Dark Waters (2019) Movie Script

1
Vod2srt /Fontby Blue-Bird
Stop the world and let me off
I'm tired ofgoing round and round
I've played the game of love and lost
So stop the world and let me off
Let me off!
Let me off!
My dreams are
Shattered, don't you see?
Oh, Lord Almighty.
Now you no longer care for me
- You don't care for me.
- Sing it, Cal!
I miss the wonder ofyour kiss
Yeah, Cal, come on!
We're singing up here.
Pull your weight, buddy.
How could you leave me here like this?
Stop the world and let me off
Let me off!
I'm tired ofgoing round and round...
That's right. Let's get in there.
We're there!
So stop the world and let me off
Hey, don't forget the beers. Okay?
- I ain't gonna forget the beers.
- Go!
Come on.
Come on.
I'll give you a boost if you want.
I don't need your help.
Ooh, hell, she got you, buddy.
- Toss them beers.
- Here you go.
- You got it?
- Okay, let's go.
All right, all right.
Hold up, hold up. The beer.
Take this. Take this.
Come on.
These damn shoes.
Come on in. It's warm.
Come on, buddy.
Look, you can even wash your hair.
I washed mine last month.
- Hey. Come on.
- Hey.
- Jerk.
- Watch this. Do it to me.
Laura, Keith, come here.
Look what I found.
- Holy shit.
- What the hell is that?
- What is it...
- Hell you doing?
Get out of here! Now!
- Jeez!
- Come on!
Goddamn kids.
Give me my damn clothes! Come on!
Go, go, go, go!
Turn off the beam, fool.
We got Steve from Dow,
Ted from Union Carbide, Jerry from Exxon
and Andy from Allied.
Welcome to Taft Law, gentlemen.
Before we get started,
a little housekeeping.
Um, all of you know this young man
as the dedicated Taft associate
who for the past eight years
has buried himself in the Superfund law.
I'm not paying for that cleanup.
Well, still it is my pleasure
to share with you that just last week,
Rob Bilott was welcomed as a partner
- here at Taft, Stettinius & Hollister.
- Mm-hmm.
- Good. Good.
- Congratulations.
Good morning. Taft Law.
One moment. I'll connect you.
Good morning. Taft Law.
One moment, please.
It's the governor's office
calling for, uh...
calling for Mr. Burke.
May I help you?
Wilbur Tennant calling on Robbie Bilott.
EPA saddled them
with the whole bill,
and given your client's history
at that site,
that's a real possibility.
- I'll take it back to them.
- Good.
Tab 12, Middletown...
I know. I'm sorry.
- But they won't leave.
- Who's "they"?
I don't know.
They say they know you.
Um...
Robbie Bilott?
Um... yes.
They call it a landfill.
A dump's what it is.
They told my brother and me
no chemicals, just trash,
but we ain't stupid.
Made them videotapes myself.
All the proof you need.
They're poisoning the creek,
killing my animals.
- I'm in the middle of a meeting.
- So I want a lawyer.
Every damn one in Parkersburg
too yellow to take my case.
Rob, he wants you back in there.
They're all scared shitless
of DuPont.
Well, I ain't scared of nobody.
Okay. Kathleen is my paralegal.
She's gonna give you
a directory of lawyers.
That's why I called your grandma.
What?
My neighbor tells me, "Call Alma White.
Her grandson's some fancy
environment lawyer down in Cincinnati."
Reception.
Yes, sir, he's right here. Yes...
Sir, I am a corporate defense attorney.
- So?
- I defend chemical companies.
Well, now you can defend me.
Rob.
Uh, 30 seconds, Tom.
- Uh, I'm sorry, Mr...
- Tennant.
I can offer you a referral,
but I'm just...
I just don't see how
I can be of any help to you.
You can start by watching them tapes,
for one thing.
Oh, let's go, Earl.
I'm sorry. I... I wish you all the luck.
Don't need your damn luck, boy.
I need your help.
Rob!
I'll be back for this,
all right?
Okay, sure.
Come on.
I'm not arguing with the overall analysis.
My only point is that
whatever we decide upon...
Thank you, gentlemen.
Do you know where we're going?
- It's a place right around the corner.
- Yeah?
What the hell was that all about?
He knows my grandmother.
Really?
Well, my mom's from West Virginia,
uh, from a town, Parkersburg.
Not us. My father was Air Force.
We moved around a lot,
but we spent the summers there.
Come on, Terp. You're buying.
Of course I am.
You can be from West Virginia, Rob.
I won't tell anyone.
All right, gentlemen.
Morton's it is.
Three-martini lunch.
Still deign to eat
with us lowly associates?
You can't drive an American car.
Taft-Hartley? Union busting?
We practically invented it.
"We"? Besides, I know
a highly esteemed partner
who still drives American.
Some real clunkers, too.
Okay, yeah, but he collects them.
That's different.
Like his no-name college and law school.
- No offense.
- Are you listening to this?
Hey, you guys go ahead, all right?
- Hey, look, I didn't mean anything by it.
- Oh, no, I got to make a call.
It's all right. I'll see you there.
- Okay, we'll save you a fish log.
- Yeah.
- You can be such an asshole.
- Carla, it was a joke.
- Yeah.
- We always joke.
Oh, yeah, you guys
are a couple of jokesters. Anyway...
You've reached
the residence ofAlma White.
I can't come to the phone right now...
He's good.
He's home early tonight, actually.
Tell him I say, "Howdy, partner."
She says, "Howdy, partner."
Are we ever gonna
see him again on Sundays?
Yes, he can still come
to Sunday dinners, Mom.
He's a partner,
not the president of the United States.
I want to make... Do you have my Bundt pan?
- Returned it.
- Where? I looked under the counter.
It's in the right-hand cupboard,
in the plastic.
- Yeah.
- I thought...
- Okay, well, we just sat down.
- All right, dear.
- So I got to go.
- Love to Rob and Teddy.
All right, see you Sunday.
- Love to Dad.
- Talk to you later.
Can you pretend to be surprised
about the cake?
She wants it to be very special.
Oh, and the granite samples came in.
Can you pick them up
on your way home tomorrow?
Mm.
- Rob?
- Hmm? Oh, sure.
Father, Son and the Spirit. Thank you.
- You okay?
- Yes.
Bless us, our Lord, and these thy gifts
which we are about to receive
from thy bounty, through Christ our Lord.
Amen.
Thank you, God, for our food.
Thank you for family.
Mm...
Thank you.
Hi, Grammers.
What on earth?
I tried to call,
but you weren't picking up.
Oh, well, you know me.
My two fake knees.
What are you doing here?
A, uh, farmer came to see me.
Wilbur Tennant?
You do know him.
I don't socialize with him,
if that's what you mean.
Inez Graham owned the farm next to his.
I used to take you and Beth over there
when you were little.
That's the place?
- You rode that pony.
- Ah.
I loved that place.
You saw a cow for the first time.
Learned to milk it.
I remember you sitting there for hours
making sure you got every last drop.
Just like you.
There.
Mm.
So, you gonna help him?
Huh?
You come up the holler.
Dump's up the hill.
Since I started complaining
about my creek, fence goes up.
All blocked off.
Hi. I'm Rob.
Sandra.
The state, any veterinarian
I called in Parkersburg...
they will not return my phone calls.
- Like I bite the hand that feeds.
- No, it's all right.
- I've already...
- This here's a gall.
Look at the size of it.
Ain't never seen no gall that big.
Bigger than the heart.
That your cow's?
Look at them teeth.
Black as night. Here.
Hoof, all turned in on itself.
Half my calves born hooves like that.
Tumor I done cut off the back a heifer.
How'd you like that on your table?
What am I looking for?
You blind, boy?
Stones as white
as the hairs on my head.
Bleached.
That's chemicals, I'm telling you.
My animals drink this water,
cool off in there.
Get them bloody welts, them dead eyes.
Charge at me, crazy-like.
Animals that used to eat
out of my own hand.
Where are the rest of them?
Come on.
In the beginning, I'd bury 'em, each one.
