Internal documents reveal that DuPont long suspected C8 was harmful, yet continued to put the company’s workers and the public at risk.
KEN WAMSLEY SOMETIMES DREAMS that he’s playing softball again. He’ll be at center field, just like when he played slow pitch back in his teens, or pounding the ball over the fence as the crowd goes wild. Other times, he’s somehow inexplicably back at work in the lab. Wamsley calls them nightmares, these stories that play out in his sleep, but really the only scary part is the end, when “I wake up and I have no rectum anymore.”
Wamsley is 73. After developing rectal cancer and having surgery to treat it in 2002, he walks slowly and gets up gingerly from the bench in his small backyard. His voice, which has a gentle Appalachian lilt, is still animated, though, especially when he talks about his happier days. There were many. While Wamsley knew plenty of people in Parkersburg, West Virginia, who struggled to stay employed, he made an enviable wage for almost four decades at the DuPont plant here. The company was generous, helping him pay for college courses and training him to become a lab analyst in the Teflon division.
He enjoyed the work, particularly the precision and care it required. For years, he measured levels of a chemical called C8 in various products. The chemical “was everywhere,” as Wamsley remembers it, bubbling out of the glass flasks he used to transport it, wafting into a smelly vapor that formed when he heated it. A fine powder, possibly C8, dusted the laboratory drawers and floated in the hazy lab air.
At the time, Wamsley and his coworkers weren’t particularly concerned about the strange stuff. “We never thought about it, never worried about it,” he said recently. He believed it was harmless, “like a soap. Wash your hands [with it], your face, take a bath.”
Today Wamsley suffers from ulcerative colitis, a bowel condition that causes him sudden bouts of diarrhea. The disease also can — and his case, did — lead to rectal cancer. Between the surgery, which left him reliant on plastic pouches that collect his waste outside his body and have to be changed regularly, and his ongoing digestive problems, Wamsley finds it difficult to be away from his home for long.
Sometimes, between napping or watching baseball on TV, Wamsley’s mind drifts back to his DuPont days and he wonders not just about the dust that coated his old workplace but also about his bosses who offered their casual assurances about the chemical years ago.
“Who knew?” he asked. “When did they know? Did they lie?”
UNTIL RECENTLY, FEW PEOPLE had heard much about chemicals like C8. One of tens of thousands of unregulated industrial chemicals, perfluorooctanoic acid, or PFOA — also called C8 because of the eight-carbon chain that makes up its chemical backbone — had gone unnoticed for most of its eight or so decades on earth, even as it helped cement the success of one of the world’s largest corporations.
Several blockbuster discoveries, including nylon, Lycra, and Tyvek, helped transform the E. I. du Pont de Nemours company from a 19th-century gunpowder mill into “one of the most successful and sustained industrial enterprises in the world,” as its corporate website puts it. Indeed, in 2014, the company reaped more than $95 million in sales each day. Perhaps no product is as responsible for its dominance as Teflon, which was introduced in 1946, and for more than 60 years C8 was an essential ingredient of Teflon.
Called a “surfactant” because it reduces the surface tension of water, the slippery, stable compound was eventually used in hundreds of products, including Gore-Tex and other waterproof clothing; coatings for eye glasses and tennis rackets; stain-proof coatings for carpets and furniture; fire-fighting foam; fast food wrappers; microwave popcorn bags; bicycle lubricants; satellite components; ski wax; communications cables; and pizza boxes.
Concerns about the safety of Teflon, C8, and other long-chain perfluorinated chemicals first came to wide public attention more than a decade ago, but the story of DuPont’s long involvement with C8 has never been fully told. Over the past 15 years, as lawyers have been waging an epic legal battle — culminating as the first of approximately 3,500 personal injury claims comes to trial in September — a long trail of documents has emerged that casts new light on C8, DuPont, and the fitful attempts of the Environmental Protection Agency to deal with a threat to public health.
This story is based on many of those documents, which until they were entered into evidence for these trials had been hidden away in DuPont’s files. Among them are write-ups of experiments on rats, dogs, and rabbits showing that C8 was associated with a wide range of health problems that sometimes killed the lab animals. Many thousands of pages of expert testimony and depositions have been prepared by attorneys for the plaintiffs. And through the process of legal discovery they have uncovered hundreds of internal communications revealing that DuPont employees for many years suspected that C8 was harmful and yet continued to use it, putting the company’s workers and the people who lived near its plants at risk.
In 2011 and 2012, after seven years of research, the science panel found that C8 was “more likely than not” linked to ulcerative colitis — Wamsley’s condition — as well as to high cholesterol; pregnancy-induced hypertension; thyroid disease; testicular cancer; and kidney cancer. The scientists’ findings, published in more than three dozen peer-reviewed articles, were striking, because the chemical’s effects were so widespread throughout the body and because even very low exposure levels were associated with health effects.
We know, too, from internal DuPont documents that emerged through the lawsuit, that Wamsley’s fears of being lied to are well-founded. DuPont scientists had closely studied the chemical for decades and through their own research knew about some of the dangers it posed. Yet rather than inform workers, people living near the plant, the general public, or government agencies responsible for regulating chemicals, DuPont repeatedly kept its knowledge secret.
Another revelation about C8 makes all of this more disturbing and gives the upcoming trials, the first of which will be held this fall in Columbus, Ohio, global significance: This deadly chemical that DuPont continued to use well after it knew it was linked to health problems is now practically everywhere.
A man-made compound that didn’t exist a century ago, C8 is in the blood of 99.7 percent of Americans, according to a 2007 analysis of data from the Centers for Disease Control, as well as in newborn human babies, breast milk, and umbilical cord blood. A growing group of scientists have been tracking the chemical’s spread through the environment, documenting its presence in a wide range of wildlife, including Loggerhead sea turtles, bottlenose dolphins, harbor seals, polar bears, caribou, walruses, bald eagles, lions, tigers, and arctic birds. Although DuPont no longer uses C8, fully removing the chemical from all the bodies of water and bloodstreams it pollutes is now impossible. And, because it is so chemically stable — in fact, as far as scientists can determine, it never breaks down — C8 is expected to remain on the planet well after humans are gone from it.
In some ways, C8 already is the tobacco of the chemical industry — a substance whose health effects were the subject of a decades-long corporate cover-up.
Eight companies are responsible for C8 contamination in the U.S. (In addition to DuPont, the leader by far in terms of both use and emissions, seven others had a role, including 3M, which produced C8 and sold it to DuPont for years.) If these polluters were ever forced to clean up the chemical, which has been detected by the EPA 716 times across water systems in 29 states, and in some areas may be present at dangerous levels, the costs could be astronomical — and C8 cases could enter the storied realm of tobacco litigation, forever changing how the public thinks about these products and how a powerful industry does business.
In some ways, C8 already is the tobacco of the chemical industry — a substance whose health effects were the subject of a decades-long corporate cover-up. As with tobacco, public health organizations have taken up the cause — and numerous reporters have dived into the mammoth story. Like the tobacco litigation, the lawsuits around C8 also involve huge amounts of money. And, like tobacco, C8 is a symbol of how difficult it is to hold companies responsible, even when mounting scientific evidence links their products to cancer and other diseases.
There is at least one sense in which the tobacco analogy fails. Exposure to tobacco usually contains an element of volition, and most people who smoked it in the past half century knew about some of the risks involved. But the vast majority of Americans — along with most people on the planet — now have C8 in their bodies. And we’ve had no choice in the matter.
FOR ITS FIRST HUNDRED YEARS, DuPont mostly made explosives, which, while hazardous, were at least well understood. But by the 1930s, the company had expanded into new products that brought new mysterious health problems. Leaded gasoline, which DuPont made in its New Jersey plant, for instance, wound up causing madness and violent deaths and life-long institutionalization of workers. And certain rubber and industrial chemicals inexplicably turned the skin of exposed workers blue.
Perhaps most troubling, at least to a DuPont doctor named George Gehrmann, was a number of bladder cancers that had recently begun to crop up among many dye workers. Worried over “the tendency to believe [chemicals] are harmless until proven otherwise,” Gehrmann pushed DuPont to create Haskell Laboratories in 1935. Haskell was one of the first in-house toxicology facilities and its first project was to address the bladder cancers. But the inherent problems of assigning staff scientists to study a company’s own employees and products became clear from the outset.
One of Haskell’s first employees, a pathologist named Wilhelm Hueper, helped crack the bladder cancer case by developing a model of how the dye chemicals led to disease. But the company forbade him from publishing some of his research and, according to epidemiologist and public health scholar David Michaels, fired him in 1937 before going on to use the chemicals in question for decades.
DuPont elected not to disclose its findings to regulators.
