Judge Blasts EPA Ground Zero Appraisal
Calls Ex-Chief's Labeling Lower Manhattan Safe 'Conscience-Shocking'
-
Christine Todd Whitman, shown in 2003. (AP)
-
Interactive Air Pollution Explore air pollution throughout the US and and find out which cities have the worst air quality.
-
Timeline In Terror's Wake A look at the major developments following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
-
Interactive The Attack Follow the events of 9/11 from moment to moment, with photographs, timelines, and charts.
The upbeat theme continued in the days and weeks to follow, with Whitman saying on Sept. 16, 2001, that air samples produced registered levels "that cause us no concern." Two days later, she said she was glad to reassure New York and Washington residents that their air and water was safe.
The lawsuit alleges that the EPA did not have sufficient information and lacked the monitoring data necessary to make the reassuring statements.
The EPA's Office of the Inspector General eventually criticized the agency's response, saying it did not have available data and information to support the Sept. 18, 2001, statement that the air was safe to breathe.
The EPA's internal watchdog found the agency, at the urging of White House officials, gave misleading assurances there was no health risk from the dust in the air after the towers' collapse.
Quoting a ruling in an earlier court case, the judge said a public official cannot be held personally liable for putting the public in harm's way unless the conduct was so egregious as "to shock the contemporary conscience."
Given her role in protecting the health and environment for Americans, Whitman's "reassuring and misleading statements of safety after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks are without question conscience-shocking," Batts said.
The judge said Whitman knew that the collapse of the buildings released tons of hazardous materials into the air that would have endangered the public and yet she encouraged residents, workers and students to return to the area.
"By these actions, she increased, and may have in fact created, the danger to plaintiffs," she said.
Batts added: "Without doubt, if plaintiffs had not been told by the head of a federal agency entrusted with monitoring the environment that it was safe, plaintiffs would not have so readily returned to the area so soon after the attacks."
U.S. Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a Democrat whose district includes the trade center site, said the many people who worked at the site and developed respiratory diseases deserve answers.
"I feel vindicated because we were screaming into the wind on this," he said in a telephone interview. "It is my assumption that thousands of people — workers and residents — are being slowly poisoned today because these work places and residences were never properly cleaned up."
U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton said in a statement that New Yorkers are still depending on the federal government to describe the ongoing risk from contaminants.
"I continue to believe that the White House owes New Yorkers an explanation," she said.
©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- CBSNews.com on Digg





