Frank Vera

I voluntarily enlisted in the Air Force during the Vietnam War but was never deployed to Vietnam.  Entering the Air Force, I was physically healthy with no disqualifying defects; reasonably intelligent (Scored a 98 with a category I on the Armed Forces Qualification Test AFQT); of good moral character (Passed an EBI security clearance, “Top Secret Clearance”); and was nuke qualified.   I had a promising career in the Air Force.

I was stationed at George Air Force Base (AFB) from 1973 to 1974, where I was assigned to the 35th MMS, AFSC 462×0 weapons, worked in the Gun Shop, and lived on base on the ground floor of an old WWII barracks.  Within one month of being stationed at George AFB, I asked to be transferred to swing or night shift so that I could work part-time (about 30 hours a week) at B&B Cycles in Victorville as a motorcycle mechanic.  Shortly after being stationed at George AFB, my life became a living hell.  Within two months I developed a rash over my entire body and started having respiratory problems. During the last eight months of service, I was on placed on light to complete duty restriction, hospitalized five times, almost died three times (a Gun Shop accident, radiation exposure, and almost bleeding to death from a wisdom tooth extraction), and lost 58 pounds, going from 192 pounds to 134 pounds, a significant weight loss for someone 6ft 4in.

I was honorably discharged 15 months after arriving at George AFB.  I was discharged while having frequent episodes of seizures and tremors; with a back brace and on crutches; bleeding out of all of my body’s orifices; with constant migraines; and barely able to walk, talk, read, or write.  I was discharged with boxes of medication, no place to live, no income or medical care, and without the ability to work.  On February 21, 1990, George AFB was listed as a Superfund site, EPA ID: CA2570024453.

I have been diagnosed by the Veterans Administration as having a non-service connected: radiation exposure, radiation myelitis, radiation myocarditis; emphysema and osteoporosis that are secondary to my radiation exposure. Additionally, I have spontaneous stress fractures, histiocytosis, Rosai-Dorfman disease, seizures, emphysema, COPD, asthma, chronic pain syndrome (CPS), and depression; enlarged spleen and liver. I have constant headaches and migraines; ulcers, lesions, and polyps in the GI tract.  I have had over a dozen polyps removed, 3 lymph node biopsies, and 1 bone marrow biopsy, all benign but abnormal. When I was 40, I was told that I had the bone density of an eighty-year-old woman and that the osteoporosis was so severe that it would prove fatal if I did not immediately volunteer for an osteoporosis research project at the local Veterans Administration Hospital. Since then, I have had numerous stress fractures.

Gun Shop Accident

I was crushed when an approximately 1,100-pound M61A1 Vulcan Gun System from an F4-E was dropped on me during an illegal procedure of transferring the gun system from a “jammer” flight line forklift to a work dolly. This injury resulted in a severe concussion (traumatic brain injury); a dislocated right shoulder and wrist; a broken sternum and cracked ribs; a hiatal hernia; hemorrhoids; severe damage to the coccyx, sacroiliac (SI), lumbar/thoracic spine; and injury to the left hip and both knees. Because of the injury to the spine, I required a back brace and crutches to walk any distance or stand for any length of time and was placed on duty restriction (no lifting, bending, prolonged standing or sitting) until I was discharged eight months later. I was treated for severe pain, depression, a nervous breakdown, and the inability to sleep (because of pain), at George AFB.

Impact force on my lumbar vertebra

The M61A1 Vulcan Gun System weighed 1,100-pounds and I weighed 195-pounds.  (1100+195) x1.25 (impact) = 1618.75 lbs  The force on my lumbar vertebra would be 700 lbs/in2.  For comparison, a concrete masonry block would be crushed beyond 1500 lbs/in2

Trichloroethylene (TCE) Exposure

Because of my duty restriction for the back injury (no lifting, no bending, no prolonged standing or sitting), I was assigned to wash parts in hot Trichloroethylene (TCE) in the “Hot Wash Tank” with no safety training or equipment at the Release/Gun Shop and at the aerospace ground equipment (AGE) shop.  I was not provided with any respirator and the rubberized canvas gloves and apron provided both had holes in them and were saturated with TCE.

