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Judge who dismissed cancer case reassigned

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The Philadelphia judge who dismissed the first McCullom Lake brain cancer lawsuit has been reassigned to family court and a new judge has been assigned to the case as both sides await an appeal ruling.

A Jan. 3 order by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court approves the transfer of Judge Allan Tereshko from the civil court’s trial division, more than two months after he resigned as its supervising judge under criticism for his handling of an unrelated case. A state appellate court that last October overturned his 2011 ruling in favor of a defendant insurance company chastised him for not disclosing his wife’s employment with the law firm representing it.

A separate panel of judges on the appellate court, which in Pennsylvania is called the Superior Court, is in the process of deciding whether Tereshko overstepped his bounds when he dismissed the first of 33 lawsuits alleging that pollution from the Rohm and Haas chemical plant in Ringwood caused a cluster of brain and pituitary tumors in and around McCullom Lake.

Should the appeal by plaintiff Joanne Branham prevail, it is not likely that the case will be retried before a family court judge. Plaintiffs’ attorney Aaron Freiwald, who motioned to get a new judge as part of his appeal, declined to comment. The individual cases were filed in Philadelphia because it is the world headquarters of Rohm and Haas, which now is a subsidiary of Dow Chemical Co.

Tereshko had said that his lack of disclosure was an “oversight” given the number of cases he handled. Judicial codes of conduct state that judges should recuse themselves in situations in which their impartiality could be reasonably questioned.

The case of Branham, who lost her husband of 40 years, Franklin, to glioblastoma multiforme brain cancer in 2004, was the first to go to trial. She and two of her former McCullom Lake next-door neighbors who also developed brain tumors sued Rohm and Haas in 2006, alleging that the specialty chemical plant tainted their air and groundwater with carcinogenic vinyl chloride. While the plant has spent decades monitoring and eliminating a plume of contaminated groundwater from a closed 8-acre on-site waste pit, it is fighting the idea that pollution reached or sickened village residents.

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