They're family.
It got to be so many,
pile 'em up, set fire to...
How many did you lose?
A hundred and ninety.
A hundred and ninety cows?
You tell me nothing's wrong here.
And...
this landfill wasn't always here?
No. My brother Jim used to dig
ditches over at DuPont plant.
Got sick. Couldn't do it no more.
One day, they come to him,
offering to buy his land
right up that holler.
They promised no chemicals.
And I assume you reached out to DuPont?
DuPont, the state, the feds.
I called everybody there is
dozens of times.
EPA finally comes out here.
- Oh, they did?
- Well, all for some report.
What did it say?
You think they're gonna show me?
Oh, hey.
He's been like this all day.
- Okay. Go on.
- Come here. Aw.
Aw.
Of course you're a perfect angel
for Daddy.
Did you get the tile?
Um, I'm sorry. No.
Rob...
I didn't drive into town today. I'm sorry.
What do you mean
you didn't drive into town?
I... I had to go to Parkersburg.
Parkersburg?
Why'd you have to go to Parkersburg?
Uh...
I... I may have a client there.
In West Virginia?
What kind of a case would you have...
He's a farmer. He knows my grammer.
Not well, but...
So, you saw her?
- Was your mother there?
- Oh, come on, Sarah.
I didn't sneak off to see my mother.
So, why did you sneak off?
I didn't.
Our speaker tonight's
no stranger to the Taft family.
Phillip Donnelly... Phil to us...
serves as in-house corporate counsel
at DuPont,
not only one of America's
most revered chemical companies...
...but one of the few giants
of the industry
that Taft doesn't represent.
Not yet, anyway.
That's the spirit, James.
We asked Phil here tonight
not just to show him what he's missing,
but to hear how a renowned leader
of our industry stays that way.
Please welcome Phil Donnelly.
- Wish me luck.
- Go get 'em, Phil.
Thank you.
At DuPont, we're not producing
chemicals for chemicals' sake.
We're producing them for people's sake.
To make folks' lives easier,
happier, longer.
That's why
"better living through chemistry"
is not just a slogan at DuPont.
It's our DNA.
- Hey, Rob.
- Hello, Phil.
Is it true what Tom tells me?
- Yeah, it's true.
- Well, good on them.
- They're lucky to have you.
- Thanks, Phil.
Like I always tell my young associates,
just keep your head down and do the work.
Thanks. Uh, Phil, can I ask you
sort of an odd question?
Shoot.
Does the name Wilbur Tennant
ring a bell?
- Tennet, did you say?
- Tennant.
No, not that I recall.
Mr. Tennant's a farmer
from West Virginia.
His property abuts
one of your landfills, Dry Run,
and his cows have been getting sick.
He thinks possibly because of the runoff
from the landfill into his creek.
You're kidding.
How did this come to you?
Hey, Phil.
He's a... a farmer. He's...
My grandmother's from Parkersburg.
Really? Washington Works.
Great plant.
Right. She knows the Tennants.
- So, Grandma's on your back, huh?
- Something like that. Anyway, uh...
the farmer said the EPA came out,
took a look around.
I wondered...
- The name of the landfill again?
- Dry Run.
Dry Run. Dry...
You know, that does ring a bell,
now that you mention it.
We may have even sent
some folks out there,
if I remember correctly,
to help EPA check it out.
That... That's got to be it.
So I'd love to share whatever came of that
with Mr. Tennant, help settle his nerves.
Absolutely. Soon as I'm back
in Wilmington, I'll take a look.
Thanks, Phil. I really appreciate it.
Happy to do it.
Now, let's get a drink
and toast you, my friend. You.
- All right.
- Okay, then.
Mr. Tennant!
Mr. Tennant.
I have the report.
Sons of bitches.
Who the hell they think they are?
Who gives them the right?
- It's an evaluation.
- "Evalu..."
Hatchet job's what it is.
I've been farming my entire life.
Entire life!
You read that.
You tell me you recognize my farm.
- Mr. Tennant...
- Read it!
"The herd health investigation
revealed deficiency in herd management,
including poor nutrition,
inadequate veterinary care,
and lack of fly control."
You see any flies here?
It's snowing.
Can't stop making excuses for 'em,
can you?
It could be pests. They consulted a vet.
Whose vet? DuPont?
Look at yourself.
Swallowing whole
whatever they've been feeding you.
Can't tell truth from lie.
You even watch them tapes I gave you?
Sir, I am trying to help.
Quiet.
Trying to help.
Stop moving.
Easy, now. Easy.
Get in.
Slow.
Forgive me, girl.
Jesus.
Need something
to warm you up right about now?
Well, how about this?
Almost heaven
West Virginia
Blue Ridge Mountains
Shenandoah River
Life is old there
Older than the trees
Younger than the mountains
Growing like a breeze
Country roads
Take me home
To the place
I belong
West Virginia
Mountain mama...
One thing or another.
This cow's eyes are cloudy with...
the pink eye is what they'll call it.
Anyway, her eyes are sunk
way back in her head.
She's poor as a whip-poor-will.
And I'm gonna cut her open
and find out what caused her to die.
'Cause I was feeding her enough feed
that she should've gained weight
instead oflosing weight.
This is what her teeth looks like.
That's the upper one.
But this one here...
I've never seen
anything like it in my lifetime.
Even the veterinarian, he'd been in it,
he would've never saw anything like this
before in his life, either.
So, what...
are you proposing we do?
File a claim, trigger discovery,
and find out what's in that landfill.
You want to sue DuPont?
Targeted. Property dispute. Routine stuff.
Not routine. Not around here.
I know, but, Tom,
if you'd actually seen it.
His farm is like a graveyard.
There's something very wrong.
So he should hire a local lawyer.
None of them will do it.
They're all terrified of DuPont.
- What does that tell you?
- We know DuPont.
They're gonna want to hear
if some of their local guys
are screwing something up.
Oh, so they're gonna thank us
for suing them?
Better us than the EPA.
I mean, new partners are supposed to
bring in business, right?
So your farmer can swing $275 an hour?
It'd be, uh, on contingency.
Jesus. What are we, coupon chasers now?
It's a small matter for a family friend.
I'll get in and I'll get out.
Help a guy who needs it.
Who? The farmer or you?
Surgical. You hear me?
Absolutely. Thank you.
Come on, Rob.
Of course I'm gonna take your call.
Even though I was, I admit,
a little surprised.
I mean, getting sued by Taft Law?
It's not every day, or any day, frankly.
I know. I'm sorry.
Look, you and I are friends.
This is a minor issue.
No reason it should get messy.
Uh, thank you. I, uh, totally agree.
Yeah, I'm putting you on speakerphone.
So, you want to know
if we violated our permits.
Pretty much, yeah.
Okay, then.
I'll have ourguys send over
anything related to hazardous waste
at Dry Run,
and I'll tell them
to hurry it up this time.
- How's that?
- Thank you. That sounds great.
And don't stress. I forgive you.
Thanks, Phil.
You took your baby into the office.
I needed a bigger trunk.
Why?
Discovery for the Tennant case
came in today.
Oh.
Oh, you started before me.
- You're so fast!
- Oh, you like that?
- What do you think about that?
- Good boy.
Rob's missing such a lovely day.
Law's a jealous mistress, Mom.
Means it comes with the territory.
Let's go over here!
Nice! Thank you.
That's what I'm talking about right there.
No score, just underway
in the top of the first.
All right, let's go.
One more, one more. All right.
"Phenyl..."
"Poly."
What's that?
No.
Mm...
How's my favorite plaintiff's attorney?
Hey, help me out, will you?
You're a run-of-a-mill dump,
nothing but trash.
You sound like my first girlfriend.
Why a requisition order
for 55-gallon containers?
Conspiracy.
Standard-size drums.
Ash, ash by-product,
glass tubing, plastic, paper waste.
It's just trash.
You pile it onto a truck, drive it away.
You don't pack it into drums.
- So they've got liquid waste.
- Not hazardous.
Or they'd have to disclose it.
