PENNSYLVANIA - sludge victims lawsuit- SYNAGRO - Attys. Peter Angelos & Chris Nidel - NAACP = Atty. Edwin Hallman


http://www.baltimoreexaminer.com/local/Is_sewage_sludge_Angeloss_next_asbestos.html

Is sewage sludge, Angelos’s next asbestos?
By Mike Silvestri
Examiner Staff Writer 9/14/08

[See the attached file]
Lin Eyer, of Havre de Grace, pets her horse, Jumping Jack Flash in April. She rode her horse through sewage sludge
and became ill soon after. -Kristine Buls/Examiner With few local experts to consult and allegations piling up that
sewage sludge spread as fertilizer causes illnesses, Peter Angelos is taking the lead.
Angelos, the Baltimore Orioles owner who made his fortune on asbestos lawsuits, and Chris Nidel, an environmental
attorney from Washington D.C., filed a lawsuit with the York, Pa., courts, seeking unspecified damages from local
offices of the country’s largest sludge-hauling company, Synagro Technologies Inc., for 35 residents of Shrewbury, Pa.,
a town 26 miles north of Towson in Baltimore County.

The residents in the lawsuit filed this summer allege that the sludge, human waste treated at a wastewater treatment
plant and spread
on a nearby farm, damaged their property and caused bloody noses, headaches, irritated eyes, fatigue and respiratory
ailments.

Edwin Hallman, an environmental attorney from Atlanta, who is considered one of the country’s top lawyers in sludge-
related lawsuits, said, “Mr. Angelos filing this suit is a clear sign that the toxic torts attorneys are finally realizing the
effects of this stuff.”

Angelos, who could not be reached for comment, was one of the first attorneys in the country to file lawsuits against
asbestos companies. He made hundreds of millions of dollars representing thousands of Baltimore residents who were
sickened by asbestos, an insulating and fire-retardant material that can cause cancer but was once thought to be safe.

The Baltimore City branch and Maryland State Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People had to take their search for counsel on sludge earlier this year all the way to Georgia.

NAACP officials have been consulting for several months with Hallman about a Johns Hopkins University study involving
a sludge compost that was spread around houses in Baltimore.

Synagro could not be reached for comment on the Pennsylvania lawsuit, but its officials have repeatedly denied that
sludge causes adverse health effects.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has supported spreading sludge as fertilizer, saying it has never been
proven to cause an illness.

Hallman’s most recent case ended in February, with a victory in U.S. District Court over the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. He won the case for a Georgia dairy farmer, Andy McElmurray, whose fields and award-winning cattle were
destroyed by sludge that contained hundreds of times more heavy metals than permitted.

“I’m really pleased to see somebody of his caliber signing on,” Hallman said of Angelos. “I think we’re going to see more
and more attorneys like him, myself and others communicating.”

msilvestri@baltimoreexaminer.com