We were
abused by a flawed claims system – flawed in that VA staff chose to actively
oppose us although their legal duty demanded a non-adversarial pro-veteran process.
Numerous federal agencies and independent experts argued for years in support
of legal and scientific merits of our exposure claims but instead a handful of VA
staff broke their own rules and turned a deaf ear.
Key
conclusions regarding the three VA actions against C-123 veterans detailed in
this report:
1 By
January 2012 VBA had “an overwhelming preponderance of evidence” supporting
C-123 veterans’ herbicide exposure claims but instead VA insisted it had a preponderance
of evidence against the claims.
2 When
C-123 veterans turned for help prior to June 2015, they were told no C-123
claims could be granted
and thus very few “fought the system” and bothered to apply for disability
benefits. VA staff was trained that C-123 claims could not be approved, so none
were.
3 As
far as VA records indicate, the only time CDC, NIH and other federal agencies opined
in support of exposure claims was for C-123 veterans. VA disputed all such
input and denied all claims anyway.
4 VA
abused its duties per law and VAM21-1MR for “benefit-of-the doubt, fact-proven,
non-adversarial, paternalistic, pro-veteran,” and “case-by-case” claims
evaluation, instead imposing a C-123 blanket denial policy.
In the
end, with help from CDC and numerous experts, we were proven correct in the law
and the science. But, in the end, that meant years wasted while our claims
should have been advancing. Years went by while VA refused veterans and
families all care and benefits. Survivors couldn’t even get a folded flag.
Years went by with VA instructing staff against every C-123 claim, and often discouraging
vets from even applying. VBA must now adjudicate C-123 claims and appeals in
the most pro-veteran basis, giving every possible benefit of the doubt...and a
bit more!
People
just can’t help it. Not only are they decades past wanting to hear about Agent
Orange, their eyes unusually glaze over if I begin explaining how VA blocked
2100 of our Agent Orange claims for many years. Actually, nobody should be
surprised at VA failings with our couple thousand when one remembers VA blocked
tens of thousands of sick veterans’ claims until Congress jammed the 1991 Agent
Orange Act into their playbook. To anyone who actually listens, my narration
seems outrageous, phony or self-serving. If I get into any details I quickly
lose my listener. Their expression says it all: “This is outrageous. VA would
never even consider such anti-veteran deceptions. Someone’s making it all up.”
Actually,
nothing’s made up or imagined, and I hope to make a case that SMCs are
appropriate from 3/2011 forward, particularly loss of use of both legs,
bilateral avascular necrosis of the hips (with revision in 2012, third
replacement 2015 following diagnosis 2011, Hyperlinks in this essay go to the
VA’s own source documents. VA resolutely opposed our claims in violation of
every legal and moral duty and in total contrast to empty assurances given our
elected representatives. In April 2011 I had faith in the VA, faith that they’d
carefully check out my claim and weigh the supporting evidence; an approval
would be forthcoming.
My trust
in the VA lasted years past when I should have been screaming “foul,” but when
they rejected all expert evidence from the CDC and NIH, I pretty much knew what
so many veterans complained about was true. And when in 2015 I finally got thousands of pages of VA internal
documents
released thru the Freedom of Information Act there was little trust left.
Rather
than dig into the dozen or so worst examples of VA mistreatment, I’ll write
about three of their worst tactics that really hurt C-123 veterans, and stalled
our disability claims for many years:
• First, VA insisted in every possible response to veterans, Congress and the press that they had no “blanket policy” against our claims, and rather, each claim was carefully evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Nope!
• Second, VA insisted from the very first it had “an overwhelming preponderance of evidence” against our claims. Nope!
• First, VA insisted in every possible response to veterans, Congress and the press that they had no “blanket policy” against our claims, and rather, each claim was carefully evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Nope!
• Second, VA insisted from the very first it had “an overwhelming preponderance of evidence” against our claims. Nope!
• Third, VA said we could submit
claims for “fact-proven” consideration. Yes they said that, but Nope, there
never was proper consideration of even a single claim.
Both
issues were vital, and VA flat-out double-crossed, misled, betrayed, deceived,
and bamboozled our elected representatives (except Merkley and Burr) up to
January 9, 2015 when the Institute of Medicine C-123 report was published.
