© CNNTheresa Devine and Steve Esmond
Two Delaware boys
are in a coma and their father still is unable to talk or move two weeks after they became sick -- perhaps from pesticide exposure, federal officials say -- during a trip to the U.S. Virgin Islands, their lawyer said Saturday.
Steve Esmond, his teenage sons and the teens' mother fell ill more than two weeks ago in St. John, where they were renting a villa at the Sirenusa resort.
The family was airlifted to hospitals in the United States. The boys, 16 and 14, were in critical condition at a Philadelphia hospital on Saturday, the family's lawyer, James Maron of Delaware, said.
"The boys are in rough shape," Maron said.
"The family are all fighters," he added. "They're fighting for everything right now. I understand it's a long recovery."
Esmond, also being treated at a hospital, is conscious but
cannot move, Maron said. The teens' mother, Theresa Devine, was treated at a hospital but released, and is now in occupational therapy, Maron said.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said Friday that the presence of a pesticide at the rented villa in St. John may have caused the illnesses, which were reported to the EPA on March 20.
Paramedics were called to the villa, which the family began had been renting since March 14.
Esmond was found unconscious; the boys and their mother were having seizures, Maron said. The lawyer did not say who called the paramedics.
Elias Rodriguez,
an EPA spokesman, said the agency's preliminary test results "do show that there was a presence of methyl bromide in the unit where the family was staying."
Exposure to methyl bromide can result in serious health effects, including central nervous system and respiratory system damage,
according to the EPA.The use of the pesticide is restricted in the United States because of its acute toxicity. It's not allowed to be used indoors. Only certified professionals are permitted to use it in certain agricultural settings.
"It's an ongoing investigation; we're still on the island doing our assessment," Rodriguez said. "We have been doing different types of air sampling and wipe sampling."
Final test results were expected next week.
The EPA said it is working with local government agencies to investigate whether the family was made ill after a fumigation at the resort on March 18 and whether any environmental regulations or laws were violated.
Maron, the family's attorney, declined to comment on the investigation.
Depending on the season, the luxury villa where the family stayed rents between $550 and $1,200 per night.
Sea Glass Vacations, which acts as a rental agent for several units at Sirenusa, said the unit directly below the one where the family stayed was recently treated for pests, but their unit was not treated.
The company said it licensed an outside company, Terminix, for the pest control services.
"Sea Glass Vacations does not treat the units it manages for pests but instead relies on licensed professionals for pest control services," the company said in a statement.
The U.S. Department of Justice has initiated a criminal investigation into the matter, according to a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing made Monday by ServiceMaster Global Holdings, the parent company of Terminix.
In an email to CNN, a spokesman for Terminix wrote that the company is "committed to performing all work ... in a manner that is safe for our customers, employees, the public and the environment" and is "looking into this matter internally, and cooperating with authorities."
"We're thinking about the family, and we join the community in wishing them a speedy recovery," Terminix wrote.
The SEC filing described the injuries to the family members as "serious."
Pesticide spraying is strongly suggested by Janine Roberts, ("Fear of the Invisible"), as the agent responsible for Polio. -The symptoms of which line up with the central nervous system disruption resulting from pesticide poisoning.
The virus theory, however, was floated and managed to gain political support and momentum at a critical time when the nation was trying to decide how to solve the frightening problem. The virus theory won out and became a massive, government-financed industry.
Parents terrified that their kids were at risk from the theoretical microbes treated their homes (if they could afford to), with liberal amounts of DDT. There were even wallpapers pre-soaked in DDT available for children's rooms.
Money being a factor, polio struck a statistically larger number of middle income families with no logical disease vector which might be expected from a viral pathology, and unlike other common diseases, polio didn't strike during the Winter season, but rather spiked in the warm months, when bug spraying was at its height. The regions where heavy spraying took place also line up with the toxin theory of polio; around apple growing regions.
Only when pesticides were regulated did polio withdraw its clutches, and vaccine history recorded its touted victory over the disease. (The health agencies also radically re-defined the symptoms of polio so that the tens of thousands of lingering cases were re-classified as other conditions which were pointedly NOT polio, thus eliminating the dreaded plague through book-keeping.)
The amazing result? Virology may well have come into being largely as a result of an incorrectly diagnosed condition, and has at its core a, from day one, built-in cognitive dissonance wrt cause and effect.
"It HAS to be a virus, because that's what the money and policy says, so exploration must be curtailed from taboo (rational) thinking, or I won't have a job and people will eject me from my academic science tribe."
As per usual, lower brain herd thinking trumps the Neo Cortex. Lab coats and clip boards, sadly, offer little defense.