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Karen Silkwood

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Karen Silkwood
Poster from the Christic Institute archives.
Born
Karen Gay Silkwood

(1946-02-19)February 19, 1946
DiedNovember 13, 1974(1974-11-13) (aged 28)
Cause of deathCar crash, unclear circumstances
Occupation
  • Laboratory technician
Spouse
William Meadows
(m. 1965; div. 1972)
Children3

Karen Gay Silkwood (February 19, 1946 – November 13, 1974) was an American chemical technician and labor union activist known for reporting concerns about corporate practices related to health and safety in a nuclear facility.

She worked at the Kerr-McGee Cimarron Fuel Fabrication Site in Crescent, Oklahoma, making plutonium pellets. She was the first woman ever elected to the union's negotiating team at Kerr-McGee. After testifying to the Atomic Energy Commission about her safety concerns, she was found to have plutonium contamination in her body and her home. While driving to meet with a New York Times journalist and an official of her union's national office, she died in a car crash, the circumstances of which were never explained entirely.

Her family sued Kerr-McGee for the plutonium contamination that Silkwood suffered from. The company settled out of court for US$1.38 million, while not admitting liability. Her story was chronicled in Mike Nichols's 1983 Academy Award-nominated movie Silkwood in which she was portrayed by Meryl Streep.

Education and personal life

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Karen Gay Silkwood was born in 1946 in Longview, Texas, and raised in Nederland, Texas. She lived with her mother Merle, father Bill, and sisters Rose Mary and Linda.[1] In high school, Karen was a straight 'A' student and a member of the National Honor Society. Chemistry was her best subject.[2] In the fall of 1964, she enrolled at Lamar State College of Technology in Beaumont, Texas on a scholarship from the Business and Professional Women's Club.[3][4]

In 1965, Silkwood dropped out of college and eloped with William Meadows, an oil pipeline worker, with whom she had three children. After the couple filed for bankruptcy due to Meadows' excessive spending habits, and after his refusal to end an extramarital affair, Silkwood left him in 1972 and relocated to Oklahoma City where she worked briefly as a hospital clerk.[5][6][7]

Union activities

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In August 1972, Silkwood was hired as a metallography laboratory technician with the Kerr-McGee Corporation at their Cimarron River plutonium production plant near Crescent, Oklahoma.[3] She soon joined the Oil, Chemical & Atomic Workers Union (OCAW) local. In November 1972, she participated in a strike to protest poor working conditions. Kerr-McGee succeeded in breaking the strike by hiring people from the surrounding area to cross the picket line. The company's managers also began "working behind the scenes to entice workers to sign a petition calling for a decertification election to eliminate the union."[8]

In August 1974, Silkwood was elected to the OCAW local's three-person bargaining committee, the first woman to hold such a position at Kerr-McGee.[3] It was a critical time for the local as the decertification drive had collected enough signatures to force an election on October 16.

Silkwood's specific union duties included investigating health and safety issues. She discovered at the Cimarron plant what she considered to be numerous violations of health regulations, such as exposure of workers to contamination, faulty respiratory equipment, and improper storage of samples. She believed the lack of sufficient shower facilities was increasing the risk of employee contamination.[9] She also found evidence of missing or misplaced plutonium.[3]

On September 26, 1974, Silkwood and the two other committee members attended a meeting in Washington, D.C. with Tony Mazzocchi, OCAW's legislative director. The committee members voiced their complaints about the dangerous workplace conditions and sought advice on how to win the upcoming decertification election. Mazzocchi recalled how Silkwood took him aside at one point and said, "You know, there's some other problems that I'd like to talk to you about.":

I said, "What are they?" She said, "I work in a quality-control lab, and I noticed the lab technician would use a felt pen on the X-ray to cover over that little thin line that showed a crack in the control rod welds." And she told me there was some fooling with the computer data, too. I said, "Look, Karen, if you could prove that, I think we could use it to beat the company and improve the conditions in that facility."[10]

At the conclusion of the meeting, Mazzocchi and his staffer Steve Wodka counseled that the best hope for survival of the Cimarron workers and their local was to raise awareness about Kerr-McGee's practices with the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the national press.[11]

