Faulty Combat Earplug Cost Taxpayers Billions

Army Earplug Lawsuit News

Thousands of military veterans from every state in the US have been filing lawsuits alleging that their standard-issue military earplugs malfunctioned and caused them hearing damage including tinnitus

Tuesday, December 24, 2019 - Soldiers in combat, as well as those who are training with firearms at home, are exposed to explosive noises so loud as to cause immediate hearing damage. Virtually no branch of the military or service member escaped the faulty defective earplug from those fighting on the front lines to those who served and repair helicopters, jets, planes, ships, and all vehicles and machinery that emit loud ear splitting decibel levels. Daily repetitive exposure to such noise can cause permanent, irreversible hearing loss and a condition called tinnitus, a maddening and constant ringing in the ears. Tinnitus sufferers have difficulty sleeping because the condition worsens the quieter the environment gets. Tinnitus sufferers are forced to sleep with a fan and TV on to compete and distract from the incessant ringing. 3M Army earplug lawsuits are represented by top national attorneys with a winning track record against big corporations and offer a no obligation free consultation.

The earplugs in question are the Dual-Sided Combat Army Earplug manufactured by 3M. 3M has in the past settled a whistleblower lawsuit for 9 million dollars with the US Department of Justice but has never admitted that their earplugs were faulty. The army issued the hearing safety device from 2003 and 2015, during which time the number of service members that filed for hearing-related PTSD or other hearing-related disability skyrocketed to around 25% of all returning service members according to the Veterans Administration (VA). This high number of disabled vets are costing US taxpayers billions in income and medical payments every year and will continue for decades.

According to WDRG 5 News, a local soldier has filed suit and describes a little about how soldiers are exposed to such loud noises. Retired Army soldier Kevin McAnally a mechanic who worked on Chinook helicopters told the news: "With engines running on a flight line where you might have to say a half a dozen to a dozen aircraft turning up and you're out walking around either doing maintenance or checking on maintenance, so you're exposed to a lot of noise," he said." WDRG also interviewed another soldier who alleges that the faulty 3M Dual Sided Combat Army Earplug was responsible for his hearing damage. Military Police Officer Brandon Wright described his exposure to high-decibel military noise as: "You had to qualify for a lot of exercises, a lot of stress tests, weapons going off, sirens, concussion grenades going off."

Army personnel that suffered hearing damage from the Dual Sided Combat Army Earplug look to the design defect of the device as being one of the problems. One side of the dual-sided earplug was designed to block out loud explosive noises while the other supposedly allowed and amplified critical battlefield voice commands. Unfortunately, combat soldiers in the heat of battle rarely have the time to stop what they are doing, but down their weapon, take off their helmet and reinsert the earplugs, a hassle much like going through TSA screening at a US airport. Also, soldiers complain that the one-size-fits-all nature of the earplugs caused them to fit improperly in the ear canal allowing deafeningly loud noises to enter.

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Lawsuits for Defective 3M Earplugs

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