Guest guest Posted December 31, 2003 Report Share Posted December 31, 2003 http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2003/12/30/news/top_stories/12_29_0321_19_28.prt Wednesday, December 31, 2003 Last modified Monday, December 29, 2003 9:32 PM PST Troop anthrax shots in question By: DARRIN MORTENSON - Staff Writer CAMP PENDLETON ---- At least two local Marines remain in legal limbo as federal officials and a Washington district court judge wrangle over whether the military can force members of the armed services to take anthrax vaccinations. The two Marines refused to take mandatory inoculations a year ago and have since faced stiff punishment for refusing direct orders. One claims to have suffered intimidation and even a death threat from his superiors for refusing the vaccine. Last week Judge Emmet G. Sullivan of the United States District Court in Washington, D.C, ruled that the anthrax vaccinations fell under a 1998 law banning the use of certain experimental drugs. His ruling barred the Pentagon from " inoculating service members without their consent " unless President Bush signs a waiver. Two days later, on Dec. 24, the Justice Department filed a motion asking the judge to limit his injunction to six plaintiffs in the case. Limiting the injunction would allow the vaccination program to continue for the rest of the armed services. Two North County men are among hundreds of members of the armed services who advocates say have refused the shots and either left the military or have been punished. Lance Cpl. Lotz, 21, of Rancho Penasquitos, was discharged from the Marine Corps for " bad conduct " in October after he refused the order to be vaccinated before his unit deployed to Kuwait in January. Lotz is appealing the status of his discharge and said he hopes the recent legal challenge will help his case. Marine Pfc. Darren Fisher, 20, of San Marcos, still faces court-martial for refusing the shot, according to Lt. Col. Tom Scully of 1st Marine Division Staff Judge Advocate's office, which prosecuted Lotz and has charged Fisher. The recent legal challenge shelved Fisher's court-martial proceedings for at least 30 days, Scully said Monday. Under a summary court-martial, Fisher can be reduced in rank and responsibility but not involuntarily discharged even if he's convicted, Scully said. Fisher could not be reached for comment Monday. Dissenter discharged Lotz was not as fortunate. In October, he was discharged for " bad conduct " after he refused the order to be vaccinated before his Twentynine Palms-based infantry unit deployed early this year. He was prosecuted under a " special " court-martial, less severe only than a " general " court-martial under the U.S. Military Code of Justice. Lotz is appealing his discharge, a move Pentagon officials say is the only legal option open to him. " If someone has a problem with his or her records, there are boards specifically set up to address that, " said Jim , a civilian spokesman at the Pentagon. " They can challenge those decisions. " Lotz said that although he is no longer a Marine and might have to stick with his discharge, the challenge to the system of mandatory inoculations could help other Marines avoid the humiliation and heartbreak he says he experienced over the last year. He said that many men in his battalion were concerned about the health risks of the anthrax shot, and at least 20 had decided not to take it. But when it came time to receive the shots last in December 2002, he was the only one to refuse. Even though he offered to sign a waiver saying that he understood the risk if he was involved in a chemical attack in Iraq, he said his commanders eventually turned against him. Lotz said he wanted to deploy with his unit but his commanders separated him from his comrades and told him he would not participate in the invasion of Iraq. He said he believes he was eventually sent to Kuwait so that commanders could coerce him to take the shot and rejoin his fellow Marines. Deployed without shot " I thought it meant the charges were dropped, " he said of the sudden decision to let him deploy. " But after I got to Kuwait, all they did was try to get me to take the shot. They asked every day and said, 'We're going to charge you when we get back, and then you'll be punished as a traitor.' " Lotz said that one senior noncommissioned officer even told him that once the war started he would be accused of treason and could face a summary death sentence in the field. Scully, however, said that he was not aware of that or any other allegations of threats or coercion by Lotz' leaders in Kuwait. On Feb. 15, after two weeks of refusing the shot, Lotz was sent back to Camp Pendleton where he said he waited in " limbo " until he was finally charged and court-martialed in October. " I was a Marine, and I felt betrayed, " he said. " They always talk about courage and commitment, and I thought I was the only one showing it. 'Semper Fi' just went right out the window. Nobody is faithful. You do a good job and then for one thing they're ready to boot you out. " While under the original, special court-martial Lotz faced four separate charges of refusing the same order from four officers, he made a deal to plead guilty to only one charge. He was confined for 14 days in the brig, reduced to the rank of private, and discharged. He said he hopes a ban on mandatory inoculations could influence the military board that will hear his appeal. Now, as he tries to make a life in the civilian world, he said he keeps a positive attitude and tries to learn from his experience. Because he had to research the Navy legal system to defend himself, he said he became interested in law and in his rights as a citizen. A part-time worker at a local Costco Wholesale Corp. store, Lotz said he will start classes at Palomar College next month in hopes of becoming an attorney. " I'm trying to find the good in this, " he said, " and make the best of a bad situation. " Pentagon seeks to lift ban While the judge reviews the ruling and the Justice Department's motion to limit its scope, Pentagon officials have halted the anthrax shot program " until the legal situation is clarified. " Lawyers and plaintiffs in the case that spurred Sullivan's ruling say that nearly 500 active-duty members of the armed services have refused the vaccine, with close to 200 court-martialed as a result. From 500 to 1,000 pilots and flight personnel have left the Air National Guard or Reserves rather than take the vaccine, the lawyers say. Pentagon officials say that although several hundred military or civilian personnel declined the vaccine in the initial years after the program was begun in 1998, only 10 have refused it since June 2002, when vaccinations were accelerated. Since then, 600,000 to 700,000 military and Pentagon civilian personnel have received the vaccine, military officials say. Experts are divided on whether the shots cause high levels of illness or widespread side effects. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Contact staff writer Darrin Mortenson at (760) 740-5442 or dmortenson@.... Meryl Nass, MD H 207 276-5092 W 207 288-5082 ext 220 or pager 441 C 207 522-5229 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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