On April 25, 2014, Flint, Michigan switched its water source from Detroit to the Flint River as a cost-saving measure under state emergency management. Within months, residents complained of discolored, foul-smelling water causing rashes and hair loss. Michigan Department of Environmental Quality officials knew the water was corroding lead pipes and leaching neurotoxic lead into drinking water. Instead of adding required corrosion control chemicals costing $140 per day, they falsified testing protocols, attacked independent researchers, and dismissed a pediatrician's blood-lead data showing children were being poisoned. The cover-up continued for 18 months while an estimated 9,000 children under six were exposed to elevated lead levels.
On April 25, 2014, at 11:43 a.m., Flint Mayor Dayne Walling pushed a button at the Flint Water Treatment Plant, officially switching the city's water source from the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department to the Flint River. The assembled crowd of city officials applauded. Walling called it "regular, good, pure drinking water." It was the culmination of an 18-month planning process driven primarily by one factor: cost savings under state-imposed emergency management.
Flint had been under emergency management since 2011, with state-appointed managers empowered to override elected officials and make unilateral budgetary decisions. Emergency Manager Darnell Earley, appointed in October 2013, made the final decision to switch to river water. The move was presented as temporary — a bridge solution while awaiting completion of the Karegnondi Water Authority pipeline that would provide Lake Huron water directly to Flint, bypassing Detroit's system.
What the assembled officials celebrating the switch did not mention was a critical omission: the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality had failed to require corrosion control treatment for the river water. The Flint River's water is approximately eight times more corrosive than Lake Huron water. Without anti-corrosion chemicals, the acidic river water would leach lead from the city's aging pipes directly into drinking water.
The cost of the corrosion control chemicals? Approximately $140 per day, according to later analysis by the Flint Water Advisory Task Force. For a projected annual savings of $5 million, state and city officials declined to spend $51,100 per year on chemicals that would have prevented the poisoning of thousands of children.
Within weeks of the switch, Flint residents began complaining. The water was discolored, ranging from yellow to brown. It smelled of chemicals. Residents reported rashes, hair loss, and gastrointestinal illness. City officials responded with assurances that the water met all safety standards and that discoloration was merely an aesthetic issue.
In August 2014, the city issued a boil-water advisory after tests showed total coliform bacteria. The city responded by increasing chlorine in the water system. The higher chlorine levels created a new problem: the formation of total trihalomethanes (TTHMs), a byproduct of chlorine interacting with organic matter in the river water. TTHMs are linked to cancer and reproductive harm.
In October 2014, General Motors announced it would stop using Flint water at its engine plant because the water was corroding engine parts. The company arranged to reconnect to Lake Huron water through a separate township line. If the water was corroding metal engine components, it was also corroding the metal pipes in Flint's water distribution system — including lead service lines and lead-soldered joints that connected to approximately half of Flint's 56,000 homes.
"People were bringing jugs of brown water to city council meetings. They were showing us rashes on their children. And officials kept saying the water met all standards."
Melissa Mays, Flint resident and activist — Interview, MLive, 2016In January 2015, Detroit offered to reconnect Flint to its water system for free until the KWA pipeline was complete. Emergency Manager Jerry Ambrose, who had succeeded Earley in January, declined. A reconnection would have ended the crisis before it fully escalated. Instead, Ambrose focused on the costs of reconnection, ignoring the mounting evidence that the water was unsafe.
In February 2015, Flint resident LeeAnne Walters contacted the city after noticing that her twin boys, ages four, had developed rashes and that her 14-year-old son's hair was falling out. City officials tested her water and found lead levels of 104 parts per billion — nearly seven times the EPA's action level of 15 ppb. Under EPA rules, water systems must take corrective action when more than 10% of samples exceed 15 ppb.
Walters demanded further testing. A follow-up sample showed 397 ppb. She began researching water contamination and discovered that Flint had switched to river water without adding corrosion control — a violation of the federal Lead and Copper Rule for water systems of Flint's size.
Walters contacted the EPA. Her call was routed to Miguel Del Toral, a regulations manager in EPA Region 5's Ground Water and Drinking Water Branch. Del Toral had worked on lead contamination issues for years and immediately recognized the problem. He arranged for EPA staff to conduct independent testing at Walters' home. The results shocked him: one sample measured 13,200 ppb — 880 times the EPA action level and high enough to be classified as hazardous waste.
