Army tests ravaged family's
land
Military blasted mines owned
by Utahns with tons of chemical agents
By Lee Davidson
Deseret Morning News
Siblings Louise, Douglas and
Allan Cannon inherited a gold mine. But they say the Army is giving them
the shaft, figuratively, as some of its old, dark secrets have turned their
dream of rich income into a nightmare.
Douglas
Cannon shows a picture of his father, Floyd Cannon, looking for minerals north
of the Bertha Mine near Dugway Proving Ground in western Tooele County.
Paul Barker, Deseret Morning News |
They found belatedly that the Army's nearby Dugway Proving Ground attacked
the old family mines with 3,000 rounds of chemical arms at the end of World
War II. The purpose was to simulate what the Army would face against Japanese
bunkers and caves.
The Army also bombed the surface of 1,425 acres of Cannon family-owned land
above the mines with more than 23 tons of chemical arms, including deadly
mustard agent, hydrogen cyanide and the choking agent Phosgene, plus high
explosives and incendiary arms that included napalm, butane and gasoline (from
flame throwers).
"They bombed the heck out of it and contaminated our lands — and the surrounding
(public) lands. And they won't clean it up," Louise says.
She worries that a new Army proposal to expand Proving Ground boundaries is
an attempt "to try to surround us and landlock us," making it impossible to
access and work the mines, eliminating the need to clean up the Cannons' land
or lowering the value if the government were to take it under eminent domain
provisions.
Also, it turns out that the Cannons had been quietly discussing the possibility
of a repository for nuclear waste on their contaminated lands if a similar
plan for the Skull Valley Goshute Reservation fails. The Dugway expansion
also could block their proposal for a waste site.
It all prolongs years of frustration, lawsuits, threats and counterthreats
among the Cannons, the Army and the state of Utah and related but unheeded
pleas to Congress for help.
Family inheritance
The siblings' grandfather, Jesse Cannon, "patented," or bought, the land from
the government in the 1920s (and his father had started working the land
years earlier). Miners have sought gold, silver, lead and copper on those
claims in the Dugway mountains. The inheritors say that when Jesse died in
1954, he did not pass along any knowledge of Army contamination there to
their father, Floyd.
Floyd made his children
partial owners of the mine areas in 1957. They became full owners when he
died in 1980. Douglas, one of the siblings, said neither his father nor grandfather
ever mentioned to him any knowledge about heavy bombardment of the area.
Louise said her father "did find some (chemical arms) canisters in a tunnel.
He didn't know what they were. He called the Proving Ground to see if they
had been doing anything in the area, and they said they had not been over
there."
Court documents later said Army records showed that the father called Dugway
several times to ask for cleanup of unexploded ordnance and weapon fragments
he found. Louise says, "He was told they were strays from testing on the
base."
Secrets begin to leak
In 1988, the Deseret News obtained and reported on Army documents that suspected
public U.S. Bureau of Land Management areas in the "Southern Triangle" near
the Cannons' land were likely heavily contaminated by weapons testing. Also
subjected to the tests, according to the report, was the so-called "Yellow
Jacket" area (the name of one of the Cannons' 86.5 patented mining claims
in the region).
The Deseret News also wrote stories about how the Army then wanted to expand
its boundaries to absorb such dangerous BLM areas, which the BLM opposed,
preferring that the Army clean up the land instead.
The expansion never occurred. But Army officials said last month in response
to Deseret Morning News inquiries that expansion has again been proposed
internally. Officials have offered no further details, nor specifics on what
boundaries are sought.
A close-up
view of the photo. The family is unable now to clean up or use the 1,425
acres of land that it owns. The land was bombed with over 23 tons of chemical
agents.
Courtesy Cannon family |
Despite early Deseret News stories, the Cannons said they did not truly suspect
heavy contamination of their lands until the Army Corps of Engineers requested
official permission in 1994 to enter their property "to determine whether
. . . these lands have been impacted by unexploded ordnance."
Louise said she later happened to be at the Tooele County Courthouse on Aug.
30, 1994, filing paperwork on a mining claim when a worker told her the Army
was holding an information session downstairs about possible contamination
on desert lands.
"I signed in, picked up the fact sheets and left," she says. "The fact sheets
said they were checking for contamination in the Southern Triangle and on
private property, but did not name the Cannon property."
However, by signing in there, courts would later rule that Louise had enough
knowledge about potential contamination on the Cannon lands that she unwittingly
started a clock ticking toward a two-year deadline to file any lawsuits against
the government. She would not learn about that deadline until it was too
late.
Contamination aplenty
In 1996, a government contractor finished a draft study that said the Cannon
property was heavily contaminated. Visits by the contractor had found intact,
high-explosive mortar shells and burster tubes from chemical-filled rockets
and bombs.
