The Delaware Gazette

Secret Cold War tests in St. Louis raise concerns

JIM SALTER

Asso­ci­ated Press

ST. LOUIS — Doris Spates was a baby when her father died inex­plic­a­bly in 1955. She has watched four sib­lings die of can­cer, and she sur­vived cer­vi­cal cancer.

After learn­ing that the Army con­ducted secret chem­i­cal test­ing in her impov­er­ished St. Louis neigh­bor­hood at the height of the Cold War, she won­ders if her own gov­ern­ment is to blame.

In the mid-1950s, and again a decade later, the Army used motor­ized blow­ers atop a low-income hous­ing high-rise, at schools and from the backs of sta­tion wag­ons to send a poten­tially dan­ger­ous com­pound into the already-hazy air in pre­dom­i­nantly black areas of St. Louis.

Local offi­cials were told at the time that the gov­ern­ment was test­ing a smoke screen that could shield St. Louis from aer­ial obser­va­tion in case the Rus­sians attacked.

But in 1994, the gov­ern­ment said the tests were part of a bio­log­i­cal weapons pro­gram and St. Louis was cho­sen because it bore some resem­blance to Russ­ian cities that the U.S. might attack. The mate­r­ial being sprayed was zinc cad­mium sul­fide, a fine flu­o­res­cent powder.

Now, new research is rais­ing greater con­cern about the impli­ca­tions of those tests. St. Louis Com­mu­nity College-Meramec soci­ol­ogy pro­fes­sor Lisa Martino-Taylor’s research has raised the pos­si­bil­ity that the Army per­formed radi­a­tion test­ing by mix­ing radioac­tive par­ti­cles with the zinc cad­mium sul­fide, though she con­cedes there is no direct proof.

But her report, released late last month, was trou­bling enough that both U.S. sen­a­tors from Mis­souri wrote to Army Sec­re­tary John McHugh demand­ing answers.

Aides to Sens. Claire McCaskill and Roy Blunt said they have received no response. Army spokesman Dave Fos­ter declined an inter­view request from The Asso­ci­ated Press, say­ing the Army would first respond to the senators.

The area of the secret test­ing is described by the Army in doc­u­ments obtained by Martino-Taylor through a Free­dom of Infor­ma­tion Act request as “a densely pop­u­lated slum dis­trict.” About three-quarters of the res­i­dents were black.

Spates, now 57 and retired, was born in 1955, deliv­ered inside her family’s apart­ment on the top floor of the since-demolished Pruitt-Igoe hous­ing devel­op­ment in north St. Louis. Her fam­ily didn’t know that on the roof, the Army was inten­tion­ally spew­ing hun­dreds of pounds of zinc cad­mium sul­fide into the air.

Three months after her birth, her father died. Four of her 11 sib­lings suc­cumbed to can­cer at rel­a­tively young ages.

“I’m won­der­ing if it got into our sys­tem,” Spates said. “When I heard about the test­ing, I thought, ‘Oh my God. If they did that, there’s no telling what else they’re hiding.’”

Mary Helen Brindell won­ders, too. Now 68, her fam­ily lived in a working-class mixed-race neigh­bor­hood where spray­ing occurred.

The Army has admit­ted only to using blow­ers to spread the chem­i­cal, but Brindell recalled a sum­mer day play­ing base­ball with other kids in the street when a squadron of green Army planes flew close to the ground and dropped a pow­dery sub­stance. She went inside, washed it off her face and arms, then went back out to play.

Over the years, Brindell has bat­tled four types of can­cer — breast, thy­roid, skin and uterine.

“I feel betrayed,” said Brindell, who is white. “How could they do this? We pointed our fin­gers dur­ing the Holo­caust, and we do some­thing like this?”

Martino-Taylor said she wasn’t aware of any law­suits filed by any­one affected by the mil­i­tary tests. She also said there have been no pay­outs “or even an apol­ogy” from the gov­ern­ment to those affected.

The secret test­ing in St. Louis was exposed to Con­gress in 1994, prompt­ing a demand for a health study. A com­mit­tee of the National Research Coun­cil deter­mined in 1997 that the test­ing did not expose res­i­dents to harm­ful lev­els of the chem­i­cal. But the com­mit­tee said research was sparse and the find­ing relied on lim­ited data from ani­mal testing.

It also noted that high doses of cad­mium over long peri­ods of expo­sure could cause bone and kid­ney prob­lems and lung can­cer. The com­mit­tee rec­om­mended that the Army con­duct follow-up stud­ies “to deter­mine whether inhaled zinc cad­mium sul­fide breaks down into toxic cad­mium com­pounds, which can be absorbed into the blood to pro­duce tox­i­c­ity in the lungs and other organs.”

But it isn’t clear if follow-up stud­ies were ever per­formed. Martino-Taylor said she has got­ten no answer from the Army and her research has turned up no addi­tional stud­ies. Fos­ter, the Army spokesman, declined comment.

Martino-Taylor became involved years ago when a col­league who grew up in the tar­geted area won­dered if the test­ing was the cause of her can­cer. That same day, a sec­ond col­league con­fided to Martino-Taylor that she, too, lived in the test area and had cancer.

Martino-Taylor decided to research the test­ing for her doc­toral the­sis at the Uni­ver­sity of Mis­souri. She believes the St. Louis study was linked to the Man­hat­tan Atomic Bomb Project and a small group of sci­en­tists from that project who were devel­op­ing radi­o­log­i­cal weapons. A con­gres­sional study in 1993 con­firmed radi­o­log­i­cal test­ing in Ten­nessee and parts of the West dur­ing the Cold War.

“There are strong lines of evi­dence that there was a radi­o­log­i­cal com­po­nent to the St. Louis study,” Martino-Taylor said.

Blunt, in his let­ter to the Army sec­re­tary, ques­tioned whether radioac­tive test­ing was performed.

“The idea that thou­sands of Mis­souri­ans were unwill­ingly exposed to harm­ful mate­ri­als in order to deter­mine their health effects is absolutely shock­ing,” the sen­a­tor wrote.

McCaskill agreed. “Given the nature of these exper­i­ments, it’s not sur­pris­ing that Mis­souri cit­i­zens still have ques­tions and con­cerns about what exactly occurred and if there may have been any neg­a­tive health effects,” she said in a statement.

Martino-Taylor said a follow-up health study should be per­formed in St. Louis, but it must involve direct input from peo­ple who lived in the tar­geted areas.

“Their voices have not been heard,” Martino-Taylor said.

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