly called Area 51.
-
- The workers, who say their exposure to toxic fumes throughout the 1980s caused
- health problems ranging from skin lesions to cancer, are seeking information to
- facilitate medical treatment and help with medical bills but no other monetary
- damages. As employees of government subcontractors, which aren't named in the
- lawsuit, some of the plaintiffs say they have no medical insurance. They also
- want a court order requiring the government to follow the law and dispose of
- such waste safely. They themselves can't bring criminal charges.
-
- So far, the government refuses to confirm or deny their allegations or to
- respond to their request for criminal prosecution. Instead, it asked U.S.
- District Judge Philip Pro, who is overseeing the case in Las Vegas, to dismiss
- the lawsuit, arguing that almost any disclosure about Area 51 could pose a
- ''serious risk'' to national security.
-
- Unusual Maneuver
-
- That strategy is startling because the government apparently has never before
- invoked the so-called national-security privilege in a case in which the effect
- is to shield itself from criminal liability. The privilege is intended to
- prevent courtroom disclosures of state secrets involving intelligence gathering
- or military planning. But the burning alleged by the workers is a serious
- crime, punishable by up to 15 years in prison and a $1 million fine. Indeed,
- the Justice Department has made the prosecution of civilians who illegally burn
- hazardous waste a priority.
-
- Constitutional experts say the case could ultimately go to the Supreme Court
- because it tests the limits of executive-branch power. In a case involving
- Richard Nixon and Watergate, the high court said the president can't use
- executive privilege to shield evidence of a crime. But in response to the
- workers' suit, the government in effect argues that the national-security
- privilege -- a form of executive privilege -- gives the military more leeway
- than the president has to keep information secret, even if it involves a crime.
-
- The case is also significant because it could determine whether the military
- will be held accountable for what many observers consider its dismal record of
- compliance with environmental laws. A government task force estimated in 1995
- that cleaning up hazardous waste at federal facilities, mostly
- military-related, would cost $234 billion to $389 billion.
-
- Information at Risk
-
- ''What I fear is the broadening of a principle that could block access to a
- whole range of information that should be available to the public,'' says
- Stephen Dycus, an expert on national security and the environment at the
- Vermont Law School.
-
- At almost every turn since filing suit 18 months ago, the workers have been
- stymied by Justice Department lawyers. For several months last year, the
- lawyers even refused to acknowledge the existence or name of the base. Only
- after the workers introduced 300 pages of references to it in government
- documents, including the Congressional Record, did the lawyers relent somewhat.
-
- The government lawyers also classified documents retroactively, preventing the
- workers from using them as evidence, the workers say. They refused to
- acknowledge that any of the men except Mr. Frost ever worked at the base. They
- even obtained a court order preventing the workers' lawyer from removing files
- from his own office.
-
- In a special filing required from agency heads who want courts to recognize the
- national-security privilege, Secretary of the Air Force Sheila Widnall
- explained why the military is so cautious about disclosing anything about Area
- 51. ''Collection of information regarding the air, water and soil'' around a
- base, she said, ''is a classic foreign intelligence practice because analysis
- of these samples can result in the identification of military operations and
- capabilities....Disclosure of such information increases the risk to the lives
- of United States personnel and decreases the probability of successful mission
- accomplishment.''
-
- The Air Force declines to comment on specific allegations or on the lawsuit,
- but a senior attorney for the service defends its record. ''We take our
- responsibility concerning protection of the environment seriously, and we also
- take seriously our obligations to protect national security,'' he says. ''We
- believe protecting the environment and national security are not
- incompatible.'' In addition, a spokeswoman says that in 1993 the government's
- Council on Environmental Quality rated the Air Force's environmental-management
- program the best in the government.
-
- Although the plaintiffs concede Area 51 harbors military secrets that must be
- protected, Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University law professor who
- represents the plaintiffs and more than two dozen other Area 51 employees who
- so far haven't joined in the suit, says the government's position is too
- extreme.
-
- ''The government claims that revealing any information about Area 51 would
- jeopardize American lives,'' he says. ''The only American lives lost so far are
- those of their own workers.''
-
- Base Not So Secret
-
- The plaintiffs disparage the government's response, partly because Area 51
- isn't much of a secret. Until access to a nearby ridge was restricted last
- year, Area 51's runways, radar towers and many of its 200 buildings could be
- seen by anyone who looked. Just off the Las Vegas strip, in fact, is a bar
- called Area 51.