Eventually, IOM, editorials, the six major veterans’
organizations
and the Senate “gang of seven” pushed VA to act.
I. Blanket Denial
Policy
for denying C-123 claims; VA Insisted It Had No Blanket Policy Against C-123
Veterans’ Claims.
That sounds perfectly reasonable, especially because such a policy would be counter to VA laws and regulations. The issue only came up when we noticed that over time, not a single C-123 disability claim was approved. Zero. While most of our veterans hadn’t served in Vietnam to be given “presumptive service connection” status, VA’s rulebook VAM21-1MR explains that vets with proof of exposure from whatever situation will have the same benefits if the vet can, on a “fact-proven basis,” substantiate the claim.
We weren’t the first to raise the
issue of non-Vietnam exposures. As early as 2001, Congress had pressed the VA
to make sure every exposed veteran would be protected. VA responded in the Federal Register with three
separate postings
over ten years, assuring Congress no new legislation was needed and VA would
handle every vet with proof of Agent Orange exposure the same as a Vietnam
“boots on the ground’ veteran. In the most recent Federal Register post VA even said, “we wish to
make clear…” And it was very clear – until we filed claims and then
exposure didn’t matter.
When we
argued that our fact-proven claims were all rejected and we accused VA of a
blanket denial policy against us, it was denied by officials from Secretary Shinseki, Under Secretary Hickey, Mr. Murphy and every staffer when
questioned. “We have no blanket denial policy with C-123 claims. Each is evaluated on a
case-by-case basis”
was the virtually uniform but erroneous response. And every VA assurance was in
error because a blanket denial policy, by whatever name or procedure (uniform,
across-the-board, generic, universal, unyielding, comprehensive, sweeping,
overall – pick a phrase as they all mean blanket!) is exactly what VA used
against us.
The
proof of a VA blanket or across-the-board denial policy is in several forms:
A. The fact that not a single claim
was ever approved (VBA agrees to this point)
B. The fact that on February 28 2013 the Director
Compensation and Pension
himself told me in his office that no amount of evidence from whatever source
would permit a C-123 claim to be approved. Dr. Wm. Peterson, Chief of VHA Post
Deployment Heath said the same thing in our conference together in March 2012.
His Deputy Chief Dr. Terry Walters said the same thing to members of Senator
Richard Burr’s staff (an Army Chemical Corps officer) and to Wes Carter. She
even told the Associated Press “a line
had to be drawn.”
C. VBA and VHA both trained regional
claims officials,
instructing them that no basis existed for approving a C-123 claim, that
exposure was virtually impossible, or that there are no regulations permitting
any such claims. VHA’s official “Information Briefs” insisted (in error as the
IOM concluded) that our exposures were scientifically impossible – what was
impossible was only trying to establish our claims against such barriers.
E. Assessments by the Senate bipartisan C-123 group, who
concluded ““It appears that [the VA] does, in fact, plan to deny any C-123
claims regardless of the evidence submitted in a particular case,” the
lawmakers wrote in a 2013 letter.
By
whatever name it might be called, the VA blanket policy against C-123 claims
was 100% effective. No exact VA reference to implementation of a blanket denial
policy has been found, however the very fact VA trained its field personnel and
distributed official “Information Briefs” insisting there was no basis
for approving a C-123 claim substantiates our allegation. The early Information
Briefs are very interesting to compare to ones published after
the IOM C-123 report.
VA’s
internal emails further proof the existence of their blanket denial policy, as
several examples show. VA Secretary Eric Shinseki responded to Burr in a letter
saying, “VA does not have a ‘blanket policy’ for denying claims” filed by C-123
veterans but VA never mentioned that VA was simultaneously denying 100% of our
claims. Perhaps no policy…maybe they just did it anyway.
II. “Overwhelming Preponderance of Evidence” against C-123
claim:
VA
considered opinions from its own staff, plus from Dr. Alvin Young, as constituting “an
overwhelming preponderance of evidence” against all C-123 claims. Dr. Young was paid $600,000 for his two-year C-123 claim
opposition and representation of VA at the C-123 IOM hearings. VA references to
“several scientists” usually refers to Young and Ginevan and Ross, two of his
colleagues who testified in defense of Dow and
Monsanto. Also
to Dr. M. Newton, a retired scientist who advocated
use of Agent Orange in Oregon’s forests.