C8 would prove to be arguably even more ethically and scientifically challenging for Haskell. From the beginning, DuPont scientists approached the chemical’s potential dangers with rigor. In 1954, the very year a French engineer first applied the slick coating to a frying pan, a DuPont employee named R. A. Dickison noted that he had received an inquiry regarding C8’s “possible toxicity.” In 1961, just seven years later, in-house researchers already had the short answer to Dickison’s question: C8 was indeed toxic and should be “handled with extreme care,” according to a report filed by plaintiffs. By the next year experiments had honed these broad concerns into clear, bright red flags that pointed to specific organs: C8 exposure was linked to the enlargement of rats’ testes, adrenal glands, and kidneys. In 1965, 14 employees, including Haskell’s then-director, John Zapp, received a memo describing preliminary studies that showed that even low doses of a related surfactant could increase the size of rats’ livers, a classic response to exposure to a poison.
The company even conducted a human C8 experiment, a deposition revealed. In 1962, DuPont scientists asked volunteers to smoke cigarettes laced with the chemical and observed that “Nine out of ten people in the highest-dosed group were noticeably ill for an average of nine hours with flu-like symptoms that included chills, backache, fever, and coughing.”
Because of its toxicity, C8 disposal presented a problem. In the early 1960s, the company buried about 200 drums of the chemical on the banks of the Ohio River near the plant. An internal DuPont document from 1975 about “Teflon Waste Disposal” detailed how the company began packing the waste in drums, shipping the drums on barges out to sea, and dumping them into the ocean, adding stones to make the drums sink. Though the practice resulted in a moment of unfavorable publicity when a fisherman caught one of the drums in his net, no one outside the company realized the danger the chemical presented. At some point before 1965, ocean dumping ceased, and DuPont began disposing of its Teflon waste in landfills instead.
IN 1978, BRUCE KARRH, DuPont’s corporate medical director, was outspoken about the company’s duty “to discover and reveal the unvarnished facts about health hazards,” as he wrote in the Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine at the time. When deposed in 2004, Karrh emphasized that DuPont’s internal health and safety rules often went further than the government’s and that the company’s policy was to comply with either laws or the company’s internal health and safety standards, “whichever was the more strict.” In his 1978 article, Karrh also insisted that a company “should be candid, and lay all the facts on the table. This is the only responsible and ethical way to go.”
Yet DuPont only laid out some of its facts. In 1978, for instance, DuPont alerted workers to the results of a study done by 3M showing that its employees were accumulating C8 in their blood. Later that year, Karrh and his colleagues began reviewing employee medical records and measuring the level of C8 in the blood of the company’s own workers in Parkersburg, as well as at another DuPont plant in Deepwater, New Jersey, where the company had been using C8 and related chemicals since the 1950s. They found that exposed workers at the New Jersey plant had increased rates of endocrine disorders. Another notable pattern was that, like dogs and rats, people employed at the DuPont plants more frequently had abnormal liver function tests after C8 exposure.
DuPont elected not to disclose its findings to regulators. The reasoning, according to Karrh, was that the abnormal test results weren’t proven to be adverse health effects related to C8. When asked about the decision in deposition, Karrh said that “at that point in time, we saw no substantial risk, so therefore we saw no obligation to report.”
Not long after the decision was made not to alert the EPA, in 1981, another study of DuPont workers by a staff epidemiologist declared that liver test data collected in Parkersburg lacked “conclusive evidence of an occupationally related health problem among workers exposed to C-8.” Yet the research might have reasonably led to more testing. An assistant medical director named Vann Brewster suggested that an early draft of the study be edited to state that DuPont should conduct further liver test monitoring. Years later, a proposal for a follow-up study was rejected.
If the health effects on humans could still be debated in 1979, C8’s effects on animals continued to be apparent. A report prepared for plaintiffs stated that by then, DuPont was aware of studies showing that exposed beagles had abnormal enzyme levels “indicative of cellular damage.” Given enough of the stuff, the dogs died.
DuPont employees knew in 1979 about a recent 3M study showing that some rhesus monkeys also died when exposed to C8, according to documents submitted by plaintiffs. Scientists divided the primates into five groups and exposed them to different amounts of C8 over 90 days. Those given the highest dose all died within five weeks. More notable was that three of the monkeys who received less than half that amount also died, their faces and gums growing pale and their eyes swelling before they wasted away. Some of the monkeys given the lower dose began losing weight in the first week it was administered. C8 also appeared to affect some monkeys’ kidneys.
Of course, enough of anything can be deadly. Even a certain amount of table salt would kill a lab animal, a DuPont employee named C. E. Steiner noted in a confidential 1980 communications meeting. For C8, the lethal oral dose was listed as one ounce per 150 pounds, although the document stated that the chemical was most toxic when inhaled. The harder question was to determine a maximum safe dosage. How much could an animal — or a person — be exposed to without having any effects at all? The 1965 DuPont study of rats suggested that even a single dose of a similar surfactant could have a prolonged effect. Nearly two months after being exposed, the rats’ livers were still three times larger than normal.
Steiner declared that there was no “conclusive evidence” that C8 harmed workers, yet he also stated that “continued exposure is not tolerable.” Because C8 accumulated in bodies, the potential for harm was there, and Steiner predicted the company would continue medical and toxicological monitoring and described plans to supply workers who were directly exposed to the chemical with protective clothing.
Two years after DuPont learned of the monkey study, in 1981, 3M shared the results of another study it had done, this one on pregnant rats, whose unborn pups were more likely to have eye defects after they were exposed to C8. The EPA was also informed of the results. After 3M’s rat study came out, DuPont transferred all women out of work assignments with potential for exposure to C8. DuPont doctors then began tracking a small group of women who had been exposed to C8 and had recently been pregnant. If even one in five women gave birth to children who had craniofacial deformities, a DuPont epidemiologist named Fayerweather warned, the results should be considered significant enough to suggest that C8 exposure caused the problems.
As it turned out, at least one of eight babies born to women who worked in the Teflon division did have birth defects. A little boy named Bucky Bailey, whose mother, Sue, had worked in Teflon early in her pregnancy, was born with tear duct deformities, only one nostril, an eyelid that started down by his nose, and a condition known as “keyhole pupil,” which looked like a tear in his iris. Another child, who was two years old when the rat study was published in 1981, had an “unconfirmed eye and tear duct defect,” according to a DuPont document that was marked confidential.
Like Wamsley, Sue Bailey, one of the plaintiffs whose personal injury suits are scheduled to come to trial in the fall, remembers having plenty of contact with C8. When she started at DuPont in 1978, she worked first in the Nylon division and then in Lucite, she told me in an interview. But in 1980, when she was in the first trimester of her pregnancy with Bucky, she moved to Teflon, where she often sat watch over a large pipe that periodically filled up with liquid, which she had to pump to a pond in back of the plant. Occasionally some of the bubbly stuff would overflow from a nearby holding tank, and her supervisor taught her how to squeegee the excess into a drain.
Soon after Bucky was born, Bailey received a call from a DuPont doctor. “I thought it was just a compassion call, you know: can we do anything or do you need anything?” Bailey recalled. “Shoot. I should have known better.” In fact, the doctor didn’t express his sympathies, Bailey said, and instead asked her whether her child had any birth defects, explaining that it was standard to record such problems in employees’ newborns.
While Bailey was still on maternity leave, she learned that the company was removing its female workers from the Teflon division. She remembers the moment — and that it made her feel deceived. “It sure was a big eye-opener,” said Bailey, who still lives in West Virginia but left DuPont a few years after Bucky’s birth.
THE FEDERAL TOXIC SUBSTANCES Control Act requires companies that work with chemicals to report to the Environmental Protection Agency any evidence they find that shows or even suggests that they are harmful. In keeping with this requirement, 3M submitted its rat study to the EPA, and later DuPont scientists wound up discussing the study with the federal agency, saying they believed it was flawed. DuPont scientists neglected to inform the EPA about what they had found in tracking their own workers.
When DuPont began transferring women workers out of Teflon, the company did send out a flier alerting them to the results of the 3M study. When Sue Bailey saw the notice on the bench of the locker room and read about the rat study, she immediately thought of Bucky.
Yet when she went in to request a blood test, the results of which the doctor carefully noted to the thousandth decimal point, and asked if there might be a connection between Bucky’s birth defects and the rat study she had read about, Bailey recalls that Dr. Younger Lovelace Power, the plant doctor, said no. According to Karrh’s deposition, he told Karrh the same. “We went back to him and asked him to follow up on it, and he did, and came back saying that he did not think it was related.”
“I said, ‘I was in Teflon. Is this what happened to my baby?’” Bailey remembered. “And he said, ‘No, no.’” Power also told Bailey that the company had no record of her having worked in Teflon. Shortly afterward, she considered suing DuPont and even contacted a lawyer in Parkersburg, who she says wasn’t interested in taking her case against the town’s biggest employer. When contacted for his response to Bailey’s recollections, Power declined to comment.
By testing the blood of female Teflon workers who had given birth, DuPont researchers, who then reported their findings to Karrh, documented for the first time that C8 had moved across the human placenta.
In 2005, when the EPA fined the company for withholding this information, attorneys for DuPont argued that because the agency already had evidence of the connection between C8 and birth defects in rats, the evidence it had withheld was “merely confirmatory” and not of great significance, according to the agency’s consent agreement on the matter.
