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Petty Officer Third Class David M. Ponder
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Jan. 21, 2001 update: David M. Ponder is currently serving time in Pensacola for
refusing to take the anthrax vaccine. Ponder was sentenced last week to 60 days and a two-grade,
pay-and-rank cut.
From: Petty Officer Third Class David M. Ponder, United States Navy
To: Committee on Government Reform
Subj: WRITTEN TESTIMONY FOR THE COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT REFORM
Oct. 3, 2000
Dear Honorable Members of the Committee,
I am thankful for the Committeeââs time and concern regarding the Department of Defense
mandatory Anthrax Vaccination Immunization Program. I hope that I can provide some
insight and understanding to the Committee as to how this program has affected me
personally and how this program is really being implemented, out in the ããreal worldää,
not as it has been discussed in theory by some members of the military establishment
in these halls.
I am a Third Class Petty Officer in the United States Navy. I am in the Seabees, the
construction force for the Navy. My views here in my testimony are my own and not
meant to be taken as those of the Navy.
I have been in the Navy for a little over three years. I have a wife of two years
and a son that just turned one year old. I am now deployed to Camp Shields, Okinawa,
Japan. I have been here for six months. The way the Seabees work is that you have
eight battalions. My battalion is Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 74. We are
home-ported in Gulfport, Mississippi. Every seven months we make a seven-month
deployment. The rotation works that we are deployed to Puerto Rico, go back to
home-port, then deploy to Okinawa, and then back to home, each stop being for
seven months. When the battalion is deployed there is what is called Details.
These are detachments from the main body of the battalion. For instance, this
deployment we had details in Atsugi, Sasebo, and Iwakuni, in main land Japan.
We also had two in South Korea, one in Chinhae and one in Pohang, the detail
which I was to accompany.
My family and I returned from leave and we found out that anybody going to South
Korea for any period of time was to receive the Anthrax Vaccine. The Chinhae and
Pohang details had to get their first shot on Jan. 12. I went to the medical clinic
and told my chief that I wasnât taking the shot. Later that day, my chief and my
company commander gave me a written order to take it and I refused that also. There
were two other people that refused the shot at the same time. In early February, we
went to Captainââs Mast. That is another name for non-judicial punishment (NJP). I
had been wrestling with the idea of turning that down and requesting a trial by
court-martial. The other two elected to take their punishment at Captainââs Mast.
The punishment for them was 45 days of restriction and extra duty, reduction rate
one pay grade, and have half monthââs pay taken for two months. I opted to go with
the court-martial because I did not want to take Captainââs Mast and be punished
for the same thing six months down the road when this vaccine was ordered again. I
knew that I was never going to take the shot.
I would like to explain my reasoning for this. Prior to this, there had already been
rumblings about the program and the shot. I had heard and read about people who refused
to take it and I had also read and heard about some of the adverse reactions people had
had to the shots. I had heard about a study that showed the presence of squalene
antibodies in a large number of Gulf War veterans who showed signs of Gulf War Illness.
I believe that an article appeared in Newsweek in September 1999, time frame. The article,
and other research I conducted, pointed strongly to the fact that the DoD had given an
experimental anthrax vaccine to troops during the Gulf War. People who had received the
Gulf War anthrax vaccine and who never went to the Gulf had squalene antibodies in their
system. As I understand it, the only way that those antibodies could be present was if
squalene had been introduced into the body. During the gulf War, the DoD had given a number
of drugs and vaccines to troops and was testing an experimental anthrax vaccine that
contained squalene, a kind of booster for the immune system, on cattle. All of this made
me very nervous and I had also read reports of veterans passing illnesses on to their
families. My wife was pregnant with our son at the time and I was scared. Regardless of
the source and information, I had some serious questions about the vaccine as my time to
take it approached.
After discussing the matter at some length with my wife and agonizing over the decision,
I decided not to take it; I decided that my familyââs and my own long-term health were
more important than my career in the Navy. At that time, my Navy career appeared to hold
a bright future, I had enlisted in the Navy and received advanced promotion to E-4 upon
completing my A school as a Seabee. I knew that there would be repercussions for refusing
the vaccine, but I never dreamed how dire they would be. I originally had hoped that I
would be allowed to part company with the Navy amicably, but that was not to be the case.
After I refused the vaccine, I was told that I would be given Captainââs Mast, which, under
the Uniform Code of Military Justice, I had the right to refuse in favor of a court-martial.
