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Maureen Ryan, 55; Criticized Use of Agent Orange in Vietnam War

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From Staff and Wire Reports

Maureen Ryan, 55, an outspoken critic of the U.S. government’s treatment of soldiers sprayed with the herbicide Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, died Sept. 8 of pancreatic cancer in Boca Raton, Fla.

Ryan and her husband, a Vietnam veteran, and their two children, who were both born with birth defects, came to symbolize the unhealed wounds of the Vietnam War when they became part of a class-action suit filed by veterans exposed to Agent Orange.

Ryan’s husband, Michael Ryan, spent 13 months in Vietnam in 1966-67 and was exposed to Agent Orange when the defoliant was sprayed around Long Binh.

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Their daughter, Kerry, was born with 22 major deformities, including deformed fingers, a missing thumb, missing bones, a hole in her heart and no lower intestinal tract. Their son, Michael, was born with brain damage that the couple also blamed on Agent Orange.

A settlement of the class action suit for $180 million was approved by a federal judge in 1984 but provided only a small amount -- an average of $5,700 -- to veterans or their families.

The Ryans’ struggle to receive compensation for their children in the suit received national attention. They also wrote “Kerry: Agent Orange and an American Family.”

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