Congressman
questions officials at Thimerosal hearings
06/20/2002
By
VALERI WILLIAMS / WFAA-TV
A United States congressman is calling for criminal penalties for
any government agency that knew about the dangers of Thimerosal in
vaccines, and did nothing to protect American children.
Last month, a News 8 Investigation disclosed allegations that
some government officials may have surpressed documentation about
the risks. Some of those officials testified at Wednesday's
congressional hearing.
News 8 research showed that the FDA began asking questions about
the dangers of Thimerosal back in 1972. By 1992, the preservative
had been pulled out of dog vaccines and contact lens solutions
because of the risks.
However, it remained in vaccines for children until last year.
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Earlier coverage |
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Video: Valeri Williams reports |
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Government health officials squirmed uncomfortably in their seats
Wednesday as more evidence emerged suggesting that they misled the
public.
"You mean to tell me that since 1929, we've been using
Thimerosal," Congressman Dan Burton (R-Indiana) said to the
officials, "and the only test that you know of is from 1929, and
every one of those people had mennigitis, and they all died?"
For nearly an hour, Burton repeatedly asked FDA and CDC officials
what they knew and when they knew it. And when memories seemed to be
a bit fuzzy, the congressman produced old memos as a refresher.
One memo, from 1999, states that the FDA had an "interim plan ...
already in place for many years" to get rid of Thimerosal.
The same e-mail also addresses the FDA's fear that it will be
accused by the public of being "asleep at the switch for decades, by
allowing a dangerous compound to remain in childhood vaccines".
Burton has proposed bringing criminal charges if it's proven the
government agencies were involved in a cover-up.
"Look, I don't think it makes any difference whether it's a
private company or a government agency," Burton said. "If they know
they're harming somebody and they continue to let it happen, then
they should be held accountable."
Government accountability is something that parents of autistic
children have been asking for for years.
Cooper Earp, 7, had lost his ability to talk by age three, and
his mercury levels were off the charts. His parents said Cooper's
only exposure to mercury was through his vaccines.
Today, he has all the classic signs of autism, such as repeatedly
hitting himself, and fixating on such things as a spinning chair.
Cooper's mother Kristi Earp has a dream that one day Cooper will
call her "mommy" in a sentence.
"I probably have that dream once a week that he's speaking to me.
It would be wonderful," Earp said.
Parents like Earp would like to ask the panel of government
officials why, in eighty years, they never ordered one clinical test
on the effects of Thimerosal in vaccines.
Burton asked the question several times Wednesday, but never got
a direct answer.
After the hearing, News 8 asked the same question of an official,
walking briskly down a corridor.
"You have to call the press office," an assistant replied.
Burton has a personal stake in the growing scandal: he said his
grandson became autistic a few days after receiving nine
innoculations.
Thus far, within the government, Burton has been a minority
voice, but he has subpoena power, and he keeps threatening to use
it.
"So what you do is keep making the case, and keep trying to get
the message out to a broader and broader audience so that people
start saying 'Why?'," Burton said. "When enough people say 'Why?',
change starts to take place."