To that end, the OCAW initiated an aggressive whistleblowing campaign. They claimed that "the Kerr-McGee plant had manufactured faulty fuel rods, falsified product inspection records, and risked employee safety". The union threatened litigation.[3] On September 27, Silkwood testified to the AEC about having been contaminated with plutonium, and she alleged that safety standards had been relaxed because of a need to increase production. She appeared at the AEC hearings along with the two other committee members who likewise testified that Kerr-McGee was endangering its workers.[12][9] The whistleblowing effort, and the visibility it brought, helped fight off decertification. The Cimarron workers voted 80-61 in October to keep the OCAW as their bargaining agent.[13][14]

On November 5, 1974, Silkwood performed a routine self-check that showed almost 400 times the legal limit for plutonium contamination. She was decontaminated at the plant and sent home with a testing kit to collect urine and feces for further analysis. Although there was plutonium on the inner portions of the gloves which she had been using, the gloves did not have any leaks or perforations according to tests performed subsequently by Kerr-McGee personnel.[15] This suggests the contamination had come not from inside the glovebox, but from some other source.[16]: 252 

The next morning, as she left for a union meeting, Silkwood again tested positive for plutonium, although she had performed only paperwork tasks that morning. She was given a more intensive decontamination. On November 7, as she entered the plant, she was found to be severely contaminated, even expelling contaminated air from her lungs. A health physics team accompanied her back to her home and found plutonium traces on several surfaces, especially in the bathroom and the refrigerator. When the house was later stripped and decontaminated, some of her property had to be destroyed. Silkwood, her boyfriend Drew Stephens, and her roommate Sherri Ellis were sent to Los Alamos National Laboratory for in-depth testing to determine the extent of the contamination in their bodies.[16]: 253 

There were questions about how Silkwood became contaminated during this three-day period from November 5-7. She said the contamination in the bathroom may have occurred when she spilled her urine sample on the morning of November 7. This was consistent with the fact that the samples she collected at home had extremely high levels of plutonium, while the samples collected in "fresh" jars at the plant and at Los Alamos showed much lower levels.[16]: 253 

She concluded that someone working for Kerr-McGee had deliberately contaminated her. Kerr-McGee's management alleged that Silkwood had contaminated herself in order to harm the company's reputation. According to Richard Rashke's book The Killing of Karen Silkwood, the particular type of plutonium found in Silkwood's home came from a Cimarron production area, pellet lot 29, where she did not work. Starting in August, the pellet lot 29 samples were kept in a Kerr-McGee vault to which she did not have access.[17]

Death

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By November, Silkwood believed she had assembled sufficient documentation, including company papers, to corroborate her claims against Kerr-McGee. She decided to go public with this evidence and contacted David Burnham, a New York Times journalist whom Tony Mazzocchi referred her to. Burnham had previously broken the Frank Serpico police corruption case and was now researching atomic energy issues.[10]

On November 13, 1974, Silkwood attended a 5:30 p.m. union meeting, along with ten other members of the OCAW local, at the Hub Cafe in Crescent. She made a brief presentation and sipped iced tea. Another attendee at the meeting, Wanda Jean Jung, stated in a sworn affidavit in January 1975 that Silkwood had a folder, a spiral notebook, and a packet of documents with her at the cafe.[18] During a break in the meeting, Jung said she spoke with Silkwood who was crying quietly and admitted how frightened she was "that she had been so badly contaminated, she would eventually get cancer and die from the plutonium in her lungs."[19] But then, Jung stated in her affidavit, Karen pointed to her documents and said, "there was one thing she was glad about ... that she had all the proof concerning falsification of records. As she said this, she clenched her hand more firmly on the folder and notebook she was holding. She told me she was on her way to meet Steve Wodka and a New York Times reporter ... to give them this material."[19]

At 7:10 p.m., Silkwood left the meeting, got into her 1973 white Honda Civic and drove alone toward Oklahoma City, about 30 miles (48 km) away, to meet with Burnham and Wodka.[20][21][22] Less than 30 minutes later, Silkwood's body was discovered in her smashed-up car, 7.3 miles from the cafe.[23] The car had run off the left side of State Highway 74, traveled some distance along the grass shoulder, and then struck the wing wall of a concrete culvert 0.11 miles (180 m) south of the intersection with West Industrial Road (35°51′N 97°35′W / 35.85°N 97.58°W / 35.85; -97.58). The impact from hitting the wall caused her to be impaled by her steering wheel and pinned to the roof of the Honda Civic.[24] She was pronounced dead at the scene.

