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Board rips lawyer, paper

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WOODSTOCK – A special meeting of the McHenry County Board of Health to discuss brain-cancer cases in McCullom Lake became a two-hour criticism of the patients’ attorney and the Northwest Herald.

The health board, and the county health department that it oversees, criticized attorney Aaron Freiwald for not sharing medical records of 22 brain, nerve and pituitary cancer victims who are suing two factories in nearby Ringwood. The lawsuits, filed in groups since April 2006, blame air and groundwater contamination for plaintiffs’ illnesses.

Board member Richard Gorski said Freiwald was keeping information secret to try to force the defendants, Rohm and Haas and Modine Manufacturing, into a settlement. Freiwald, who lives in Pennsylvania, could not be reached for comment after the meeting.

“We’re not in this for the money,” Gorski said. “We’re not in this for getting a piece of flesh. We’re in this because there are 975 other people [in the village] that potentially may be exposed to something that this attorney knows, and he is unwilling to share that with us.

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“That’s what really galls me, and I find that not only wrong, but I find that amoral.”

Gorski and others also defended a 2006 epidemiology study undertaken by county health officials that concluded that McCullom Lake’s brain-cancer rates were not above normal. Board members had harsh words for a Dec. 18 investigation by the newspaper that concluded, based on official documents and sworn testimony, that the study was rushed and flawed.

The meeting resulted in no official action. Gorski made a motion to ask staff members to list alleged inaccuracies in the newspaper’s six-part investigation into the cancers, but the board voted against it.

The newspaper’s investigation found, among other things, that the county’s data excluded all but one of the victims, and relied in great part on maps from the defendants to determine groundwater flow and contamination extent.

Public Health Administrator Patrick McNulty said the newspaper “chose to ignore, spin or downplay key facts that have come to their attention,” but he did not list any.

Board President Ed Varga, who called the special meeting with Gorski, said he did not know what direction the board might give the health department when it met at its regular time Monday evening. But the course of action, he said, could be not to take one.

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