MEMORANDUM OPINION
This case is before the Court on defendants’ motion to dismiss. Plaintiff, Mr. James Thornwell, is a former serviceman who seeks to recover for injuries which he sustained both before, and after, his discharge from the United States Army. The named defendants include the United States as well as twenty-nine individuals who, Mr. Thornwell asserts, all participated in the tortious conduct which led to his injuries. Although Mr. Thornwell may have employed a shotgun approach in naming his defendants, the defendants attempt to benefit from the same method in their motion to dismiss. The motion before the Court raises a host of substantive and procedural issues and, after reviewing the relevant statutes and case law, the Court is drawn to the conclusion that it must dismiss counts I, II, III, and IV, as well as counts VII and VIII. The Court, however, shall deny defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts V and VI. The Court also rejects defendants’ assertion that venue is improper and it postpones a definitive ruling on their claim that personal jurisdiction is wanting.
*346 I. BACKGROUND
On a motion to dismiss the Court must assume not only the truth of plaintiff’s allegations but also all reasonable inferences which may be deduced from those allegations.
Conley v. Gibson,
The first incident from which Mr. Thorn-well’s claims arise occurred in France in June 1961. At the time, Mr. Thornwell was a private in the United States Army, and he had been imprisoned as part of an Army investigation into the theft of approximately one hundred classified documents. While in prison, Mr. Thornwell was subjected to a battery of harsh interrogation techniques: He was confined “for months” to a small, windowless, unlit “isolation chamber,” where he was deprived of sleep and toilet facilities; he was interrogated for as long as seventy hours at a time; during interrogation he was “physically abused,” “terrified with threats of . death,” and “degraded by a steady stream of verbal abuse, including racial slurs and accusations of sexual impropriety.” Complaint ¶ 39 (filed Oct. 2, 1978).
This phase of Mr. Thornwell’s interrogation ended when a special team of Army officers arrived on the scene as part of “Operation Third Chance.” Operation Third Chance was a covert program designed to test the utility of a psychedelic chemical, lysergic acid diethylamide (“LSD”), as an aid to interrogation; it involved the surreptitious, nonconsensual administration of LSD to foreign nationals who were then questioned under conditions of extreme physical and mental stress. Evidently, by special permission, Mr. Thorn-well became the sole exception to the “foreign national” limitation on the scope of Operation Third Chance. Id. ¶ 36.
As part of this covert program in human experimentation, Mr. Thornwell was secretly drugged with LSD and then subjected to further physical and mental degradation. The official report prepared by the Operation Third Chance special purpose team explained that the experiment on Mr. Thorn-well demonstrated the “usefulness of employing as a duress factor the device of inviting the subjects’ attention to his [LSD] —influenced state and threatening to extend this state indefinitely, even to a permanent condition of insanity or to bring it to an end at the discretion of the interrogators. . . . ” Id. ¶ 41. The report also concluded that in Mr. Thornwell’s case, the drug produced an “extreme paranoic reaction” which was “highly sustained and almost incapacitating.” Id. ¶ 40. Four months after the test, Mr. Thornwell received a general discharge from the Army.
The transformation to civilian status, however, did not free Mr. Thornwell from the wrongs inflicted by his alleged tortfeasors. Despite his efforts to ascertain the cause or causes of his condition of ceaseless misery, the defendants deliberately concealed from him the facts and circumstances of the drug experiment. Id. ¶¶ 46-48. Even after the Department of Defense had assured Congress that the facts of LSD testing would be disclosed to all subjects of the experiments, Mr. Thornwell remained uninformed about his own participation in the tests. In the alternative, Mr. Thornwell claims that the defendants, who had assumed the burden of aiding men in his condition, were negligent in failing to provide him with examinations and treatment.
This non-consensual venture in human experimentation has, Mr. Thornwell asserts, caused him the gravest injury. As a direct consequence of the surreptitious drugging and the subsequent cover-up, Mr. Thornwell complains that for the last seventeen years, he has suffered — and continues to suffer— from serious mental illness and severe physical pain. Moreover, during this same period, he has been unable to maintain any gainful employment for more than short periods. In sum, Mr. Thornwell has been *347 transformed from a productive, healthy individual into an isolated social and emotional cripple, deprived of the pleasant experiences of human society. Id. ¶¶ 56-60.