Their
four opinions, in VA’s view, somehow overwhelmed every proof of exposure from
any source, including US Government agencies such as CDC. In fact, the phrase “overwhelming preponderance of
evidence”
excludes the possibility any reasonable doubt, overpowering any alternatives.
VA specified
essay topics for Young to prepare against us. VA even paid him huge funds to champion VA’s C-123 opposition. He opposed C-123 claims at the IOM
hearing but denied representing the VA, saying he was there only to explain the
science.
Contrary to protocol at such gatherings, he did not reveal his financial
interest in the articles he wrote or his IOM presentation for VA. This is very important
because:
1. It
implied Young was there as an impartial expert witness and
2. It disguised
the fact Young was the paid surrogate for VA, arguing for a negative IOM
finding
The
phrase “overwhelming preponderance of evidence” is a favorite of Mr. Jim Sampsel, manager of VA’s Agent Orange
Desk. He used it frequently and included it in drafts of correspondence between
the VA secretary and legislators to explain why claims were denied. Mr. Sampsel
accused me of “grandstanding” and “hassling” Mr. Dominic
Baldini at JSRRC and Dr. Mary Paxton of the IOM while pressing for VA to
recognize C-123 veterans’ Agent Orange claims.
I
disagree: Every veteran has the right to argue in support of a disability
claim, and if done politely it should not be received with VA resentment. Former
Secretary McDonald, Mr. Scott Blackburn, Mr. Baldini, Dr. Paxton, former
Assistant Secretary Linda Schwartz, staff at St. Paul VARO or Assistant
Secretary Brooks Tucker should be asked if Mr. Sampsel’s characterization is accurate.
As the manager of VBA’s Agent Orange Desk, he actively opposed my claims. He
even refused to permit JSRRC confirmation of my exposure, because that would
satisfy VAM21-1MR requirements. I believe my arguments about Agent Orange, VA
and C-123 veterans have proven correct over the years.
However,
consider the evidence affirming the C-123 veterans’ exposure: CDC/ATSDR, NIH, NIEHS, USPHS, Committee of Concerned Scientists
and Physicians,
and many university schools of
medicine and
public health. None of the federal agencies or individual physicians or scientists
was paid for their input, and 100% of the experts responding agreed we’d been
exposed. VBA ignored them all or said
their expert input was unqualified.
Mr. Sampsel remains unyielding in
his opinions,
even after the January 2015 release of the Institute of Medicine C-123 report
confirming veterans’ exposures. Mr. Sampsel told a VA committee in 2016 that
Agent Orange is merely “hype and hysteria.” In December 2016 he discussed me by name and then
told his VA audience also said “hardly anybody” believes the IOM’s C-123
exposure conclusions. Mr. Sampsel failed to mention “hardly anybody” actually
includes the CDC, VA itself, the National Institute of Health and the peer
review committee of the National Academy of Science that approved the IOM C-123
report. In fact, other than Sampsel, Young
and his three associates, “hardly anybody” disagrees
with the IOM report.
One
especially deceptive part of VA opposing our evidence of exposure is the fact
that in 2012 VHA Post-Deployment Health (just for that office, not the rest of
VA) used a poster display at the Society of
Toxicology for revision of their in-house redefinition
of the toxicological tern “exposure.”
They conflated exposure with bioavailability, so their new and unscientific
(according to federal scientists) definition required veterans to go back to
pre-1991 Agent Orange Act, and prove medical nexus, something virtually
impossible decades after exposure.
III. VA would evaluate claims on
“fact-proven” basis
This is
a standard VA assurance for all Agent Orange and other exposure claims from
veterans outside a “presumptive compensation” group. More than a mere
assurance, it is the law, and was repeated constantly by VA claims officials as
regards C-123 veterans.
But it was
never allowed by VBA’s Compensation & Pension officials.