So, what is killing these cows?
- It's not paper and ash.
- Well, maybe it's human error.
They're dumping something in there
they don't know is toxic.
Kim, it's DuPont.
They know more than the EPA does.
Everyone knows more than the EPA does.
Why else would they let us
regulate ourselves?
What?
Do we?
Do we what?
The EPA only started
regulating chemicals in '76.
Yeah?
They grandfather in
every existing chemical nonhazardous
unless they knew it was hazardous
or a company told them it was.
- We're saying the same thing.
- No, we're not.
I'm saying, what if a company didn't tell?
What if the reason Phil Donnelly agreed
to discovery on hazardous
is because he knows
whatever's in that landfill
isn't even regulated?
Okay, now you are sounding
like a plaintiff's attorney.
I've got a meeting.
Hey. Oh, wait one second.
Have you...
Have you heard of this, um, PFOA?
No.
Uh, you know, it's mentioned here,
but I can't find anything about it
in any of the literature.
I don't even know if it's a chemical.
Ask Phil.
Well, thank you.
As I said,
Mr. Donnelly is still out of town.
Well, I called last week
and left two messages
and haven't heard back from him.
I will be sure to tell him
that you called again.
Okay. Damn it.
Your tickets
to the Chemical Alliance dinner.
And, no, dark suit
is not the same as black tie.
Wouldn't he be going?
I don't know if Rob told you,
but I was a receptionist at Taft
before law school.
- Is that right?
- Yeah, but, well,
I think the right Bilott ended up there.
- Harold, you're not getting away from me.
- Oh.
- Would you excuse me?
- Sure, it was...
- It's great to see you.
- When is the...
That's funny.
Right away,
I saw a little of myself in Rob.
- Oh.
- One black sheep to another.
- My dad was a steelworker, you know.
- Was he?
- Yeah.
- Have you seen Phil?
No.
- So, you're an attorney?
- Oh, uh, recovering.
I represented employers
in workmen comp disputes,
but now I stay at home with our baby.
Well, that's the thing
with lady lawyers.
- Oh. Oh, Gerald!
- Oh.
I want to say hi to the Dow folks.
Have you seen them?
No, I've been looking for Phil.
Did I tell you they sent me some work?
Dow? That's great.
Just a small project, like a tryout.
But if I impress them,
can you imagine if I brought on Dow?
Uh, none for me, thank you.
You're not...
I'm, um...
You're...
- She's... You...
- I'm...
I'm gonna wait as long as I can
to tell the firm, obviously.
Would you excuse us for a moment?
These lady lawyers need a quick sidebar.
- Congratulations.
- Thank you.
Of course.
- No, no...
- He probably signs your paycheck.
- Be nice to him.
- Don't leave me.
- Congratulations.
- I know. I can't believe it.
Uh, uh, excuse me.
Uh, Rob, how are you?
Yeah, Phil, I've been trying to reach you.
Sorry, all this traveling.
How about I give you a shout tomorrow?
We're gonna need to broaden discovery
to everything in that landfill,
hazardous or not.
Turns out good lawyers.
Turned out...
Excuse me.
You kidding me?
No. Um...
I think whatever's
causing problems in there
isn't something the EPA regulates
or knows to regulate.
Sorry?
I'm seeing things in your documents
I don't understand.
You're seeing ghosts
is what you're seeing.
And, frankly,
you're making an ass of yourself.
Okay, then help me out.
I mean, like this.
I mean, what is this, uh, PFOA?
What's that stand for?
Jesus.
You're on a goddamn fishing expedition.
You want to flush your career
down the toilet for some cowhand?
Be my guest. I'm done helping you.
Phil, I need to insist
on broadening discovery.
Sue me!
I'm already suing you.
Welcome, everyone,
to the 14th annual
Ohio Chemical Alliance...
- Fuck you!
- ...awards dinner.
Hick.
So, let's get the fun started!
I'm sorry.
You're not the only one
who's sacrificed.
I just hope you know what you're doing.
You know the difference between
business and pleasure, right?
So, why on earth would you engage
in business conversations
at a public function?
Tom. He's hiding something.
You saw his reaction.
Yeah, me and everyone in that room.
Taft in a pissing match with DuPont.
I am gonna get a court order
and force them to tell me everything
that's in that landfill.
Jesus Christ, now you want
to actually take them to court.
And I'm gonna need
local counsel in West Virginia.
What happened to routine stuff?
- Get in, get out? God!
- Ask Phil Donnelly.
Of course I remember you.
Yeah, last time I saw you,
I think Phil Donnelly
was trying to get you
to go out on the links with us.
- Yeah.
- Actually, I'm suing him,
and I was looking for some advice
on local counsel.
You what?
- Larry.
- Thank you.
- Good morning.
- Okay.
- Good morning, Larry.
- Morning.
Morning, Miss Claire.
Don't you look nice.
Save it for the judge, Mr. Winter.
You're suing DuPont.
Yes, ma'am.
You represent DuPont.
My old firm did.
I've been out on my own for a while.
Good luck with that.
Just wanted
to let you know personally
that your court-ordered discovery
is on the way.
Thanks, Phil.
No, it's my pleasure.
Discovery.
Son of a bitch.
All right, no admission of liability.
And non...
Nondisclosure of any and all terms.
Pardon me a moment.
Thanks.
Holy Jesus.
- What in the...
- Thanks.
...world?
I guess the joke's on me.
- Yeah.
- Hmm.
No one can go through all this crap,
not in a million years.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure
that's what they're banking on.
- Oh, goddamn it!
- Oh, God, Rob.
- Here, let me...
- No, no, no.
You shouldn't be around this stuff.
- You sure?
- I'm positive.
Thank you, though.
Yeah.
Good luck.
Egg salad.
What is the holdup back there?
- Hey, Bobby. How you...
- What are you having?
Usual.
Eggs over, bacon and grits.
Same.
I need two over, grits, twice.
Wilbur Tennant.
He's not in his office.
Can I take a message?
I been leaving messages.
I know, Mr. Tennant,
but he really can't get
to the phone right now.
I want service!
- I'll let him know that you called again.
- For Christ's sakes.
Is she getting accustomed
to being at Mom and Dad's?
You know Grammer.
She misses her own house.
- What? Uh...
- She misses her own house.
Um, I have a bad cell.
I said Grammer misses her own house.
Okay, can you... Can I talk to her?
Well, she and Mom are at the doctor's.
Will you tell Grammers I called?
Rob, you're breaking...
- You're breaking up.
- And Mom, too.
- Let's try again on Sunday.
- All right.
"C-8."
You know you look
like a crazy person, right?
What was the name of that guy
that you brought by?
- The, um...
- What guy?
Th-Th-The chemistry expert.
- The guy who does the models.
- Gillespie.
Here you go.
- Thank you.
- Mm-hmm.
Kim Burke had an expense account.
- Oh, sorry. It's not that kind of case.
- Hmm.
Are you familiar
with something called PFOA?
No.
No. No.
I did read something recently
about a PFOS, I think it was.
That sounds related.
And what was that?
Long-chain fluorocarbon, synthetic.
I'm sorry. Chemistry was
my worst class in high school.
Boy, you in the wrong line of work.
Tell me about it. So?
- So, synthetic. Right? Man-made.
- Mm-hmm.
- Uh, Frankenstein.
- And?
Um, long-chain fluorocarbon is a sequence
of carbon atoms, add a fluoride.
All right, in the lab,
you take a carbon atom.
- Mm-hmm.
- And then you add another carbon atom.
And then another and another.
Look.
You're making a chain, right?
Right?
Could it be... eight? Eight carbons?
Well, sure. Yeah.
In the lab, you can do almost anything.
And why would you want to?
Make this, I mean.
Well, a chain like that's
pretty much unbreakable,
biochemically speaking.
So, uh, industrial uses, I imagine.
3M made it.
They don't anymore. That's what I read.
And why did they stop?
Didn't say.
What if...
What if you drank it?
Drank it? You don't.
- But what if you did?
- Ready to order?
- Yeah, I think I'd like a...