Ken Wamsley also remembers when his supervisor told him they had taken female workers out of Teflon. “I said, ‘Why’d you send all the women home?’ He said, ‘Well, we’re afraid, we think maybe it hurts the pregnancies in some of the women,’” recalled Wamsley. “They said, ‘Ken, it won’t hurt the men.’”
WHILE SOME DUPONT SCIENTISTS were carefully studying the chemical’s effect on the body, others were quietly tracking its steady spread into the water surrounding the Parkersburg plant. After it ceased dumping C8 in the ocean, DuPont apparently relied on disposal in unlined landfills and ponds, as well as putting C8 into the air through smokestacks and pouring waste water containing it directly into the Ohio River, as detailed in a 2007 study by Dennis Paustenbach published in the Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health.
By 1982, Karrh had become worried about the possibility of “current or future exposure of members of the local community from emissions leaving the plant’s perimeter,” as he explained in a letter to a colleague in the plastics department. After noting that C8 stays in the blood for a long time — and might be passed to others through blood donations — and that the company had only limited knowledge of its long-term effects, Karrh recommended that “available practical steps be taken to reduce that exposure.”
To get a sense of exactly how extensive that exposure was, in March 1984 an employee was sent out to collect samples, according to a memo by a DuPont staffer named Doughty. The employee went into general stores, markets, and gas stations, in local communities as far as 79 miles downriver from the Parkersburg plant, asking to fill plastic jugs with water, which he then took back for testing. The results of those tests confirmed C8’s presence at elevated levels.
Faced with the evidence that C8 had now spread far beyond the Parkersburg plant, internal documents show, DuPont was at a crossroads. Could the company find a way to reduce emissions? Should it switch to a new surfactant? Or stop using the chemical altogether? In May 1984, DuPont convened a meeting of 10 of its corporate business managers at the company’s headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, to tackle some of these questions. Results from an engineering study the group reviewed that day described two methods for reducing C8 emissions, including thermal destruction and a scrubbing system.
“None of the options developed are … economically attractive and would essentially put the long term viability of this business segment on the line,” someone named J. A. Schmid summarized in notes from the meeting, which are marked “personal and confidential.”
The executives considered C8 from the perspective of various divisions of the company, including the medical and legal departments, which, they predicted, “will likely take a position of total elimination,” according to Schmid’s summary. Yet the group nevertheless decided that “corporate image and corporate liability” — rather than health concerns or fears about suits — would drive their decisions about the chemical. Also, as Schmid noted, “There was a consensus that C-8, based on all the information available from within the company and 3M, does not pose a health hazard at low level chronic exposure.”
Though they already knew that it had been detected in two local drinking water systems and that moving ahead would only increase emissions, DuPont decided to keep using C8.
A DuPont lawyer referred to C8 as “the material 3M sells us that we poop to the river and into drinking water along the Ohio River.”
In fact, from that point on, DuPont increased its use and emissions of the chemical, according to Paustenbach’s 2007 study, which was based on the company’s purchasing records, interviews with employees, and historical emissions from the Parkersburg plant. According to the study, the plant put an estimated 19,000 pounds of C8 into the air in 1984, the year of the meeting. By 1999, the peak of its air emissions, the West Virginia plant put some 87,000 pounds of C8 into local air and water. That same year, the company emitted more than 25,000 pounds of the chemical into the air and water around its New Jersey plant, as noted in a confidential presentation DuPont made to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection in 2006. All told, according to Paustenbach’s estimate, between 1951 and 2003 the West Virginia plant eventually spread nearly 2.5 million pounds of the chemical into the area around Parkersburg.
Essentially, DuPont decided to double-down on C8, betting that somewhere down the line the company would somehow be able to “eliminate all C8 emissions in a way yet to be developed that would not economically penalize the bussiness [sic],” as Schmid wrote in his 1984 meeting notes. The executives, while conscious of probable future liability, did not act with great urgency about the potential legal predicament they faced. If they did decide to reduce emissions or stop using the chemical altogether, they still couldn’t undo the years of damage already done. As the meeting summary noted, “We are already liable for the past 32 years of operation.”
When contacted by The Intercept for comment, 3M provided the following statement. “In more than 30 years of medical surveillance we have observed no adverse health effects in our employees resulting from their exposure to PFOS or PFOA. This is very important since the level of exposure in the general population is much lower than that of production employees who worked directly with these materials,” said Dr. Carol Ley, 3M vice president and corporate medical director. “3M believes the chemical compounds in question present no harm to human health at levels they are typically found in the environment or in human blood.” In May 2000, 3M announced that it would phase out its use of C8.
DUPONT CONFRONTED ITS potential liability in part by rehearsing the media strategy it would take if word of the contamination somehow got out. In the weeks after the 1984 meeting, an internal public relations team drafted the first of several “standby press releases.” The guide for dealing with the imagined press offered assurances that only “small quantities of [C8] are discharged to the Ohio River” and that “these extremely low levels would have no adverse affects.” When a hypothetical reporter, who presumably learned that DuPont was choosing not to invest in a system to reduce emissions, asks whether the company’s decision was based on money, the document advises answering “No.”
The company went on to draft these just-in-case press releases at several difficult junctures, and even the hypothetical scenarios they play out can be uncomfortable. In one, drafted in 1989, after DuPont had bought local fields that contained wells it knew to be contaminated, the company spokesperson in the script winds up in an outright lie. Although internal documents list “the interests of protecting our plant site from public liability” as one of the reasons for the purchase, when the hypothetical reporter asks whether DuPont purchased the land because of the water contamination, the suggested answer listed in the 1989 standby release was to deny this and to state instead that “it made good business sense to do so.”
DuPont drafted another contingency press release in 1991, after it discovered that C8 was present in a landfill near the plant, which it estimated could produce an exit stream containing 100 times its internal maximum safety level. Fears about the possible health consequences were enough to spur the company to once again rehearse its media strategy. (“What would be the effect of cows drinking water from the … stream?” the agenda from a C8 review meeting that year asked.) Yet other recent and disturbing discoveries had also provoked corporate anxieties.
In 1989, DuPont employees found an elevated number of leukemia deaths at the West Virginia plant. Several months later, they measured an unexpectedly high number of kidney cancers among male workers. Both elevations were plant-wide and not specific to workers who handled C8. But, the following year, the scientists clarified how C8 might cause at least one form of cancer in humans. In 1991, it became clear not just that C8-exposed rats had elevated chances of developing testicular tumors — something 3M had also recently observed — but, worse still, that the mechanism by which they developed the tumors could apply to humans.
Nevertheless, the 1991 draft press release said that “DuPont and 3M studies show that C-8 has no known toxic or ill health effects in humans at the concentrations detected” and included this reassuring note: “As for most chemicals, exposure limits for C-8 have been established with sufficient safety factors to ensure there is no health concern.”
Yet even this prettified version of reality in Parkersburg never saw the light of day. The standby releases were only to be used to guide the company’s media response if its bad news somehow leaked to the public. It would be almost 20 years after the first standby release was drafted before anyone outside the company understood the dangers of the chemical and how far it had spread beyond the plant.
IN THE MEANTIME, fears about liability mounted along with the bad news. In 1991, DuPont researchers recommended another study of workers’ liver enzymes to follow up on the one that showed elevated levels more than a decade before. But Karrh and others decided against the project, which was predicted to cost $45,000. When asked about it in a deposition, Karrh characterized the decision as the choice to focus resources on other worthy scientific projects. But notes taken on a discussion of whether or not to carry out the proposed study included the bullet point “liability” and the hand-written suggestion: “Do the study after we are sued.”
In a 2004 deposition, Karrh denied that the notes were his and said that the company would never have endorsed such a comment. Although notes from the 1991 meeting describe the presence of someone named “Kahrr,” Karrh said that he had no idea who that person was and didn’t recall being present for the meeting. When contacted by The Intercept, Karrh declined to comment.
As the secrets mounted so too did anxiety about C8, which DuPont was by now using and emitting not just in West Virginia and New Jersey, but also in its facilities in Japan and the Netherlands. By the time a small committee drafted a “white paper” about C8 strategies and plans in 1994, the subject was considered so sensitive that each copy was numbered and tracked. The top-secret document, which was distributed to high-level DuPont employees around the world, discussed the need to “evaluate replacement of C-8 with other more environmentally safe materials” and presented evidence of toxicity, including a paper published in the Journal of Occupational Medicine that found elevated levels of prostate cancer death rates for employees who worked in jobs where they were exposed to C8. After they reviewed drafts, recipients were asked to return them for destruction.
In 1999, when a farmer suspected that DuPont had poisoned his cows (after they drank from the very C8-polluted stream DuPont employees had worried over in their draft press release eight years earlier) and filed a lawsuit seeking damages, the truth finally began to seep out. The next year, an in-house DuPont attorney named Bernard Reilly helped open an internal workshop on C8 by giving “a short summary of the right things to document and not to document.” But Reilly — whose own emails about C8 would later fuel the legal battle that eventually included thousands of people, including Ken Wamsley and Sue Bailey — didn’t heed his own advice.
