After
accumulating evidence via the Freedom of Information Act that showed the Environmental Protection Agency conducted
disturbing experiments that exposed humans to
inhalable particulates the agency has said are deadly, sound science advocate Steven
Milloy has sued the federal government.
The trials,
which were carried out at EPA’s Human Studies Facility at the University of
North Carolina in Chapel Hill, exposed subjects to fine particulate matter
(called “PM2.5”) at extremely elevated levels for up to two hours at a time.
EPA’s Web site on particulate matter and its 2009
“Summary of PM2.5 Risk Estimates,” stated, “an examination of cause-specific
risk estimates found that PM2.5 risk estimates for cardiovascular deaths are
similar to those for all-cause deaths….” Also, in July 2011 EPA stated in the
Federal Register announcement of its Cross-State Air Pollution Rule that “a
recent EPA analysis estimated that 2005 levels of PM2.5 and ozone were
responsible for between 130,000 and 320,000 PM2.5-related and 4,700
ozone-related premature deaths….”And to cap it all, last September EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson told the Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, “Particulate matter causes death. It doesn’t make you sick. It’s directly causal to dying sooner than you should.”
But in descriptions
more tangible than statistical, the experiments conducted by EPA’s North
Carolina doctors sound like something out of World War II-era Germany.
“EPA obtained
their PM2.5 from a diesel truck,” explained Dr. David Schnare, a former EPA
litigator who is now director of American Tradition Institute’s Environmental
Law Center, which filed the lawsuit in Virginia. “It is difficult to overstate
the atrocity of this research.
“EPA parked a truck’s exhaust pipe directly beneath an
intake pipe on the side of a building. The exhaust was sucked into
the pipe, mixed with some additional air and then piped directly into the lungs of the human subjects.
EPA actually has pictures of this gas chamber, a clear plastic pipe stuck into
the mouth of a subject, his lips sealing it to his face, diesel fumes inhaled
straight into his lungs.”
Among other
things, the lawsuit demands that:
EPA to be
barred from conducting illegal life-and health-threatening experiments
A formal
investigation of EPA’s human experiments
Regulations
based on the illegal experiments to be suspended pending an investigation
“In the context
of rules established after scientific horrors of World War II and the Tuskegee
syphilis experiments,” Milloy said in a press release announcing the lawsuit,
“the notion that EPA would pipe high levels of PM2.5 and diesel exhaust into
the lungs of unhealthy people to see what would happen is simply appalling.”
In June Milloy
filed a complaint with the North Carolina Medical
Board that accused three doctors in the state – two employed by EPA (Dr. Andrew
Ghio and Dr. Wayne Cascio) and one by the University of North Carolina (Dr.
Eugene Chung) – of intentionally exposing test subjects to PM2.5. In his letter
he outlined the details of EPA’s outrageous activities to the board’s
president.
“During these
experiments,” Milloy wrote, “the study subjects were intentionally exposed to
airborne fine particulate matter (“PM2.5”) at levels ranging from 41.54
micrograms per cubic meter to 750.83 micrograms per cubic meter for periods of
up to two hours.”
Milloy alleged
the three doctors violated EPA standards of conduct in human research as well
as the Hippocratic Oath. Based upon information he obtained via FOIA, Milloy
learned that experiments were conducted on 41 subjects. Of those, one
experienced atrial fibrillation – a 58-year-old obese woman with a history of
health problems and family history of heart disease – and another developed an
elevated heart rate. Both returned to normal breathing and heartbeat function
within two hours, according to an EPA report.
Among the
requirements established by EPA, researchers must minimize risk to subjects and
risks must be reasonable compared to anticipated benefits. Since EPA has
already determined that PM2.5 is lethal and can cause death within hours of
breathing it from the diesel truck’s exhaust pipe, no apparent benefit could
have been derived from the research. Test subjects must be fully informed of
the risks involved, and studies with “risk of substantial injury to a human
subject” are not to be approved except in extremely rare cases that are
approved by higher agency authorities. Milloy – who received 3,500 pages of
documents responsive to his FOIA request – alleges the test subjects were never
told that their health, or lives, were imperiled.
Milloy, who
publishes the Web site Junkscience.com, has created a special Internet site for
the case called EPAHumanTesting.com.
The site archives extensive details, which include historical context about the
legal and proper conduct of scientific experiments on human beings, in addition
to copies of the documents he received and correspondence with government
officials about the case.
“That EPA
administrator Lisa Jackson permitted this heinous experimentation to occur
under her watch shocks the conscience,” said Milloy.
Source: Paul
Chesser is an associate fellow for the National Legal and Policy Center and
publishes CarolinaPlottHound.com,
an aggregator of North Carolina news. He was also director of communications
last year, and a senior fellow for part of this year, for the American
Tradition Institute, which filed the lawsuit representing Steve Milloy.
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