I didnât particularly want this, but I knew that I was never going to take the shot, so I
refused Captainââs Mast in the late January to early February time frame, with my unit
scheduled to deploy in March to Okinawa. Before the Captainââs Mast I had been told by our
legal advisor that if I refused Captainââs Mast and elected to fight the order at a
court-martial, I would more than likely be left in Gulfport. The vaccine, I was told, was
a prerequisite to deployment. Despite this, after I refused Mast, I was told that I was
going to be going to Okinawa to be court-martialed. Something about this didnât seem right
and so I hired a civilian attorney to represent me, a considerable expense for someone
drawing E-4 pay with a wife and son. There had been two people in our battalion who, about
a week earlier had gone to Captainââs Mast on drug charges. They refused Mast as well and
went to a court-martial. They were both kept in Mississippi for their trials.
My civilian attorney tried unsuccessfully to prevent the Navy from taking me to Okinawa,
but the judge denied our motion. I then was deployed to Okinawa in March and charges were
brought against me. Captain Dale Saran, United States Marine Corps, was detailed as my
defense attorney. During the time of my court-martial, I have learned a lot about the
anthrax vaccine and the anthrax program. None of it has ever given me any reason to question
my decision. In fact, everything has only further steeled my resolve and made me absolutely
certain of the wisdom of my decision. I would like to detail some of the things that have
happened and things that I have learned since this all began.
I have learned that there have never been any long-term studies on the effects of the
anthrax vaccine. I learned that the company that makes the vaccine still, to this day,
cannot get FDA approval because of problems with its production facility, including serious
quality control violations that raise questions about what exactly is in these lots of
vaccine. I do not have to detail all of the problems to this Committee. One only has to
pick up the paper, it seems, and at least once a month there is some new revelation about
the company, the vaccine, or the program that would scare me if I had taken the shot.
It boggles the mind. Some examples:
-- Bioport, the company that makes the vaccine, had to be bailed out by the military to
the tune of millions of dollars, and it currently is undergoing criminal investigation
for how some of those funds were spent
-- The Secretary of Defense stated that four criteria would have to be met before the
program would begin. One of those four criteria was independent review of the program
by a civilian expert. As you well know, that civilian medical doctor from Yale, a
so-called ããexpertää, turned out to know nothing about anthrax öö his specialty involves
Obstetrics and Gynecology. In fact, you are already well aware of this because he was
asked to testify before congress but declined and will no longer answer questions
about his role in the ããreviewää
-- The FDA conducted an inspection of the companyââs production facility last November
and found over forty violations, most of them serious ones in how the vaccine was produced
-- Recently a worker at Bioportââs facility died in part because of the vaccine,
according to the coronerââs report and now the FDA has in fact found squalene in lots
of the anthrax vaccine, which the DoD has long denied that were ever there
It would be shocking in the extreme if all of this were new, but unfortunately, for the
DoD, it is not. Committees of past Congresses have found these kinds of abuses of
service membersâ basic rights for over fifty years. I urge members of this Committee
to read the 1994 Rockefeller report, which details a laundry list of DoD use of members
of our Armed Forces service members as guinea pigs, sometimes with pure motives,
sometimes not so pure motives. In fact, the one thing that I have learned through all
of this is that the order to take the anthrax vaccine is patently illegal because it
violates an act of this Congress, a law that was passed specifically because of some
of the issues that arise when vaccines are used for purposes other than which they
were originally intended.
I am speaking of 10 USC ¤¤ 1107 and the history behind that law and the hard learned
mistakes, which caused this Congress to enact such a law. This and previous congressââ
experience in investigation Gulf War Illness revealed some startling problems with
the DoDââs use of two particular drugs during the Gulf war, pyridostigmine bromide
(PB) and botulinum toxoid (BT) vaccine. I will not presume to lecture members of
this committee about things that they may already have heard, but it seems we have
not learned, and the DoD certainly has not learned the lessons from the Gulf. Arguments
about the anthrax vaccineââs efficacy or safety are really beside the point. A mandatory
vaccination program is simply against the law. I provide a brief history only for
those who may not be aware of it.
PB was licensed in 1956. The drug was tested safe and effective to work against a
particular disease, myasthenia gravis, in a certain quantity, administered in a
certain protocol, in a very limited population. That is how specific the license
for a new drug must be in order to be approved by the FDA. PB was not licensed to
be used as a pretreatment for nerve agents. The DoD asked for and obtained a waiver
of the informed consent requirement in order to administer this drug and botulinum
toxoid (ããBTää), a vaccine. At the time, the PB was to be administered in 30 mg
tablets, an amount less than that typically administered to myasthenia gravis
patients. (See House Veterans Affairs Subcommittees on Health and Oversight Hearings,
16 Nov 1999, ããPossible Health Effects of Pyridostigimine Bromide on Gulf War
Veterans.ää[1]) There were no long-term studies on effects of PB as a pretreatment
for nerve gas, but the thought process was that since it had been used on myasthenia
gravis patients since 1956 and produced a particular chemical reaction in the body
that there should be no cause for concern with using it on soldiers. Unfortunately,
this type of linear thinking does not hold true because it assumes linear relationships
in the field of medicine. Subsequent experiments have indicated that PB may have severe
adverse health effects when withdrawn, or when the patient using it is under heat,
stress, and other conditions that were present during the Gulf. Additionally, it may
in fact aggravate the effects of other nerve agents, or aggravate the effects of the
same nerve agent in non-lethal doses. Of course no one could foresee this at the time,
but it provides a lesson for all of us, particularly the military medical establishment,
about the necessity for long-term studies when drugs are used for different purposes
than they were originally intended. Additionally, the FDA withdrew the DoDââs waiver
after the Gulf War and changed the regulations back to what they had always been,
requiring a personââs (including service membersââ) informed consent before administering
such an investigational or experimental drug.