- Wait.
What if you did?
That's like saying,
"What if I swallowed a tire?"
I don't know.
You want to be the guy that finds out?
Tuna melt.
Let us all begin
with hymn number 452 in our hymnal books:
"Here I Am, Lord."
Please rise.
I, the Lord of sea and sky
I have heard my people cry
All who dwell in deepest sin
My hand will save
I have made...
It makes sounds here.
Asteroid ahead.
Makes sounds like that.
Are you ready to blast off?
I'm taking off that.
You said it had fluoride?
What? Mr. Bilott, it's Sunday.
That chemical,
you said it had a fluoride atom.
It's a fluorocarbon, so yes.
Somewhere along the chain...
What would it do to your teeth
if you drank it?
Don't tell me if you shouldn't.
If you drank a lot of it,
what would it do to your teeth?
Well, in trace amounts,
fluoride hardens teeth,
but too much, it's gonna stain 'em.
I mean, even turn 'em black.
So, can I get back to my family now?
Whoa, whoa. Where are you going?
- It's in their water.
- What? What is?
How long's the coughing been?
Couple... Couple months.
- A year.
- You a smoker?
No.
Roll up your sleeve.
We're gonna take some blood.
Thought you left him inside.
I did.
Oh, baby.
You move this?
What?
Did you go through this?
No.
They been here. They been here.
What happened?
Wash up.
Dad?
- What is it?
- Quiet.
This is my land, damn you!
You get out of here!
Go on!
Go on!
- Sandra, girls, go on!
- What's going on?
Go on, get in! Get in!
I know you!
Rob?
Holy crap. Rob!
What?
I thought someone was breaking in,
for God's sakes!
No, it's just me.
You need to tell me
what in the hell's going on.
We're being poisoned.
- Rob.
- What?
I mean it.
DuPont is knowingly poisoning us.
You mean the farmer, his land.
All of us.
Please don't look at me like that.
They're already poisoning the baby.
No. No, I'm not listening to this.
- Sarah...
- Stop it! Just stop it, okay?
Do you hear yourself?
You are acting like a crazy person.
Tearing up our floor,
scaring me half to death.
I know it's my job to support you,
but that does not mean you get to come
into our home, to our family,
and tell me that our unborn child
is being poisoned.
- No!
- I'm sorry.
- Can I please explain?
- Explain what?
All of it.
And if you still think I'm crazy,
I'll drop it. I swear to God.
I swear to you.
There is a man-made chemical.
It was invented
during the Manhattan Project.
It repelled the elements,
especially water.
So they used it to make the first-ever
waterproof coating for tanks.
It was indestructible.
Then some companies thought,
"Hey, why just the battlefield?
Why not bring this chemical
into American homes?"
- Rob's here.
- All right, good.
He'll see you now.
DuPont was one of those companies.
So they took this chemical, PFOA,
they renamed it C-8...
and they made
their own impenetrable coating,
but not for tanks.
For pans.
They called it Teflon.
A shining symbol of American ingenuity
made right here in the USA
in Parkersburg, West Virginia.
But right from the start,
something wasn't right.
The men and workers who made Teflon
were coming down with nausea, fevers.
DuPont wanted to know why.
So they laced cigarettes with Teflon.
They told a group of the workers,
"Hey, smoke these."
DuPonters did as they were told.
Almost all those men were hospitalized.
That's 1962,
one year after Teflon launched,
and already DuPont knew.
The dust, they just sent
right up the smokestacks,
released into the air.
The sludge, tossed it into the Ohio.
Or, uh, packed into drums
and chucked it into the Chesapeake.
But then the drums started washing up.
So DuPont starts digging ditches
on the grounds
of the Washington Works plant,
and in those pits, they dumped
thousands of tons
of toxic C-8 sludge and dust.
One of the men that they hired
to dig those ditches
was Wilbur Tennant's brother Jim.
But they weren't the only ones
covering their tracks.
3M, who pioneered these chemicals
for Scotchgard,
they were testing them on monkeys.
Most of the monkeys died.
It wasn't like DuPont didn't know that,
because they were doing
their own tests on rats.
Watched their organs balloon.
Now the rats are getting cancers.
Tested them on pregnant rats
and watched them give birth
to pups with deformed eyes.
So they yanked all the young women
off the Teflon line
and never told them why.
Sue Bailey's job
was scrubbing these huge steel vats
where they held the liquid C-8.
She was pregnant.
I love you.
Would you stop?
She gave birth to a baby
with one nostril and a deformed eye.
Remember how DuPont had seen
those deformities in the rats?
Oh, God.
What about his eyes?
Blue, just like all newborns.
But they're normal,
the lids, the pupils?
Mr. Bilott, relax.
He's perfect.
Ah, hey. Hi, Charlie.
So Sue goes to DuPont.
She says, "Why did you
pull me off the Teflon line?
Did C-8 make my baby this way?"
"No," they tell her.
Then all of her records
from her time at Teflon disappear.
One year later, they put all of the women
back on Teflon
and never say a thing.
He's here.
DuPont knew everything.
They knew that the C-8
they put into the air
and buried into the ground for decades
was causing cancers.
They knew that their own workers
were getting these cancers.
They knew that the consumers, too,
were being exposed.
And not just in Teflon.
In paints, in fabrics,
in, uh, raincoats, boots.
To this day.
For 40 years,
you knew C-8 was poison.
You knew the Happy Pan
was a ticking time bomb.
And you knew exactly why.
Because C-8, it stays in us forever.
Our bodies are incapable
of breaking it down.
And knowing all of this,
still you did nothing,
because doing something, quote...
"would essentially put
the long-term viability
of this product segment
on the line," end quote.
You were making too much money.
$1 billion a year,
just in profit, just in Teflon.
And so you pumped millions more pounds
of toxic C-8 into the air, into the water,
so much so
you could actually see it foam.
C-8 was everywhere.
There was nowhere left
for you to contaminate.
And that's when they came to Jim.
They knew he was sick
and needed the money,
and they needed his land.
And when they got it,
they dug up all the C-8
from every single pit
at Washington Works...
14 million pounds of toxic C-8 sludge...
and they dumped it again.
This time, right up there.
Steps from your creek, from your house.
And that's what your cows
have been drinking, Earl.
Put 'em behind bars.
Whole damn lot of 'em, rot in jail.
I understand, believe me,
but this is a civil case.
The most we could hope for is damages.
Don't want no money!
Whole damn world need...
needs to see what they done.
You're right. They should.
And it kills me that they won't.
But that would mean going to trial
and proving that C-8 killed your cows.
And every scientist who knows
anything about any of this
already works
for these chemical companies.
That's not an accident, Earl.
Earl, these companies,
they have all the money,
all the time, and they'll use it.
Trust me, I know. I was one of them.
You're still one of 'em.
You can't be serious.
You know what I put on the line here?
You want a prize?
Some medal 'cause, for once in your life,
you took the side of the little guy?
Sorry, no prize.
All you get is your share
of this blood money.
And you sleep real good tonight.
Talk to your family.
It ain't just my cows that was poisoned.
What you think I fed my family on?
Wilbur...
please!
Leave this place!
Start over!
Give your family a fighting chance!
Too late for that.
We got it, Sandra and me, the cancer.
Surprise, surprise.
In here.
How'd it go?
What's wrong?
Rob?
Rob, what is it?
What happened? What happened?
Oh, honey, honey, honey.
You saw a man hurting, and...
you did the Christian thing.
- You helped him.
- How? How? How?
Either he dies penniless,
or he lets DuPont
just keep pillaging his community.
How is that helping?
Got to get some sleep.
I can't believe a freaking case settlement
could shut this up.
Have you read
their confidentiality agreements?
You've uncovered a threat to the public.
This goes beyond lawyering.
That's...
That's all I know is lawyering.
Fine. Then be the lawyer.
You know DuPont better than anyone.
What haven't they thought of?
Jesus, Mary and Joseph. What is that?
A memo and 136 exhibits.
Wilbur, Sandra, this is your copy.
