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US Government Asks Court to Seal Vaccine Records |
Reuters Health - Attorneys
for the Bush Administration asked a federal court
on Monday to order that documents on hundreds of
cases of autism allegedly caused by childhood vaccines
be kept from the public.
Department of Justice lawyers asked a special master
in the US Court of Federal Claims to seal the documents,
arguing that allowing their automatic disclosure
would take away the right of federal agencies to
decide when and how the material should be released.
Attorneys for the families of hundreds of autistic
children charged that the government was trying
to keep the information out of civil courts, where
juries might be convinced to award large judgments
against vaccine manufacturers.
The court is currently hearing approximately 1,000
claims brought by the families of autistic children.
The suits charge that the measles-mumps-rubella
(MMR) vaccine, which until recently included a mercury-containing
preservative known as thimerosal, can cause neurological
damage leading to autism.
Federal law requires suits against vaccine makers
to go before a special federal "vaccine court"
before any civil lawsuit is allowed. The court was
set up by Congress to speed compensation claims
and to help protect vaccine makers from having to
pay large punitive awards decided byjuries in state
civil courts. Plaintiffs are free to take their
cases to state courts if they lose in the federal
vaccine court or if they don't accept the court's
judgment.
The current 1,000 or so autism cases are unusual
for the court.
Because it received so many claims, much of the
fact-finding and
evidence-gathering is going on for all of the cases
as a block.
Monday's request by the Bush Administration would
prevent plaintiffs
who later go to civil court from using some relevant
evidence generated
during the required vaccine court proceedings.
Plaintiffs' attorneys said that the order amounted
to punishment of
the families of injured children because it would
require them to incur
the time and expense of regenerating evidence for
a civil suit.
"Wouldn't it be a shame if at the end of the
day our policy would be
to compensate lawyers," said Jeff Kim, an attorney
with Gallagher Boland
Meiburger & Brosnan. The firm represents about
400 families of autistic
children who received the MMR vaccine.
Kim accused the government of trying to lower "a
shroud of secrecy
over these documents" in order to protect vaccine
manufacturers, who he
said were "the only entities" that would
benefit if the documents are sealed.
While federal law clearly seals most documents generated
in
individual vaccine cases, it has never been applied
to a block proceeding like the one generating evidence
in the autism cases.
Administration lawyers told Special Master George
Hastings that they
requested the seal in order to preserve the legal
right of the Secretary
of Health and Human Services to decide when vaccine
evidence can be released
to the public.
Justice Department attorney Vincent Matanoski argued
that to let
plaintiffs use the vaccine court evidence in a later
civil suit would
confer an advantage on plaintiffs who chose to forgo
federal compensation.
"There is no secret here. What the petitioners
are arguing for are
enhanced rights in a subsequent civil action,"
Matanoski said of the
plaintiffs. "They're still going to have unfettered
use within the proceedings."
Hastings would not say when he would issue a ruling
on whether to
seal the court documents, but did say that his decision
would be "very prompt."
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