Pubdate: Sun, 06 Sep 2009 Source: Salt Lake Tribune (UT) Copyright: 2009 The Salt Lake Tribune Contact: http://www.sltrib.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/383 Author: Nate Carlisle, Staff Writer 'METH COPS' LEGAL CASES TRYING TO GET HEALTHY, TOO Salt Lake County Sheriff's Sgt. Gary Sterner ticked off the ailments he attributes to methamphetamine exposure. Headaches, joint pain, esophageal problems. "Let's see. What else," Sterner said. "Memory loss," replied his lawyer, Susan Black Dunn. "Oh, yeah." But science has not yet supported the claims made by police officers like Sterner. Neither has Utah law. The Utah Labor Commission this year has dismissed 19 cases filed by the so-called "Meth Cops" or their survivors seeking workers compensation benefits. Many of the cases, which were first filed four years ago, were dismissed at the requests of the officers, who wanted more time to find evidence that busting meth labs contributed to their ailments before they refile their claims. Eight cases remain because a judge says or opposing sides agree there is enough evidence to proceed. It's far from certain those officers ultimately will have their claims upheld. Sterner's case is proceeding, but the case of his deceased wife, Kelly Nye, was dismissed. Black Dunn said Sterner has better evidence meth contributed to his aliments, including a doctor willing to testify on his behalf. There is not yet such documentation or witnesses for Nye. "It isn't over," Black Dunn said of Nye's and other dismissed cases. "We're going to keep the fight going." The Meth Cops are comprised of a few dozen current or former police officers, like Sterner and Nye, who investigated or dismantled Utah meth labs beginning in the 1980s and 1990s. They claim the fumes of cooking methamphetamine, its discarded byproducts or handling the drug itself caused ailments ranging from cancers, respiratory impairments, nervous system disorders and trouble sleeping at night. Some of the cops began filing worker compensation claims against their employers beginning in 2005. But proof meth caused their symptoms has been tough to find. A state-funded study was supposed to determine whether the Labor Commission should assume meth exposure caused medical problems. The study, released in 2008, found some suggestions the officers have an elevated risk of contracting lymphoma, melanoma and colon and rectal cancers. But the study also warned: "These conclusions must be viewed cautiously ... because so few police officers responded to the study's surveys." So at the moment, the burden of proof remains with the Meth Cops. Black Dunn, who represents about half of the dismissed and pending cases, concedes there is no definitive study linking meth exposure to the ailments described by her clients. And because every officer has received individual treatment, no doctors are aware of any clusters, she said. But Black Dunn feels evidence exists. Physicians who have treated individual officers will be willing to testify in their favor, Black Dunn said. The problem is, Black Dunn said, that means rounding up a doctor for every cop. Scientists in the occupational health field might also be willing to support the cops, she said. "We're trying to forge new territory," Black Dunn said. "We're blazing the trail." Nye was a Salt Lake City police officer who for nine months in the early 1990s was assigned to a narcotics task force. Six months after leaving that force, while still in her early 30s, Nye needed a hysterectomy, Sterner said. The doctors were surprised because she was so young, Sterner said Eventually, her spleen and gall bladder also were removed and her liver swelled. She died of kidney failure in 2005 at age 49. Sterner worked on the same narcotics task force for about two years in the early 1990s and says he has been exposed to meth elsewhere in his career. Today he's 57 and serves civil papers for the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office. Sometimes that means serving eviction notices on homes that have had a meth lab. Sterner said rashes break out on his arms when he walks inside those houses. Many cities and counties buy insurance through the Workers Compensation Fund and it is a party in many of the Labor Commission cases. J.D. Ashby, an attorney for Workers Compensation Fund, said his clients have not yet taken a legal position on the cops' claims, but he would not be surprised if some of the dismissed cases are filed again. "It's just at this point they don't have evidence to survive the motion to dismiss," Ashby said. Black Dunn said successful workers compensation cases could mean $500,000 to $1 million per officer. That would cover lost work hours and past and future medical expenses. That's what has got them worried, if something happens down the road, Black Dunn said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr