Passage of The Camp Lejeune Justice Act Could Take Months Longer Than Expected

Water Contamination Lawsuit News

It may be starting to dawn on lawmakers that allowing Marines and their families to sue the military could cost billions of dollars

Tuesday, July 12, 2022 - Lawyer advertising for clients that developed cancer from drinking contaminated water on or near the Camp Lejeune Marine base may have spooked lawmakers to think twice about allowing what could be a tsunami of PFAS water lawsuits against the Federal government. The Camp Lejeune Justice Act is a controversial provision in the Honoring Our Pact Act that allows all people living on or near the marine base from 1953 to 1987 to file a personal injury or wrongful death lawsuit against the Department of Defense and the Federal government for polluting the local tap water and failing to inform the public for decades after knowing marines, civilian employees, and their family members were getting cancer and dying. The two pieces of legislation passed the approval of the US House of Representatives and the Senate and seemed destined for a patriotic Fourth of July approval by the president. According to Yahoo News, the bill is being delayed by a procedural technicality but will billions of dollars on the line, it seems like there is more to the delay than meets the eye. YN wrote, "The bill had already passed through the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, however, a Blue Slip Objection was just brought forth. One of the bill's leaders and advocates, Mike Partain, said the objection is a procedural issue that requires the Senate to fix before the House can move forward with the bill." The Act will be approved later rather than sooner as the fundraising issues need to be resolved in the House of Representatives first, then wait for Senate approval once again, and then the signature of the President.

The Camp Lejeune Justice Act was rejected by the House of Representatives initially on jurisdictional objections but was later included as part of the Honoring Our Pact Act. NewsObserver.com told readers that two North Carolina senators rejected the bill after initially drafting it. "Sens. Thom Tillis and Richard Burr voted Thursday against the bill they helped craft that would benefit veterans from Camp Lejeune who were exposed to toxic chemicals in the base's water for nearly three decades." Another important issue that has arisen in recent weeks is that hundreds of personal injury and wrongful death lawyers have started to advertise looking for Camp Lejeune tap water PFAS cancer clients to file lawsuits when the bill eventually becomes law. Some call the lawyers sharks that have started to circle smelling blood in the water. Attorneys are looking for clients that have cancer or the families of those who have died from the disease sometime in the past fifty years. Lawyers also focus on encouraging the families of children that have died from childhood leukemia, their pregnant mothers having drank contaminated tap water on or near the base during their pregnancy, and whose bodies now fill a local cemetery to file wrongful death lawsuits.

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