Soldier electrocutions probed in Iraq
PITTSBURGH (AP) - March 20, 2008 Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight
and Government Reform, said Wednesday he has asked Defense
Secretary Robert Gates to hand over documents relating to the
management of electrical systems at facilities in Iraq.
Staff Sgt. Ryan Maseth, 24, died Jan. 2 of cardiac arrest after
being electrocuted while showering at his barracks in Baghdad.
Also Wednesday, Maseth's parents filed a wrongful death lawsuit
in Allegheny County Court against KBR Inc., the Houston-based
contractor responsible for maintaining Maseth's barracks.
The lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages and costs, alleges
that KBR allowed U.S. troops to continue using electrical systems
"which KBR knew to be dangerous and knew had caused prior
instances of electrocution."
"I expected that if I lost one of my sons (in the war), it
would be due to an IED or firefight," Maseth's mother, Cheryl
Harris, told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "I never expected
to hear he would be electrocuted, that something so senseless
happened to him."
An Army investigation found that his death was due to improper
grounding of the electric pump that supplied water to the building,
Waxman said. Maseth died after an electrical short in the pump sent
a current through the pipes, the California Democrat wrote in his
letter.
Chris Isleib, a Defense Department spokesman, said that the
Pentagon has turned the matter over to the department's inspector
general for a full investigation.
Since 2003, at least 12 service members have died in Iraq as a
result of electrocution, according to the Army and Marine Corps.
In October 2004, Waxman said in his letter, the Army issued a
safety alert that noted five soldiers had been electrocuted that
year and improper grounding was a factor in nearly all of the
cases.
The letter did not give the names of victims other than Maseth.
Waxman asked that his committee be provided investigative reports
on the dead soldiers and reports and communications regarding
electrical grounding in military facilities in Iraq.
In a Jan. 21 memo responding to questions from Maseth's family,
the Army's criminal investigations division said the Chinese-made
pump was acquired before KBR took over maintenance of the building
and did not meet U.S. safety standards.
KBR declined to comment on the lawsuit Wednesday, but said it
would cooperate with agencies investigating Maseth's death. The
company was formerly owned by Halliburton Co., the oil services
conglomerate once led by Vice President Cheney.
Harris said the military initially did not tell her that her son
was electrocuted, and then told her he died "with a small
electrical appliance in the shower." Only later did she learn the
truth, she said.
The investigation was sought by Rep. Jason Altmire, a Democrat
who represents a district north of Pittsburgh.