Del Toral drafted an internal memo dated February 27, 2015, detailing what he had found. The memo warned that Flint's lack of corrosion control was causing lead to leach from pipes at dangerous levels, that the city's sampling methodology appeared designed to minimize results, and that children were at risk of permanent neurological damage from lead exposure. He sent the memo to his supervisors at EPA Region 5 and to Michigan DEQ officials.
Rather than triggering emergency action, Del Toral's memo was suppressed. Susan Hedman, Administrator of EPA Region 5, sent it to MDEQ and accepted their assurances that the situation was under control. MDEQ officials told Hedman that Del Toral was mistaken about the regulatory requirements and that Flint's water was safe.
MDEQ spokesman Brad Wurfel went further, calling Del Toral a "rogue employee" in communications with Michigan officials. Within the agency, MDEQ officials began coaching Flint water staff on how to conduct testing in ways that would produce lower lead readings.
Emails obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests documented the manipulation. MDEQ district engineer Michael Prysby instructed city staff to pre-flush taps for five minutes before collecting samples. This practice removes standing water — where lead concentration is highest — and replaces it with fresh water from the main, artificially lowering test results. Federal regulations explicitly require "first draw" samples to capture standing water lead levels.
In June 2015, when Flint's six-month compliance testing showed two samples with extremely high lead levels, MDEQ officials instructed the city to throw out the two highest readings, claiming they were invalid. Removing those samples brought Flint's 90th percentile result to 11 ppb — just below the EPA action level of 15 ppb. With the high samples included, Flint would have exceeded the action level and triggered mandatory public notification and corrective action.
Virginia Tech professor Marc Edwards later called this "technical fraud" — using correct procedures incorrectly to achieve a predetermined outcome. The manipulated testing allowed MDEQ to claim Flint's water met federal standards while residents drank water with lead levels that would trigger hazardous waste protocols.
In spring 2015, LeeAnne Walters contacted Marc Edwards at Virginia Tech. Edwards had previously exposed lead contamination in Washington, DC's water system and understood how water utilities could manipulate testing to hide problems. He agreed to organize an independent water testing campaign in Flint.
In August 2015, Edwards and a team of Virginia Tech students, along with local volunteers, collected 277 water samples from Flint homes using proper first-draw methodology. The results, released September 8, 2015, were damning: 40% of homes sampled had lead levels above 15 ppb. Multiple homes exceeded 1,000 ppb. Five homes exceeded 5,000 ppb.
Edwards' team also analyzed the city's official testing data and found systematic irregularities consistent with the coaching documented in MDEQ emails. They identified homes with lead service lines that should have been included in compliance testing but were excluded, sampling locations selected to minimize lead readings, and evidence of pre-flushing.
MDEQ spokesman Brad Wurfel immediately attacked Edwards' findings. In a September 15 interview with Michigan Radio, Wurfel said: "Let me start here — anyone who is concerned about lead in the drinking water in Flint can relax." He dismissed Edwards' research and suggested the professor was seeking publicity.
Two weeks later, Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, a pediatrician at Hurley Medical Center in Flint, released her own analysis. She had obtained blood-lead level data for children treated at Hurley and compared results before and after the April 2014 water switch. Her findings, presented September 24, 2015, showed:
Wurfel again attacked the messenger, calling Hanna-Attisha's conclusions "unfortunate" and claiming state data showed no increase in blood-lead levels. Within days, as media scrutiny intensified, Wurfel issued a public apology. Governor Rick Snyder acknowledged Hanna-Attisha's data was correct on October 1, 2015, and announced that Flint would reconnect to Detroit water.
The reconnection occurred on October 16, 2015 — 18 months after the switch to river water. By then, an estimated 9,000 children under age six had been exposed to elevated lead levels.
As the lead contamination became public, another crisis emerged: a deadly outbreak of Legionnaires' disease linked to the water system. Legionnaires' disease is a severe pneumonia caused by Legionella bacteria, which thrive in warm water systems and are typically controlled through proper disinfection.
Between June 2014 and November 2015, Genesee County experienced an unusual cluster of Legionnaires' cases: 90 confirmed cases and 12 deaths. Epidemiological investigation would later determine the outbreak was linked to the Flint water system. The switch to corrosive river water without proper treatment had damaged the protective biofilm inside pipes, creating conditions where Legionella could proliferate. Reduced chlorine residuals in parts of the system allowed bacteria to survive.
Michigan health officials knew about the outbreak as it was happening. Health Director Nick Lyon was informed in March 2015. Governor Snyder's Chief of Staff Dennis Muchmore received briefings. Yet the state did not issue public warnings. Residents were not told to take precautions. The outbreak continued.