The EPA announced a public hearing
into this family of chemicals
I've been looking into?
I heard about it from Tucker.
- "Monsanto" Tucker?
- Union Carbide now.
He says to me,
"Is it true that a Taft lawyer
sent a phone book's worth
of confidential DuPont documents
- to the entire federal government?"
- Internal documents.
Not... Not confidential.
- Very different.
- So you're testifying?
I signed up to testify,
and the next thing I hear is
DuPont has petitioned a judge
to stop me from testifying,
from flying to D.C.,
from even picking up the phone...
- They filed for a gag order.
- Yes.
- This is what we're up against.
- Jesus.
- David.
- I mean, come on, Tom.
- What do you expect?
- Where do we stand?
Well, the judge rejected the gag order,
so I fly out Monday.
Nice.
I guess we'll just watch on C-SPAN.
You ever do anything like this again,
I will cut your balls off
and serve them to DuPont myself.
Now get out of here.
Good luck in Washington.
Thanks, Tom.
This material, uh,
is a perfluoro, or a PFOA.
It's also known as FC-143...
ammonium perfluorooctanoate.
It has been shown
by DuPont's own science
that PFOA/C-8...
is possibly life-threatening
to human health.
We are asking this agency to do something.
...presidential election in four decades.
Just look at these latest polls
this morning...
Did you forget
to pay the water bill?
What?
You forget to pay the water bill?
No.
We got a notice.
What's it say?
Uh, "PFOA is a persistent chemical
that is slow to be eliminated
from the bloodstream
of people who have been exposed to it.
The DuPont Company has advised
the Lubeck Water District
that low concentrations have been found
in the district's wells.
DuPont has advised the district that
it is confident these levels are safe."
What the hell does that mean?
A letter came last fall.
Made no sense to me,
so I started making calls.
I told Joe,
"Don't kick that hornet's nest."
It's not like we didn't know
what we'd signed up for.
What do you mean?
Oh, I was married before Joe,
um, to a chemist at DuPont.
Dream job. Paid real well.
And the perks.
Presents for no reason.
We'd get this catalog.
Just pick whatever you want.
And little stuff.
Like he'd bring home this soap,
this miracle powder.
You put it in the washing machine
or the dishwasher.
Just wipes stuff clean
like you would not believe.
One day, he comes home and says,
"Can't bring that stuff home no more."
"Why?" Won't tell me.
Then he'd get sick for weeks.
The Teflon flu, the guys would call it.
We knew something wasn't right.
But this house, we bought it
just by showing the bank
my husband's DuPont ID.
Put both our kids through college.
Engineers.
In this town,
that doesn't come without a price.
My brother Kenny didn't know that price.
He joined DuPont at 19.
Died on the operating table
two years later.
Ulcerative colitis.
Just like Dan Schiller had.
Who's Dan?
A chemist at DuPont.
Worked with my ex-husband.
And, uh, Roger, what's his name?
Wilkins, the foreman.
Steven Gellar.
Randy Field.
Randy's was kidney cancer.
He survived.
- Yeah, his wife didn't.
- No, June's was thyroid.
And it was supposed to be treatable.
Hmm. They didn't catch it in time.
But they caught it in their son.
Were your children born, uh, healthy?
- Yes. Yes, they were.
- Good.
But... we wanted a third and couldn't.
I went to my doctor.
He says, "You need a hysterectomy.
You need it right away."
- I'm so sorry.
- Bad luck, I guess.
I was 36.
Mr. Kiger, do you think
I could get a copy of that letter?
What's wrong with your hand?
Nothing. It's fine.
Whoa. Rob?
Rob, what are you doing?
I mean, it's not enough
to poison these people?
- They got to swindle them, too?
- Okay, calm down. All right?
DuPont wrote that letter,
not the water authority.
How do you know that?
You think I don't know
what a DuPont letter looks like by now?
Okay. Okay.
I mean, Jesus! It's evil, Sarah.
It's fucking evil.
What's "fack"?
Perfect. It's nothing, sweetie.
It's nothing. Oh, boy.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry, honey.
Can you give Charlie
the bottle, please?
- Where's his bottle?
- It's in the bag. Here.
- What is all this?
- It's from Grammer's.
Left in her mailbox.
"Medical claims,
now and forever"?
Here, bud.
"Now and forever." Is that the... that...
Medical monitoring, is that...
I thought you said
that wasn't gonna pass.
Morning.
Morning, guys.
Our lead plaintiff is Mr. Joe Kiger.
Potential plaintiff,
if the partnership approves.
Mr. Joe Kiger, a phys ed teacher
from Parkersburg, West Virginia,
on behalf of the 70,000 local residents
whose water DuPont knowingly poisoned
for the last 40 years.
- A class action?
- Let him finish.
The Kigers were notified
by their local water company
that DuPont had found small concentrations
of C-8 in their water supply,
but not to worry
because those concentrations were safe.
Why? Because DuPont said so.
This is what DuPont considers safe.
That's something like one drop of water
in an Olympic-size swimming pool.
In other words, even a trace of C-8
renders water unsafe.
But DuPont told the local water authority,
"Don't worry.
Your wells have got even less than that."
- Except that was a lie.
- A lie?
Yes. DuPont has been secretly testing
these wells for decades.
They knew they had contaminated
those wells
up to six times that level.
And thanks to the Tennant case,
now we know, too.
Hold on. This stuff is unregulated, right?
I mean, as far as EPA's concerned,
- it might as well be rose petals.
- Yeah.
The EPA hasn't set a standard,
that's true, but DuPont did.
And all the law requires
to win a case like this
is to show that DuPont exceeded
what DuPont itself considers safe.
Self-regulation.
If what you're saying
is right...
- It is right.
- ...then why would DuPont
tell this water district anything at all?
Seems to me that they're being
a good corporate citizen here.
That's how long you have to file suit.
One year from the moment you realize
your water's been contaminated.
This letter looks like it's telling people
their water is safe.
In fact, it's notifying them
that it isn't.
- DuPont has started the clock.
- Smart.
We would've counseled that.
It was sent 11 months ago,
the moment they realized we knew.
In 30 days, they're home free.
So that's the proposed case in brief.
But there's something else to consider.
You think?
Rob.
C-8 bioaccumulates.
It builds up inside of us.
Some class members who aren't sick today
will get sick tomorrow.
We need a way to protect them
into the future.
Jesus, Tom, if you're even thinking
about using medical monitoring...
Hold on. Hold on.
Medical monitoring is a claim
now permitted in West Virginia courts.
Oh, come on.
Let's hear him out.
It says if a company exposes a community
to something that makes them sick,
they must monitor the health
of that community indefinitely.
Everybody get that?
You're creating liability
from mere exposure.
It's also unprecedented.
Exactly. Which is why,
not six months ago,
- we fought tooth and nail against it.
- And you lost.
Our clients have the right
to avail themselves of the law.
Potential clients.
Uh, okay. Um...
I know you, Rob.
I know your passion.
Uh, you... you got a great settlement
for your farmer.
You should be proud of that.
Uh, and perhaps,
as the newest partner at this table,
I should be more circumspect.
But, uh, what he's proposing here
is nothing less than a shakedown
- of an iconic American company.
- We do not represent DuPont.
No, you don't represent anyone.
Is this what we have become?
Plaintiff's attorneys? Ambulance chasers?
I mean, why don't you just admit it?
Rob, you want to flip.
You want to take everything that you know
about how chemical companies operate
and turn it against DuPont,
like an informant.
- That's enough.
- Isn't that right?
- Okay.
- Isn't that right?
- Isn't that right?
- Yes.
Okay, then I say we take a vote
and determine whether or not
we continue in the tradition
that has distinguished this firm
from everyone else in the industry...
Okay, I'm running this meeting.
Okay? You got that?
Has anyone even read
the evidence this man has collected?
The willful negligence? The corruption?
Read it.
And then tell me
we should be sitting on our asses.
That's the reason
why Americans hate lawyers.
This is the crap that fuels
the Ralph Naders of the world.