Trichloroethylene (TCE) is a highly toxic solvent degreasing.  It is linked to heart malformations in exposed fetuses, kidney toxicity including cancer, immunotoxicity, neurotoxicity, and liver toxicity including cancer.  Trichloroethylene Toxicity – ATSDR

Radiation Exposure

When the third Airman from the Gun Shop was killed in Vietnam, I wanted to get away from everyone, so I rode my dirt bike (3 to 5 mph because of the back injury) to the base motocross track.  Because of my back injury, I could barely ride my dirt bike, so I sat in the ravine in the MX track to mope.  While I was sitting there in the base recreational area, I saw an unmarked, olive drab (military green) barrel, so I opened it and dug into it.  About 45 minutes after digging into the barrel, my lungs started hurting, so I headed back to the barracks.  I had a seizure in the middle of the road and did not make it back to the barracks.  A man and his son in a light blue Dodge pickup found me and took me to the base hospital, where I was admitted.  I later learned that the content of the barrel I had opened was radioactive material.  This exposure was the subject of several Congressional investigations, including an investigation by Bob Stump, Chairman House Committee on Veterans Affairs.

Car Accident

I do not remember the accident, but there is a notation in my records that I was a passenger of a car that was rear-ended, and I reinjured my back, received a whiplash, and suffered another concussion.

Life-Threatening Hemorrhage after Wisdom Tooth Extraction (Removal)

letter – E Zigo to F Vera - wisdom teeth extraction GAFBI was in the process of being medically retired when Col. Myer, the base Dentist, pulled four impacted wisdom teeth without first checking my platelet count.  I had an extremely low platelet count because of my radiation exposure.  I had to be hospitalized for about a week for blood loss and received numerous transfusions during that week at George AFB Hospital.

On the second day of my hospitalization, Col. Myer entered my hospital room and asked what had happened to me to cause the uncontrolled hemorrhaging.  I told him about the barrel at the base MX track.  He had me describe the barrel, the contents, and the location.  He came back with the Base Engineer, Hospital Commander, Base Command, and the base JAG (attorney).  Three days after I was discharged from the hospital, I was called into the base JAG’s office.  I was told that I did not want a Medical Retirement and that I “wanted” an Honorable Discharge.  With a disabling and severe back injury, I was forced to sit on a hard metal chair in an office for about four days until I agreed to take an  Honorable Discharge with the guarantee that if I needed the Medical Retirement, the Air Force would help.  In 47 years, the Air Force has done nothing to help, and I spent 23 years homeless.

Illegal Discharge

I was given an Administrative Discharge under Honorable Conditions (a fuckup discharge) instead of being Medically Retired. It is illegal to discharge anyone until he or she is stable and able to work, or on disability with medical care. At the time of discharge, I had been hospitalized five times and had been on duty restriction for the last 8 months of service; I was having seizures and tremors; I was on crutches, bleeding out of all my body’s orifices and with constant migraines; and I could barely walk, talk, read, or write. I was discharged with nothing more than boxes of medication. Because I was honorably discharged instead of being medically retired, the Air Force fraudulently altered and withheld my medical records. I spent about 23 years incredibly sick, in pain, homeless and hungry, until 1997 when the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Mr. Jesse Brown, intervened on my behalf and ordered the Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Regional Office (VARO) to award me Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) at 70% with Individual Unemployability (IU). This is equal to a Service-Connected Rating of 100% Permanent and Total (P&T) disability. Unfortunately, I had already spent the majority of the previous 23 years homeless.

Timeline and Supporting Documents

On this page, numerous documents refer to my “probable radiation exposure” or “non-service connected radiation exposure.”  Unfortunately, until the Department of Energy (DOE), Department of Defense (DOD), and Air Force (AF) acknowledge the presence of the radioactive material and the cleanup that took place in the early 1980s, my exposure will remain probable and non-service connected. The radioactive waste dumpsite located south of Air Base Road, and east of the Bomb Dump and small arms range, was cleaned up at the same time as the former small arms range was.

Buried Radioactive Waste at George AFB

1971

  • George AFB was notified by HQ USAF that all of its radioactive waste burial sites were to be accounted for, fenced off, and clearly marked.  They were not.
    See: Headquarters USAF survey letter – Radioactive Waste Disposal, Hq, SCN 71-28 -AF – 19 February 1971

1972

  • Burial of Radioactive Waste in the USAF – 15 March 1972
    Positive Responses for George AFB Pages 13, 21, & 31
  • I voluntarily enlisted in the Air Force during the Vietnam War, was physically healthy, passed my induction physical with no restrictions; was reasonably intelligent, scored a 98 Category I on the Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT); of good moral character and psychologically stable, passed my Extended Background Investigation (EBI)  and was nuke qualified and had a promising career in the Air Force. See DD-214 Report of Separation from Active Duty  – Box “27 Remarks”
  • Stationed at Lackland Air Force Base, TX and graduated fifth in my flight from basic training.
  • Stationed at Lowry Air Force Base, CO for Tech School and I tied for third place in my class from tech school (AFSC 462×0).  I went to weapons tech school in the “Black Shack.”