Reilly clearly made the wrong choice when he used the company’s computers to write about C8, which he revealingly called the “the material 3M sells us that we poop to the river and into drinking water along the Ohio River.” But the DuPont attorney was right about two things: If C8 was proven to be harmful, Reilly predicted in 2000, “we are really in the soup because essentially everyone is exposed one way or another.” Also, as he noted in another prescient email sent 15 years ago: “This will be an interesting saga before it’s thru.”
EDITORS NOTE: DuPont, asked to respond to the allegations contained in this article, declined to comment due to pending litigation.
In previous statements and court filings, however, DuPont has consistently denied that it did anything wrong or broke any laws. In settlements reached with regulatory authorities and in a class-action suit, DuPont has made clear that those agreements were compromise settlements regarding disputed claims and that the settlements did not constitute an admission of guilt or wrongdoing. Likewise, in response to the personal injury claims of Ken Wamsley, Sue Bailey, and others, DuPont has rejected all charges of wrongdoing and maintained that their injuries were “proximately caused by acts of God and/or by intervening and/or superseding actions by others, over which DuPont had no control.” DuPont also claimed that it “neither knew, nor should have known, that any of the substances to which Plaintiff was allegedly exposed were hazardous or constituted a reasonable or foreseeable risk of physical harm by virtue of the prevailing state of the medical, scientific and/or industrial knowledge available to DuPont at all times relevant to the claims or causes of action asserted by Plaintiff.”
This article was reported in partnership with The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute.
Alleen Brown, Hannah Gold, and Sheelagh McNeill contributed to this story.
In this series, Sharon Lerner exposes DuPont’s multi-decade cover-up of the severe harms to health associated with a chemical known as PFOA, or C8, and associated compounds such as PFOS and GenX. Read our complete coverage of PFAS pollution.
It’s obvious the U.S. Government is entirely irresponsible in matters relating to a potential global catastrophe manufactured by an unscrupulous company who’s sole purpose for existence is: profit.
Working in the environment at dupont. He noticed an orangie odour. After work his clothes always smelt of this being thermex .my husbabd reported lots of places where it was and was asked to leave it to the technitiians . Reporting it to workmates also telling them to steer clear of theese areas.
My husband worked for dupont in doncaster previously ici for many years. He died in 2012 having mainly Multiple myeloma contributing to his demise . Could be a connection to absorbing chemicals over that time.
I cringe when I think back to my teenage years when I had my first apartment and was gifted with a full set of T-Fal cookware. I used it for years, until the cooking came off. In the early 2000’s I got rid of ALL non-stick / Teflon coated bake ware and cookware, when I become aware of the potential health effects.
I wonder if that is why I have Thyroid Disease.
It’s interesting. a well-seasoned cast iron pan is virtually non-stick and non-toxic. But, I guess, you can’t patent cast iron.
wow… and people thought Tobacco was our greatest health threat
I’ll snort a line of that G8….mmmmmmhhhhmmmmm
I look forward to part 2.
I also likened it to how GMO people also are not doing the proper vetting of just what are the (if any) long term affects of using these plants on people, animals, and the environment.
I’m not against GMO, only want a proper study done.
They to simply did their thing and said, well it seems to be doing what we want so lets release it now. Just show me the long term studies on any possible affects on us the real end users.
This article simply says that which we skeptics tend to do, that is never believe what our companies and government do or say. As Dr. House says “people lie”.
Good luck in your future people.
Even though it’s said you’ll never get out of this life alive, all I want is to do is go simply because of old age and “natural” causes.
Right, Raymond!
These days it is impossible to determine that “old age” and “natural” causes are NOT euphemisms for chemical abuse.
Let us not forget Agent Orange and the lies we all heard from it. It has been a long time to get any acknowledgement on it. Corporate greed is huge. Before we slam EPA don’t forget the lobbyists making the waters murky for regulators too.
It is not the impossible-to-ignore-or-cover-up disasters like the EPA’s fuck-up at the Animus River or Freedom Industries’ Elk River spill that are going to kill us, it is the cumulative effect over decades of all these “minute amounts” (or not so minute amounts) of chemicals discharged “legally” into land, sea and air by manufacturers and consumers of these chemicals. And shamefully lacking as practices and policies may be here in the USA, let’s don’t forget that we’re one of the cleanest dirty shirts in the world with regard to toxic chemical regulation and disposal.
Yep, but dirty is dirty, and the money still says that’s enough….
It’s the fluoride, stupid.
Wow whole article not one mention of WWII. Teflon was created to handle fluoride. Fluoride is necessary for refining uranium, and tended to melt and destroy everything it contacted. Scientists involved in the A-bomb project remarked they had no defense in the laboratory against a high pressure fluoride gas leak.
In this article, pfoa’s are called invincible (or something). They are, and it’s not because of any of the eight “C'”s. It’s because of the fluoride.
The same Congress-appointed lawyers that investigated gov testing of radioactive elements on the public also investigated fluoride’s role in the making of the A-bomb. Fluoride and Uranium were the two chemicals crucial for the process. Those gov lawyers got zilch, zip, nada on fluoride, but everything they wanted almost on the radiation tests.
Fluoride was necessary for the bomb, necessary for teflon, and is necessary for Prozac.
Did I mention it may even benefit dental health?
Chemist? This is about PFOA’s. It is not about WWII or fluorine.
These don’t exist in nature. Fluorine is the most reactive element (most electronegative) and therefore readily wants to combine and form compounds . The carbon-fluorine bond is the 2nd strongest bond in organic chemistry. In this case the compound does not want to break down and upon entering the body will accumulate.
When serum blood levels are measured and PFOA shows up it because the molecule does not break down and the fluoride ions remain attached. You are measuring PFOA and not the fluoride ion. Correct , fluorine’s are attached but it’s the whole molecule not breaking down in the body that presents the problem, again because of it’s reactivity and bond strength. It wants to remain a compound and hang onto those fluoride ions.
As for the dental heath that is a topic of great debate. Japan and most all of western Europe do not fluoridate the water and yet have seen decline in dental caries. See WHO studies on fluorine.
Very interesting, I was just tossing around a fluoride compound story. Do you know about Boyce Thompson inventing a plant that will survive same and feed it back to US?
http://bti.cornell.edu/about/history/50s-and-60s-at-bti/
See paragraph three.
Basically, this guy helped deflect attention from the producer of the pollution, aluminum production, and devised an edible solution las wel as a detector, inspector! The grass eats the gas, but then what?
It’s a globo problemo…
https://www.google.com/patents/US2823984
If flouride from phospahte fertilizer production, aluminum smelting and uranium refining wasn’t disposed of by d=feeding it to us in water, “better living” and drugs, it would be a mufti-billion dollar a year waste disposal cost and problem for those industries.
It is so important to dispose of fluoride while making a profit doing so, that here in Florida, where phosphate fertilizer production is a big industry, it is illegal to NOT fluoridate water.
I”m not sure if fluoride is the initiator of toxicity of C8, but surely you’ve heard of enzymes. Liver enzymes can, and sometimes do, create more toxic compounds in the process of detoxifying a substance. Simply because fluoride bonds are extremely stable does not mean that that fluoride is inert once attached or that a substances toxicity is not related to the presence of fluoride.
The fluoride bond can also render a substance phototoxic, meaning when sunlight hits your skin, toxic species are produced.
Thanks for your reply.
All may be true, my point as stated above is that they are measuring serum PFOA levels in the blood. Simply sample the blood and look for the whole PFOA molecule.
The fluoride/fluorine was a side conversation. PFOA, from reports and studies I have read does not break down in the body or environment. The kidney removes ( approx 50-60%) a great deal of the fluoride from other sources in the body while the rest is absorbed by hard tissues ( cartilage, bone etc.) We know this because the ion is found in excreted urine and also in bones and the pineal gland.
Finding that man made chemical in the body to me implies it was somehow ingested, most probably drinking water since elevated levels have been found in the wells and water supplies in the Mid Ohio Valley. It also tends to not break down and moves back and forth from intestine to blood stream remaining as PFOA. Additionally it tends to accumulate in the body as evidenced by the increased levels found in certain individuals.
The toxicity studies were about feeding rats, dogs, monkeys etc PFOA. Observing the effects on the body including cancers and other illnesses.
I am not talking about fluorosilicic acid or sodium fluoride that is added to water supplies of sodium fluoride or stannous fluoride used in toothpaste.
The debate about fluoride or fluorine is a whole other topic. For example many studies indicate that fluoride may have an effect on IQ and there is evidence of bone cancers and other bone disorders with elevated fluoride levels.
The point here is DuPont dumped this stuff and it is in just about every American. Studies I have read including the C8 panel indicate a more probable than not link to those illnesses and cancer mentioned in the study. I compare that finding to be much like the Surgeon Generals warning on cigarettes, not worth the risk!
DuPont should stop the charade and ensure the safety and health of the residents affected. To continue using it after your studies indicated toxicity and to withhold information (EPA Fine) is criminal. Just because they settled does not mean they aren’t negligent. They will tell you that the settlement does not indicate guilt, but the amount of this toxic stuff on the planet tells me otherwise.
