Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Three Marines die in Afghanistan

Three Marines die in Afghanistan

Staff report
Posted : Tuesday Jun 8, 2010 18:06:25 EDT

OCEANSIDE, Calif. — Three Marines with a Camp Pendleton, Calif.-based infantry battalion died Sunday after a vehicle accident in Afghanistan, military officials said.

The Pentagon identified the three as

Sgt. Brandon C. Bury, 26, of Kingwood, Texas;

Cpl. Donald M. Marler, 22, of St. Louis, Mo.; and

Lance Cpl. Derek Hernandez, 20, of Edinburg, Texas.

They were members of 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines, with the 1st Marine Division.


go here for more
Three Marines die in Afghanistan

Staff Sgt. Shane S. Barnard died defusing bomb to save others

Base holds memorial service for slain soldier

The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Jun 9, 2010 10:16:05 EDT

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — Joint Base Lewis-McChord is holding a memorial service Wednesday for a soldier killed May 19 in Afghanistan.

The Army said 38-year-old Staff Sgt. Shane S. Barnard of De Smet, S.D., was an explosives disposal specialist who was probably working on one device when he triggered a second homemade bomb.
read the rest here
Base holds memorial service for slain soldier

Helo shot down in Afghanistan, 4 killed

Helo shot down in Afghanistan, 4 killed

By Rahim Faiez and Rohan Sullivan - The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Jun 9, 2010 9:55:22 EDT

KABUL, Afghanistan — Insurgents shot down a NATO helicopter and killed four American troops in southern Afghanistan on Wednesday, the military said, in the latest bloodshed ahead of a major operation in the militants’ heartland.

NATO said the four died “after their helicopter was brought down by hostile fire” in Helmand province, part of a volatile region where Taliban still hold sway despite a buildup of U.S. troops.

Lt. Col. Joseph T. Breasseale, U.S. military spokesman in Kabul, confirmed the four troops killed were Americans, but the military and NATO gave no other details.
read more here
Helo shot down in Afghanistan, 4 killed

Unemployed Army Vet beats odds to run for Senate seat

Who Is Alvin Greene?
Tue Jun. 8, 2010 7:59 PM PDT
— Alvin Greene SCDP.org.
An unemployed 32-year-old black Army veteran with no campaign funds, no signs, and no website shocked South Carolina on Tuesday night by winning the Democratic Senate primary to oppose Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC). Alvin Greene, who currently lives in his family's home, defeated Vic Rawl, a former judge and state legislator who had a $186,000 campaign warchest and had already planned his next fundraising event. Despite the odds, Greene, who has been unemployed for the past nine months, said that he wasn't surprised by his victory. "I wasn’t surprised, but not really. I mean, just a little, but not much. I knew I was on top of my campaign, and just stayed on top of everything, I just—I wasn't surprised that much, just a little. I knew that I worked hard and did," Greene said in an interview.
read more here
http://motherjones.com/mojo/2010/06/alvin-greene-south-carolina
linked from RawStory

TBI, when brain doesn't work right, troops given Tylenol

With Brain Injuries, Soldiers Face Battle For Care
T. Christian Miller and Daniel Zwerdling


June 9, 2010
At the rapidly expanding base in Fort Bliss, Texas, along the U.S.-Mexico border, the military is racing to build new homes for 10,000 additional soldiers. Cranes stack prefabricated containers like children's blocks to erect barracks overnight. Bulldozers grind sagebrush desert into roads and runways.

Just down the street from the construction boom squats a tan, featureless building about the size of a convenience store. Completed nearly a year ago, it remains unopened, the doors locked.

Building 805 was supposed to house a clinic for traumatic brain injury, often called the signature wound of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead, it has become a symbol for soldiers here of what they call commanders' indifference to their problems.

"The system here has no mercy," said Sgt. Victor Medina, a decorated combat veteran who fought to receive treatment at Fort Bliss after suffering a brain injury during a roadside blast in Iraq last June. Since the explosion, Medina has had trouble reading, comprehending and doing simple tasks. "It's struggle after struggle."