1973 – 1974

  • Stationed at George Air Force Base, CA
    At George Air Force Base, CA, lived on-base in the 35th MMS barracks, and was discharged 17 months later after having been hospitalized twice, having lost 58 lbs., going from 192 lbs. to 134 lbs., which is a significant weight loss for someone 6ft 4in. My first hospitalization was at the George Air Force Base Hospital for about 1 week and I was then transferred to March AFB Hospital for about 3 weeks. The second hospitalization was at the George AFB hospital for about a week. I was on duty restriction for the last 8 months of service. In the first 3 months of duty restriction, I was on light duty, and in the last 6 months, I was on complete duty restriction. I was discharged on crutches, having seizures, bleeding out of all of my body’s orifices, with nonstop migraines, and could barely talk.

While I was stationed at George AFB I had five major injuries, and complications from these injuries.

1973

 1. Accident in the gun shop – a 1,100-pound M61A1 Vulcan gun system from an F-4E was dropped on me – George AFB
1973 Accident in the gun shop Flicker
1973 Accident in the gun shop PDF

2. Trichloroethylene (TCE) Exposure – I was placed on light duty after the accident in the gun shop and was assigned to wash parts in TCE in the hot wash tank at the Gun and Aerospace Ground Equipment (AGE) shops  for about two months – George AFB

3. Probable Radiation Exposure – I opened and dug into a barrel in the Southeast Disposal Area (SEDA) (the DoD will not comment on the contents of the barrel) – George AFB

1974

Improper and possibly illegal honorable discharge from the Air Force at George AFB

I was in the process of being medically discharged when Col. Myer, DDS, decided to pull out 4 impacted wisdom teeth.  Because of an extremely low platelet count I almost bled to death and spent about 5 days in the hospital getting blood transfusions. Col. Myer asked what had happened to me that could have caused this, and I told them about finding and opening the barrel in the base sanctioned motocross track south of Airbase Road and being hospitalized at George and March AFB hospitals.  When I was discharged from the hospital or the wisdom teeth extractions, I was called to the JAG’s office to explain what had happened.  I repeated the story about finding and opening the barrel and being hospitalized.  The JAG sent me back to my barracks.  They called me back about 3 days later and insisted that I take an Honorable discharge instead of a medical discharge.  I think the AF did not want to medically discharge/retire me because it requires a Medical Evaluation Board (MEB) and the AF would have to explain in writing on my permanent record what happened and why there was a radioactive waste dump in the base sanction recreational area (an MX track).

DD-214 Report of Separation from Active Duty – George AFB
My DD-214 has my AFSC listed as 70010 Apr Admin Helper. I never worked as an Admin Helper. My AFSC was 46250 Weapons Systems Specialist. I had an EBI security clearance and had an Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT) score of 98% I.  My AFSC and my security clearance was pulled just before I was discharged.

1976

  • Workers Compensation
    Workman’s comp ruled that I was permanently and totally disabled because of a preexisting medical condition (seizures were the result of an injury in the military).  Unfortunately, because of the seizures, I was no longer insurable under worker’s compensation insurance.

1977

  • Social Security’s Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
    The worker’s comp attorney filed for SSI for me. Social Security denied the claim.

1979

1980

  • Lymph node biopsy – VA Loma Linda Medical Center
    “Benign lymph node with marked sinus histiocytosis”
  • Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) Denial
    Prior to the lymph node biopsy, my doctor wrote a letter and referred me to the hospital Patient Advocate to have them file for SSDI. In the letter from my doctor to Social Security stated Mr. Vera is extremely ill we think that he has lymphoma and he is homeless and he has about six months to a year and a half to live. Because of his extensive medical problems, he should be granted SSDI.
    Social Security denied my claim on the grounds that the illness was not expected to last more than a year.

