FORT DRUM, N.Y.
May 28
A military panel on Wednesday found an Army reservist guilty of
disobeying an order for refusing to take the anthrax vaccine.
The panel of eight officers only two of whom said during
questioning that they have taken the six-shot regimen took 40
minutes to return a guilty verdict against Pvt. Kamila Iwanowska.
Iwanowska, 26, admitted in a court "stipulation of fact" that she
refused to follow the verbal and written orders of her commanding
officers. Army prosecutor Capt. Leslie Rowley said the statement was
all the proof the panel needed, and neither side called witnesses.
Iwanowska, who is Polish and became an American citizen last
year, told her superiors she considered the shot medically dangerous
to children she might have in the future, saying the vaccine's
long-term effects are unknown. As a Roman Catholic, she also cited
religious reasons.
Since the vaccinations were made mandatory for all U.S. military
personnel in 1998, hundreds of service members have been disciplined
or discharged for refusing to take the shot. At least 37 have been
court-martialed.
The Pentagon insists the vaccination is safe, with severe adverse
reactions developing in about one in 100,000 vaccinations.
Iwanowska, of New York City, was charged after reporting for
pre-deployment processing in January. Her unit was being sent to
southwest Asia.
She is expected to testify during the sentencing phase, which was
to begin later Wednesday. Iwanowska faces a maximum of 12 months in
jail, a bad conduct discharge, reduction in rank and forfeiture of
some of her pay, Rowley said.
"I still believe the Army is a good place and I don't regret
joining," Iwanowska said after the verdict. "I don't regret what I
did, I just wish it had turned out differently."
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