When Corporate Greed Goes Nuclear

Manhattan Project’s Nuclear Ghost Haunts St. Louis; Feds Say Cotter & Norfolk Southern Must Pay

TL;DR

  • The U.S. government is suing Cotter Corporation and Norfolk Southern Railway to recover over $88 million in taxpayer money spent cleaning up radioactive waste in St. Louis and Hazelwood, Missouri.
  • The contamination stems from uranium processing residues, a legacy of the Manhattan Project, which were improperly stored and handled by the companies from the 1960s through the mid-1970s.
  • The lawsuit alleges the radioactive waste was left in “uncovered, unlined piles” on bare ground, contaminating soil and spreading to adjacent properties via flooding for decades.
  • Key radioactive hazardous substances found at the Superfund site include Thorium-230, Radium-226, and Uranium-238.

Cotter told the government the site was clean in 1974 to terminate their license. The official complaint detailing that lie is in Legal Receipts.

The Non-Financial Ledger

For over fifty years, a toxic secret from the dawn of the nuclear age has been seeping into the soil of Missouri. This is not just about money or legal filings. It’s about the betrayal of a community. While families lived, worked, and raised children nearby, corporations were allegedly walking away from a radioactive mess they helped create. The waste came from the same program that built the atomic bomb, a heavy legacy to begin with. It was then sold to private industry, which treated the land like a disposable dumping ground.

This case is a reckoning for a decision made decades ago: to leave 8,700 tons of radioactive material sitting on bare earth.

The government now estimates there are 138,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil. Think about that volume. It’s a physical manifestation of a promise broken in 1974, when Cotter Corporation allegedly told the Atomic Energy Commission that all hazardous materials had been removed. The community was left in the dark while radioactive contaminants, carried by rain and floodwaters, migrated across their neighborhoods. This is the weight of corporate negligence, an invisible threat that erodes trust just as surely as it poisons the ground.

Legal Receipts

The government’s complaint against Cotter and Norfolk Southern is not based on speculation. It is a detailed account of corporate actions. Here are the direct allegations from the legal filing, Civil Action No. 24-cv-1593.

After years of this storage method, Cotter sought to end its responsibility for the site. The complaint states they misled regulators to do so:

The consequences of this alleged deception continue to this day, with cleanup operations still pending for parts of the contaminated area.

Societal Impact Mapping

Environmental Degradation

The legacy of this contamination is written into the land itself. The complaint identifies significant levels of Thorium-230, Radium-226, and Uranium-238 in the surface and subsurface soils. These aren’t just chemicals; they are radioactive elements that decay over geological timescales. The complaint documents how this contamination didn’t stay put. For decades, “flooding caused by excessive rain flowed across these properties,” carrying the hazardous materials “via water-borne transport” to surrounding areas, creating an expanding footprint of toxicity.

Public Health

The entire framework for this lawsuit, the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), was created to protect the public from sites like this. The law authorizes the government to act when a release of hazardous substances is necessary to “protect the public health or welfare or the environment.” The materials handled by Cotter and stored on Norfolk Southern’s land are byproducts of nuclear fuel processing. Their presence in a commercial and industrial area, with the potential for human exposure, is the central threat that prompted this decades-long, multi-million-dollar federal intervention.

Economic Inequality

When a corporation creates a toxic liability and then walks away, the bill eventually comes due. In this case, it was sent to the American taxpayer. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been forced to step in and manage a cleanup that the government argues should have been the companies’ responsibility from the start. The costs are staggering, and they are not final.

$88,095,734
Your Tax Dollars Spent Cleaning Up Their Nuclear Mess (So Far)

This figure, $88.1 million, only covers costs from 1997 to 2020 and explicitly excludes some major removal actions. The government is seeking a judgment that holds the defendants liable for all future costs, which will almost certainly run into many more millions.

What Now?

The legal battle has just begun. The Department of Justice, on behalf of the Army Corps of Engineers, is seeking to hold these corporations accountable not just for the past, but for the future. Here is who is involved and what to watch.

Corporate Actors

These are the entities the U.S. government has named as financially responsible for the nuclear contamination.

  • Cotter Corporation (N.S.L.)
  • Norfolk Southern Railway Company

Regulatory Watchlist

These are the government bodies currently involved in the cleanup and legal action. Their decisions will determine the future of the North St. Louis County Superfund Sites.

  • U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
  • Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
  • Department of Justice (DOJ)

Real change comes from the ground up. Support local environmental justice organizations in the St. Louis area that have been fighting this fight for years. Demand full transparency from the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers about the cleanup timeline and health risks. Corporate negligence thrives in silence. It’s our job to make noise.

The source document for this investigation is attached below.

This legal complaint against these evil corporations can be found at the Department of Justice’s website: https://www.justice.gov/d9/2024-12/cotternsrr_complaint_filed.pdf

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Aleeia
Aleeia

I'm Aleeia, the creator of this website.

I have 6+ years of experience as an independent researcher covering corporate misconduct, sourced from legal documents, regulatory filings, and professional legal databases.

My background includes a Supply Chain Management degree from Michigan State University's Eli Broad College of Business, and years working inside the industries I now cover.

Every post on this site was either written or personally reviewed and edited by me before publication.

Learn more about my research standards and editorial process by visiting my About page

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