Family sues
military, doctors in
Marine's boot camp death
DETROIT -- Renee Thurlow
knew her 18-year-old son
was sick when she talked
to him about two months
after he left for boot
camp at Parris Island,
S.C.
"You
sound awful," she told
Justin Haase over the
phone about a week
before Christmas 2001.
Haase,
of Macomb County's
Chesterfield Township,
promised to see a
doctor, but didn't
mention how exhausted he
was or the headaches
that made him cry.
One
week later, he died of
bacterial meningitis.
Now,
nearly two years after
Haase's death, his
mother has filed a
lawsuit in U.S. District
Court in Detroit against
the Navy, two Marine
sergeants, a Marine
medic and a Navy doctor.
The suit, filed last
month, says an internal
military report shows a
series of medical
mistakes hastened
Haase's death.
The
lawsuit challenges a
54-year-old U.S. Supreme
Court ruling that
essentially says the
military cannot be held
responsible for the
death or injury of
active duty service
members.
"That
law has got to be
changed," Thurlow told
the Detroit Free Press
for a Tuesday story.
Maj.
Ken White, a Parris
Island spokesman, said a
thorough investigation
was conducted.
"We
identified people who
violated policy and we
held them accountable
for their actions,"
White said.
Thurlow and her lawyers
hope to show that a
neglectful chain of
events began when Haase
arrived at Parris
Island.
Haase
missed the dose of
antibiotics that
recruits receive to ward
off infections because
he was allergic to
penicillin. He should
have received an
alternative, but the
Marines' review found no
evidence that he did.
Military doctors argue
that the initial
treatment would not have
fought bacterial
meningitis. The lawsuit
claims Haase likely
would not have become
susceptible if treated
upon arrival.
During a Dec. 22
training course that
began at 6:30 a.m.,
Haase vomited and later
began to cry.
A
drill instructor took
Haase to a military
field medic who did not
check his breathing, his
pulse or temperature,
records show.
Haase
stayed in bed for most
of the day. When he
awoke that evening, he
could barely keep his
eyes open and was
incoherent.
Just
after 8 p.m., a senior
drill instructor called
911 and said Haase had
"taken a spill" during
the training course. He
was sent to Beaufort
Naval Hospital.
A
doctor initially focused
on a possible head
injury until a rectal
temperature reading
showed a 102-degree
fever. A bacterial
infection was suspected.
But
Haase's spinal fluid was
not checked for more
than another two hours.
Healthy people have
clear fluid. Haase's
looked like skim milk.
At
11:30 p.m., Justin
received his first
antibiotic treatment.
At
1:55 a.m. on Dec. 23, he
was taken for a brain
scan. Care for
meningitis patients
includes five methods to
reduce or pre-empt brain
swelling. None of those
methods was used,
medical records show.
Haase
was again moved at 2:25
a.m. He spent the next
several hours thrashing
in bed and was put in
restraints.
A
nurse found Haase with
fixed and dilated pupils
at 5:30 a.m. He had
suffered severe brain
trauma.
Around 7 a.m. doctors
prepared to fly him to
Savannah Memorial
Hospital in Georgia and
called his family in
Michigan.
Haase
was pronounced brain
dead at 3:16 p.m. on
Dec. 23.
In
early January, a
one-page, unsigned
letter from Parris
Island arrived at the
Thurlow house.
"What
happened to your son,"
the letter said, "was a
freak accident that
could have been
prevented."
Thurlow began her quest
for answers.
Haase's father, Don
Haase, though angry and
grieving, said it is
difficult to blame the
Marines.
"Clearly things could
have been done
differently," Don Haase
said. "At any point,
they could have done
something to save him
and maybe the outcome
would have been
different.
"But
at what point in time
was it too late?"
Field
medics at Parris Island
now must consult a
doctor by two-way radio
when recruits are sick
or injured. Drill
instructors are educated
about warning signs of
infectious disease.
But
Thurlow, who wears
Haase's dog tags around
her neck, says the
lawsuit remains
necessary.
"It's
about stopping this
before it ever happens
again," she said.
--From the Wednesday,
August 20, 2003 online
edition of the Augusta
Chronicle