The main point is that the presence of fluoride alters the biochemistry of a substance. No need to disassociate the fluoride or even convert it through enzyme action to something either more or less toxic.
The substitution of fluoride for another ion in the main molecule backbone can render the substance much more toxic or alter it’s bio- or neuro-chemical properties.
Here’s an example I am intimately familiar with, having direct personal experience with the toxicity.
Mefloquine, brand name Lariam, is an anti-malarial consisting of a fluorquionoline backbone. It has three fluoride ions substituted where hydrogen would normally be on the basic quinoline ring.
Cipro, and its cousins, are part of a class of anti-bacterials known as fluorquinolones. They are the darlings of the anti-bacterial arsenal these days. Quinolines and quinolones themselves differ simply in the number of double bounds in the rings. So Lariam and Cipro are virtually identical , except for the substitutions on the ring side chains.
Cipro has ONE fluoride substitution, Lariam has three. Both have the potential for extreme neurotoxicity that can manifest as psychological and behavioral disturbances, that can be debilitating and permanent.
However, Lariam has been associated with suicidal and homicidal behavior far in excess of that caused by Fluoroquinolones, even to the point of being noticed by the popular press.. Therefore it is a reasonable hypothesis that the reason is the extra fluoride in Lariam, because other that that, there is virtually no difference except for the particular side chains that distinguish one fluoroquinolone anti-bacterial from another.
You are correct. My point, however, is the elephant in the room. Once upon a time teflon was top-secret. It works because of the fluoride, and I was hoping to highlight the chemical’s fundamental capacity to destroy. When it finally meets something it can’t destroy it combines with it and becomes invincible. Teflon was produced in order to physically handle the fluoride that was necessary for refining uranium in order to build the atomic bomb.
I’m not putting the health effects of teflon down to the fluoride. You have that topic squared away. It just amazes me how little is known about this extraordinary chemical and it’s role in our history. Fluoride vaporizes uranium on contact. Did I mention it’s extraordinary for your teeth?
It’s not really a simple-minded argument I’m making. The lead toxicologist of the Manhattan Project, Dr. Harold Hodge, proposed a study on the neurotoxic effects of fluoride. We know he proposed this study because a researcher found the proposal. We don’t know if he carried out the study. Dr. Phyllis Mullenix, however, found her fluoride rat study (which, incidentally, mirrored Hodge’s own proposal) she conducted at Boston Children’sHospital mentored by a highly distinguished researcher — one Dr. Harold Hodge, who checked on the rat study in person every day until falling ill, when he checked every day by phone. Google Dr. Mullenix if you want to watch her describe the situation.
Just thought it worth mentioning. Thanks for the reply.
Okay – we need to watch for harmful chemicals but this has the sound and feel of another Rachael Carson debacle. Too many environmentalists with too little detailed knowledge, less common sense and frequently nothing more than a zeal to make a name for themselves use anecdotal information to scare the public into thinking they are authorities on some subject.
Rachael Carson debacle: there is no such thing, or at least it just exists in the imagination of people such as you. Surely you would not blame RC for mosquitoes developing resistance to DDT? But that is in effect what you are doing.
“Rachael Carson debacle. ”
Yeah, How dare she expose the problems with DDT in the environment. I bet she was responsible for raptor eggs being too weak to support the mother bird too.
Damn her! If it wasn’t for her, we would be free of malaria and bird shit on our cars.
I hope she’s in jail, like all whistleblowers should be!
Regarding C8:
Teflon is made from tetrafluoroethylene (C2F4). C8 does not seem to be involved at all. Why was C8 an essential part of the production of teflon? What role did it play?
Teflon is not made from tetrafluoroethylene (C2F4), Teflon IS tetrafluoroethylene (C2F4). I am not privy to the actual chemical reactions necessary to produce tetrafluoroethylene (C2F4). but I would assume C8 is a reactant in the process.
Teflon is Polytetrafluoroethylene, (C2F4)n. Chains of the individual molecules are produced. C2F4 is produced from chloroform. I do not believe that C8 is used in the process.
Teflon is Polytetrafluoroethylene.
Right. Tetrafluoroethylene, (C2F4) is the monomer. Last I checked, it didn’t exist in nature, and the last I checked, chloroform doesn’t contain fluoride. So it has to be made from something and the fluoride has to come from somewhere.
For making Teflon non-stick pans they use(d) PFOA (C8) in the process and is burned off. What I understand of it, it’s used for the ceramic layer on top of PTFE (C2F4). That’s a heat resistant silicone like, also used for cookingware (327 C). That’s what get’s burned when you forget about your pots and pans.
nah…. Mike has a point. The title of the article may not be correct. I am not sure what the right title than should read.
Teflon might in fact be a brandname of PTFE. At least it’s widely referred to as just that. There is no problem with teflon tape or other PTFE products and no PFOA (C8) is involved in making it.
<blockquote)Teflon might in fact be a brandname of PTFE
Yes, it is.
C8 can be used in the polymerization process where C2F4 becomes (C2F4)n. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfluorooctanoic_acid) Perhaps “Teflon” has better properties when made this way for some applications. The title thus might be correct, but I think a better explanation is necessary. If it was “an essential ingredient” of Teflon for so many years, what is different now, and what are the possible problems with the new process?
Great article.
This is the sort of journalism I love: Incisive, in-depth revelation of terrible deeds. Naming names, quoting secret meetings and emails… the works.
Thanks very much, Sharon Lerner; I’m looking forward to part two.
When I read stories like this, there is one thing that perplexes me. It is always observed that the cost of cleaning up an accident or malfeasance would be very large. But it is never compared with the amount of profit generated by the action in the first place. For a business person, this is the only thing that matters. If the penalty to any company is $1 billion, but the company earned more than $1 billion, then the fine does not matter. It becomes standard business procedure. It is profitable, end of story. People hear things like a company being fined hundred of millions of dollars and think ‘gee, thats a big number’ but the size of the number is irrelevant. The only thing that matters at all is how it compares to the amount of money made doing the thing they are being penalized for. If it is less, which is usually the case when dealing with large companies, then the penalty is just a cost of doing business and it would still hurt them more financially to cease their harmful activities than it would to continue them. If it costs you $1 million to earn $1.1 million, then you pay the price. Companies also benefit from the small, but vocal, portion of society that will stand up and say the government has no place levying multi-billion-dollar penalties on companies. Those people don’t consider the scale of the damage done, or whether the penalty will even motivate the company to cease their harmful actions, they just have a visceral reaction to the large number and speak out in defense of the company.
Well said, Dustin.
I’d rather see executives criminally santioned and jailed- maybe that would stop this kind of monstrous behavior that is still, incredibly, going on.
Ethyl corportation knew of the danger of tetraethyl lead in the ’30s when they first started using this petrol additive; many nations banned leaded petrol in the ’70s and ’80s, yet the company -under another name- was still marketing it to developing world nations which hadn’t yet banned it in the early ’00s.
James Hardie knew all about asbestos in the ’50s, yet continued to make stuff from it until the ’80s. In the ’90s, the company faced legal action, lost, set up a compensation fund for victims of their asbestos, drastically under-funded it then moved their corporate HQ from Australia to The Netherlands to avoid liability.
Melamine in baby formula, lead in paint for kids toys, poisonous dog food, deadly “life saving” drugs… the people responsible are amoral scumbags who deserve to be locked up for a long time.
A corollary to this is that, in most instances, the cost to the public to clean up the mess left behind- external costs in economic parlance – is greater than ,not only the taxes collected but, in many cases, the actual profits generated.
In these instances, wouldn’t it be cheaper for the public to pay the company to NOT manufacture the product in the first place? If the product is somehow an utter necessity, wouldn’t it be even better still for the public to manufacture the product – thereby keeping the profits for the public while insuring the externalitiess are minimized?
An instances was cited in the article of clean up costs far exceeding the economic benefit created. Another instance I am aware of occurred in NY State. Costs, paid exclusively by the taxpayers of NYS, to clean up cadmium contamination (29,000+ ppm) in the Hudson River – produced by a small electroplating company which went out of business – was in the billions of dollars – far exceeding any profit, much less taxes, produced by the operation in the first place.
Great piece! I’m looking forward to part two.
Very well written article I have never heard of c8 before reading the article
Thank you so much for keeping us informed. Very interesting.
Thank you for this excellent expose. Keep them coming.
Fantastic article, yet horrible in its information. I am afraid this is the tip of the iceberg with these chemical companies. I would be very afraid to live in this are and also…Houston and Baton Rouge, LA. for example. Thanks for your reporting on this.
Gives new meaning to the term “Teflon” when applied to corrupt but untouchable public figures. Appropriate since many have sold us out to toxic industries.
