By Noel Brinkerhoff and David Wallechinsky
United States - In defending the U.S. military’s medical system in court, the U.S. Department of Justice
is arguing that service personnel and their families are not allowed to
sue for medical malpractice regardless of the circumstance.
As a general rule, military members are barred from taking the
government to court, which has been established in several court cases,
in particular the 1950 Supreme Court decision in Feres v. United States.
But now government lawyers are trying to expand the scope of Feres to
make it impossible for families of soldiers to sue for medical
malpractice, if at the time of the bad care the service member was on
active duty.
“This is a whopper of a theory and it immediately raised the
hackles of attorneys who practice in this field,” wrote Andrew Cohen for
The Atlantic. “Now, all of sudden, family members of military
personnel can't sue the U.S. for negligence because their loved ones are
on active duty?”
Eugene Fidell, an expert in military law at Yale University told the Military Times
that the Feres Doctrine was not intended to protect military hospitals
sued by civilians. “If the government can plausibly take a position like
this, something is basically wrong,” said Fidell. “The outcome the
government is arguing for is intolerable. If the government wins this
motion, Congress has to step in.”
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