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Kristina Archena Baehr (, born 1980 or 1981) is an American trial attorney who specializes in bringing class actions on behalf of people who allege they were poisoned by environmental toxins. She has brought several lawsuits representing victims of the Red Hill water crisis at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam on Oahu. Early life, education and career Kristina Scurry was born to Pamela M. Scurry and Richardson G. Scurry Jr.; her father worked for an investment firm in Purchase, New York, and co-founded the Bible Literacy Project. She graduated from Princeton University and Yale Law School. At Yale, she authored a law review comment that examined the effect of mandatory minimum sentencing of sex crimes in South African criminal law. She argued that the existing structure favored judicial consideration of mitigating factors and should be replaced with a framework centered on aggravators. In 2007, she married fellow Princeton alumnus Evan Baehr. Baehr began her career with the Carter Center helping the Liberian Ministry of Justice launch a sex crimes prosecution unit. She was then a clerk for federal district judge Nancy Gertner. The Baehrs moved to Austin, Texas, where they had four children and where Kristina joined McKool Smith as a corporate litigator. Baehr believes that she and her children were being harmed by indoor "toxic mold", which is considered a myth by experts. The Baehrs said they spent $700,000 on home mold remediation. The number of claimants grew over the next year, reaching 7,500 represented by Just Well Law in three separate cases. The suits were filed under the Federal Tort Claims Act. Some of the plaintiffs against the Navy in the Red Hill litigation are active-duty service members. Although the doctrine bars most tort claims by active-duty personnel, Baehr has argued that it cannot be used to bar claims by service members for injuries they suffered off duty in their own homes. A bellwether trial for a limited number of plaintiffs began on April 29, 2024. The U.S. government admitted to liability for negligence at the fuel storage facility and that residents using the water line suffered injury.<ref name"CBS-2024" /> Baehr described the government's stipulation to liability as "historic".<ref name"Military.com - 2023" /> The trial is set to determine the extent of harm experienced by plaintiffs and whether the government failed to warn residents of the military base.<ref name="CBS-2024" />
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