Science | Camp Lejeune Marines: Military Should Have Told Us About Toxic Water Cancer victims link disease to Lejeune By Rob Quinn Posted Sep 17, 2010 3:39 AM CDT Copied A sign is posted at an ongoing cleanup pump and treatment center at Camp Lejeune, to treat the underground plume of TCE, trichloroethylene, created by a waste disposal site on the Marine base. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome, File) Peter Devereaux is dying and he believes the military's failure to tell him he had been exposed to carcinogens at a North Carolina base could be to blame. The 48-year-old former Marine was stationed at Camp Lejeune in the '80s, when the camp's water supply was tainted with poisonous chemicals. The military was aware of the problem for decades but didn't notify him until 2008, when he had already been diagnosed with the cancer that has now spread through his body, Devereaux says. Devereaux—who testified before Congress yesterday with two others— says he would have had regular cancer screenings if the military had told him about the contamination sooner, reports the Los Angeles Times. "The Marines knew about it and said nothing, knowing full well we were bathing in and drinking contaminated water on a daily basis," Devereaux said. "The water reports state that the wells were contaminated and action needed to be taken, and nothing was done." Read These Next Trump aide gives punny response to Springsteen. Brazilian influencer is dead at 27 after cosmetic surgery. Conan O'Brien finally speaks on deaths of Rob and Michele Reiner. Hundreds offer to adopt dog abandoned at airport. Report an error