According to court documents, the study said a full-scale removal of munitions
and debris in the Yellow Jacket claim area alone — only a small part of the
Cannons' property — would cost $12.3 million.
It also said record searches showed at least 3,004 rounds of chemical weapons
had been fired into some of the Cannon mines, and it listed the other weapon
types tested on the property. It found chemical munitions residue and chemical
agent contamination throughout the area and said it was likely the entire
1,425 acres of Cannon property was contaminated.
Deseret Morning News graphic |
It recommended buying the land, fencing it, posting warning signs, doing
some limited munitions removal and sealing the mines.
Douglas Cannon says a gold company that had a lease on the Cannon mines abandoned
it for fear of the contamination. He said other companies that had shown
interest in leasing it also backed away quickly once they learned about the
Army's testing and contamination.
Louise says she had been anxiously awaiting the study that confirmed the
contamination, and often called the Army Corps of Engineers seeking it. "They
kept saying it would come in 30 days. Then in another 30 days," she said.
She says one employee there finally warned her that she only had two years
from the time she learned of potential contamination to file a suit. She
called an attorney, who confirmed that.
After the Cannons saw the draft study confirming contamination, they filed
a claim with the Army, and then a lawsuit in federal court, seeking $8.8
million in damages, the value they put on the land.
Family secrets
As the lawsuit advanced, the Army said it found an old contract it had signed
with the siblings' grandfather, Jesse Cannon, that had allowed the military
to use the Yellow Jacket area for testing for six months. "We had never known
about it," Louise says.
That contract, which gave Jesse just $1, allowed the Army to use a portion
of his property in exchange for the Army's promise to "leave the property
of the owner in as good condition as it was on the date of the government's
entry."
Louise says, "The Justice Department says he did that because he was patriotic"
and wanted to help the war effort against the Japanese. "We'll never know,"
she says. "It (the contract) never mentions any military maneuvers or testing.
He wasn't allowed on the property for the six months it was used. I don't
think he knew what they planned."
Rocket
launchers fire near Dugway Proving Ground.
Archive photo |
After the Army's "Project Sphinx" testing ended on that land, documents that
emerged during court proceedings show that Jesse Cannon was not happy with
what he found.
He walked the area with an Army claims officer who found the "entire area
is liberally covered with shell, rocket and bomb fragments," and that "just
outside a cabin are 10 butane-filled dud bombs."
Jesse filed a first claim for damages, and was paid $755.48. Later, he filed
another claim for damages to mine shaft timbers from the testing and was
paid $2,064.
He filed a third claim five years later in 1950. He said while he accepted
the earlier payment in full for all claims for damages at his Yellow Jacket
mine, "I did not believe at that time that the chemical agents used by the
Army would remain in the workings and make it impossible for me to ever operate
the mine again without some sort of decontamination."
The claim added he found there was "still a concentration of poison gas present
in the mine," and said miners who considered leasing it "shied away when
they learned of the Army's use of the mine." He never collected money on
that claim, and his grandchildren never learned about it from him.
Regardless, Louise says, "The Army was under contractual obligation to clean
up the land, and they never have."
Court win, court loss
The younger Cannons initially won $160,937 in damages against the Army in
2002, but the Army appealed to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, which reversed
the decision.
Despite the reversal, the appeals court's written opinion blasted "the government's
abysmal failure over the past half-century to clean up the test site."
It lamented that the law gave the Cannon siblings only two years from when
they learned about the possibility of heavy contamination of their property
to file suit. The Cannons had contended the clock should have started ticking
when the Army's draft study of contamination was released in 1996 (which is
also when they filed suit).
But the court agreed with the Army's assertion that it began when Louise attended
the information meeting in 1994, and when the Army asked permission to search
for unexploded ordnance. That meant the statute of limitations allowed by
law had expired, and the Cannons lost.
Still, the court wrote, "The United States government has yet fully to recognize
and appreciate Jesse F. Cannon's contribution to national security during
World War II. The government should have lived up to its obligations long
ago. . . . The Cannons' remedy at this stage is political, however, not legal."
Congress no help
Taking the judges' hint that only political and not legal help was available,
the Cannons started asking Congress for compensation for their contaminated
land.
"I have written to some members of the Utah congressional delegation and
to 200 different members of appropriations or other committees who are over
defense or public lands," Louise said. "I have not received one reply."
She said she also wrote to Utah governors, the Environmental Protection Agency
and other government agencies she thought would have an interest in cleaning
up the area, especially neighboring state-owned school trust land sections
that likely had been contaminated as well. She said none showed interest.