Silkwood's car contained none of the documents she had been holding in the meeting at the Hub Cafe. The Oklahoma state trooper at the crash site remembers that he found one or two tablets of the sedative methaqualone (Quaalude) in the car, and what he believed were two marijuana joints.[24] The coroner found 0.35 milligrams of methaqualone in her blood — "a therapeutic dose is .25 mg; a toxic dose, .50 mg."[25] The Oklahoma Highway Patrol report concluded that she fell asleep at the wheel and died as a result of an accident.[26]

The OCAW hired a crash investigator, A. O. Pipkin Jr., to examine the car and the scene of the crash.[27] Based on his examination, Silkwood had not fallen asleep while driving: "The steering wheel was bent back on the sides, proving she'd been wide awake and hanging on tight as she tried to maintain control."[28] In support of his notion that she was awake, he added two other observations. The first was the anomalous fact that her car had veered from the right lane to the left shoulder:

"In most one-vehicle accidents where the driver has gone to sleep, or because of impaired abilities," Pipkin noted, "the vehicle has always gone off to the right because of the contour of the road, namely the crown." The second thing Pipkin reported was that the Honda tracks in the grass showed the car did not drift, but was actually out of control before it left the highway. "The only way that this car could have been put in that attitude," he wrote, "was either an impact by an unknown vehicle or a combination of an impact by an unknown vehicle and driver over-reaction and subsequent loss of control."[29]

But most significantly, Pipkin found damage to the rear of the vehicle which, according to her friends, had not been present before. As the crash was entirely a head-on, front-end collision, it didn't explain the fresh dents on the left rear fender and the bumper above it.[30][31] A microscopic analysis of the rear of the car revealed paint chips that could have come only from impact by another vehicle.

In light of Pipkin's findings, some friends and journalists theorized that Silkwood's car was rammed from behind with intent to cause a fatal crash.[32] OCAW officials Mazzocchi and Wodka did not believe it was premeditated murder because that stretch of highway is flat, and the odds of her hitting an obstruction like a concrete culvert were so remote. Instead, they suspected it was an attempt, which went tragically awry, to scare and intimidate her into stopping her whistleblowing and returning the documents.[33] Another hypothesis is that she was being chased to force her to halt. She drove evasively, including speeding along the left grass shoulder, and while looking behind her or to her right at the chase car, she didn't realize until too late that she was racing toward the culvert.[34] However, the various theories about foul play have never been substantiated.

Due to concerns about contamination, the Atomic Energy Commission and the State Medical Examiner requested analysis of Silkwood's organs by the Los Alamos Tissue Analysis Program.[16]: 254–255  On November 18, she was buried in Kilgore, Texas.[12]

Silkwood’s plutonium contamination and the mysterious circumstances of her death became a national news story. It aroused public suspicion and resulted in a federal investigation of Cimarron plant security. National Public Radio reported that the investigation determined 20 to 30 kilograms (44–66 lb) of plutonium had been misplaced at the plant. The unaccounted-for nuclear material generated speculation as to its whereabouts. Richard Rashke suggested that the missing plutonium may have been stolen by "a plutonium smuggling ring" given that the quantity was enough to make three or four nuclear bombs.[35] He added that security at the Cimarron plant was so lax, workers could easily smuggle out finished plutonium pellets.[36]

Kerr-McGee closed its nuclear fuel plants in 1975. The Department of Energy (DOE) reported the Cimarron plant as fully decontaminated and decommissioned by 1994.[37]

Silkwood vs. Kerr-McGee

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Silkwood's father and her children filed a lawsuit against Kerr-McGee for gross negligence on behalf of her estate. The time leading up to the trial was likewise filled with controversy. According to Rashke, officials investigating Kerr-McGee's operations and the circumstances of the car crash were themselves at risk: "People had been tailed and forced off lonely roads by speeding cars. Two shadowy characters about to be subpoenaed suddenly packed up their attaché cases and fled to West Germany. One apparently healthy police officer about to be deposed died of a heart attack. There was no autopsy.[38] Someone tried to murder a Kerr-McGee manager who knew too much.[39] Someone tried to assassinate Bill Taylor, the chief investigator for the legal team representing the Silkwood family.[40] And then there were all those strange clicks on everyone's telephone."[41]

The trial occurred in spring of 1979. Gerry Spence was the chief attorney for the Silkwood estate; the other major attorneys were Daniel Sheehan, Arthur Angel, and James Ikard. William Paul was chief attorney for Kerr-McGee. The estate presented evidence that the autopsy showed Silkwood was contaminated with plutonium at the time of her death. To prove the contamination was sustained at the plant, evidence was given by a series of witnesses who were former employees of the facility.[42]

