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Court Victory is a First for Cell-phone Programmers
Sun Sentinel, October 2, 2005
By Nancy McVicar, Health Writer
Sharesa Price thought
it was just another in a series of sinus infections. Her head and eyes
hurt, and she was vomiting. But then Price had a seizure, and a brain
scan found something far more troubling.
"When I got home,
the phone was ringing. It was the doctor's office, and they told me, `Brace
yourself. Honey, you have a brain tumor.' I was standing by the refrigerator,
and I just collapsed, saying, `no, no, no, it can't be a brain tumor,'"
she recalled.
After her diagnosis
in 1999 and surgery to remove most of the tumor, Price started looking
for answers. She became convinced that exposure to radio-frequency radiation
on the job, where she programmed cell phones for new customers, had caused
the tumor.
In May, an administrative
law judge who handles worker's compensation claims awarded her $30,000
to pay her medical bills and other expenses. Price may be the first person
to convince a judge that her illness was caused by radio-frequency radiation.
The decision is unlikely to have widespread repercussions for the cell
phone industry, however, because the settlement was small.
Price's customers
at Advanced Communications Systems in northern California were doctors,
firefighters, police departments and security departments for casinos,
and she loved her work. She used a cell phone several hours each day,
and the room in which she worked contained transmitters that emitted radio-frequency
radiation, she said.
Price said when she
filed a workers comp claim, her boss fired her, eliminating her health
insurance. Then she lost the case. The Native American single mother of
two daughters was devastated. She turned to Tribal Health, a government
health agency for Native Americans, to get anti-seizure medication.
"If I hadn't been
Indian, I would have died," she said.
Her former boss, Dave
Bohlen, said that he did not fire Price, that she quit based on her doctor's
advice that she not return to work there. Bohlen said he dropped the insurance
because she was no longer an employee. He called her worker's comp case
"frivolous" and said there was no proof her tumor was caused by working
in his small shop.
"There's nothing harmful
going on here," he said.
After Price recovered
from brain surgery, she went to the Internet and found researchers studying
the biological effects of radio-frequency radiation, and got to know them.
"I would call them
up and say, `You are absolutely dead on. If a rat could talk, this is
what it would say. I'm the human rat.' "
Price couldn't find
an attorney to take her case until she contacted Carl Hilliard, a semi-retired
lawyer and president of the Wireless Consumers Alliance, a California-based
consumer-advocacy group.
Hilliard volunteered
to represent her pro bono and re-filed her workers comp case. Hilliard
said his group has represented cell phone users in issues involving poor
service, billing problems and misrepresentations by cell phone service
providers.
"We're the ones who
filed a case saying federal law does not pre-empt state law [on consumer
issues] and won that case four years ago," Hilliard said.
Hilliard brought in
Dr. Nachman Brautbar, an occupational toxicologist and clinical professor
of medicine at the University of Southern California School of Medicine,
to review Price's medical records.
Brautbar has been
an expert witness in a number of high-profile cases, including the chromium
poisonings from polluted drinking water portrayed in the movie Erin
Brockovich.
Brautbar reviewed
Price's case and wrote a report supporting her claim that the tumor was
caused by exposure to radio-frequency radiation.
"It's not a money
issue, suing the company, it's a health and safety issue," said Price,
who speaks to school assemblies and classes about the need to use a headset
when talking on a cell phone. "We need to explain to people that just
like putting on condoms, you have to take this precautionary measure to
make the product be as safe as it can be."
Nancy McVicar can
be reached at nmcvicar@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4593.
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