Louise said that during the trial, she said to a government lawyer that maybe
the Cannon family should clean up the land itself, and keep the munitions
they find. She said the government informed her that was not allowed because
it owned the unexploded ordnance, and only the federal government could remove
it. The lawyers also said they considered her suggestion "to be a threat
against the United States."
The 105mm
artillery projectile is like those loaded with nerve agent or mustard gas
that apparently contaminated a Utah family's property.
Archive photo |
Because she was frustrated, she said she would return any munitions found
"in a yellow rental truck parked next to the federal building" (sounding like
the Oklahoma City bombing). She said the lawyers also took that as a threat
but didn't see leaving the old ordnance on Cannon land as a threat.
Weak actions
Douglas Cannon said Army representatives said in court that there are plans
eventually to clean up the area. But the Army cannot do it until it receives
funding from Congress, which likely is years away.
He said when the judge asked the Army if it would be interested in buying
the land, "They said no because it is contaminated. That is ironic, because
they contaminated it. They said they didn't have the budget to handle it,"
Douglas said.
Amid frustration, Louise said she once called the state to ask what would
happen if she did not pay taxes on the contaminated land and let it revert
to the government or if she simply deeded it over to the state.
"They said, 'We would sue you.' "
"I said, 'What?' They said, 'If you let property that you knew to be contaminated
come back to the state, we would sue you to clean it up.' I said, 'You've
got to be kidding. I didn't do this.' And they said, 'It doesn't matter,'
" Louise said.
The Cannons said the only effort the Army made on their land was to post
some signs warning that it is a Formerly Used Defensive Site, and that no
one should pick up munitions they see.
Louise said the Army also accused her of stealing such
signs that disappeared. But when the Army told her the signs had been made
of wood, she said, "Anything made of wood out there disappears quickly. They
have all theses campers, hikers and motorcyclists out there. They make little
campfires. If you leave any wood out there unattended for 24 hours, it disappears,"
she said.
Louise said that on another occasion, the Army accused her of stealing an
old chemical rocket booster that erosion had laid bare on Cannon property.
It had been spotted by Army crews in the area.
"They flagged it, and when they returned to Dugway they left orders for others
to go get it," she said. "Eleven days later when they went looking for it,
they couldn't find it, but saw a lot of tire tracks around the site. So they
called me and asked if I had taken it."
She says she replied, "Are you people out of your minds? No I don't have
it. There are so many people who go out there (for hiking and four-wheeling)
that it's probably sitting on some guy's mantle, and he doesn't know what
he has. That's why you need to clean up that area."
She said she then received a lecture on how it would be illegal for her to
take such munitions if she finds them.
The waste option
Faced with not being able to clean up the property or mine it safely, Louise
said, the siblings considered another option.
"I also had several conversations with the nuclear waste people that were
trying to put that storage of nuclear waste in Skull Valley," she says. The
state has fought for years to block an above-ground storage area proposal
by Private Fuels Storage on the Goshute Reservation. The company is a consortium
of Midwest nuclear power utilities.
"Because they've kind of been hitting one roadblock after another to put
it in Skull Valley, the Dugway property that is owned by the Cannons is looking
better and better to them," she says.
Louise says her family's property is more stable geologically than the Skull
Valley site, and the land sits beneath a "no fly zone." The state has fought
the Skull Valley site in part by contending it is too near faults and that
a plane crash into it could be catastrophic.
If Dugway Proving Ground expansion took the Cannon property — or surrounded
it — that would almost surely prevent a private repository there, too.
In a Catch-22
Louise says, "We're in a Catch-22. We can't get the property cleaned up.
We can't lease it. We can't even get rid of it. I even worry we might be
liable if someone is hurt out there by some of the contamination."
Douglas says, "The property is now useless to us. No development or potential
sale can take place because of the danger and because necessary insurance
cannot be obtained inexpensively to protect personnel from injury or death."
They worry that the latest disclosure by the Army that it is considering expanding
Dugway boundaries is aimed, at least in part, at them and their property.
(The Deseret Morning News has filed a Freedom of Information Act request
for specifics about the proposal, but the Army has not yet responded.)
"My fear is that what they are trying to do is surround us and landlock us,"
preventing access to the mines and any hope of developing them, Louise says.
"It's privately owned, and they don't want to clean it up."
She adds, "What I want them to do is clean it up. The price of precious minerals
is going up, especially gold. It's not only a large mine, but it has shown
promise in the past" and managed to produce $246,000 in lease fees despite
the contamination worries between 1969 and 1993. Some promising veins have
been identified.
But the Cannons say the jury is still out on whether they will really get
the gold mine — or just the shaft.
E-mail: lee@desnews.com
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