There
are several proofs of this failure to honor its obligations to veterans Not
once did a C-123 veteran’s claim gain approval, no matter how much evidence
supported it. In fact, Mr. Tom Murphy and other C&P and VHA leaders stated
that no matter how much proof from whatever federal or other scientific source,
no C-123 claim would ever be approved. Mr. Murphy’s statement was made to his
staff and Majors Wes Carter and Marlene Wentworth in Mr. Murphy’s office on
February 28, 2013.
Mr.
Murphy said Dr. Terry Walters of VHA Post-Deployment Health had already decided
that no C-123 veterans were exposed and he would abide by that decision. I
called her in March 2013 and she confirmed VBA’s position, based on her office
redefinition of “exposure” to require bioavailability to be acknowledged.
Although
neither the law nor VAM21-1MR specify the state Agent Orange must be (gas,
liquid or solid,) Dr. Walters and her colleagues disqualified C-123 veterans
because the airplane’s toxin contamination was dried residue from the Vietnam
spraying operations. She insisted C-123 Agent Orange residue could not harm veterans
via any of the exposure routes (dermal, inhalation, ingestion,) but the
Institute of Medicine concluded all three routes poisoned the veterans. She
also erroneously characterized C-123 contamination is “secondary.”
As CDC,
NIH and NIEHS have confirmed, this redefinition of exposure was an unscientific
attempt only within Post-Deployment Health, not the rest of VA, to conflate the
two separate toxicological terms. It was created along the lines of Dr. Alvin
Young’s (a.k.a. “Dr. Orange”) work and to prevent exposure claims in defiance
of the 1991 Agent Orange Act as well as VA’s repeated assurances to Congress
that all veterans establishing exposure to Agent Orange would receive the same
benefits as Vietnam’s “boots on the ground” veterans.
Further
proof is the fact that VA did not approve a single C-123 claim between 1980-2015.
Of course, there were few in the early years, but more as veterans began
hearing of the contamination the Air Force identified in our aircraft from 1994
on.
The next
proof is clear and well-documented by VA: Dr. Walters and numerous other VHA and
VBA managers frequently stated that there was no legal or scientific basis for C-123
veterans’ exposure claims. This was even part of Dr. Walters’ field training
for claims workers, and repeated in numerous “Information Brief” releases. Her
official but erroneous statements such as “The potential for exposure to
Agent Orange and TCDD and subsequent development of any adverse health effects
from flying in potentially contaminated C-123 aircraft years after the Vietnam
War is essentially Zero.”
Department authorities even had VBA claims
workers convinced that “regulations do not permit” C-123 claims,
although no such regulation ever existed. Another quote: “It is difficult to
ascertain a basis upon which to find a health risk among crew members.” Another
surprise quote from Dr. Walters: "No Vietnam ground troops were exposed
to Agent Orange.”
There
are other examples to cite that establish VA’s decision to avoid judging claims
on a “fact-proven basis,” but one that truly stands out is Dr. Walter’s own decision
to prohibit C-123 veterans from even being given an Agent Orange exam. While the exam is not an
application for benefits, it helps establish injuries or illnesses that might
be associated with herbicide exposure and can inform a veteran of the need to
file a claim. Dr. Walters overturned VA policy providing the exam to any vet
believing him/herself to have been exposed by forbidding C-123 veterans from
the exam. She wrote that it was available only to Vietnam veterans or to
non-Vietnam veterans exposed to liquid Agent Orange. Another quote she used to block claims was “It is difficult to find any basis
upon which to establish a C-123 claim.”
She also wrote that TCDD exposure was
impossible via dermal or inhalation routes.
VA
claims officials were formally instructed by Dr. Walters and other VHA and VBA
leaders as part of the August 2013 “Domestic Environmental Exposures” programs that C-123 claims were
unacceptable, and had no merit regardless of proof. Secretary Shinseki himself railed
against the very idea that non-Vietnam veterans could qualify for benefits.
In
considering the above, it is vital to know VA had been formally advised by the
CDC/Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry in January 2012 (and repeatedly thereafter) that these VA barriers to C-123
claims were in error. CDC had determined veterans were exposed more than 180
times the military safety threshold, and experience a 200-fold increase in
cancers risks. NIH, US Public Health, the National Institute of
Environmental Health
Sciences all informed VA that C-123 veterans were harmed.