The bad news eventually comes out about things we don’t need– like Teflon and the tobacco industry. But when it comes to tech we actually need– like vaccines– the dirt and smoking guns pile up for decades until industry and regulators are so far gone, mired in cheap dinosaur science and so dominant that they’ve crushed safety innovation everywhere that no one wants to be responsible for tripping the booby trap by exposing it, even if the trap was laid by industry itself. The “trap” is that if industry pulls out or collapses, we could see a return of things like polio and diphtheria. And so the disaster rages on to the point that the damage may be greater than from the diseases themselves.
http://www.c-span.org/video/?c4546421/rep-bill-posey-calling-investigation-cdcs-mmr-reasearch-fraud
Hillary Clinton, for all her warmongering and corporate corruption, once suggested a good solution to this: pass a law that vaccine makers would have to announce their intention to stop making a product long in advance so that they couldn’t pull another stunt like they did in the 80s, which was to demand tort immunity “or else” they’d simply suddenly cease production. She backed away from the proposal when she joined the Obama admin.
Are not corporations now Citizens. Who goes to jail when corporate boards and execs permit these horrendous manifestations on workers and the public?
I still live in Parkersburg. I did not see in the article where Dupont paid residents in the area $400 to test their blood for C8 “research”. If I remember correctly I signed away my right to be apart of the class action suit against them by receiving the $400 check after they took my blood for testing.
I would talk to a lawyer. If you signed away your right to sue without having full information, it may not be binding, notwithstanding the $400.
Might want to contact the author- she’d likely be interested in interviewing you for part two. Her email is at the end of this piece.
Hi Scott,
I worked on some of the science panel studies mentioned in the article. Did you give the blood sample as part of the Wood County Circuit Court class action lawsuit (http://www.hpcbd.com/Personal-Injury/DuPont-C8/Why-is-the-C8-Class-Action-Unique-and-Different.shtml), which paid $400 per person? If so your blood sample was used in the science panel studies (available at http://www.c8sciencepanel.org/publications.html) and you might be eligible for medical monitoring (http://www.c-8medicalmonitoringprogram.com/). I’m not involved in the lawsuit or medical monitoring so I’m not exactly sure how those work, but these web sites provide some more information and contact information if you have questions.
Why doesn’t the EPA regulate this nasty stuff instead of benign carbon dioxide?
Are you some kind of bloody idiot? Man-made CO2 uncontrollably warms the planet faster than nature! What in the hell is the matter with you?
Man made CO2? Do you mean produced?
PFOA is man made and is in the environment. Problem is does not break down in the body or the ground water, ocean, air etc.
While you are trying to make this a climate thing, PFOA is clearly the bigger issue. While some feel CO2 is a problem and others do not there is no denying it has effects that are valuable. Please check the increase in crops yield, and other effects associated with carbon dioxide.
PFOA on the other hand has one desirable effect , surfactant for production of Teflon. I know of no known natural benefit to having PFOA in the environment. I can do without the PFOA and will risk the few extra calories of whatever can be used in a frying pan.
Wake up! It’s not an either or situation. There’s ample reason to regulate both – as well as a host of other substances, solid, gas and liquid, that endanger both the environment and public health for the sake of profits.
Will the second part cover the Chemours spin off, now that it owns the Parkersburg plant and its liabilities?
Fantastic article, really well written! …fantastically horrific article, but not in the least surprising. Having worked for some Grade A corporate slimeballs over the years, I’ve no doubt -as bad as it sounds here- that the reality is 50 times worse.
What is it with all these corporate types that they are incapable of showing any more responsibility or consciousness than a bunch of pre-adolescent boys playing with matches?
Most of them are sociopaths which means they have no moral compass or conscience. They think that harming large numbers of people is Ok b/c they are making a profit.
1979-1986 exposed to C8 and others.
Memphis,Tn. Fite Rd. Plant.Mystery illnesses.Limited or no resources.
Seeking Help/Mercy
I am a former Dupont Chemicals employee,Memphis,Tn.Fite Rd.site.Mystery Tumor in upper hard pallet/roof of mouth;Removed before making, Prostate Cancer/Removal before spreading.Interested in Class Action Law Suit/Pertinent Information.
Did you try contacting Sue Bailey or Ken Wamsley? Fellow victims are probably most likely to respond, and they can give you a direct line to a lawyer.
http://www.taftlaw.com/attorneys/5-robert-a-bilott
Wonder how these people were “dummy” enough to fall for all this?
Do you imagine smart phones and wifi are tested honestly? Are you wearing yoga pants or tops loaded with rubber? When you buy a new tee shirt from sweatshops, do you wash it with baking soda to get some of the formaldehyde and resins off? Do you really know what’s in Pepsi and European collagen?
We are swimming in an ocean of garbage here…mostly due to the eager greed of corporations, but also to our own eager greed for convenience and gadgets. Lat’s admit it…we gobble the crud up without even thinking about it.
Oh Noooooooo, not Pepsi. Oh well, guess I’ll stay with Dr. Pepper………
Wow. This just makes me wonder what’s happening now with other chemicals (ahem, sodium fluoride) that is being covered up. This is why I distill, then filter, then remineralize my water. Life is too short to spend it being poisoned by corporations or government.
Sodium fluoride is a waste product produced by aluminum refining that has no effect on tooth decay and causes brain damage. It was added to the water supply in concentration camps during WWII to passify prisoners. DuPont, which controlled General Motors at the time, was one of the US companies indicted during the Nuremberg Manufacturing and Pharmaceutical Trials. (wayback) Irenee DuPont, friends of Morgan Bank and GM financed a coup against FDR in 1934, including a $3 million army of terrorists, modeled on the French fascist Croix de Feu, but it was outed by General Smedley Butler. (Trading with the Enemy: Charles Higham, John Loftus: America’s Nazi Secret.)
Awesome article, Sharon Lerner – thanks!
Ask Forbes, Fortune, Bloomberg BusinessWeek and other publications, and applicable securities analysts, to assess the impact of the liabilities on the value of DuPont (NYSE ticker symbol DD). How many will rise to the occasion?
Problem is the people responsible will not be held as such. The company will be and the people themselves will not be personally responsible. These people need to be prosecuted.
Great reporting. Insane story. What evil people.
This is appalling. I can’t believe that any sane person would decide to work at a poison plant and allow their babies to be exposed to these chemicals. People are truly stupid. They must have deluded themselves into thinking they were working in a candy factory. DuPont and all chemical factories should be destroyed. We don’t need their satanic destruction.
All chemical factories? I’m assuming you are not posting psychically.
Everything is made of atoms and molecules, i.e. chemicals.
This story is appalling, and the evil done very real. But don’t overreach.
Not overreaching at all! The comparison to tobacco is spot on. Making it for years even after knowing early on about the effects. Name one use of this other than production of Teflon products.
This stuff of course is made of atoms but it’s about what the atoms effects are on the earth. Give me one natural use of this material and the benefits to man other than to keep food from sticking. I’ll cook in cast iron and risk the sticking (BTW I get it, it’s a problem in production and may not pose a risk in the finished pans.)
Worked for DuPont for 30 years in R&D and technical roles and I am ashamed to say so1 Long list of toxic material we try and defend,
Imprelis®, Benlate® and PFOA® just to name a few.
Thanks for posting here, and am not sure if you’ll read this. Bear with me — I’m curious what it means to do R&D as a chemist professionally…i.e. the type of career path that is set for all chemists, and how difficult or impossible it would be to live as a chemist without working for a big company like Dow. The bigger companies like Dow have the money to hire these engineers out of school, and I’m assuming pay them to live quite comfortably. The company knows what sort of chemicals produce the most amount of profit, and those are probably tied to basic novelty in consumer goods and marketing schemes that sell the most product (teflon, goretex)…stuff you can license and that people will buy because they think New = Better…
I work in tech, and think the best way to conceptualize tech/engineering work, is to think of the really big corporations as buying brains and eyes to look at “problems” that the corporate board decides to focus on. That’s it. Your academic and intellect reduced to rote problem solving, which you do not choose and is not based in anything other than the fact that the company has amassed wealth for somereason and is willing to pay you. In IT/tech as of only recently there is more leeway to either go out on your own, or look for companies that might share your values or interests academically…I’m not sure if chemist or chemical engineers have that sort of choice, and these are companies that are close to 100+ years old! That in turn has created this massive feedback loop of corpoate interest in profit, and a constant stream of well meaning engineers divorced from the chemicals they are “inventing” or researching that are either unecessary and often poisonous to the planet or life.
That’s a really long winded way to say that I think the link between giant corporations and science is completely fucked by design. We’ll have to short circuit that.
Dumping waste in the ocean is goddamn criminal.
Thank you for this series!
I think the perception from an outside person would envision chemists and lab technicians as working in labs with beakers, test tubes and the like. In reality little of that actually goes on. Take this issue for example: Plunkett got Teflon by mistake and the resulting work for years was refinement of the manufacturing process. Once a process goes to manufacturing it’s about producing more for less. They know it, you know it and I know, the more you can knock out of manufacturing cost the better the bottom line for the business.
Only a handful of scientists, chemists or engineers ever make a major contribution. All others are relegated to making what I term as “tweaks” to the process for items such as increased capacity, yield and others factors that contribute to the bottom line.
If you are not going to work for a major corporation then to me it’s going to be very difficult to go out on your own, you gotta have capital and the big corporations of course do. What makes that even more disturbing is that there are many very intelligent and creative scientists and working for corporations often subdues that intelligence and creativity. Good salaries? Probably. Enjoy the work? Probably not so much.