We should want to nail DuPont.
All of us should.
American business
is better than this, gentlemen.
And when it's not,
we should hold them to it.
That's how you build faith in the system.
We're always arguing
that companies are people.
Well, these people have crossed the line!
To hell with them!
It may come as a surprise
to corporate defense types
like yourselves,
but there's more to the law
than just flooding
the other side in papers.
From where I sit,
you have to touch people.
You know, these girls,
they handle the calls
from the class action members.
And there's thousands of 'em
on any given case.
And it's here that we come
to know their pain.
Isn't that right, Hazel?
Yes.
We hear it every day, and it's my job
to make a jury feel that pain,
not out of pity, but out of fear.
Whatever it is
that happened to my client,
that juror has to think,
"That could happen to me."
You just keep hammering it.
One part per billion,
one part per billion.
It's their own documents,
their own scientists.
- Absolutely.
- All right?
They set that standard.
They have to live with it.
Yeah, I think we can relax,
Rob, though.
There's no way they're gonna
prevail with a motion to dismiss.
This is procedural.
It's nonsense. We'll get a trial today.
Okay, I'll catch you guys in there.
I'm gonna get a drink.
I wouldn't drink that.
Earl.
How you doing?
Still here.
That's something, right?
Yes, that... that's something.
It's good to see you, Rob.
Can't let 'em...
shut you down.
Oh, I... I won't. I... I promise.
Whole world...
needs to know.
They will, Earl.
They will.
Hey, Rob? It's time.
I... I have to go.
We are here on defendant's motion
- to dismiss the case...
- Hey, Joe. How are you?
...brought by Mr. Kiger, et al.
Now...
...which one of you is Mr. Wallace?
Edward Wallace, Your Honor,
on behalf of E.I. du Pont de Nemours
and Company,
better known as DuPont.
Yes, I've heard of it.
- Your motion.
- Thank you.
Your Honor, we're here today
because of a uniquely American invention:
Teflon.
Since 1961,
Teflon has liberated housewives...
No, no, no, no, no, no.
Oh, uh, excuse me.
Homemakers throughout...
This is a courtroom, Mr. Wallace,
not the Home Shopping Network.
Plaintiffs have alleged
that DuPont did not meet
- its own standard of safety...
- She's good, huh? She's good.
...with regard to the level of C-8
in the local water supply.
- Okay.
- That's irrelevant, Your Honor.
We ask you to dismiss on grounds
that the only standard that matters
is the one that
elected government deems safe.
- Not if it's unregulated.
- It's government's job
to make these determinations,
not any one company.
- That's a trap.
- They can't revert back to...
I got it.
Is there a problem, Mr. Deitzler?
Apologies, Your Honor,
but DuPont has been hiding
the dangers of this chemical
from the government for a while now.
And they're asking you
to let 'em off the hook
because they've succeeded
in their strategy.
Government doesn't regulate C-8.
Uh, actually, that's not true.
- Oh?
- No, no.
The West Virginia's C-8 Working Group
has just issued a standard.
Here with us today is the governmental
official who led that effort,
Dr. Mary-Sue Kimball.
And, Dr. Kimball, uh, as a senior member
of the state's Department
of Environmental Protection,
isn't it, in fact, your duty to protect
- the citizens of West Virginia...
- Mr. Wallace.
I'll cut to the chase.
What is the level of C-8 in drinking water
that the state of West Virginia
has determined to be completely safe?
Watch it go
from one part per billion to...
- Five?
- Ten?
150 parts per billion.
- Welcome to West Virginia.
- The levels found in the wells
of all six water districts
represented in this suit,
do they fall below this maximum level?
Well below.
Nothing else, Your Honor.
Your witness, Mr. Deitzler.
Wait, who's on the working group?
DuPont, of course, and who else?
- Who did the water testing?
- Mr. Deitzler?
- When was it done?
- One moment, Judge.
What was the sample size?
Yeah, I mean, we should be able to see...
- Going once.
- Good job. Good job.
Going twice.
Dr. Kimball...
who were the members of this cabal
you call the C-8 Working Group?
Objection.
Cool it, Mr. Deitzler.
Go ahead, Dr. Kimball.
Agency officials, representatives
of the scientific community,
um, stakeholders.
Stakeholders? Which stakeholders?
Oh, wait. Let me guess.
It rhymes with "bouffant."
DuPont is a stakeholder, yes.
So, I see.
So, don't you find it peculiar
that on the eve of a class action lawsuit
where DuPont might be considered liable
for poisoning this community,
they get you to come in here suddenly
and reverse decades
of their so-called heralded science?
That's false. I don't work for DuPont.
I didn't say you did.
But now you bring it up,
we'll check back in a month.
- Your Honor...
- Were you honestly
gonna plan on telling this community
that they can drink 150 times more C-8?
I mean, "Come on, people. Bottoms up."
That kind of thing?
- Honestly, Judge, this is not...
- All right, Mr. Deitzler. Enough.
We'll be unveiling the new standard
at an upcoming public hearing.
"Unveiling."
Whoa, that sounds like a party.
We'll be there!
Their safety standards thing,
that's all a sham.
Thanks to the judge's decision,
we will have our day in court.
Yes, we will!
Because if the state of West Virginia
won't stop the DuPont corporation
from literally poisoning its citizens,
then we, the citizens,
will stop them ourselves.
Good evening, and welcome to 20/20.
Well, it coats the pots you cook with
so the food doesn't stick,
it protects the carpet
your baby crawls on...
I miss carpet.
...winterjacket, your skin lotion,
even your makeup.
We're talking about Teflon.
And tonight,
our 20/20 investigation uncovers
alarming information
about this much-used material.
It is very alarming, Barbara.
I cook with Teflon.
I didn't know until I watched
this report that you're about to see
that if Teflon gets hot enough...
...millions ofpeople have in their homes.
Teflon has become such a familiar...
...a substance that is also used
in clothing, cars, even in contact lenses.
...already found in the blood
ofmost Americans.
Now scientists are saying...
PFOA...
...millions of homes across Australia.
Teflon, a nonstick surface...
The Environmental
Protection Agency this morning
announced it has opened a priority review
of the chemical C-8,
currently the subject
of a class action lawsuit
against the chemical giant DuPont.
Joe!
Joe!
Oh, my Lord. Joe, just wait!
Wait for the fire department,
please, honey!
Please don't go crazy!
...have triggered a mass panic
among Chinese consumers.
Should you throw away
your nonstick pans? Many experts say...
Are your pans making you sick?
That's the question being asked...
...returns of kitchen implements
coated in Teflon.
The house was empty.
It belongs to my father.
I don't know how it could've started.
His name Kiger?
Think someone
might have got the wrong house?
All of this hullabaloo is just silly.
Teflon is completely safe for cooking.
That is why we founded
the Cook Healthy campaign
to set the record straight.
And besides being completely safe,
it is also...
Copy that.
All the way down.
We are now on the record.
This is the videotaped deposition
of Charles O. Holliday, Jr.,
taken by the plaintiffs
in the matter of Kiger et al.
versus E.I. du Pont de Nemours
and Company.
Raise your right hand.
Do you swear to tell the whole truth
and nothing but the truth?
I do.
Uh, please state your name.
Charles O. Holliday, Jr.
And are you presently employed?
Yes.
What is your position?
I'm the chairman and chief executive
officer of the DuPont Company.
In DuPont's most recent filing
with the Securities
and Exchange Commission,
you state, quote,
"Based on over 50 years
of industry experience
and extensive scientific study,
DuPont believes there is no evidence
that PFOA causes
any adverse human health effects
or harms the environment."
You signed that legal filing, correct?
I don't recall the exact statement,
but that sounds right to me.
Are you aware that DuPont has,
in its own files,
studies dating back to the 1970s
that say just the opposite?
That PFOA... or C-8, as it's called...
has potentially life-threatening effects
on human health?
I'm not familiar with the exact studies
we may have in our files.
Then I'll take you through them.
Uh, exhibit nine.
Uh, you were just handed exhibit nine.