Mr. Thornwell’s complaint is phrased in terms of eight separate counts. In count I, he alleges that a sub-group of the defendants violated his privacy rights under the first, fourth, fifth and ninth amendments, by surreptitiously administering LSD and then conducting interrogations under conditions of severe stress. Count II asserts that these same acts deprived him of his right to due process under the fifth amendment and count III claims that the conduct was cruel and unusual punishment violative of the eighth amendment. Count IV sounds in common law tort and alleges that the drugging and harassment constitute assault and battery, as well as intentional infliction of emotional distress. Counts V and VI address the wrongs which occurred after Mr. Thorn well’s discharge from the military: in count V, he alleges that the defendants’ concealment of the drugging and their failure to provide him with follow-up medical treatment violated his due process rights under the fifth amendment; in count VI, he alleges that the failure to provide followup assistance, by itself, was negligent. Counts VII and VIII assert that the drugging and cover-up violate 42 U.S.C. §§ 1985(3) and 1986, respectively.
II. THE COURT MUST DISMISS PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM FOR INJURIES OCCURRING WHILE ON ACTIVE DUTY
In
Feres v. United States,
Recently, in
Stencel Aero Engineering Corp. v. United States,
[Fjirst, the relationship between the Government and members of its Armed Forces is “ ‘distinctively federal in character,’ ” . .; it would make little sense to have the Government’s liability to members of the Armed Services dependent on the fortuity of where the soldier happened to be stationed at the time of the injury. Second, the Veterans’ *348 Benefits Act establishes, as a substitute for tort liability, a statutory “no fault” compensation scheme which provides generous pensions to injured servicemen, without regard to any negligence attributable to the Government. A third factor [is] “[t]he peculiar and special relationship of the soldier to his superiors, the effects of the maintenance of such suits on discipline, and the extreme results that might obtain if suits under the Tort Claims Act were allowed for negligent orders given or negligent acts committed in the course of military duty . . .
Plaintiff asserts that his case is factually distinguishable from the situations involved in
Feres
because he seeks recovery for intentional torts as well as constitutional violations. Although in
Feres,
the Supreme Court only reviewed claims alleging negligence on the part of the military, neither the language nor the rationale of the Court’s decision indicates that the legal theory of a soldier’s claim ought to be a salient factor in determining the scope of intra-military immunity. In explaining its holding, the Court broadly provided immunity for
“injuries
” which “arise out of or are in the course of activity incident to [military] service.”
Other courts have also uniformly recognized that the
Feres
bar extends to both constitutional and intentional torts. In
Citizen’s National Bank of Waukeegan v. United States,
No. 77-1974, slip op. at 7 (N.D.Ill.Feb. 15, 1978), the court explained, “[T]he logic of
Feres
does not permit a principled distinction between negligent and intentional torts.”
Accord, Levin v. United States,
*349 Accordingly, this Court concludes that counts I-IV must be dismissed.
III. UNDER
GRIFFIN v. BRECKENRIDGE,
In count VII, Mr. Thornwell seeks recovery for defendants’ alleged violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3). Count VIII is based on 42 U.S.C. § 1986, which permits recovery against individuals who fail to prevent the conduct proscribed by section 1985(3). In light of two factors — (1) the Court’s decision to bar all of plaintiff’s claims arising out of his service in the Armed Forces, and (2)
Griffin v. Breckenridge,
First, in dismissing counts I-IV, the Court held that the
Feres
bar extended to
all
personal injury claims which arise out of, or are incident to, service in the Armed Forces. Although counts VII and VIII seek recovery for injuries sustained in the course of active duty as well as those incurred after discharge, this Court’s holding with respect to counts I-IV compels the conclusion that these two counts are barred to the extent that they pertain directly to Mr. Thornwell’s service in the Army.
See Birdwell v. Schlesinger,
In
Griffin,
the Court explained that a claim under section 1985(3) required a showing of “some racial or perhaps otherwise class based, invidiously discriminatory animus behind the conspirator’s action.”
Both dismissals, however, are without prejudice. In the event that plaintiff, through discovery, gathers information which supports his allegations, he will certainly be entitled to renew his claims.
