Reservist who refused vaccine found guilty of disobeying order
Associated Press
Wednesday, May 28, 2003
FORT DRUM, N.Y. - A military panel on Wednesday found an Army reservist
guilty of disobeying an order for refusing to take an anthrax vaccine.
The panel of eight officers - only two of whom said during questioning that
they have taken the six-shot regimen - took 40 minutes to return a guilty
verdict against Pvt. Kamila Iwanowska.
Iwanowska, 26, admitted in a court ``stipulation of fact'' that she refused
to follow the verbal and written orders of her commanding officers. Army
prosecutors read a statement to the panel and rested their case without calling
any witnesses.
``Good order and discipline and following orders is essential in the United
States Army,'' Capt. Leslie Rowley said in a brief opening statement.
Rowley said Iwanowska's signed statement was all the proof the panel needed
for a conviction.
Defense Attorney Capt. Jeremy Ball told panel members what was not in
Iwanowska's statement is why she refused, ``and that's what this case is
ultimately about.''
``I still believe the Army is a good place and I don't regret joining,''
Iwanowska said after the verdict. ``I don't regret what I did, I just wish it
had turned out differently.''
``I'm pretty much alone in my actions but talking to other soldiers I'm not
necessarily alone in my feelings,'' she said. ``I wish I was overseas with my
unit. They have prevented me from doing my job. I was ready to deploy without
the shot.''
Ball said he planned to call Iwanowska and several other witnesses during the
sentencing phase, which began late Wednesday morning.
After the verdict, her mother, Elizabeth Kurek from Mt. Pocono, Pa., said:
``My daughter is a brave girl, is a good girl.''
Since the anthrax vaccinations were made mandatory for all U.S. military
personnel in 1998, hundreds of service members have been disciplined or
discharged for refusing to take the shot. At least 37 have been court martialed.
The vaccinations were ordered because of worry that Iraq and other nations
hostile to the United States are developing anthrax weapons.
Airborne anthrax can kill within days of inhalation. Anthrax attacks in the
United States last fall killed five people and raised questions about whether
civilians might need the vaccine.
Iwanowska, of New York City, was charged with disobeying an order to get the
anthrax vaccine after reporting for pre-deployment processing with her unit in
January. The unit was headed to southwest Asia; a specific location was not
released. After being brought up on disciplinary charges by her company
commander, Iwanowska was twice ordered to take the vaccine by Col. Emory Helton,
the garrison commander, but refused.
Iwanowska, who is Polish and became an American citizen last year, told her
superiors that she considered the shot medically dangerous to children she might
have in the future, saying the long-term effects of the anthrax vaccine are
unknown. As a Roman Catholic, she also cited religious reasons for refusing it.
The Pentagon insists the vaccination is safe, with severe adverse reactions
developing in about one in 100,000 vaccinations. Anthrax is a naturally
occurring virus that typically affects sheep and cattle. When inhaled, dry
anthrax spores can be deadly to humans.
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"