- Uh, you see the date March 13, 1979?
- Yes.
- You see the DuPont logo at the top?
- Yes.
Do you see this word here,
highlighted?
Yes.
- Would you read it for me, please?
- "Receptors."
Do you know what that word refers to,
"receptors"?
Um, in this context, I do not.
It means human beings.
DuPont refers to the men and women
that your company exposed to C-8
as "receptors."
And in these receptors,
your scientists found, quote,
"significantly higher incidents
of allergic, endocrine
and metabolic disorders," end quote.
As well as, quote,
"excess risk of developing liver disease."
- Do you see that?
- Yes.
Moreover, you have infertility at Teflon.
Occurrences of leukemia.
You have excess of cancers.
Bladder, kidney, oral, pharynx.
Next paragraph.
Seventy-eight.
You see that heading?
You see that date? Do you see that?
Exhibit 96. Exhibit 53.
I'd like to move on to birth defects.
We've gone almost seven hours.
Mr. Holliday, you're aware that in 1981,
3M notified DuPont
that it had conducted studies on rats
and these studies showed
that sustained C-8 exposure
can cause facial deformities?
I'm not aware of a study by 3M.
How about DuPont's own studies
that showed the same thing in humans?
That's DuPont's pregnancy study from 1981.
Does that look like
a DuPont document to you?
It looks to be.
Are you aware that DuPont has denied
that any such study ever even took place?
I'm not familiar with specific statements
we've made about that.
Seven pregnant women,
all DuPont employees,
all from the Teflon line.
Do you see this here?
Quote, "Child, four months,
one nostril, eye defect," end quote.
Yes.
Two of the seven women, nearly 30%,
gave birth to babies
that had the exact facial deformities
that your company already knew about.
We're done here.
Sir.
His parents named him Bucky.
Bucky Bailey.
This is your receptor.
Now we're done.
The Environmental Protection Agency
has levied the largest fine
in agency history
against the chemical giant DuPont.
The EPA concluded the company failed
to report the health dangers of C-8
used in the manufacture of Teflon.
DuPont will pay the EPA $16. 5 million.
It earns a billion dollars in profits
from Teflon each year.
To recap, we've agreed that
DuPont will clean local water supplies,
installing filtration systems
in all six water districts.
Additionally, DuPont will pay
$70 million in cash to the class.
Three days' revenue on the Teflon line.
Which leaves our most challenging issue:
medical monitoring.
We've agreed to establish
an independent science panel
comprised of three scientists
who have no relationship to either side.
This independent panel
will study the members of this class
to determine whether C-8 exposure
has led to increased incidents
of disease in this region.
If the panel finds that
there are probable scientific links
to a particular disease,
the health of everyone in the class
will be monitored for that disease,
in perpetuity,
at DuPont's cost, up to $235 million.
And any class member
who develops that disease
can sue DuPont for damages.
However, if the science panel fails
to establish probable scientific links...
then this case is over.
No monitoring,
no lawsuits, no exceptions.
Good. Well, gentlemen, you are
now officially in the hands of science.
Well...
Wouldn't have pegged you
as a mai tai guy.
It's festive.
Wouldn't have pegged you
for that, either.
We have something
to celebrate.
- Yeah?
- Do we?
Look, how do we know
that the panel is gonna prove
that DuPont made all these people sick?
I'm no scientist,
but even I know you'd need
huge amounts of medical data,
not to mention
thousands of blood samples and...
From people who don't trust us.
"Hey, folks, we want to stick you
with some needles.
You won't mind, will you?"
I mean, I know these people.
They're gonna take the money and run.
Wouldn't you?
I think they want more
than just the money.
I... I think they...
they want to know
if they're gonna get sick or not.
Or if they have C-8 in their blood
and what that's gonna do
to them and their families.
So, we're just gonna trust
that they show up, huh?
Trust but verify.
What does that mean, Rob?
Well, come in for an exam.
Um... give us a blood sample.
Then we'll give you your check.
- On second thought, make mine a mai tai.
- All around, please.
- Rob Bilott.
- Yeah.
Where'd you pull that out of?
Healthy drinking water
is vital to all of us.
That's why scientists need to know
if the chemical C-8
causes any health problems.
Starting today, you can help by completing
a health questionnaire and having...
Ah, come on!
...medical vans downtown.
Well, how aboutyou?
Are you gonna get your blood tested?
Nah. I... I hate needles.
It's 400 bucks, buddy.
Really?
Got your attention...
I don't think I can.
Okay, okay! All right, all right.
Yeah, that'll work.
We bring them back here...
draw the blood and hand them a check.
- $400.
- Each.
Lots of money around here.
How many you brought
with you today, Miss LuAnn?
My husband and my three kids and me.
- $2,000.
- Yeah.
Not too shabby
right before Christmas.
Yep.
But you ain't gonna find nothing.
DuPont's good people. You'll see.
Gigi, Gigi, Gigi!
It's your turn
to put the angel on the top.
- You do it, sweetie. Gigi's too pooped.
- Look at me!
Why don't you get your Uncle Ben
to give you a boost?
Look!
- Ooh!
- Mom?
- What's up?
- You okay?
- Can you put... Can you help...
- Yeah.
Seriously, it's huge.
They're gonna be making you partner
this year. I know it.
Well, they'd better. I mean...
- Mommy, come see this!
- Hey, baby, did you hang that ornament?
- Rob, can you get that?
- Mm, uh...
- Let me see.
- Okay, I'm coming.
- Hello?
- Rob, you sitting down for this?
- Larry, what's wrong?
- 69, 000.
69,000 what?
69, 000 people got tested. 69, 000!
You realize how much data this is?
This is what we needed, Rob. This is it.
- Oh, my God.
- You were right all along, my friend.
- Merry Christmas.
- Thank you.
- You bet.
- Thank you!
Talk real soon.
- Hey, who was that?
- You won't believe.
- Daddy, guess what I just did.
- Yeah?
- What? What'd you just do?
- I put the angel on the top.
- Yeah?
- Uncle Ben lifted me.
He did? Like this?
Merry Christmas, everyone!
Merry Christmas!
We are gathered here today
in the memory of Wilbur Earl Tennant.
The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.
He makes me lie down in green pastures.
He leads me beside still waters.
He restoreth my soul.
Even though I walk through the valley
of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil...
Quick, everybody.
Mustard or ketchup?
Teddy, for the tenth time,
that's my ketchup.
Charlie, don't start.
What? It's mine. I got it.
- He's got his own, okay?
- You're that lawyer.
Finish up.
My brother's Dale Lamb.
You took his blood, said you'd help him.
Yeah, I did. We're...
We're working on that. I promise.
He's dead.
Testicular cancer.
Left three little boys younger than yours.
But you enjoy your family.
- Okay. Everybody up.
- I'm not finished.
I said up.
Well, Darlene can't even leave the house
without being harassed.
I know, Joe. I'm...
First, they blame us for suing DuPont,
and now they hate on us
'cause they ain't seen nothing from it.
- I'm sorry, Joe.
- Well, that ain't good enough!
And they wonder why in the hell
it takes four damn years
to read a lousy blood sample,
and I don't blame 'em.
We trusted you, Rob.
We put our faith in you.
- I know, Joe. I'm so...
- All right?
I'm so...
Isn't there just
some kind of a progress report,
anything that I can share
with these folks?
I mean, they... they have been waiting.
I'm sorry, Mr. Bilott.
The panel is still in the process
of analyzing complex data and modeling
from thousands of samples
and medical histories.
I'm so sorry.
Could you hold a moment?
Charlie, don't pick at your food.
What's a hooker?
Where did you learn that?
He told me that
Mary Magdalene was a hooker.
What? She was.
You're supposed to say "prostitute."
And then she found God
and became one of Jesus's
most fervent disciples.
See? I was just teaching him the Bible.
I can't today. So, everybody up.
Everybody up.
Can we still afford it?
What?
Catholic school.
My brother's back in rehab.
Did you know that?
No. I'm sorry.
Today's...
Today's Mom's first day at chemo.