The public learned about the Legionnaires' outbreak in January 2016 — nine months after state officials were informed and after the death toll had reached at least 12. In June 2017, Lyon was charged with two counts of involuntary manslaughter, making him the highest-ranking Michigan official ever charged with homicide while in office. Prosecutors argued his failure to warn the public caused deaths.
"They knew people were dying. They had the information in March 2015. They didn't tell anyone until January 2016. How many of those 12 deaths could have been prevented?"
Marc Edwards — Testimony before U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, March 2016The involuntary manslaughter charges against Lyon were eventually dismissed in 2022, with a judge ruling prosecutors failed to establish sufficient evidence that Lyon's specific actions caused specific deaths. But the documented timeline — officials informed in March, public notification in January, 12 deaths in between — remained undisputed.
Beginning in 2016, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette brought criminal charges against 15 current and former state and local officials. Charges included involuntary manslaughter, misconduct in office, willful neglect of duty, tampering with evidence, and conspiracy.
The highest-profile prosecutions targeted:
The prosecutions produced mixed results. Michael Prysby pleaded no contest to a reduced charge of misconduct in office in 2017 and received probation. Several other officials reached plea agreements. But the major felony cases stalled.
In June 2019, Michigan Solicitor General Fadwa Hammoud, who took over the prosecution after Schuette left office, dismissed all pending charges, citing procedural problems with how evidence had been presented to the grand jury. Hammoud announced the investigation would restart from the beginning.
In January 2021, Hammoud's team filed new charges against nine officials, including Governor Snyder himself. Snyder was charged with two misdemeanor counts of willful neglect of duty — the first time a Michigan governor had faced criminal charges related to actions in office. Former Health Director Lyon was again charged with involuntary manslaughter.
But in June 2022, the Michigan Court of Appeals dismissed charges against Snyder, Lyon, and seven other officials, ruling that the one-judge grand jury process used to issue indictments was improper. The court did not address the underlying facts or whether crimes had occurred — only that the legal process for charging defendants was flawed.
As of 2024, no senior Michigan official has been convicted or served prison time for the Flint water crisis. The most significant conviction was Michael Prysby's plea to a single misdemeanor.
While criminal prosecutions faltered, civil litigation produced accountability of a different kind. In November 2021, a federal judge approved a $626 million settlement to compensate Flint residents harmed by the water crisis. The settlement resolved consolidated lawsuits against the State of Michigan, the City of Flint, and engineering firm Veolia North America.
The settlement structure allocated 80% of funds to children who were under 18 at the time of exposure, recognizing that lead poisoning causes permanent neurological damage with lifelong consequences. Individual payouts varied based on documented lead exposure levels and demonstrated harm, with the highest payments going to children with blood-lead levels above 15 micrograms per deciliter.
Former Governor Snyder agreed to a separate settlement in August 2023 requiring him to give nine hours of videotaped deposition testimony and turn over internal documents from his time in office. The testimony was used in ongoing civil cases. Snyder's legal team fought the deposition requirement for years, arguing executive privilege, before agreeing to the settlement.
Lead is a neurotoxin with no safe level of exposure. It permanently damages developing brains. Children exposed to lead show reduced IQ, learning disabilities, attention deficit disorders, and behavioral problems. Effects persist into adulthood, affecting educational attainment, employment, and lifetime earnings.
A 2023 study published in JAMA Pediatrics analyzed academic outcomes for children exposed to Flint water during the crisis. Researchers found that children exposed to contaminated water during infancy or early childhood had 3.39 times higher odds of having a learning disability compared to unexposed children. The effects were dose-dependent: higher lead exposure correlated with worse outcomes.
The study controlled for socioeconomic factors, prior academic performance, and other variables. The association between Flint water exposure and learning disabilities remained statistically significant. The researchers concluded: "These findings suggest that the Flint water crisis may have long-term implications for the educational trajectories of affected children."
Lead exposure also increases risk of kidney damage, cardiovascular problems, and reproductive harm. A 2021 analysis estimated the lifetime economic cost of lead exposure during the Flint water crisis at $395 million, primarily from reduced lifetime earnings due to cognitive impairment.
Beyond documented medical harm, the crisis destroyed community trust. Residents were told their water was safe when it wasn't. When they reported problems, officials dismissed them. When independent researchers proved contamination, the state attacked the researchers. When pediatricians showed children were being poisoned, officials claimed the data was wrong.
