| "TEST VET" TELLS
STORY OF HUMAN EXPERIMENTATION
"I started seeing animals coming out
of walls. People were constantly calling my name, and I'd turn
around, and there was no one there."
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... For more about the lawsuit mentioned in this article ... click
here ...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/10/nf10/nfjan10/nf012210-4.htm
And, for more about what
happened at the Edgewood Arsenal, use our search engine ... click
here ...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=edgewood&op=and
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Veteran seeks case against DoD
HOPE HODGE
http://www.jdnews.com/news/dod-72334-age-rochelle.html
A Jacksonville resident who is
suing the Department of Defense for using experimental drugs on
him during the Vietnam war is one step closer to having his case
heard.
In late January, a lawsuit
filed by six military veterans, Vietnam Veterans of America, and
the organization Swords to Plowshares against the Department of
Defense, Central Intelligence Agency, and U.S. Army overcame a
number of motions to dismiss and won the right to continue with
the legal process. The plaintiffs, all of whom were part of
government experiments at the Edgewood Arsenal in Edgewood, Md.,
and other locations between 1950 and 1976, hope to win healthcare
for physical
damages
sustained during that period and freedom from oaths of secrecy
that they took about the project.
Jacksonville native Frank
Rochelle was 20 in 1968 when he was drafted into the Army.
Stationed at Fort Lee, Va., he said he volunteered for a temporary
duty assignment in which soldiers were told they would be testing
various Army equipment, such as gas masks and boots. Of about 400
applicants for the assignment, Rochelle said he was one of about a
dozen chosen, selected for high scores in physical and mental
aptitude.
After signing a waiver of
confidentiality, Rochelle learned about another task: taking
different drugs and allowing the effects to be recorded. But, he
said, he was told that he wouldn’t be harmed or be given anything
that hadn’t been previously administered to other soldiers. The
second drug Rochelle tested, administered through a breathing
apparatus, was atropine, an anticholinergic drug with
hallucinogenic properties.
The effects were immediate.
“I started seeing animals
coming out of walls,” Rochelle said. “People were constantly
calling my name, and I’d turn around, and there was no one there.”
Although ostensibly under
constant observation, Rochelle found a razor while under the
drug’s effects and tried to gouge his skin, believing his freckles
had turned into living bugs and he needed to cut them out. The
hallucinations, he said, lasted two-and-a-half days.
When Rochelle got out of the
Army in 1970, he said he had trouble holding a job due to
complexes he had developed including authority problems and
claustrophobia, Other symptoms that he believes followed him from
Edgewood include memory loss, anxiety disorders, breathing
disorders and heart problems.
After retirement from a
maintenance job at Camp Lejeune in 2009, Rochelle began searching
the Internet for others with stories like his. He found nearly 35
veterans on the search that also led him to Gordon Erspamer,
senior counsel at the law firm Morrison & Foerster, which agreed
to take his case on pro bono.
Erspamer said the law suit,
filed in July, has passed its first large hurdle in overcoming
motions to dismiss.
“We felt very strongly that what
they did to these men was wrong,” Erspamer said. “We also felt
very strongly that the secrecy oaths exacted
from
them under threat of court martial were also wrong.”
Of the 7,200 GIs who
participated in drug testing at Edgewood or other facilities,
Rochelle estimates 3,500 to 4,000 remain, which gives his quest a
note of urgency.
“The government, in my opinion,
has been waiting for us to die off,” he said.
The lawsuit still faces a number
of obstacles, including document requests, interrogatories, and
subpoenas. Erspamer is working in the first quarter of the year to
get the veterans certified as a class. But he believes that,
ultimately, the suit will be successful.
“The strength of cases more
often than not depends on the facts,” Erspamer said. “And the
facts of this case are so compelling.”
Officials with DoD and CIA have
told media they do not comment on pending litigation.
For more information, visit
edgewoodtestvets.org.
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