The defense relied on expert witness Dr. George Voelz, a high-ranking scientist at Los Alamos. Voelz said he believed the contamination in Silkwood's body was within legal standards.[43] The defense later proposed that Silkwood was a troublemaker who might have poisoned herself. After the summation arguments, Judge Frank Theis told the jury, "[I]f you find that the damage to the person or property of Karen Silkwood resulted from the operation of this plant ... defendant Kerr-McGee Nuclear Corporation is liable...."[44]: Instruction 7 

The jury rendered its verdict of US$505,000 in damages and US$10,000,000 in punitive damages. On appeal in federal court, the judgment was reduced to US$5,000, the estimated value of Silkwood's losses in property at her rental house, and reversing the award of punitive damages. In 1984, the U.S. Supreme Court restored the original verdict. In Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp. 464 US 238 (1984), the court ruled that "the NRC's exclusive authority to set safety standards did not foreclose the use of state tort remedies."[45] Although indicating it would appeal for other reasons, Kerr-McGee agreed to settle out of court for US$1.38 million ($3.75 million in 2021 dollars), while admitting no liability.

Portrayals in media

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  • Silkwood is mentioned in the song, "We Almost Lost Detroit", on the 1977 music album, Bridges, by Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson.
  • With clear echoes of the Silkwood story, the 1979 movie The China Syndrome depicts a fictional Southern California nuclear power plant that has to be shut down following a near disaster caused by a defective water pump. The incident is filmed by an L.A. TV news crew. Soon thereafter, the power plant's management wants to reopen and provides radiographs to prove the water pump has been repaired. But a whistleblower in the power plant finds evidence that the welds for the water pumps were deceptively X-rayed to conceal their faulty condition. He hands the false radiographs to Hector Salas, a member of the news crew, to deliver to a convention of nuclear scientists which is occurring in L.A. While driving to the convention, Salas is rammed from behind and forced off the road. Unlike Silkwood, he does not die in the crash, but the radiographs are stolen from his car.[46]
  • Silkwood was portrayed on stage by actress Jehane Dyllan in the one-person play Silkwood, which Dyllan scripted along with Susan Holleran and Bobbi Ausubel. Ausubel also directed the piece. It ran April 7-12, 1981 at Theater Works, UMass-Park Square in Boston.[47]
  • The 1983 movie Silkwood is an account of Silkwood's life and the events resulting from her activism, based on an original screenplay by Nora Ephron and Alice Arlen. Meryl Streep played the title role and was nominated for an Academy Award and a BAFTA. Cher played Karen's friend and roommate Sherri Ellis, and was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award. Mike Nichols was nominated for Best Director. Ephron and Arlen were nominated for Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen.[48]
  • PBS Frontline produced the program, Nuclear Reaction,[49] which contained aspects of the Silkwood story. The program's website includes supplementary text about her that was first printed on November 23, 1995 in Los Alamos Science.[50] The program covered the risks of nuclear energy and raised questions about corporate accountability and responsibility.
  • The 2004 novel Cloud Atlas (and its 2012 film adaptation) has a section in which a female journalist is nearly murdered via car accident to prevent her from publishing a report on a conspiracy to cause a nuclear power plant catastrophe.
  • Silkwood's death is mentioned in the Netflix TV documentary mini series Meltdown: Three Mile Island (2022). In Episode 3 entitled "The Whistleblower", insiders claim that "cost-cutting measures and intimidation tactics create a danger far worse than the accident itself."[51]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Gallagher, Edward J. "The Life and Accidental (?) Death of Karen Silkwood". Lehigh University Digital Library.
  2. ^ Rashke, Richard (2000) [First published 1981]. The Killing of Karen Silkwood: The Story Behind the Kerr-McGee Plutonium Case (2nd ed.). ILR Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0801486678.
  3. ^ a b c d e Kleiner, Diane L. "Silkwood, Karen Gay". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Society. Archived from the original on November 24, 2010. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  4. ^ Rashke 2000, p. 8.