1983

1985

1987

  • Mitral Valve Prolapse – VA Loma Linda Medical Center
    “Mr. Vera has mitral valve prolapse. it is advisable that he not lift any load weighing more than 50 lbs.”
  • Seizures – VA Loma Linda Medical Center

1988

  • I qualified for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) SS found that I was permanently and totally disabled

1990

  • VA Compensation and Pension (C&P) exam diagnoses probable radiation myocarditis – VA Bay Pines Medical Center
    In 1990 I won the medical side of a Compensation and Pension Exam with diagnoses of probable radiation myocarditis. This was done with the help of the medical staff at VA Bay Pines Medical Center and the research librarians at the Stetson University of Law Gulfport, FL. Unfortunately, I lost the Compensation and Pension case with the Veterans Affairs because the DoD would neither confirm nor deny the presence of the radioactive material at George AFB, CA.
  • Congressman George E. Brown request that the Air Force investigate my radiation exposure
    Mr. Vera opted for an honorable discharge versus the medical discharge, that was recommended by his superiors when he separated from the military. Mr. Vera’s military records indicated that he was exhibiting the same symptoms that are indicative of exposure to nuclear radiation (radiation myelitis). The fact that it was not diagnosed accurately, while Mr. Vera was in the military, does not prove that he was not suffering from radiation myelitis.

1991

  • OSI / FBI investigation into my possible exposure to an unknown, possible CBRN material at the former George Air Force Base, CA.  A separate investigation into “potential [environmental] hazards that were known to the Air Force at that time” at George Air Force Base, CA.
    See: FOIA request – OSI investigation CBRN – George AFB – 4 April 2012

1993

  • CAT scan Bone Density
    Mean spinal bone density is 88 mg per cc: which is significantly lower for this patient’s age and sex.” “Major Abnormality, No Attn. Needed”

1994

  • Vera referral Oak Ridge DOE – VA Loma Linda Medical Center
    40-year-old w/male w/complicated H/0 exposure (Extensive) to possible toxic and weapons-grade isotopes in the 1970s or 1980s. Suspect long-lived isotopes. The patient has hematologic dyscrasias and bone abnormalities including osteomalacia or osteoporosis wondering about possible ingestion of long-lived isotopes, possibly radioactive and could include Gamma, Beta or Alpha emitters. Please schedule for total body survey for these types of isotopes.
    This 1994 referral was the result of about 1 year of work by my congressman’s office, several doctors, and myself.  The Department of Veterans Affairs Department and the Department of Energy (DOE) had approved a whole-body count to be done at the Radiation Dosimetry Laboratory at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, TN.  The appointment date was being confirmed and to get the airplane tickets and lodging. The DoD stopped the radiation assessment.
  • Osteoporosis research consent form – VA Loma Linda Medical Center
  • William C Capel Vocational Rehabilitation – non-service connected radiation exposure – VA Loma Linda Medical Center
    “The veteran has apparently exhausted all means to get the VA to recognize the radiation exposure. Apparently, there is no rating for radiation exposure and the Rating Board is hamstrung from acting. The veteran is urged to write letters to Clinton, Gore, and Jessie Brown with full documentation of the detail of the radiation exposure and ask for assistance. This CP concurred with this action on the veteran’s part as apparently, no other option was available.”
  • GAFB Airman [Frank Vera] Exposed to Radiation – newspaper article

1996

1997

  • Jesse Brown, United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs personal interest case -Debi Bevins – Frank Vera – Los Angeles VARO
    This is a Secretary Brown Interest case.” “Personal Interest of the Secretary – Expedite
  • VA Secretary Jesse Brown / President Clinton’s investigation – Frank Vera – files from the Clinton Library obtained under FOIA
    In 1997 after an investigation of my medical care and my C&P claim, VA Secretary Jesse Brown ordered the Los Angeles VARO to award me 70% with Total Disability Based on Individual Unemployability (TDIU). This is equal to a Service Connected Rating Of 100%. Unfortunately, I had already spent the majority of the previous 23 years homeless and hungry. This investigation centered on injury caused by the accident in the Gun Shop in 1973.
  • At the recommendation of VA Secretary Jesse Brown’s staff, the radiation exposure was not addressed this investigation because there is no rating for an accidental radiation exposure. The only radiation exposure that the VA will acknowledge is Veterans that participated in atmospheric and certain underground nuclear tests; Took part in the American occupation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan; Certain veterans who were POWs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki; or Served at gaseous diffusion plants in Paducah, Ky., Portsmouth, Ohio, and area K25 at Oak Ridge, Tenn. (See: VA Programs For Veterans Exposed To Radiation)

2012

2013

The Patient Reps at Loma Linda VA MC that helped

  • Roosevelt Harris
  • AJ Hobson

I am not a doctor, Veterans Service Officer (VSO), or attorney; therefore, I cannot provide medical or legal advice.

If you, a friend, or a loved one have been injured or have passed away due to exposure to contamination at a DOD Superfund Site, please follow the steps outlined on the "Get Help" page.

The views and opinions expressed on this website belong solely to the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any agency of the U.S. government.

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