FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT
John J. Michels, Jr., Esq.
(703) 712-5350
Mark S. Zaid, Esq.
(202) 371-6626
FEDERAL LAWSUIT FILED TODAY CHALLENGING DEFENSE DEPARTMENT'S
ANTHRAX VACCINATION IMMUNIZATION PROGRAM
Action Against Pentagon, FDA and Vaccine Manufacturer
Seeks To Declare Vaccine Experimental And Illegal By Its Current
Use
WASHINGTON, D.C.
May 3, 2001
The highest
ranking military officer and the first military physician to
refuse the controversial anthrax vaccine filed a lawsuit today
before the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia. Sonnie Bates, a former Air Force Major, and Captain
John Buck have sued to request that a federal judge declare the
vaccine as it is being presently used by the U.S. military as an
experimental drug. The vaccine is being utilized by the
Department of Defense ("DoD") in order to allegedly
protect servicemembers and civilian contractors from exposure to
aerosolized anthrax. However, the Food and Drug Administration
("FDA") has never formally approved the vaccine for
this use.
An
Investigational New Drug ("IND") application was filed
in 1996 by the DoD and the vaccine manufacturer requesting FDA
approval for the vaccine for use against aerosol anthrax. The
IND application still remains pending despite DoD's inoculation
of more than 500,000 persons. Named as defendants, on behalf of
their respective agencies, will be Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, Secretary of Health and Human Services, Tommy Thompson,
and Bernard A. Schwetz, Acting Principal Deputy Commissioner,
FDA, as well as BioPort, Inc., the vaccine's manufacturer.
While
assigned to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, Major Bates refused
the anthrax vaccine in November 1999, and was forced to end his
14-year career as a result. Although he was not court-martialed,
he was given a general discharge under honorable conditions in
March 2000, and ordered to pay a fine. Captain Buck, however, is
facing formal court-martial charges for his refusal in January
2001, and is scheduled to be prosecuted at Keesler Air Force
Base, Mississippi, in September 2001.
"The
substantive changes in the way the vaccine is used and the
purpose for which it is used render the vaccine an IND under
current federal law," said John J. Michels, Jr., one of the
attorneys in the case. "As an IND, the vaccine may not be
administered to service members without their informed consent.
It is patently illegal", he added.
Internal
government documents, many of which are described within the
lawsuit Complaint, revealed a history of health violations and
scientific concerns regarding the DoD's Anthrax Vaccination
Immunization Program ("AVIP"). A 1994 report by the
Senate Veterans Affairs Committee concluded that the vaccine
could not be expected to protect troops against airborne anthrax
and should be considered experimental. "Unfortunately, when
anthrax is used as a biological weapon, it is likely to be
aerosolized and thus inhaled," the report said. "Therefore,
the efficacy of the vaccine against biological warfare is unknown.
The
vaccine should be considered investigational when used as a
protection against biological warfare."
Executive Order 13139, which was signed by then-President
Clinton in September 1999, does not allow the DoD to administer
investigational new drugs to service members without their
informed consent, except in times of national emergency. If
the lawsuit results in the anthrax vaccine being classified as an
investigational drug, federal law would require informed consent
each time the vaccine is administered. The AVIP would essentially
become a voluntary program. Earlier this year Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld reportedly asked for a review of the vaccination
policy.
"As every
day goes by the AVIP continues to ruin the lives of dedicated
servicemembers and their families. It is time for this program to
be terminated", said Mark S. Zaid, Esq., another attorney
assisting with the lawsuit. "I hope this litigation will
open the eyes of the right people at the Pentagon who will now
conclude 'enough is enough, let it end'", he added.
In December
1997, the DoD ordered the inoculation of all 2.5 million active
duty personnel, regardless of duty station or responsibilities.
The immunization series calls for six injections of the vaccine
over a period of 18 months, followed by annual booster shots.
Vaccinations began in March 1998, but in December 1999 it was
announced that Phase II and III of the program would be delayed
for at least one year due to the continuing existence of FDA
violations at the vaccine's manufacturing plant. The DoD now only
has enough vaccine to last until September 2001. A report issued
by the House of Representative's Committee on Government Reform
in February 2000, recommended the termination of the AVIP. Nearly
500 active-duty service-members have refused the vaccine, and
more than 60 have been court-martialed. Additionally,
approximately 600-800 pilots and flight crew members have quit or
resigned from the Air National Guard or Reserves rather than take
the vaccine, thereby jeopardizing the United States' capabilities
to conduct future air campaigns.
John J. Michels, Jr., is a partner in the Tyson's
Corner office of McGuire Woods, and serves as a Lieutenant
Colonel in the Air Force Reserve. Mr. Michels represented Major
Bates and was the author of a high-profile legal memorandum
analyzing the illegality of the AVIP; the subject matter of which
he testified on before Congress in October, 2000.
Mark S. Zaid
is Of Counsel to the Washington, D.C. law firm of Lobel, Novins
& Lamont, and also serves as the Executive Director of The
James Madison Project (www.jamesmadisonproject.org), a non-profit
organization that educates the public on national security issues
including the anthrax vaccine controversy. Mr. Zaid has
represented dozens of anthrax refusers, including service as
senior defense counsel in nearly one dozen court-martials. He
testified before the House of Representatives against the AVIP in
March 1999.