-
- The base has had a local reputation as a big employer since the 1950s. Well
- before dawn most weekdays, hundreds of civilian workers can be seen parking in
- a far corner of McCarran International Airport. From there, they fly free of
- charge in unmarked planes to the base, which sits on a dry lake bed called
- Groom Lake near where atomic bombs were once tested. The Area 51 name is
- derived from its designation on Nevada test-site maps.
-
- Area 51's 1,000 civilian and 2,000 military employees sign oaths to keep all
- information about the base confidential, and the former workers who sued take
- it seriously. Fearing government retaliation for whistle-blowing, they have
- obtained unusual permission from Judge Pro to be known publicly as John Does.
-
- Speaking nervously in interviews in Las Vegas hotel rooms, where their lawyer
- had taken precautions to prevent government monitoring, the men recently
- described the illegal burning and what they view as the military's indifference
- to their health. They spoke on the condition that they not be identified in any
- way.
-
- They say the illegal burning grew out of the extreme secrecy at the base, where
- U-2 spy planes, F-117 stealth bombers and other secret aircraft have been
- developed and tested. In military parlance, it is a ''black'' base: Access is
- granted only to people with top-secret security clearance.
-
- Nothing left the facility except the workers, they say. All else, including
- office furniture, jeeps and leftover lobster and prime rib, was either burned
- or buried.
-
- Frequent Fires
-
- During the 1980s, the men say, classified materials were burned at least once a
- week in 100-yard-long, 25-foot-wide pits. With security guards standing at the
- edge, Air Force personnel threw in hazardous chemicals such as
- methylethylketone, a common cleaning solvent, and other things, such as
- computers, that produce dioxin when burned. The toxic brew, including drums of
- hazardous waste trucked in from defense facilities in other states, was ignited
- with jet fuel and typically burned for eight to 12 hours, the men say.
-
- Helen Frost says her husband, after being exposed to the thick, black fumes,
- endured constant headaches and itchy eyes. But, like many of the men, he
- continued to work because his pay -- about $50,000 a year -- was high and the
- work was consistent, she says.
-
- In the mid-1980s, however, dozens of Area 51 workers began developing breathing
- difficulties, chest pains, neurological problems and chronic skin inflammation
- -- all classic signs of exposure to toxins. The burning especially affected
- those who worked outdoors in maintenance and construction, about 150 to 300
- yards downwind from the pits.
-
- The skin condition, which they called ''fish scales,'' broke out on their
- hands, legs, backs and faces. They say they used emery boards and sandpaper to
- remove the embarrassing scabs. ''I never saw anything like it. We would get it
- dried up in one spot, and then it would pop up somewhere else,'' says Stella
- Kasza, another plaintiff. Last April, her husband, Walter, a sheet-metal
- worker, died at age 73 of liver and kidney cancer, which his wife blames on a
- decade of exposure to the burning.
-
- The workers contend that when they asked for protective gear, Air Force
- officers rebuffed them. ''They told us we could buy our own masks and then
- pointed to the gate and told us we could leave if we didn't like it,'' recalls
- one of the John Does, who, like the others, believes that the officers resented
- the civilians' higher wages. Though the workers used gloves they purchased
- themselves, they say base-security policy prevented them from bringing in any
- other protective gear.
-
- Reticent Patients
-
- Many refused to seek medical help or gave doctors incomplete explanations for
- their symptoms. They say they feared 10-year prison terms for talking about the
- base, as, they say, Air Force security police repeatedly warned them.
-
- But after Mr. Frost died of cirrhosis of the liver in 1989 at age 57, many felt
- they had no choice but to seek legal advice. A study of Mr. Frost's fatty
- tissue by Peter Kahn, a Rutgers University biochemist and expert on chemical
- and hazardous substances, found unusually high levels of dioxins and other
- carcinogens in Mr. Frost's cells that he attributed to industrial exposure.
- Dioxins typically target the liver and cause severe skin reactions, Mr. Kahn
- says. Though not the cause of Mr. Frost's liver ailment, Mr. Kahn adds,
- exposure to the chemicals could have accelerated its progress, resulting in
- premature death. But the government had denied Mr. Frost's request for worker's
- compensation.