Every chemist, engineer, scientist or associate (even those with their Phd’s) I have worked around has stated as some point the work they were doing had more business implications than science implications.
Top science contributors are rarely found in labs but rather in meetings or conference room talking about the economic portion of the science. I recall going into am meeting around a polymer for lithium polymer batteries and one of the top bosses telling a top chemist they needed to move faster on finding that polymer. His reply was “3M hasn’t found it in 30 years what makes you think I can find it in a month?” My point is those bosses were really concerned with the need to get to market quickly versus the complexity o the science.
You and I agree on the issue of the link between big corporations and science. How do you change and get the best people in science working on the right things from a science perspective versus a business perspective?
Unless the chemical is already known to be toxic or dangerous much of the work goes into getting the product refined and the safety and health of people and the environment are after thoughts.
What makes this so disturbing to me is the arrogance of the corporation even this many years later. I am not condoning the dumping in the early years ( in reality they should have addressed that concern) but to still be in denial after more and more scientific data comes out means the bottom limes still rules. There needs to be more of a push to hold the CEO’s and senior management criminally negligent rather than to fine them pennies on the dollars of profit they make.
Not sure how you got your comments posted without use of the deadly chemicals in the battery, monitor, plastic body and circuitry of your computer, pad or phone.
We all have a line in the sand we would not cross…just be aware that we each feel justified when we choose to cross another person’s line.
Great article. Needless to say – we are living in a shit storm of chemicals, many of which are endocrine disruptors. That means they screw with the body’s ability to grow, heal and reproduce properly. And, perhaps, that has always been the intended purpose of their usage.
IR guided weapons like Stinger missiles, use HgCdTe semiconductors (mercury-cadmium-tellurium). Fume hoods with big fans are used, but even in the highest-rated cleanrooms, contamination is a problem, so the fans blow chemicals out of the fume hoods onto workers. Mercury has a very high vapor pressure, and is odorless and colorless and stored in fat. Most mercury poisoning is through inhaling vapor.
It seems like you can’t isolate the manufacture of weapons from the deaths they’re intended to produce.
I’m from Parkersburg, it likely wasn’t a choice to work there. DuPont was one of the the biggest employers and best paying and jobs are scarce in that area.
I’m with Cathy. I’m also from Parkersburg – lived there up until 10 years ago. Grew up on a farm in the shadow of DuPont, and drank/showered/cooked with well water until high school (when my dad finally got a city line to the house). The well is still there, we just don’t use it anymore.
DuPont is the largest employer in the area. If it goes away, the town will crumble to nothing. Love the judgement of people’s intelligence when you don’t even know the area. Very compassionate of you.
Where you work is a choice you made.
Drinking cancer causing chemicals was not!
Yeah economic displacement and migration isn’t the problem of workers. It’s a management decision. Towns and cities disappear all the time, and its inhuman, but the problem is that management and boards are allow to build those communities without thinking about the long-term prospects for when work dries up, or if the company is fucking criminal when its dumping waste on its neighbor. No one is blaming you personally for having to live there or stay, you and your family or loved ones should be taken care of — the CEO and Board of Dow has more than enough money to make that happen.
The country of coal mine, moonshine or get on down the line, DuPont looks good. People were misinformed, lied to, when the truth came out they were already poisoned. The people sought employment not criminal abuse.
Great article! Too bad the MSM won’t do a show on these facts but it isn’t surprising,who’s their daddy?
Apparently Teflon is not entirely safe:
H/t HollanDaze Sawz who linked to this below: http://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancercauses/othercarcinogens/athome/teflon-and-perfluorooctanoic-acid–pfoa
Wonderful article. I am curious how the “voluntary” phase-out of C8 that was suppose to happen this year is going. Will you be reporting on that? Excellent reporting and thank.
Thank you Sharon for a wonderful article!
The prudent thing to do before introducing any product that can potentially be ingested, or which comes into contact with something that is, is to have long term toxicity trials conducted by a neutral organization. As such a process is both costly and time consuming, the companies that produce such products spend untold millions lobbying governments to exempt their products from testing and to weaken the regulatory agencies responsible for ensuring public health. The chemical and pharmaceutical industries are no different from the financial industry in that regard. But unfortunately, it seems that most Americans believe the fable that everything the government does is bad, and thereby empower the very companies that continue to work to maximize their own profits at the cost of others’ health, even lives.
OK, for years I’ve guessed that the cracking industry (oil refining) is shipping their filthy waste (benzene, etc…) off to the fracking industry (natural gas producers) to use as their “proprietary” recipe for extraction, but is it just a distraction? Are they saving a fracking fortune eliminating expensive waste by recycling it back into the community for a kick back?
So I ran that past my inlaw/outlaw who’s analyzed that shite, and he said the pieces might fit, but who wants to die like cousin Marshall? Remember Henry Marshall?
Watch your back, in Texas they will call that chicken shite move a suicide. Billy Sol Estes is off the hook!
Hmmm…I wonder what they were handling at the Teintsin port of haul? Recycling waste as spaced out above? Do tell all….
Burning or overheating a Teflon pan will kill pet birds. I wonder what wonderful toxins are in the new nonstick coatings.
DuPont, apparently, has a nonstick legal coating.
Dupont…weren’t they the same company that prohibited the miracle plant “hemp” in the United States, as it was in direct competition with their nylon, paper industries?
What killed the hemp industry was the railroads. Primarily used for cording and rigging to stopper and stablize the leaky craft that used to float our butts. DuPont would replace us with Weebles if they would only fall down.
Kentucky was the hemp capital of the World in the 1830s. Didn’t Vanderbilt have a corner on that hay market? My G-Gmammy carried the first spinning wheel to Canetuky, but surely not the first pipe.
That cane was oceans of hemp, Daniel Boone, but still they had to build their stills to convert their crops into liquid gold. Who could afford to “ship” their crops anymore? Have you seen the charge the Old Commodore was asking for his railroad? What a racket.
What about Scotch Guard and those vinyl treatments for car interiors? They all feel the same to me. I used to think I got motion sickness in Dad’s slick red Torino, but now I think it was lotion sickness.
Ice 9, but it’s a slower transformation. Eventually, nothing will stick to anyone, not even the folks who clean up after our teflon dons’ party down, Garth.
Must say that Uncle Dupie has demonstrated better skill at suppressing the ills of their kills than those Kochs from the other side of the block, the big bullies. For how many years have I hoped formaldehyde might meet it’s makers?
Lucky for me I’m not a fan of ultra slippery shite, but I have chewed my share of styrofoam cups, kidz. We Boomers are full of volatiles and the most destabalizing stabilities unknown to man.
Is this why I’m D deficient? It’s so depressing.
Back in the 70s, dirty filthy pigs just barreled their bombs off to a sole contractor willing to take the fall for the entire family. Bankrupting an old fart instead of the community was a great liability plan. From airports to military installations, car dealers to service stations, what Old Fart poured down the Pantano stays in the Pantano, no liability.
Thank you for a great extensive and accurate article. The article is understandable to both a Nobel Lariat and a village idiot. Science is a double edged sword and extreme care must be taken not to hack off something you will certainly miss. I have studied and worked in science for going on half a century to include a short stint at EPA, a well meaning organization sometime effective but often way out gunned by industry and ignorance. Both science and the EPA are often working with the untested and unknown so a bit of caution and humility are in order.
DuPont’s new slogan since 1999 is “The miracles of science.” The chemical miracles and marketing got way ahead of the knowledge of toxicology, and this was vastly compounded by industry’s concealment of science that demonstrated toxicity. Too many chemicals were widely marketed with toxicity known only to God. This poisoned the planet and all life on it, want is the liability for that? Sadly good science and better manufacturing process and containment could have reduced the impact. Government and industry have been and are increasingly staffed by “scientists” conditioned to support policy and marketing not science.
I have written on the duality of science. “Science and technology certainly can either help or harm, depending on the wisdom, desires, or even the fortune of the user. Antibiotics have done much to improve the human condition but chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons are also products of science, and they could make Frankenstein’s monster look like a choirboy.” Of Sharing and Humility in Science. Fred Cowan. Commentary, The Scientist, Sept. 28,1998.
this is the year that DuPont has to stop using it.. but we find about it after the fact..screw you big name corporations. people should sue your ass because you never let us know
This gives new meaning to Dupont’s old advertising axiom.. “Better Living Through Chemistry”.
Almost as good as the early 19th century Tuna industry’s famous advertizing strategy to change peoples fish eating habits from Salmon to Tuna, by guaranteeing Tuna will never turn pink. At least, it didn’t kill people.
As for those degenerate pond scum exec’s in these Corporations who hide information that ultimately kills people in the name of profits, my contempt pool is bottomless. I’d spit in their face if I could. ..notwithstanding a pitchfork through their abdomen. However, their judgement will come. An eternity of endless, incomprehensible pain would do nicely.
