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FORMER INDIANA GUARD COMMANDER BLAMES
TERMINAL CANCER ON CHEMICAL EXPOSURE --
Retired Lt. Col. James Gentry, 51, is under
hospice
care and has been told he has only weeks to live.
For more about the Indiana Guard and chemical
exposure (with backlinks), click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/08/
nf08/nfdec08/nf120408-3.htm
Story here...
http://www.nwitimes.co
m/articles/2008/12/11/ap-state-in/d950ata00.txt
Story below:
Your comments accepted at bottom of
page.
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Former Guard commander blames cancer on chemical
WILLIAMS, Ind. - A former Indiana National Guard commander diagnosed with
terminal cancer believes his illness was caused by exposure to toxic
chemicals at a water pumping plant in Iraq.
Retired Lt. Col. James Gentry, 51, is under hospice care and has been told
he has only weeks to live, The Times-Mail of Bedford reported Wednesday in
its online edition.
But
his concern isn't just for himself.
"I'm very concerned about the ... other soldiers," said Gentry, who
requires assistance to move from a living room chair to the dining room
table in his home about 70 miles southwest of Indianapolis.
Gentry was commander of the 1st Battalion, 152nd Infantry, which was
assigned to guard the Qarmat Ali water pumping plant in Basrah, Iraq
shortly after the U.S. invasion in 2003.
Sixteen soldiers from the unit filed a federal
lawsuit last week against defense contractor KBR Inc., saying its
employees knowingly allowed them to be exposed to sodium dichromate, a
known carcinogen, while guarding the water plant.
Gentry is not a party to the suit, but he believes he was exposed to the
chemical.
The chemical, used to remove pipe corrosion, is especially dangerous
because it contains hexavalent chromium, which is known to cause birth
defects and cancer, particularly lung cancer, according to the suit.
The
cancer can take years to develop.
The Guard began notifying Gentry and other soldiers in the unit in July
that they might have been exposed to the chemical.
Gentry had begun having breathing problems before he returned to Iraq for
a second tour of duty.
He was diagnosed with cancer in 2006, the
newspaper said, and has spent time in and out of Veterans Administration
hospitals in Louisville, Ky., and Indianapolis.
"I guess our concern ... is that these soldiers get checked out in a
timely fashion," said his wife, Lou Ann.
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posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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