"I still don't drink Flint water. I don't care what they say now. They lied to us for 18 months. Why would I trust them?"
Nakiya Wakes, Flint resident — Interview, PBS NewsHour, 2020As of 2024, many Flint residents still do not drink unfiltered tap water, despite state assurances that the water now meets federal standards. The psychological harm — the broken trust between government and governed — may take generations to repair.
The Flint water crisis was ultimately an infrastructure crisis. The city's water distribution system included thousands of lead service lines connecting homes to water mains. These lines, installed decades ago when lead pipes were standard, were safe as long as water chemistry was properly controlled. Corrosion control treatment coats pipes with a mineral scale that prevents lead from leaching into water.
When Flint switched to corrosive river water without corrosion control, that protective scale dissolved. Lead leached directly into drinking water. The problem was predictable — corrosion control has been standard water treatment practice for decades. The Federal Lead and Copper Rule, adopted in 1991, specifically requires corrosion control for large water systems.
MDEQ officials claimed Flint was exempt from the corrosion control requirement because it was treating the Flint River as groundwater under the direct influence of surface water — a regulatory classification that would have allowed delayed corrosion control. But this interpretation was incorrect. The EPA and independent water experts confirmed that Flint was required to implement corrosion control from day one of the switch.
After the crisis, Flint began a comprehensive lead service line replacement program. As of 2024, the city has replaced over 10,000 lead service lines at a cost exceeding $100 million, funded primarily by state and federal grants. The program is ongoing. Every dollar spent on pipe replacement is a dollar that could have been saved if state officials had spent $140 per day on corrosion control chemicals.
The full scope of official knowledge and decision-making became clear through documents obtained via Freedom of Information Act requests and subpoenas in criminal and civil litigation. Emails, memos, and internal communications documented:
The documentary record shows not a single catastrophic failure but a sustained pattern of decisions prioritizing cost savings over public health, dismissing citizen complaints, suppressing scientific evidence, and attacking researchers who exposed the truth.
The question central to criminal prosecutions and civil liability was: What did officials know and when did they know it? The documents provide clear answers:
State officials knew from the beginning that Flint's water was more corrosive than Detroit's water and that corrosion control would be necessary. They chose not to require it, claiming Flint was exempt — an interpretation later confirmed to be incorrect.
By February 2015, EPA had documented dangerous lead levels and warned Michigan officials. Rather than investigating, MDEQ officials characterized the EPA expert as "rogue" and accepted state agency assurances.
By March 2015, health officials knew about an unusual Legionnaires' outbreak with deaths. They did not warn the public for 10 months.
By June 2015, MDEQ officials were actively coaching city staff to manipulate testing protocols to keep official lead numbers below action levels.
Throughout 2015, residents complained about water quality, showing brown water to city council, reporting rashes and illness. Officials consistently dismissed complaints and insisted water met all standards.
The pattern documented in emails and testimony was not ignorance or incompetence. It was systematic concealment. Officials who knew or should have known there was a problem took actions to hide it, discredit those who reported it, and delay accountability.
In response to the crisis, Michigan enacted several reforms intended to prevent similar failures. The state revised its Lead and Copper Rule implementation, requiring more aggressive corrosion control and stricter sampling protocols. Michigan also passed legislation requiring lead testing in schools and childcare facilities, mandatory reporting of elevated blood-lead levels, and increased penalties for water quality violations.
At the federal level, Congress passed the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation (WIIN) Act in 2016, which included provisions for lead service line replacement funding and required water systems to notify consumers of lead testing results. The EPA revised the federal Lead and Copper Rule in 2021, strengthening corrosion control requirements and accelerating lead service line replacement timelines.
But policy reforms cannot restore trust. The Flint water crisis demonstrated how vulnerable communities are when government officials prioritize financial considerations over public health, when regulators become advocates for the industries they regulate, and when accountability systems fail.
The criminal prosecutions that might have established clear consequences for official misconduct largely failed due to procedural dismissals. The civil settlements provided compensation but not admission of wrongdoing. No senior official served prison time. Some officials simply retired with pensions.
The lesson of Flint is not that the system worked — independent researchers, citizen activists, and whistleblowers forced accountability over the objections of government officials at every level. It is that systems designed to protect public health can be systematically corrupted when decision-makers face no personal consequences for their failures.
The children of Flint will live with the neurological effects of lead poisoning for the rest of their lives. The cost was $140 per day in corrosion control chemicals. The officials who decided that was too expensive have faced minimal personal accountability.
That is the documented crime.