CBS Interviewed Returning Servicemen As To The 3M Combat Army Earplug Experiences

Army Earplug Lawsuit News

In an eye-opening and heartfelt video, an investigative news team at CBS This Morning interviewed two seasoned combat veterans that had recently returned from Iraq

Thursday, August 8, 2019 - What we are now learning via an investigative news report from CBS This Morning is that not only was something wrong with the 3M Combat Army Earplug, but, in fact everything was wrong from the device's design to its misrepresentation, to 3M's fraudulent cover up of what they knew of the device's defects. Until the news reached servicemen returning from the front lines soldiers just assumed hearing loss was "par for the course," and a not unexpected side effect of being in the military, according to CBS. Servicemen assumed that the standard-issue 3M Combat Army Earplug would perform as it advertised and it was not until the company agreed to pay $9.1 million to the US Department of Justice as a result of a whistle-blower lawsuit did anyone suspect something might be wrong.

Servicemen reported to This Morning that as army personnel there was an implied expectation among all combat personnel that they could rely on their equipment and training. They were also told that the standard issue 3M Combat Army Earplug would save their hearing. Servicemen relied on the earplugs to protect their hearing in both training and combat. "Everybody thought they worked" was the recollection of one serviceman who also stated that he trusted the contract he signed with the military to provide hearing protective equipment. Our soldiers were told that the 3M Army Earplug was the best equipment available and that it would protect their hearing, but another earplug manufacturer questioned that opinion.

A competitor of 3M along with the US government filed a civil lawsuit against 3M alleging, according to CBS that 3M "was aware prior to selling the earplugs to the military, that testing procedures and fitting instructions were unlawfully manipulated." The suit also alleged that the company "sold the earplugs to the military from 2003 to 2015 without disclosing the design defect." Servicemen are convinced that 3M's failure to disclose the defects were not unintentional and that the company's actions were designed to defraud the US military to the company's monetary enrichment.

Other civil lawsuits filed against 3m allege that "3M did not adequately warn of the defects or adequately demonstrate how to use the earplugs" according to CBS. The earplugs did not usually fit and were either too long or too short depending on the depth of the soldier's ear canal. Soldiers stated that they were more concerned about their physical well-being during combat and that they did not have the time or inclination to question the effectiveness of the hearing protection device. "Worrying about adequate hearing protection was at the bottom of the list" soldiers interviewed told CBS when asked to prioritize their physical combat concerns.

Thousands of active and inactive, as well as retired military personnel that served between the years of 2003 and 2015 when the 3M Combat Army Earplug was deployed are contacting the base where they were station and being referred to an Army Earplug Attorney to see if their degree of hearing impairment qualifies them to file a claim for compensation of real monetary damages.

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