IV. UNDER THE FACTS OF THIS CASE, MR. THORNWELL MAY RECOVER FOR POST-DISCHARGE NEGLIGENCE
In count VI, Mr. Thornwell seeks to recover for the injuries which resulted from the defendants’ alleged negligence in failing to provide him with any follow-up examinations, supervision, or other medical treatment during the seventeen years after his discharge. The Court finds that recovery for these post-discharge injuries is not merely consistent with
Feres v. United States,
*350
In
United States v. Brown, supra,
the Supreme Court held that the
Feres
bar did not apply to an injury sustained by a veteran six years after his discharge. In permitting the plaintiff to recover for the negligent operation performed at a Veterans’ Administration Hospital, the Court relied upon his “civilian status” as the distinguishing feature between his situation and that of the
Feres
plaintiffs.
Moreover, recovery for these post-discharge injuries is fully consistent with the rationale of
Feres.
In reviewing the personal injury claims of servicemen, courts have recognized that the precise relationship at the time of the wrong between the plaintiff and the military is a critical factor.
E. g., Bankston v. United States,
In recognizing the validity of Mr. Thorn-well’^ negligence claim, the Court is fully aware of the difficulties which other courts have encountered in their treatment, under
Feres,
of torts which commence while the plaintiff is on active duty and then continue, unabated, until well after discharge.
Compare Schwartz v. United States,
Mr. Thornwell, however, does not allege a mere continuing negligent omission. He claims that he was
intentionally
harmed while he was on active duty and he further claims that, after he became a civilian, the defendants failed to exercise their duty of care by neglecting to rescue him from the position of danger which they had created. Although the precise nature of the duty of care upon which the plaintiff relies is not clear,
7
Mr. Thornwell’s claims for in-service, and out-of-service, injuries certainly involve two distinctly separate patterns of conduct, one intentional and negligent. Thus, he has alleged two entirely different torts, and even though the first tort occurred in the course of his military service, the second did not. In
Henning v. United States,
This Court is, of course, not the first to acknowledge the validity of claims alleging the negligent aggravation of a previous, albeit immunized, wrong. In
Hungerford v. United States,
Long before 1957, when the ravages of the disease had made necessary the radical surgery upon the plaintiff, the Government doctors therefore should have been aware of the dangers of the drug. The Government should have reviewed the records of all patients to whom [the radioactive dye] had been given and warned them of the danger of its retention in their bodies. Accordingly, even if the plaintiff had never returned to a Government physician after his discharge from military service, there was a duty resting on the Government to follow up those cases in which [the dye] had been installed. The Government must be charged with knowledge that [the dye] had been used by its physicians at an earlier date, and its roentgenologists must have known of the danger of [the dye]. The negligence here is not in its installation, but rather in not having affirmatively sought out those who had been endangered after there was knowledge of the danger in order to warn them that in the supposedly innocent treatment there had now been found to lurk the risk of devastating injury.
To summarize the relevant precedent, it appears that there are three types of personal injury cases which involve post-discharge negligence. In the first case, the military performs separate negligent acts (i. e., two improper operations), one before, and one after, discharge;
United States v. Brown,
The Court is, of course, mindful of the possibility that artful pleading may be employed to elevate one continuing act of negligence into separate wrongs. 9 The defendants’ however, have never contested the legitimacy of the distinction which plaintiff’s complaint draws between the intentional wrongs inflicted while on active duty and the negligent omission occurring after his discharge. Nonetheless, if the defendants wish to show that the drugging of Mr. Thornwell was a mere accident — something akin to the careless surgeon’s towel on Feres — then the Court will re-consider its decision in light of the “continuing negligence” line of precedent. Absent such a showing, the Court finds that count VI states a valid claim.
Finally, the Court notes that its refusal to dismiss count VI does not automatically entitle Mr. Thornwell to compensation for all of the injuries which he has alleged. The *353 plaintiff’s injuries must be apportioned and he may recover only to the extent that defendants’ post-discharge negligence aggravated or prolonged his condition. See W. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts § 52 (4th ed. 1971).
In accordance with the foregoing, the Court denies defendants’ motion to dismiss count VI of the plaintiff’s complaint.