Joint
Services Records Research Center told VA about C-123 exposure source documents
in March 2013 as per VAM21-1MR, but was
disregarded, with Walters and others continuing to insist claim be denied. VA,
under leadership of Dr. Walters, Mr. James Sampsel, Mr. Tom Murphy and their
consultant, Dr. Alvin Young, refused every claim.
Refused,
at least until January 9 2015 when the Institute of Medicine proved VA wrong,
and confirmed what all the experts had been telling VA for four years: C-123
veterans were exposed and harmed by that exposure. It took years for VA
to be told that the CDC/ATSDR was correct all along, years that VA denied C-123
veterans every benefit and compensation due.
CONCLUSION:
C-123
veterans were routinely and systematically denied the protections of VCAA, and
denied due process of our disability claims. VA resistance discouraged veterans
from filing claims because at every level we were told there was no basis for
approval. VA’s assurances of “claim by claim” adjudication based on
facts-proven were deceptive – VA would insist until January 2015 that there was
no exposure.
Besides
hearing the same things as I negotiated with VA as chairperson of the C-123
Veterans Association, I was also told the same stuff going over my own claim
while sitting in front of VSO representatives at Buncombe County NC, Nashville,
Portland, McMinnville, Denver, Cheyenne. Even the VVA office at Washington DC
VARO. Time after time claims experts, truly earnest advocates for my own claim,
kindly showed me VA web pages, training letters, and memoranda from VA showing
clearly that C-123 veterans clearly weren’t eligible for benefits.
Promises
of “fact-proven” claims evaluation instantly disappeared, with VHA having already
decided we’d had no exposures. VA blocked claims with these deceptive comments,
all disproved in the final IOM C-123 report.
•
“There is no scientific evidence
that Veteran's presence in aircraft
containing solidified TCDD can lead to adverse long-term health effects” (VA Secretary Erik Shinseki)
•
“There is no scientific basis for allegations of exposure.” (VHA Dr.
Terry Walters)
•
“TCDD in post-Vietnam aircraft is
not active and cannot enter the human body, therefore no TCDD “exposure.” (Mr. James Sampsel, VBA)
The
earliest that VA waivered in this obstruction was early 2014 when plans finally
were made to submit the C-123 question to the IOM.
Even
then, VA stalled by saying all claims in processing would be “held” until the
IOM decision…causing veterans to wait yet another year to get medical care and
compensation in a fight Secretary McDonald described as already “too hard,
too long,” and conceding our claims was “the right thing to do.” Even when the
IOM did finally begin its study, VA actively opposed the issue via their highly
paid surrogate, Dr. Young.
Remaining Questions:
• How
did 100% of C-123 claims get denied if not a “blanket denial policy” by
whatever name?
• How
did CDC and other authoritative confirmation of exposure get ignored while Mr.
Sampsel continued insistence on his flimsy “overwhelming preponderance of
evidence?”
• Why
did Sampsel and others set their increasingly high threshold of proof to
prevent C-123 claims?
• In
what way does VA say that we received any “benefit-of-the-doubt, pro-veteran,
non-adversarial, paternalistic and pro-veteran” claim treatment as required by
law?
• How
does the VBA Agent Orange desk still insist that “the majority, the vast
majority of scientists” agree with him about Agent Orange harmlessness?
• How
does Mr. Sampsel equate “the vast majority of scientists” agreeing with him
(Young, his associates, Dr. Newton, and the PHD staff) to be an “overwhelming
preponderance of evidence” when weighed against CTC/ATSDR, NIH, NIEHS, the
National Institute of Medicine, US Public Health, dozens of experts represented
by the Concerned Scientists and Physicians, etc. who disagree
and whom he dismisses as merely “some scientists?”
• How
was PHD permitted to redefine for their own office use the term “exposure” via
an official VA poster presentation at the 2012 Society of Toxicology
conference?
• How
did Young get an unbudgeted $600,000 no-bid, sole-source unsolicited contract
for his Agent Orange articles? Why was the contract’s specification of a
central data collection not completed? Why did VA spend money only to oppose
C-123 claims?
• Why
have none of the VA misstatements and other errors been corrected, such as
letters to legislators, governors, and the press? Why, after many deceptive and
erroneous “Information Brief” papers has VA not updated the issue?
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