As a result of this experience and previous Congressââ inquiry into these areas,
10 USC ¤¤1107 was passed to prevent vaccination of someone with an ããinvestigationalää
drug or a drug ããunapproved for its applied useää without their prior informed consent.
I can assure you that I have never given my consent nor has it been asked for by the
DoD. What is particularly amazing to me is that the DoD knows that the drug is investigational
but it continues to prosecute people like me. In 1996, the predecessor of Bioport filed
an investigational new drug application with the FDA. One of the reasons for the application
was a change to the anticipated route of infection of anthrax for an aerosolized infection.
The original anthrax vaccine, the same one that is currently being given to service members,
was licensed as a prophylaxis against cutaneous (skin) exposure to the disease. The DoD
expects that any weaponized anthrax will be in aerosol form and that is why it joined in
the MBPI application and even urged the company to make the change. I have the seen the
minutes of meetings between the DoD and MBPI personnel. The DoD knew and has known for
quite some time that the current license for the vaccine is only for cutaneous anthrax.
Furthermore, FDA regulations state that when such an application is filed, the use of a
particular drug for the purposed listed in the application is investigational 30 days
after the filing unless the FDA acts otherwise on the application. The President and
CEO of Bioport, Mr. Fuad El-hibri, has testified before this Congress that BioPort still
has the application pending before the FDA.
The DoD joined in that application and the proposed clinical experiment for the license
amendment was to be conducted at Fort Detrick, Maryland. In fact, the clinical protocol
required volunteers for this project. Somehow, though, the DoD now mandates that all
service members take a vaccine for which it requested volunteers in 1996. At the same
time, the DoD comes before Congress and talks about the vaccine as safe and the vaccineââs
long-term safety record with veterinarians. This is simply not true and doctors have
testified before Congress that no long-term epidemiological study or tracking was ever
done of these veterinarians or wool workers. Additionally, this is exactly the same kind
of thing the DoD said with PB and BT before the Gulf in order to get a waiver from the
FDA regulations for those drugs. We now know what a bad idea that was because battlefield
use of PB with troops is not the same as the use of PB in a clinical setting on a limited
population. The DoDââs AVIP program is a repeat of the DoDââs PB and BT biological warfare
pretreatment programs. However, this time, the DoD doesnât have a waiver from the FDA,
but continues on with the program and prosecutions of those of us who refuse to gamble
our long-term health on such a program. This Congress, this country, and veterans of the
Gulf War have already learned the lesson the hard way, paying with taxpayer dollars and,
in the case of veterans, their health and lives.
It appears as though history will repeat itself because the DoD will not admit what is so
blatantly obvious to those of us staring down the barrel and who are more concerned about
our health than our careers, the program was and is a bad idea, no matter how well intentioned.
I would like to add a final footnote to my testimony. My command took me to Okinawa because
it was necessary for me to be with my unit. My unit is now preparing to return home to our
home port and our sailors to their families . . . except, of course, for me. Because my
attorney was able to get a stay of my court-martial for the Navy and Marine Court of Appeals
to hear one of our motions, I am being left behind in Okinawa. Meanwhile, all of the witnesses
and even jurors of the court-martial will return home to their families while we await the
appeals process which could take many more months or even result in dismissal of the case.
Even my attorney has changed duty stations to Quantico, Virginia, while I remain behind,
to do what, I have no idea. I was offered, through my attorney, one chance to return home
if I agree to plead guilty for disobeying a lawful order at a lesser forum and accept my
punishment. Unless I agree to that, I will, according to my command, be staying in Okinawa
for who knows how long. My only regret in all of this is the price that my wife and son
have had to pay for my decisions. I want to close by thanking my wife and family for all
of their support through this.
Very Respectfully,
_________________
DAVID M. PONDER
PO3 USN
[1] The tablets were to be taken 3 times per day; a ããtypicalää myasthenia gravis patient
might take 60 mg, 3 times and much more over a long period of time.
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