How NPR Located More Veterans Exposed To Mustard Gas Than The VA
Jun 26, 2015byCaitlin Dickerson
This week, NPR reported that the Department of Veterans Affairs failed to live up to a promise to contact 4,000 veterans who were exposed to mustard gas in secret military experiments. In 1993, the VA promised it would reach out to each of those veterans to let them know that they were eligible for disability benefits. Instead, over the past 20 years, the VA reached out to only 610.
Brad Flohr, a VA senior adviser for benefits, told NPR the agency couldn't find the rest of the test subjects, because military records of the experiments were incomplete. "There was no identifying information," Flohr said. "No Social Security numbers, no addresses, no ... any way of identifying them. Although we tried."
That response from the VA surprised NPR Investigations Research Librarian Barbara Van Woerkom, who spends a lot of time tracking down sources for NPR stories.
"It just struck me as such a low number, knowing all the ways that I look for information to try and locate an individual," she says.
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http://knpr.org/npr/2015-06/how-npr-located-more-veterans-exposed-mustard-gas-va
NOTE: The Current story continues on the link below:
http://www.npr.org/2015/11/03/453962074/families-react-to-nprs-reporting-of-secret-mustard-gas-testing