Thursday, November 18, 2010

Veteran getting help instead of going to jail after standoff

Man arrested in standoff will be treated for PTSD
A man arrested after a standoff near Cooperstown, N.D., has been ordered to wear an electronic tracking bracelet for a year and receive treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.
By: Archie Ingersoll, Grand Forks Herald


A man arrested after a standoff near Cooperstown, N.D., has been ordered to wear an electronic tracking bracelet for a year and receive treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Matthew Helm, 40, served in the first Persian Gulf War, and he was a helicopter door-gunner during fighting in the 1990s in Somalia in the 1990s, Helm’s attorney, Ralph Carter, said Wednesday.

“As a result of his service, he developed PTSD, and it was determined by the VA that he is 100 percent disabled,” Carter said.

Helm’s arraignment was set for Wednesday, but it was cancelled because his case was resolved earlier this month after he pleaded guilty to three misdemeanor assault charges in Nelson County and three misdemeanors in Griggs County, including disorderly conduct, preventing arrest and carrying a concealed weapon.

Helm must spend seven weeks in an inpatient PTSD treatment program at a veterans’ facility in Topeka, Kan., and 1½ years in an outpatient program. He was given credit for having served 158 days in jail.
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Man arrested in standoff will be treated for PTSD

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