V. PLAINTIFF MAY RECOVER FOR VIOLATIONS OF FIFTH AMENDMENT RIGHTS WHICH OCCUR AFTER DISCHARGE
Count V of Mr. Thornwell’s complaint is apparently an alternative charge to count Vi’s claim of negligence; it states that after his discharge, the defendants acted to conceal the LSD experiment from him and that they also failed to provide him with a follow-up examination and treatment. Complaint ¶ 72 (filed Oct. 2, 1978). Although plaintiff’s complaint is hazy, the fifth amendment due process violation evidently arises out of the defendants’ disregard for their own regulations. It may, however, also arise out of the defendants’ egregious conduct, which shocks the conscience. The cover-up allegation is strongly suggestive of a charge that the defendants intentionally withheld the medical care which was vital to Mr. Thornwell’s well-being. 10 The Court finds that count V states a valid claim.
A. The Doctrine of Intra-Military Immunity Does Not Apply.
First, in reviewing count VI, the Court held that Mr. Thornwell’s allegation of post-discharge negligence involved a course of conduct distinct and separate from the intentional wrongs which had occurred while he was on active duty. As a result, the Feres doctrine of intra-military immunity had no application. Mr. Thorn-well’s allegation of an unconstitutional cover-up also involves a new course of conduct arising after the attainment of civilian status; thus, the rationale of this Court’s approval of count VI compels the conclusion that count V also states a valid claim. Indeed, the case for the validity of count V is a simple one because the concept of immunity for a “continuing tort” 11 can have no application when intentional or unconstitutional conduct is involved. To hold that the military may deprive a civilian of his constitutional rights merely because the deprivation originated when the civilian was an enlisted man would be tantamount to declaring all veterans second class citizens. Men and women who have served in our Armed Forces, and to whom this nation is indebted beyond measurement, are certainly entitled to the constitutional liberties afforded all citizens. In short, if the military deprives a veteran of his constitutional rights, it may not look to Feres for immunity. 12
B. There is a Cause of Action For Damages Under The Fifth Amendment.
Apart from
Feres,
the defendants also contend that there can be no implied private right of action under the fifth amendment. In
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
In
Payne v. Government of the District of Columbia,
Apart from the precedent of
Payne
and
Dellums,
the Court finds independently that a restrictive interpretation of
Bivens
is inappropriate. The defendants rely on
Torres v. Taylor,
First, the Court believes that, in interpreting
Bivens, Torres
relies too heavily on Justice Harlan’s concurring opinion which asserted that the Court held a constitutional cause of action proper because it was the
only
possible remedy for the alleged wrong.
Id.
at 953 (citing
Bivens v. Six Unknown Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
Respondents do not argue that petitioner should be entirely without remedy for an unconstitutional invasion of his rights by federal agents. In respondents’ view, however, the rights that petitioner asserts — primarily rights of privacy — are creations of state and not of federal law. Accordingly, they argue, petitioner may obtain money damages to redress invasion of these rights only by an action in tort, under state law, in the state courts.
Although in this case, the Federal Tort Claims Act may provide the federal remedy sought by the Bivens majority, it is clear that Congress has never intended the Act as the exclusive remedy for the tortious conduct of federal officials. In 1974, Congress amended the Federal Tort Claims Act to provide a remedy against the United States for wrongs committed by federal law enforcement or investigative officers. Act of March 16, 1974, Pub.L. No. 93-253, § 2, 88 Stat. 50. Rather than displace the Bi *355 vens cause of action — the proper result under both Justice Harlan’s analysis and Torres — Congress decided to retain suits under the fourth amendment which provide relief against federal officials in their individual capacity. The 1974 amendments to the Act show that Congress plainly intended to permit Bivens and Federal Tort Claims Act suits to exist side by side. S.Rep. No. 558, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 3 (1974), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1974, p. 2789.
In addition, an exclusive remedy under the Act provides a less effective deterrent against constitutional violations than a direct action against federal officials. Although the Act may render more certain the injured party’s recovery of some financial benefit,
Bivens
actions, by providing for recovery from the individuals responsible for the invasion of constitutional rights, should in the long run incrementally reduce the unconstitutional action of federal officials.
Cf. Stone v. Powell,
Finally, a suit under the fifth amendment may well be the only cause of action which fully encompasses the wrongs which Mr. Thornwell has alleged.' The facts stated on the face of his complaint appear to go far beyond the outrageous conduct which marks the common law tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress. The injury which he suffered was not mere “emotional distress,” but rather a prolonged psychiatric disorder accompanied by severe physical pain. In addition, the defendants’ conduct involved not only intentional harm to Mr. Thornwell, but also willful disregard of both Army regulations and public promises made by high ranking military officials. Perhaps the only tort which is capable of describing this course of conduct is one based upon the fifth amendment’s guarantee that no person shall “be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” U.S.Const. amend. V.
