A police officer searches for remains in a wrecked vehicle at a beach in Namie, Japan, near the stricken Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, on Monday, March 11, the second anniversary of the tsunami. Two years ago, a magnitude-9.0 earthquake unleashed a wall of water that killed nearly 16,000 people in northeast Japan and sparked the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25 years.
Police officers offer chrysanthemum flowers for tsunami victims in Namie on Monday after their search for remains of those still missing, two years after the disaster.
Police officers search for remains on the coast in Namie on Monday.
A Buddhist monk prays for tsunami victims at Arahama district in Sendai, Japan, on Monday.
People visit a memorial altar at the Okawa elementary school where at least 70 students died in the 2011 tsunami, in Ishinomaki, Japan, on Monday.
Vehicles that were abandoned two years ago sit in a field of reeds in Namie on Monday.
Children pray during a memorial ceremony to mark the second anniversary of the disaster in Kamaishi, Japan, on Monday.
Collapsed houses still line on a street in Namie on Monday.
Buddhist monks pray at the tsunami-devastated Disaster Prevention Center in Minamisanriku, Japan, on Monday.
A man mourns on Monday in front of a ship brought ashore by the 2011 tsunami in Kesennuma, Japan.
Volunteers clean pictures found in debris from the earthquake and tsunami disasters at the Tsukidate elementary school in Kesennuma, Japan, on Sunday, March 10.
Children in Minamisoma, Japan, float balloons while paying respects on Sunday, March 10, a day before the second anniversary of the disaster.
Japanese police officers dig through rubble in Miyagi Prefecture on Sunday.
Sun shines through the window of an area on Sunday that was devastated two years ago in Rikuzentakata, Iwate Prefecture.
A laundry shop remains deserted about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear facility on Sunday. The earthquake knocked the power plant offline, resulting in a meltdown of three reactors.
Japanese Buddhist monks chant and pay their respects to the victims on Sunday in Minamisoma.
A devastated area stands still Sunday in Odaka, a hard-hit city within the former exclusion zone set up after the Fukushima Daiichi facility had released radiation.
An abandoned house is filled with rubbish in Odaka on Sunday.
Students and volunteers light candles at Yuriage Junior High School during a commemoration ceremony on Sunday in Natori, Japan.
A boy takes part in an anti-nuclear march in Tokyo on Sunday. The radiation crisis that stemmed from the earthquake and tsunami shattered public trust in nuclear power.
Visitors walk in front of a replica of the "miracle" pine tree on Sunday in Rikuzentakata. It was the last surviving pine in what was once a sprawling grove of more than 70,000, standing as a symbol of hope amid the devastation.
A cemetery in Odaka has low visibility in heavy wind on Sunday. The city became a nuclear ghost town after the 2011 disaster.
Men sit on a bench in front of a temporary housing shelter on Thursday, March 7, in Motomiya, Fukushima Prefecture. Thousands were displaced in the aftermath of the earthquake.
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
Two years after Japan earthquake, tsunami
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Lawsuit over radiation exposure to crew of USS Ronald Reagan expands
- Lawyers say number of plaintiffs rises to 26 from initial 8
- Amended suit now seeks more than $2 billion in damages
- Crew members claim they suffered health problems after aid mission to Fukushima
(CNN) -- Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) faces mounting damages from the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster as more U.S. servicemembers joined a lawsuit accusing the Japanese national utility of lying about the risks involved in an aid effort to the stricken area in 2011.
Attorneys said the number of plaintiffs had grown to 26 from an initial eight, who filed their original lawsuit in December, and that 100 more were ready to join the lawsuit which is now seeking more than $2 billion, the Stars and Stripes newspaper reported late last week.
READ: TEPCO accused of lying over Fukushima
TEPCO confirmed that more plaintiffs had been added to the court petition filed with the U.S. District Court in California in December but did not give details.
"We would refrain from responding to the matter in relation to the contents of the detailed procedure of the lawsuit. In any case, we would like to properly cope with this lawsuit, following U.S. legal proceedings," the company said in a statement to the Tokyo Stock Exchange obtained Monday.
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The amended lawsuit increases the amount of damages lawyers are seeking for crew aboard the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier and other service vessels in the area who say they are suffering continuing health problems from the rescue effort that followed the devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck eastern Japan on March 11, 2011, crippling reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant.
Lawyers will still sue TEPCO for $40 million in compensation and punitive damages for each crew member but have increased the demand of $100 million for ongoing health monitoring and medical expenses to $1 billion, Stars and Stripes reported.
"At all relevant times, the defendant knew that the reactors and storage tanks at the [Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant] were then leaking and emitting high levels of radiation," the report said, citing the complaint.
It claims TEPCO knew the U.S. Navy would send the USS Ronald Reagan and other vessels to help, relying on what the utility was saying about the risks, adding: "At all relevant times herein, the defendant failed to warn the plaintiffs, the U.S. Navy and public officials of the properties and actual levels of radiation detected at the [plant] at that time."
The plaintiffs say they are suffering a range of disorders related to radiation exposure, from headaches and difficulty concentrating to rectal bleeding, thyroid problems, cancer and gynecological bleeding.
"At all times relevant herein, the Japanese government kept representing that there was no danger of radiation contamination to the USS Reagan (CVN-76) and/or its crew, that 'everything is under control,' 'all is OK, you can trust us,' and there is 'no immediate danger' or threat to human life, all the while lying through their teeth about the reactor meltdowns at FNPP," lawyers stated in the complaint.
The Navy "was lulled into a false sense of security" because it relied on TEPCO's "misrepresentations regarding health and safety," it continued.
The plaintiffs must now endure a lifetime of radiation poisoning and suffering which could have and should have been avoided
Lawsuit complaint
The suit also accuses TEPCO of failing to conduct adequate testing, designing a defective product, conducting deceptive business acts and practices, acting as a public nuisance and as a private nuisance and fraud.
"The Plaintiffs must now endure a lifetime of radiation poisoning and suffering which could have and should have been avoided," lawyers said.
Last October, TEPCO acknowledged that it had played down safety risks at the facility out of fear that they would lead to a plant shutdown.
The company said in a report that "severe accident measures" were taken in 2002, which included "containment venting and power supply cross-ties between units," but additional measures were never put in place.
Part of the reason, the report said, was a concern that implementing the new safety measures "could spread concern in the sitting community that there is a problem with the safety of current plants."
TEPCO added that taking such measures could also have added to "public anxiety and add momentum to anti-nuclear movements."
CNN's Junko Ogura, Tom Watkins and Lateef Mungin contributed to this report.