Billions of Dollars Will Be Needed To Reimburse Taxpayers For Veterans Hearing Loss Disability Payments

Army Earplug Lawsuit News

More than 100,000 soldiers have banded together to sue 3M for the hearing loss allegedly caused by their faulty earplugs

Friday, May 1, 2020 - The United States has a reputation for supplying its military members with the most sophisticated weaponry and physical protection equipment available. Despite this, US taxpayers and military veterans are asking how is it that the world's most technologically advanced country could have more service members return home from combat after suffering life-altering hearing damage than any other injury? According to an article in Newsweek, a staggering number of individuals in the military lost most of their hearing or will suffer permanently with a hearing related injury. "Hearing loss is "by far" the most common service-connected injury suffered by veterans, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs. The department says that, in 2014, more than 933,000 veterans were receiving disability benefits related to hearing loss and nearly 1.3 million were receiving benefits related to tinnitus," according to Newsweek. Military disability payments due to hearing damage cost the US taxpayer billions of dollars every year, an expense that will continue into the foreseeable future. Over 140,000 soldiers have filed suit against 3M and if a jury is looking for a benchmark in which to base a lump-sum damages award, that number and statistic may be a good one to start with.

In the Newsweek's article, one 3M Executive is on record as telling others that "US soldiers don't deserve to know about potential issues with safety gear," expressing the derisive attitude of the company that charged the military almost $8.00 per pair for the 3M Dual Sided Combat Army Earplug that only cost less than $1.00 to manufacture. Many of the 140,000 soldier plaintiffs filing army combat earplug lawsuits also stated in their written claim that 3M's test design of the earplug's capabilities deliberately inflated the device's hearing protection ability and that the company knowingly withheld that information from consumers and the military. Depositions go on to state that of a former vice president at Aearo Technologies, the original maker of the earplug as saying that concealment of potential product defects was par for the course at the company. Newsweek writes: "Martin Salon, a former vice president at Aearo Technologies, was asked if it was okay for 3M to "conceal" information about potential defects in the earplug from the government. He responded, "I suppose it is if the product is working in most cases."

Plaintiff attorneys feel that 3M had a responsibility to the US military to supply a product that would protect soldier's hearing, instruct them on its proper usage, and warn them of the potential for malfunction. 3M thinks that they have complied with the minimum military standards that they were required to observe and that they should not be held liable and that it was the government's obligation to test the product further. Thousands of soldiers have returned home from combat with hearing damage so profound that they can not find work nor carry on a meaningful relationship with their spouse or children. Others with tinnitus find it difficult to sleep and need to keep a fan or TV on all night to compete with the constant ringing in their ears.

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