Disposable Heroes: Veterans used to test suicide-linked drugs!
An ABC News and Washington Times investigation reveals veterans are being recruited for government tests of drugs with violent side effects
June 17, 2008 - Mentally distressed
veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan are being recruited for government tests on
pharmaceutical drugs linked to suicide and other violent side effects, an
investigation by ABC News and The Washington Times has found.
The report will air on Good Morning
America and will also appear in The Washington Times on Tuesday.
In one of the human experiments,
involving the anti-smoking drug Chantix, Veterans Administration doctors waited
more than three months before warning veterans about the possible serious side
effects, including suicide and neuropsychiatric behavior.
"Lab rat, guinea pig,
disposable hero," said former U.S. Army sniper James Elliott in describing
how he felt he was betrayed by the Veterans Administration.
Elliott, 38, of suburban
Washington, D.C., was recruited, at $30 a month, for the Chantix anti-smoking
study three years after being diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. He
served a 15-month tour of duty in Iraq from 2003-2004.
Months after he began taking the
drug, Elliott suffered a mental breakdown, experiencing a relapse of Iraq
combat nightmares he blames on Chantix.
"They never told me that I was
going to be suicidal, that I would cease sleeping. They never told me anything
except this will help me quit smoking," Elliott told ABC News and The
Washington Times.
On the night of February 5th, after
consuming a few beers, Elliott says he "snapped" and left his home
with a loaded gun.
His fiancée, Tammy, called police
and warned, "He's extremely unstable. He has PTSD."
"Do you think that he is going
to shoot or attack the police?" the 911 dispatcher asked.
"I can't be certain. I don't
know," she said.
"He was operating as if he was
back in theater, in combat theater," she told ABC News. "And of course,
a soldier goes nowhere without a gun."
When police arrived, they found
Elliott in the street, with the gun in the front pocket of his hooded
sweatshirt.
"Are you going to shoot me?
Shoot me," Elliott said, according to the police report.
Police used a Taser gun to stun Elliott and placed him
under arrest.