In accordance with the foregoing, this Court finds that count V of plaintiff’s complaint states a valid cause of action and, as a result, defendants’ motion to dismiss count V must be denied.
VI. VENUE FOR THIS ACTION LIES IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
A. 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b).
The individual defendants have also moved to dismiss on the grounds that venue is not proper in the District of Columbia. In light of both the principles recently explicated by the Court of Appeals for this Circuit in
Lamont v. Haig,
In
Lamont v. Haig,
*356 [W]here “the claim arose” should in our view be ascertained by advertence to events having operative significance in the ease, and a commonplace appraisal of the implications of those events for accessibility to witnesses and records.
Id.
at 18,
The exhibits which Mr. Thornwell has offered in support of his claim contain relevant correspondence involving Army officials headquartered in the District of Columbia. Also, in this forum, crucial Army studies on the effects of LSD were prepared and distributed. From Washington, D.C., Cyrus Vance, then general counsel to the Secretary of the Army, requested a specific review of Thornwell’s case
15
and' General Throckmorton and Lieutenant Colonel Brandenburg both supervised the review from that same Washington office.
16
Defendants Harold Brown, Cyrus Vance and other Secretaries of the Army acted in Washington, in their official capacity, to assume responsibility for the safety of subjects of LSD testing.
17
Also, in 1976, the Internal Revenue Service notified Mr. Thornwell from Washington that he might have been a victim of LSD experiments and the Service then neglected to follow up that notification. Complaint ¶¶ 50-53 (filed Oct. 2, 1978). There are, of course, far more contacts between the District of Columbia and the instant lawsuit, but a further review would serve no purpose. It is clear that numerous events which have “operative significance in the case,” id. at 18,
B. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1402(b) & 1391(e).
For the defendant United States, the relative venue provision is 28 U.S.C. § 1402(b), which provides:
Any civil action against the United States under subsection (b) of section 1346 of this title may be prosecuted only in the judicial district where the plaintiff resides or wherein the act or omission complained of occurred.
Also, for the four defendants named- in their official capacity, 18 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e) controls venue considerations and, in pertinent part, it states:
A civil action in which a defendant is an officer or employee of the United States or any agency thereof acting in his official capacity or under color of legal authority, or an agency of the United States, or the United States may, except *357 as otherwise provided by law, be brought in any judicial district in which .
(2) the cause of action arose Like section 1391(b), section 1402(b) refers to the judicial district where the wrongful act occurred, thus suggesting that only one district is proper. Section 1391(e) is also susceptible to a similar, narrow interpretation. Yet, because Lamont v. Haig, supra, compels a broader reading of section 1391(b), this Court believes that sections 1391(e) and 1402(b) must be similarly construed. Indeed, it is well established that section 1391(e)’s reference to the district where the “cause of action arose” is identical to section 1391(b)’s language concerning the district “in which the claim arose.” 15 Wright & Miller’s Federal Practice and Procedure § 3815, at 95 (1976). Accordingly, in reviewing venue objections under sections 1391(e) and 1402(b), the Court must apply the same “preponderance of the contacts” test that it employed under section 1391(b), and under this test, it concludes that venue is proper for the United States and the four defendants named in their official capacity.
In view of the foregoing, the Court denies defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of venue.
VII. DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF PERSONAL JURISDICTION IS DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE
Finally, the defendants have also moved to dismiss plaintiff’s claim for lack of personal jurisdiction. In their arguments before the Court, the parties have evidently assumed that plaintiff’s complaint states, in its entirety, a valid claim. The Court, however, has ruled otherwise and accordingly several individual defendants, who may only have participated in the pre-discharge wrongs, may no longer be proper parties to this action. The Court is not now willing to assume the burden of culling the thirty defendants to ascertain who among them was exclusively involved in pre-discharge activity. The parties are certainly more capable of performing this task and the Court encourages them to promptly re-examine the case with this issue in mind. Once the process of re-examination is completed,. the Court will be better able to render an informed decision regarding personal jurisdiction. Accordingly, defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction shall be denied without prejudice to renewal.
