Tuesday

Guatemalans exposed to STDs by researchers in 1940’s can’t sue US: Obama adminstration Experiment exposed prostitutes, prisoners, mental patients and soldiers to STDs to test effects of penicillin

The Obama administration argued Monday that Guatemalans unknowingly exposed to sexually transmitted
 diseases by U.S. researchers in the 1940s cannot sue the United States, no
matter how shameful and unethical the studies were.

In its first response to a lawsuit filed on behalf of the experiment's
subjects, the Justice Department late Monday said sovereign immunity
 protects federal health officials from litigation stemming from the study.
The experiment conducted in the 1940s exposed Guatemalan prostitutes,
prisoners, mental patients and soldiers with STDs to test the effects of
 penicillin. The studies were conducted without the test subjects' consent.

President Barack Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Health
 and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius all have apologized for the research, hidden for decades until a Wellesley
 College medical historian uncovered the records in 2009.

The Justice Department filing Monday said the studies were "a deeply
troubling chapter in our nation's history."

"As a result of these unethical studies, a terrible wrong has occurred. The
 United States is committed to taking appropriate steps to address that
wrong," the filing said, without elaborating on what steps might be
planned. But the government attorneys argued, "This lawsuit is not the
 proper vehicle — and this court is not the proper forum — through which the
consequences of this shameful conduct may be resolved."

The government says the Federal Tort Claims Act protects the United States
 from lawsuits based on injuries suffered in a foreign country, even if the
acts that caused the harm were planned in the United States.

Attorneys for the Guatemalans said the immunity assertion contradicts the
 apologies made by Obama and his advisers. They also said failure to accept
responsibility for the human rights abuses violates the international
prohibition against non consensual human medical experimentation that the
 United States and other nations renounced during the Nuremberg trials
following World War II.

"We will continue to vigorously fight for the rights of the Guatemalans
wronged in this matter to obtain a remedy for the harms done by U.S.
 officials," plaintiffs' attorney Terrence Collingsworth said in a statement in response to the filing. "But we remain open to the
 United States deciding to do the right thing, consistent with
long-established human rights law and basic morality."

Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom said he wants the U.S. government to compensate six survivors who have been
 identified. But the lawsuit also seeks compensation for heirs of all the
victims who have died, some who have experienced their own health problems
possibly linked to their parents' exposure, with the amount to be
 determined by a jury. Attorneys representing the Guatemalans first asked
the Obama administration to set up an out-of-court claims process similar
to those established in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and the 9/11 terror
 attacks, but they got no response and filed the suit.

Guatemalan officials said last month that they have found 2,082 people were
involved in the experiments conducted from 1946-1948 to infect subjects
with syphilis, gonorrhea or chancroid. U.S. officials put the figure at
 1,308 subjects.

The STD study was designed to test the effects of penicillin, then a
relatively new drug. Among the goals of the research, funded by the
predecessor of the National Institutes of Health, was to see how well
 differing dosages of penicillin worked against different venereal diseases.

An American team persuaded officials at prisons and mental institutions to
cooperate by giving them other equipment and supplies such as refrigerators
 and difficult-to-get medications for malaria and epilepsy. Sometimes,
individual subjects were paid with cigarettes and, in the case of
prisoners, infected prostitutes were used to expose them to the disease.
 
 The U.S. has been involved in numerous other infamous medical studies on
human subjects. The most notorious was the Tuskegee syphilis research on
600 black men in Alabama who were studied without being offered any
 treatment. The physician involved in that study, Dr. John Cutler
directed the Guatemalan research.

Deuteronomy 28:61-  Also every *sickness, and every plague, which is not written in the book
of this law, them will the LORD bring upon thee, until thou be destroyed.

Psalm 41:8
An evil disease, say they, cleaveth fast unto him: and now that he lieth he shall rise up no more.
 

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