Great story. There is a similar one being told of Mercury and the Chemsitry of Deception in Dentistry. See McClatchy DC, Medscape, MD+DI Device Talk, and http://www.IAOMT.org. HHS suppressed a long awaited FDA Safety Communication warning of dental amalgam health risks in January 2012.
Hi Sharon, many thanks for your article ! This planetary concern has, according to me, made no headlines in the French media. Is this trial exceptional or are there other ones in the world ?
Sharon, good article. I hope you soon find time to look into related Bisphenol A (BPA) widely used in polycarbonat and epoxy resins for aviation, car and boat construction. The workers in that sector could be highly exposed to BPA by inhalation of fine dust. BPA is a serious health risk as it acts and functions like the human hormone estradiol and is closely related to Diethylstilbestrol (DES) Yes, once used for hormonal contraception. BPA has been slowly banned for baby bottles, -not that the replacements are for sure any better- but for industrial construction there just is no alternative for epoxies. Bisphenol A = Too Big to Fail
This brought tears to my eyes. As a teacher of 32 years who did extensive chemistry/ecology units on toxins; I am sickened.
You are a brave and courageous writer. Your research is impeccable. This needs to get news coverage. Big time. This should be taught in every high school biology and chemistry class.
excellent, enlightening article on a few of our chemical polluters and their hazardous products that they knew were dangerous to our health, yet went unreported. maybe some day you will post an article on monsanto and the sins it has perpetrated with their toxic gmos, insecticide and pesticide products, the hazardous effects of which also remain unreported.
i look forward to reading part 2 of this series when it is published on the intercept.
Dupont. Isn’t this the same Dupont of Buphol, India fame?
No. That was Union Carbide, now owned by Dow Chemical.
They also had a plant in that area
One who worked on her husband’s staff said VanSusteren got her start off of that disaster.
Thank you for this interesting report, It is shameful that this type of information can so easily be omitted from our daily news media for so long. This is due in part to what large employers are allowed to do without any consequences for the sake of money and jobs. Through this entire time the EPA was mentioned and it appeared that they did little or nothing to even investigate C8 so what benefit did the workers or the public receive by the EPA even being in existence? It would seem this could well have been the reason for companies like this to go global and move jobs to other countries claiming costs of wages and benefits as the reason. Look at the wages and benefits of those responsible for this long going coverup while the workers continued to be exposed those at the top looted profits for themselves. The bigger the company the more our government allowed them to prosper and continue. I doubt the whole truth will ever surface and the upper management and CEO’s will be allowed to keep their ill gotten wealth and benefits despite their illegal actions. Again the worker pays the total bill of the wealthy.
Excellent article. I am incensed but unsurprised. The title “corporate medical director” is laughable. There’s only one guiding principle for any corporate executive and it’s profit. The only interest in medical science is to put up a front so employees feel safe, and to fashion a defense by manipulating data when the inevitable complaints come in.
This whole thing made my blood boil. I hope DuPont and the other companies responsible for polluting people and the environment with this poison will have to pay for
everything – for the victims, for cleanup…all of it.
You’re and optimist. If I understood correctly, it is very stable and almost everywhere. I just hope we can clean it up.
Yeah it pretty much doesn’t break down. If I remember correctly it said C8 will still be on Earth even after humans have gone extinct so there’s nothing we can do about that. But at least we can clean up the water and such as much as possible. If shitty companies like DuPont grow a conscience…or get a huge legal kick in the ass.
Ms. Lerner this is a superb piece of investigative journalism. I did wonder about the safety of Teflon but see you have stated in comments that it is not a risk.
This long-form, excellent coverage is making The Intercept an A-list publication. Kudos.
“Because birds are very sensitive to fumes released by non-stick cookware, some organizations of pet bird owners recommend minimizing a bird’s exposure to these fumes by keeping pet birds out of the kitchen or by increasing ventilation if non-stick cookware is used. ”
You decide…
http://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancercauses/othercarcinogens/athome/teflon-and-perfluorooctanoic-acid–pfoa
Not to mention all the adhesives (formaldehyde) smoldering out of your recently installed free standing range… Modern life is a cumulative danger, but don’t sweat the small stuff unless your doctor thinks it’s other than benign. Circulate the air and you won’t have to care so much.
I was amazed I could paint my own interior in the middle of this long hot summer without gagging. Paint has come a long way, babies.
Now folks who live near to where we smoked the basement fracking with nukes in the Southwest, those folks I fear for. Talk about your freed radicals. Benzene with a mean twist of NG. Irradiated to useless proportions, oops. That’s half of what’s blanketing the planet, ops.
Teflon is Probably not toxic under normal use, but even on an overheated stove can make you ill, and welding Teflon coated metal can be very toxic and requires greet attention to ventilation and safety. I cook on my grandmother’s cast iron proven low cost technology. Only need worry about getting burned or dropping on your foot, there is an element of risk in all technology.
I don’t see any information about levels or concentrations in the body. What levels are typically found in humans? What levels are found in people who worked with the substance? What levels have been linked to hazards, in humans or in other species?
I didn’t see one unit of measurement.
Why aren’t other people complaining?
You can find some sources via https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfluorooctanoic_acid . I should note that Wikipedia can be biased on some topics; it’s not beyond the notice of corporate shills nowadays, not to mention the usual cranks with a cause, but my gut feeling is that this one doesn’t seem too bad at the moment.
Blood levels in the group living near the plant averaged around 28.2 according to this study of the people living near the plant. http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/1205829/
For the general population, it’s lower. This from a 2012 study in Environmental Research: “Serum levels reported from industrialized countries around the world are reasonably consistent, with arithmetic means of 2–8 ng/mL for most studies.”
Teflon pans aren’t a big source of exposure..
Thank you.
Is it safe to eat food cooked on non-stick pans?
I don’t want to beat a dead horse, but I have to ask a few questions. How safe do you want to be? How much food? Cooked at how high a temperature?
Right. As I recall, Teflon poses greatest risk when pans are heated to 500F or more and the coating can then off-gas. Presumably, so long as the pan coating is not physically disturbed (like scraping it with a metal utensil) the Teflon should not be dislodged and the threat should be minimal.
In theory, anyway, and so I’ve been told…
Rand, If you knew it took three tablespoons of a toxin to hurt you really bad, would you willingly take two tablespoons?
I might take one thousandth of that. Depends.
Just about everything, including entirely natural things, are a toxin and will kill you in large amounts. Drink too much water and you’ll die. Too much citric acid (lemon juice) and you’ll die.
DuPonter?
That’s what generally comes out of their mouths. Big difference between citric acid and perfluorooctanoic acid and as such EPA classifies them quite differently.
Nice try though!
Speaking of Mr. Natural, isn’t that Nordicware Viking claiming his aluminum pans are the “natural” way to go, now? I own one of his slick double burners, too.
Do you know what comes out of aluminium plants? Floride gas, and didn’t they know it! So the Boyce Thomspon Plant Research Intisitute produced an animal feed grass that could survive that waste gas. Yum YUM. He was close friends with Andrew Mellon, the airfoil head.
I don’t have a problem with plants sucking up poison gas, but then they feed it back to us? Those iceholes.
Excellent article about human greed, but the constant stylistic flourishes being introduced to this site are distracting and useless. I have become less and less interested in TI due to the ‘cutting-edge’ graphical changes. More emphasis needs to be placed on the content rather than the aesthetics…
I sort of agree. The color theme of white text on black background resembles the ISIS flag.
Is this sarcasm? If not, you are a grade-A moron.
Hi LM –
While I don’t think TI is skimping on content, I am totally with you on the aesthetics. I HATE the new look. And NOTHING has been done to make an article open in its OWN tab. And PLEASE, TI, GET RID OF THOSE SUPER ANNOYING OUTSIZED CAPITAL LETTERS which start various sections of some articles, notably this one.
Sorry if I’m shouting but I get the feeling TI isn’t listening. It’s frustrating.
To Ms. Lerner – I haven’t read the article – yet. It is long and I’m not always into reading a long form … but it sounds intriguing and comments have indicated you’ve done a fine job. I do intend to tackle it; but I might have to do it in parts :-)
Actually, right-click on article “Open in New Tab” does work – one of the few vestiges of functionality-over-appearance left on TI…
Hi LM –
Thanks for the tip but I just tried it and it DOESN’ T work for me. Nope. Are you using firefox, by chance because I use IE and it didn’t help.
Try TOR as recommended by
Micah Lee
Technology Analyst
Micah Lee is a technologist with a focus on operational security, source protection, privacy, and cryptography. ?
[email protected]
Tor is based on the firefox browser. IE isfor the birds.
I agree the big capitals merging with the smaller text smacks the readability of the article. I do however prefer the ISIS black on white styling.
Horses for courses.
Looking this up on PubMed I found http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4117925/ , which was paid for by a court-appointed group and at least claims to be independent. It found some increase in brain defects but isn’t very confident about it – that said, it was a large study of people exposed via the water supply, rather than individuals at the company who could have received extraordinary exposures.
With situations like this there is, in one sense, no substitute for research. But then again, there is a sort of substitute, which is for us to be more cautious about large-scale chemical contamination of the environment while we wait for that data to come in.