The Court, however, notes the right to renewal will not extend to the four defendants 19 who were served in the District of Columbia; with respect to these individuals, the Court clearly has plenary in personam jurisdiction. The Court also has jurisdiction over the four individuals who were served in their present official capacity. 20 Moreover, the Court requests the plaintiff to inform the Court of his position with respect to the two defendants 21 who are now deceased.
VIII. CONCLUSION
This Court finds that plaintiff has stated a valid cause of action with respect to the injuries allegedly incurred after his discharge. However, for those injuries received while on active duty,
Feres
v.
United States,
*358 An order ip accordance with the foregoing will be issued of even date herewith.
Notes
. In holding that counts I-IV must be dismissed, the Court acknowledges the precedent of
Feres,
but does not offer any approval for the sweep of that decision. Indeed, to this Court,
Feres
appears to grant an immunity which is broader than necessary and, as a result, the application of that immunity may at times lead to unconscionable results. Recently, in
Jaffee v. United States,
The Court: [A]s I read the law it doesn’t matter if they stood up there and, “one, two, three, left, right, left,” and marched them over a cliff . . You’d be protected under Feres . .”
The Govt: Yes, your Honor.
id. at 635. See generally Note, Military Law, 1978 Ann.Survey Am.L. 631, 649-51.
. The defendant United States has also raised 28 U.S.C. § 2680(k) as a bar to recovery. Although the Court’s ruling under
Feres
renders
*349
unnecessary extensive analysis of § 2680(k), the statutory construction offered by
In re Paris Air Crash of March 3, 1974,
. Sectipns 310 and 331 provide recovery for injuries in the “line of duty” during war or peace. 38 U.S.C. §§ 310 & 331 (1976). Benefits under section 351 are only available to veterans who suffer an injury in the course of medical treatment “awarded under any of the laws administered by the Veterans’ Administration.” 38 U.S.C. § 351 (1976).
. The defendants contend that Mr. Thornwell may recover for his pre-discharge injuries under 10 U.S.C. § 1552 (1976). This statute empowers military officials to alter “any military record . . . when . . . necessary to correct an error or remove an injustice.” 10 U.S.C. § 1552 (1976). With a corrected record, Mr. Thornwell would presumably become entitled to veterans’ benefits.
.
Cf. Jaffee
v.
United States,
. In upholding count VI, the Court recognizes only Feres and Brown as binding precedent. It expressly declines to assess the wisdom of Henning v. United States, supra, and Wisniewski v. United States, supra, because it believes Mr. Thomwell’s case distinguishable from both' decisions. The Court, however, also believes that its holding in this case does not depart from the precedent of these two decisions.
. It is not clear whether Mr. Thornwell is relying on a general duty of care,
see Schwartz v. United States,
. The defendants submit that
Schwartz v. United States, supra,
was overruled in
Henning v. United States,
. See notes 4-6 supra and accompanying text.
. The plaintiff may, of course, be entitled to amend his complaint to allege that this course of conduct constitutes a common law, intentional tort.
. See notes 4-6 supra and accompanying text.
. In denying immunity under
Feres,
the Court makes no ruling concerning an issue which neither party has raised — the extent of immunity, If any, available under
Butz v. Economou,
.
Compare Davis v. Passman,
. In
Lamont v. Haig,
. See plaintiffs Attachment A-10.
. See plaintiffs Attachment A-ll.
. See plaintiffs Attachment C-2. The Court takes note that almost all of the documents relied upon to show venue were gathered through requests under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552 et seq. (1976). Indeed, absent the Freedom of Information Act, Mr. Thornwell may never have discovered the information which led to the filing of this suit. The just resolution of his claim is certainly one of the more visible benefits of this oft-slighted statute.
. These four defendants are: Van M. Sim, Chief, Medical Research Division, Biomedical Laboratories; Clifford L. Alexander, Secretary, Department of the Army; Harold Brown, Secretary, Department of Defense; Charles C. Pixley, Surgeon General, Department of the Army.
. These four defendants are: Cyrus Vance, Robert S. McNamara, Stanley R. Resor, and George H. Decker.
. These defendants are listed at note 17, supra.
. These two defendants are former Surgeon General Richard R. Taylor and Emanuel Fusfield.
