Veteran Moves to Challenge Feres Doctrine in Supreme Court
Veteran Moves to Challenge Feres Doctrine in Supreme Court
A former Coast Guard officer is hoping to challenge the Feres doctrine ban on military injury claims before the Supreme Court.Walter Daniel, a Coast Guard veteran, says he still doesn’t know what happened when his wife died in childbirth.Herself a servicemember, Navy Lt. Rebekah Daniel was due to give birth at a Washing state military hospital. But within hours of a successful delivery, Daniel was dead.Nobody really knows what wrong in the procedure. Daniel, a healthy, 33-year old woman—a labor and delivery nurse herself—bled to death at Naval Hospital Bremerton. She should have been low-risk by any accounting.And according to Walter Daniel, nobody really tried to figure out what had gone wrong, either.“There was no timeline, no records of what steps were taken,” he said. “I’ve had no answers.”Daniel tried to file a wrongful death lawsuit in 2015 but it was dismissed. His appeals were turned down, too, not based on the merits of his claim but the so-called ‘Feres doctrine.’Feres, writes KHN, is a ’68-year old federal ruling that bars active-duty military members from suing the federal government for injuries.’Daniel and his lawyer are petitioning the Supreme Court to make an amendment—one that’d let service members sue for medical malpractice just the same way civilians can.The military’s health system, by Kaiser Health News’ estimation, encompasses 54 hospitals and 377 medical clinics. In total, it serves 9.4 million Americans, of which nearly 1.4 million are active-duty.“I don’t want this to happen to any other family,” said Ddaniel.The Feres doctrine hasn’t been reconsidered by the Supreme Court in decades.The last time it went up before the justices, a 5-4 decision ensured its survival.That decision, says KHN, ‘drew a scathing dissent from Justice Antonin Scalia, who declared the rule should be scrapped.’“Feres was wrongly decided and hearily deserves the widespread, almost universal criticism it has received,” Scalia wrote.
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Sources
‘Grossly Unfair’? Widower Takes Ban On Military Injury Claims To Supreme CourtSupreme Court deals devastating blow to Feres Doctrine opponents
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.