Judge Dismisses $750M Fort Detrick Pollution Lawsuit

FREDERICK, Md. (AP) -- A federal judge has dismissed a $750 million class-action lawsuit alleging the Army's reckless handling of chemical and biological toxins caused death and illness among people living near Fort Detrick in Frederick.

The Frederick News-Post reports that U.S. District Judge Catherine Blake filed the dismissal notice Thursday in Baltimore.

She ruled that the plaintiffs had not met a threshold requirement of proving the Army lacked discretion over how to dispose of hazardous waste.

RELATED$750M Lawsuit Claims Army Recklessly Handled Toxins Which Killed People In Md.

The plaintiffs had argued that executive orders signed by President Richard Nixon mandated rules for handling hazardous waste at federal facilities. Blake likened the executive orders to policy guidelines that did not remove the Army's discretion.

Plaintiff Randy White says the plaintiffs will ask Blake to reconsider. He says if that fails, they'll appeal the ruling.

 

(Copyright 2016 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

 

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