I forgot.
'Cause it's not about your case, Rob.
Car!
- Gosh.
- Okay. Jeez.
Teddy forged my signature,
and Tony's quitting football.
Tony. But how would you know
about that, right?
Because all you see, all that you...
the boys have ever seen
is you obsessing about this...
Have I ever complained?
Say something, for God's sakes, Rob.
No.
- No?
- No.
No.
Because I knew that you needed something.
Uh, some connection, something.
And so, I took it on.
But if you want to start accounting,
if you want to start with,
"Oh, can we afford," then...
I don't know, Rob.
Can the boys afford a father
who can't string two words together?
Can our marriage afford 13 years of...
13 years of this?
How about it, Rob?
You want to talk about it?
About our lives?
Of course not.
I'll tell Mom you asked about her.
What in God's name
is that panel doing?
And why are we still getting bills?
Overhead, uh...
Local counsel. Harry's call center.
A thousand dollars an hour.
That was a...
That was a technical expert.
We needed to do filings
when DuPont started lobbying Washington...
That's Washington's problem, not ours.
That's why you got them involved.
Your memo.
It was just a fine, Tom. It's a fine.
$16 million,
it's nothing for these people.
- It's pocket change.
- Yes, but if they get charged
with criminal concealment, game over.
You said DOJ was investigating.
- Not anymore.
- What?
They dropped the investigation.
- They dropped... What?
- They dropped it. No reason given.
Tom, our government is captive to DuPont.
This case, it's the only hope we have.
They know that,
and they're trying to make it
as expensive as they can
to force you to make me stop.
- Just tell me how much longer.
- Uh...
I... I can't. I... I wish I could.
- Tom, I...
- Are you okay?
Uh, I'm fine. I'm just...
Rob, I'm a managing partner now.
- I have a firm to run.
- I know.
And, Tom, I think there could be
a huge payout here if we can...
You think I'm in this for money?
- No, I...
- You think I'm...
I'm letting you drag this firm's
reputation through a meat grinder
for some kind of plaintiff's payoff?
I... I don't know
why you're doing... doing it.
Rob, listen, I...
I'm sorry, but you're gonna
have to take another pay cut.
Tom, that's my fourth pay cut.
- What am I supposed to do?
- I... I...
- You don't have any...
- I'm down to a third now.
You don't have any clients.
No one will take your calls.
What am I supposed to do here?
Now, I'm on your side, but...
Rob? Emmy!
Hey! Emmy!
- Kathleen! Kathleen!
- Get some help!
- Get some help!
- Rob?
Rob?
Looks like we should, uh, cancel
my 4 o'clock with Jerry...
I don't know.
We're waiting to find out. He was...
Well, uh...
Make sure that, uh,
Jerry knows that, um...
I have to go.
- Mrs. Bilott?
- Yes.
We think your husband's
most likely experienced a TIA,
a transient ischemic attack.
Blood is briefly cut off to the brain,
mimicking the symptoms of a stroke.
Uh, excuse me. A TIA?
This wasn't short.
It kept going on.
What about poison?
I'm sorry?
Could someone be poisoning him?
No, Mrs. Bilott. This is neurological.
You just said it wasn't a stroke.
Not this time.
- What does that mean?
- It means that
he needs to never miss his medication
and he needs to reduce
all sources of stress in his life.
He's under enormous pressure at work.
Well, that needs to change.
But he's a young man.
He shouldn't be having these incidences.
He's sedated, but you can see him.
- Okay.
- I'll check in on him tomorrow.
Thank you. Thank you.
Um...
I'll, uh, give you some privacy.
Uh...
Anything you need, call me.
I need you to stop making him
feel like a failure.
I appreciate the stress
that your family must be going through.
Please...
don't talk to me like I'm the wife.
Did Rob ever tell you about,
uh, moving around as a kid?
- Um, I, uh...
- Ten times before senior year.
No friends, no ties, no...
Just him, his sister, his folks and...
Then I came along,
and you came along and, uh...
Taft... it's not just a job.
To him, it's... it's home.
And he was willing to risk all that
for a stranger who needed his help.
Now, you and I may not know
what that is...
but it's not failure.
And you lead me
In ways everlasting
Lord, you have searched my heart
And you know when I sit
And when I stand
Your hand is upon me
Protecting me from death
Keeping me from harm
Oh, Lord, I know
You are near
Standing always
At my side
You guard me from the foe...
Hey, do you know the score?
The game?
Sorry, my radio's busted.
- Sorry.
- Don't worry about it.
It'll be a surprise.
Bucky, come on. We'll be late.
Have a good one.
Hey, Rob. Bill Leary. Uh, we haven't met.
I'm the new comptroller
out of Indianapolis.
Listen, we need to talk
about your unbilled hours
and these un-reimbursed...
Hello?
Mr. Bilott?
Yes?
I guess I should start
by apologizing for taking,
well, seven years to call you.
- Who is this?
- Oh, yes, of course.
It's Dr. Karen Frank from the...
Science panel?
Again, I'm so sorry to have kept you
waiting this long, Mr. Bilott.
Uh...
- But there was just so much data that...
- Please, uh...
Doctor, please, can you...
would you just please tell me
what's happened, what's happening,
what... what you've found out?
Yes, yes. You gave us
an unprecedented amount of data.
The largest epidemiological study
in human history.
It's irrefutable.
We have linked sustained exposure to C-8
to six categories of serious illness.
Kidney cancer, testicular cancer,
thyroid disease, preeclampsia,
high cholesterol, ulcerative colitis.
3, 535 people in the class
already have these diseases.
Many more will develop them.
Thanks to you,
the entire class will be monitored,
and those who get sick
can seek restitution.
You did a good thing here, Mr. Bilott.
You did good.
Thank you.
- Oh.
- Thank you.
Thank you.
Watch out, now.
Watch your eyes.
Oh!
Rob?
What happened?
Rob?
DuPont, they're reneging.
Which part?
All of it.
They're tearing up our agreement,
rejecting the science panel.
They're gonna...
They're gonna fight every claim in court.
Thousands of claims.
People, sick people, they'll give up.
They can't fight DuPont.
How can they go back on...
- Sarah.
- They can't go back on everything.
They're a titan of industry.
They can do whatever the hell they want.
Nothing else matters.
They can fight you all they want.
It doesn't take away
from what you've done.
Of course it does.
That's exactly what it does.
They want to show the world
it's no use fighting.
"Look, everybody,
even he can't crack the maze,
and he helped build it."
The system is rigged.
They want us to think it'll protect us,
but that's a lie.
We protect us. We do.
Nobody else.
Not the companies, not the scientists,
not the government.
Us.
A farmer with a 12th-grade education
told me that.
On day one, he knew,
and I thought he was crazy.
Isn't that crazy?
No.
All rise.
The Honorable Timothy Burg,
United States District Judge
for the Southern District of Ohio
presiding.
This court is now in session
pursuant to the adjournment.
Hear ye, hear ye, hear ye.
All persons having business
with this honorable court,
draw near, give their attention,
and they shall be heard.
God save the United States
and this honorable court.
Please be seated.
And we're here this morning
for a jury trial.
So... 3,535 claims.
At a rate of four or five cases a year,
we can all expect to be here till...
well, the year 2890.
If we're lucky.
Guess we'd better get started.
Mrs. Johnson, is your attorney present?
Good morning, Your Honor.
Rob Bilott for the plaintiff.
Oh, still here, huh?
Still here.
Well, I won't back down
No, I won't back down
You can stand me up
At the gates of hell
But I won't back down
Gonna stand my ground
Won't be turned around
And I'll keep this world
From draggin'me down
Gonna stand my ground
And I won't back down
Hey, baby
There ain't no easy way out
Hey, I
Will stand my ground
And I won't back down
Well, I know what's right
I got just one life
In a world that keeps on
Pushin'me around
But I'll stand my ground
And I won't back down
Hey, baby
There ain't no easy way out
Hey, I
Will stand my ground
And I won't back down
No, I won't back down
Modify /Fontby Blue-Bird