By Michael Fumento on 10.13.05 @ 12:04AM
Harvard honors Hollywood's favorite paralegal.
The Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) has just
announced it's giving its highest honor to Los Angeles paralegal
Erin Brockovich, best known for her virtual
beatification in the allegedly "based on a true story" film of
the same name. Julia Roberts portrayed her as having the mouth of a
hooker but a heart of gold. Yet the Hollywood Brockovich is bunk,
and this is not Harvard's finest hour.
HSPH gives its
Julius Richmond Award to those who "have promoted and achieved
high standards for public health conditions." In this case,
according to a response to outraged HSPH alum (by American Council
on Science and Health President Elizabeth Whelan), it's for Brockovich's efforts "on
behalf of all of us," and especially the residents of Hinkley,
California, whose health was adversely affected by a toxic
substance dumped by a utility company.
Do you feel benefited? You shouldn't. Here's why.
The California
Cancer Registry showed no excess
cancer in Hinkley compared to surrounding counties, despite the
claim of Brockovich and her law firm that they suffered terribly high rates from
exposure to chromium-6 in drinking water. Indeed, there was no
evidence of any excess illness at all.
Further, according to the Environmental Protection Agency's
toxicology website, "No data were located in the
available literature that suggested that chromium-6 is carcinogenic
by the oral route of exposure." Indeed, "Exposure to chromium-6 in
tap water via all plausible routes of exposure," even in extremely
high concentrations, concluded "the Journal of Toxicology and
Environmental Health, poses no "acute or chronic health hazard
to humans."
The true beneficiary of Erin Brockovich has the initials "E.B."
She pocketed a bonus of over $2 million in the Hinkley
case, although many residents who truly were sick (albeit not
from chromium-6) never got a dime.
She's now up to her old tricks. Her firm is suing a vast number of oil companies, the City of Beverly Hills and its school
district. It accuses them of causing three types of cancer
among the approximately 11,000 alumni who attended between 1975 and 1997 by exposing them
to oil well fumes on the property of Beverly Hills High
School.
"These statistics are 20 times higher than the national average for these
specific cancers," Brockovich told a credulous media, creating
hysteria among both former and current students. "I have 300
cancers staring me in the face and an oil-production facility
underneath the school," Brockovich also claimed, "It doesn't take a rocket scientist to
figure out that the two fit together."
Well then, how about a cancer expert? Under a contempt of court threat her firm admitted it had no data regarding excess cancers at the
school. Further, the Beverly Hills Courier reported that long after
Brockovich's "300 cancers" assertion her firm had filed only
216 complaints of which only 94 concerned
cancer. University of Southern California epidemiologists also
found no unusual rate among former students.
Brockovich also insisted that air samplings collected by a lab
she'd hired showed massive levels of benzene,
a human carcinogen. "When they came back I said, 'I can't believe
this.' So we went four times, five times, six times," Brockovich
claimed. "And each time we were getting the same
results."
But the regional
air quality authority conducted its own tests and found no high levels of any toxic pollutant. As it
happens, neither had she. Her lab's data, which the city was forced to subpoena,
showed benzene levels ranging from low to unmeasurable.
I know personally of Brockovich's not only foul but forked
tongue. She told the New York Times Sunday Magazine
that she challenged me "a million times" to debate her. Try zero.
In fact, when Vassar College tried to arrange a debate I instantly
said yes and waived any honorarium; she demanded a fee she knew the
school couldn't afford. When Australia's 60 Minutes flew
me to L.A. for a segment on Brockovich, I suggested they try to
arrange a joint appearance. She refused them.
That mere film-goers would be confused about Brockovich is
understandable. But you might think the Harvard School of Public
Health would do a bit more research before giving awards than
merely watching a movie.
topics:
Environment, Hollywood, Law, Oil