  5. ^ Garraty, John Arthur; Jackson, Kenneth T.; Markoe, Arnold; Markoe, Karen E. (1994). Dictionary of American Biography. Scribner's. p. 726. ISBN 978-0-684-19398-4.
  6. ^ Booth, Bibi; Mongillo, John (2001). Environmental Activists. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 260. ISBN 978-0-313-30884-0.
  7. ^ Rashke 2000, p. 9.
  8. ^ Leopold 2007, p. 314.
  9. ^ a b Rashke 2000, pp. 22–23.
  10. ^ a b Leopold 2007, p. 316.
  11. ^ Leopold 2007, pp. 317–318.
  12. ^ a b Burnham, David (November 19, 1974). "Death of Plutonium Worker Questioned by Union Official". The New York Times.
  13. ^ Leopold 2007, p. 321.
  14. ^ Rashke 2000, p. 32.
  15. ^ United States General Accounting Office. "RED-75-374 Federal Investigations Into Certain Health, Safety, Quality Control and Criminal Allegations at Kerr-McGee Nuclear Corporation" (PDF). www.gao.gov. Retrieved April 4, 2016.
  16. ^ a b c d "The Karen Silkwood Story" (PDF). Los Alamos Science. 23. November 23, 1995. Archived (PDF) from the original on August 13, 2016. Retrieved August 28, 2017.
  17. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 105–106.
  18. ^ Rashke 2000, p. 75.
  19. ^ a b Rashke 2000, p. 77.
  20. ^ Mazzocchi, Tony (November 1999). "Karen Silkwood Remembered". Labor Party Press Online. Labor Party Press. Archived from the original on November 30, 2012. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
  21. ^ Leopold, Les (2007). The Man Who Hated Work and Loved Labor. Chelsea Green Publishing Company. pp. 324–325. ISBN 978-1933392646.
  22. ^ "The Karen Silkwood Story (1946 - 1974)". United Steelworkers. Retrieved August 25, 2024.
  23. ^ Rashke 2000, p. 78.
  24. ^ a b Leopold 2007, p. 325.
  25. ^ Rashke 2000, p. 97.
  26. ^ Kohn, Howard (January 13, 1977). "Karen Silkwood: The Case of the Activist's Death". Rolling Stone.
  27. ^ Burnham, David (December 24, 1974). "Atom Case Death Linked to a 2d Car". The New York Times.
  28. ^ Leopold 2007, pp. 325–326.
  29. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 98–99.
  30. ^ Leopold 2007, p. 326.
  31. ^ Rashke 2000, p. 93.
  32. ^ Phillips, B. J. (April 1975). "The Case of Karen Silkwood: Mysterious Death of a Nuclear Plant Worker". Ms. pp. 59–66.
  33. ^ Leopold 2007, pp. 326–327.
  34. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 380–381.
  35. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 389–392.
  36. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 60–62, 237.
  37. ^ Summary: USDOE Richland Operations Office (May 1, 1994). Decontamination and decommissioning of the Kerr-McGee Cimarron Plutonium Fuel Plant (Report). Washington, United States: United States Department of Energy (USDOE). doi:10.2172/10151437. OSTI 10151437.
    Full text: USDOE Richland Operations Office (May 1, 1994). "Decontamination and decommissioning of the Kerr-McGee Cimarron Plutonium Fuel Plant" (PDF). DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI). Washington, United States: United States Department of Energy (USDOE). doi:10.2172/10151437. Archived from the original on August 29, 2017. Retrieved August 29, 2017.
  38. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 278–279.
  39. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 307–308.
  40. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 275–277.
  41. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. xvii–xviii.
  42. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 326–346.
  43. ^ Rashke 2000, pp. 365–373.
  44. ^ "Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 485 F. Supp. 566 (W.D. Okla. 1979)". Justia US Law. Justia. August 18, 1979. Archived from the original on July 16, 2017. Retrieved August 28, 2017. (Oklahoma case)
  45. ^ "SILKWOOD v. KERR-McGEE CORP., (1984) No. 81-2159". FindLaw. Thomson Reuters. January 11, 1984. Archived from the original on August 28, 2017. Retrieved August 28, 2017. (Supreme Court case)
  46. ^ "The China Syndrome (1979) - Plot". IMDb.
  47. ^ Clay, Carolyn (April 14, 1981). "Anatomy of a Martyr". The Boston Phoenix. Retrieved March 7, 2024.
  48. ^ "'Silkwood': THR's 1983 Review". Hollywood Reporter. November 22, 2014.
  49. ^ "Nuclear Reaction | FRONTLINE". PBS.
  50. ^ "PBS Frontline supplementary text". PBS. Retrieved October 11, 2019.
  51. ^ "'Meltdown: Three Mile Island' The Whistleblower (TV Episode 2022)". IMDb.

Further reading

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