Wednesday, June 8, 2022 - Children dying en masse is a horrific tragedy no matter how their deaths occur and the perpetrator of the crime of killing them is not always readily apparent. One way that thousands of children have died before their tenth birthday is from leukemia directly related to their mothers drinking contaminated tap water while pregnant. So many children have died from PFAS cancer in the last twenty or so years, on or around the Camp Lejeune Marine Base in North Carolina that the local cemetery has been renamed to honor them. And that is just at the Camp Lejeune base. When you consider the Department of Defense has admitted that more than 400 instances of PFAS drinking water contamination have occurred at hundreds of military bases around the country, the number of dead children could be in the hundreds of thousands. The National Institute of Health (NIH) tells readers that "drinking water contaminated with VOCs may increase the incidence of leukemia among exposed females."
One incident that can not go unnoticed was a childhood leukemia cancer cluster in Woburn Massacheusettes where twenty-one children died over 17-years from 1969-to 1986. The cancer cluster is attributed to pregnant mothers drinking ordinary tap water from three local wells supplied by the contaminated Aberjona River. The river was discovered to be contaminated in 1979. According to Environment and Society.org, "it was discovered in May 1979 that barrels with industrial fluid containing trichloroethylene (TCE) and perchloroethylene (PCE) had been leaking into the Aberjona River. Tests confirmed high concentrations of both organic compounds in two public drinking wells." TCE and PCE are forever chemicals also known as dry cleaning fluid. The Camp Lejeune water contamination catastrophe is being blamed on a local dry cleaner. Thousands of dry cleaners around the country may be contaminating the local drinking water supply with toxic forever chemicals.
Toxic dry cleaning fluid being improperly disposed of and leaching into the local drinking water supply may have contaminated hundreds of neighborhoods throughout the country. In addition to leukemia and cancer, other illnesses are now occurring in numbers never seen before and can be attributed to individuals coming into contact with chemicals used for dry cleaning and textile processing. Regenerate.com explains that Tetrachloroethylene dry cleaning solution may cause "upper respiratory tract and eyes, kidney dysfunction, and neurological effects such as reversible mood and behavioral changes, impairment of coordination, dizziness, headache, sleepiness, and unconsciousness." Plant workers exposed to these chemicals report bladder cancer, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and multiple myeloma, according to RG. The NIH officially reports, "In the early 1980s, two water-supply systems on the Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina were found to be contaminated with the industrial solvents trichloroethylene (TCE) and perchloroethylene (PCE)." That fact underlies the Camp Lejeune Justice Act that could pass this week enabling Marine veterans and their families the right to file a lawsuit against the Federal Government for negligence in failing to warn them about the contaminated local tap water drinking supply. Marines that have had children that have died from leukemia and lived on or near the base should speak with a Camp Lejeune water contamination lawyer as they may be entitle to lump-sum compensatory and punitive damage awards.
Our attorneys specialize in holding large corporations accountable when they've placed profits ahead of safety. Through settlements and winning verdicts, our attorneys have obtained millions for our clients. Let us help you today.
Filing a lawsuit will allow you to hold the federal government accountable for damage it has caused you or a loved one, while also providing real compensation for your medical expenses, suffering and loss. Contact us today for a free consultation.