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91(B) RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL (RAM)

The term “91(b)” refers to highly classified radioactive material (RAM) covered under Section 91(b) of the Atomic Energy Act (AEA) of 1954 associated with current nuclear weapons material, legacy nuclear weapons maintenance wastes, residuals from nuclear weapons accident/incidents, some residuals from atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons, and residuals from nuclear reactor operations. 1.2.3. Installations located in the United States that possess residual 91(b) [Read More…]
The groundwater and soil are contaminated with radioactive waste
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Why did the US EPA remove any reference to the radioactive contamination at George AFB and other bases?

EPA’s Missing Records: A Cover-Up or Oversight? The US EPA has removed any references to radioactive materials or waste from its website for the following California Superfund sites: George Air Force Base, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, McClellan Air Force Base, Norton Air Force Base, Tracy Defense Depot, and El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. In 1991, the U.S. EPA documented radioactive waste as [Read More…]
An open letter from the Gomez Trial Attorneys to Senators Feinstein and Padilla
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An open letter from the Gomez Trial Attorneys to Senators Feinstein and Padilla

Re: Robert Anderson, et al v. The United States of America 2:21-cv-09102-VAP-PD Dear Senators Feinstein and Padilla, We represent individuals and families whose lives have been devastated by our Nation’s failure to warn them of the dangers of exposure to hazardous materials and waste while they lived and/or worked on the former George Air Force Base. Unfortunately, these families are not alone. There [Read More…]
No Picture
Pesticides

Department of Defense, Base Housing, and Organochlorine Pesticides

Everyone makes mistakes; the real crime is the attempt to cover them up. Did the Department of Defense (DoD) conceal a critical defect in its residential structures built before 1980 (barracks, dorms, and housing), potentially exposing millions to organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) that may have endangered the health of military personnel, their families, and nearby residents? Yes. Did they then fail to inform them [Read More…]
Contamination at U.S. Military Bases Profiles and Responses
Articles

Seeking Justice

When we (the injured) seek justice for our injuries through the courts, we are told that our case has no standing because of the Statute of Limitations, Feres Doctrine, and/or the sovereign immunity clause of the Federal Torts Claim Act (FTCA). How can the DOJ/DOD argue that the Statute of Limitations has expired when rogue employees within the DOD conspired to and did [Read More…]