-
- Prof. Turley and his clients say they can prove the government violated the
- Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, the federal law regulating hazardous
- waste. And they say they can do this without revealing anything that would
- undermine national security.
-
- The law makes it a crime for anyone who handles hazardous waste, including
- owners of oil-change shops such as Jiffy Lubes, to do so without getting a
- permit or transportation manifest. It also requires Environmental Protection
- Agency inspections. Early in the litigation, the government conceded that it
- had never applied for a permit or manifest for Area 51.
-
- But the government has consistently refused to acknowledge that hazardous
- wastes of any sort were kept at the base or that common industrial chemicals
- such as trichloroethylene were used there. The solvent, found in most machines
- with moving parts, is on the list of toxins that must be reported and are
- regulated under the law.
-
- ''Acknowledging that a large military base has trichloroethylene is like saying
- that a cleaning crew has ammonia. It would hardly be cause for celebration in
- the Russian intelligence services,'' Prof. Turley says.
-
- Evidence in a Manual
-
- The government's position outraged some Area 51 workers, who sent an
- unclassified government security-training manual to Prof. Turley. It confirms
- the existence of a ''vehicle paint and body shop'' and ''base battery storage''
- operations that typically produce hazardous waste. When Prof. Turley asked
- Judge Pro to accept the manual as evidence, however, the plaintiffs say the
- government classified it retroactively. Government lawyers then tried to
- retrieve the document from Prof. Turley and from news reporters even though it
- was available on the Internet.
-
- The government also asked the judge to seal the transcript of a telephone
- conference call he held with attorneys for both sides about the manual. At the
- government's request, the judge placed Prof. Turley's office under seal until
- he decides what to do.
-
- ''The government has been simply stonewalling,'' says Steven Aftergood of the
- Federation of American Scientists, a Washington group concerned with, among
- other things, what it considers excessive government secrecy.
-
- The workers' attorneys have repeatedly asked Judge Pro, who once found that the
- government wasn't liable for injuries to 216 workers exposed to radiation at
- the Nevada test site between 1951 and 1981, to limit the material the
- government can restrict under the national-security privilege to truly
- sensitive information. In other privilege cases, the lawyers say, judges have
- segregated sensitive material and given the public access to the rest. A few
- courts have enlisted special judges with high-level security clearance or held
- secret trials rather than dismiss cases against the government, Vermont's Prof.
- Dycus says.
-
- The 'Mosaic' Theory
-
- The Defense Department, however, claims to have properly asserted the
- national-security privilege. Though conceding that its position will result in
- some routine information about the base being withheld, government lawyers
- argue that they can't acknowledge seemingly innocuous facts without creating a
- ''mosaic'' that an enemy could use to figure out what the military considers a
- secret.
-
- While Judge Pro hasn't ruled on the government's motion to dismiss the case, he
- has decided in its favor on most important issues, including the ''mosaic''
- theory. Last month, he found that the government had properly refused to
- provide virtually all of the material sought by the plaintiffs and that the
- government had properly classified the manual. He also rejected without
- explanation the workers' argument that the government can't use the privilege
- to conceal evidence of a crime. Prof. Turley's office remains under seal and
- off limits to faculty members and students. He says his clients intend to
- appeal many of the judge's rulings.
-
- On one important point, however, the workers prevailed. Last spring, the
- government disclosed that the EPA had begun inspecting Area 51, making it the
- first ''black'' base opened to public inspection. But, citing the privilege,
- the government refused to make the inspection report public, as required by
- law. After the plaintiffs objected, Judge Pro ruled the government could
- withhold the report only if it got an exemption from the president.
-
- Shortly afterward, President Clinton, who the same week publicly apologized to
- the victims of radiation experiments and who is opening up long-classified
- files about public exposure to atom-bomb tests in the 1950s, granted the
- exemption. His memo said keeping the reports secret was in the nation's
- ''paramount interest.''
-
- Copyright © 1996 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- LGM NEWSDESK - Avaliable at the Little Green Men BBS. 01342 844517 - 24 Hours
- Regularly updated - Fido: 2:440/217.0, Internet: lgmnews@nolimits.demon.co.uk
- Found any UFO related stories in the media? Please forward to the LGM NEWSDESK
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-