Previously, NPR and ProPublica reported that the military has failed to diagnose brain injuries in troops who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Mild traumatic brain injuries, which doctors also call concussions, do not leave visible scars but can cause lasting mental and physical problems.
read more here
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=127542820

Rape, sex, abuse at University City nursing home for veterans

Report: Rape, sex, abuse at University City nursing home for veterans

By: Leisa Zigman

KSDK -- Missouri's Department of Health and Senior Services found serious violations regarding allegations of physical, sexual and verbal abuse inside a University City nursing home for veterans.

The I-Team obtained the 21 page report Tuesday night. The state had been investigating the K.F. Jammer Manor, West facility since April and recently completed its investigation.

According to the state's findings one resident made two allegations of rape but no one from the facility made a hotline call or alerted police as required by law. The resident eventually called 9-1-1. That same resident claimed she and a housekeeper had a sexual relationship. The report states, "During an interview the Director of Nursing said the resident alleged he/she had a sexual relationship with Housekeeper #1. Due to the resident's allegations, staff moved the housekeeper to the facility's other location. The Director of Nursing did not report any allegation of rape or a sexual relationship because, according to the report, she did not believe they happened.
go here for more
http://www.ksdk.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=203774&catid=3

Vietnam Vet wants to make a difference for homeless veterans

From life in uniform to life on the streets
New program seeks to aid homeless vets with mental illness

By John Carpenter, Special to the Tribune

June 9, 2010


It took one year in the Vietnam jungle to smash Walter Newman's mind to pieces. It took him 30 years to figure out that alcohol and drugs weren't going to put it back together. Now, working with a pilot program targeting homeless veterans with mental illnesses, he hopes to show fellow vets that if he can get his life back, they can too.

Newman, 58, will be part of a demonstration program being developed by Thresholds, a Chicago-based mental health agency. The Thresholds Veterans Project will target homeless vets with mental illnesses, offering a range of services from housing to treatment to peer support to employment-skills training.

"When I first realized I needed help, the first person I talked to was a veteran," Newman said. "That made a difference. Now I want to be that difference."


Newman's story is not unlike that of many Vietnam veterans. A graduate of Englewood High School, Newman enlisted in 1970, having been told he would study administration after basic training. Instead he was slated for the infantry, and served in combat in Vietnam from December 1970 to December 1971.


When he returned he couldn't find a job. He married and started a family. But that fell apart as he descended into more than 30 years of substance abuse. Newman is now living with a diagnosis of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. But for years after his combat service, he simply felt that he was stuck in a cycle of drug and alcohol abuse. He traveled to various cities, winding up homeless in Atlanta for five years.

"I felt like that was my destiny, that I was worthless and that I would always be homeless and eventually die," Newman said.
read more here
From life in uniform to life on the streets

Actor turned soldier gets new satisfaction

Actor turned soldier gets new satisfaction


Posted : Monday Jun 7, 2010 15:31:45 EDT

FAIRBANKS, Alaska — People join the Army from all walks of life, but few follow Scott Eberlein’s path.

The Los Angeles native was an actor who had a small part in the film “L.A. Confidential” and larger roles in TV shows such as “The X-Files” and “Nash Bridges.” But he left Hollywood behind following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

“To pursue something as trivial as acting was something I had taken for granted all my life; I didn’t think twice about it,” said Eberlein, now a captain stationed at Fort Wainwright with the Stryker brigade’s 1st battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment.

“When I saw it could be taken away in a moment, that spoke volumes to me.”
read more here
Actor turned soldier gets new satisfaction

PTSD:Growing need of National Guard and Reservists


This is one of the biggest reasons I made this video. The problem is, too few cities and towns are stepping up to help them really come home.

The risk of mental health problems may be more persistent among National Guard soldiers, the study suggests. A greater proportion of men and women in the National Guard than in the Army were diagnosed with PTSD and depression one year after their return, although the two groups had similar rates at the three-month mark.

"These were soldiers who were exposed to the same level of combat; who, by and large, reported similar rates of being attacked, ambushed, [and] rocketed; and who reported similar symptoms when they got home," says the lead author of the study, Major Jeffrey L. Thomas, Ph.D., the chief of military psychiatry at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, in Silver Spring, Maryland.


Depression, PTSD plague many Iraq vets
By Amanda Gardner, Health.com
June 7, 2010 5:30 p.m. EDT


STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Up to 31 percent of soldiers returning from combat in Iraq experience depression or PTSD
In extreme cases, relationship problems and stress can lead to suicide
The time between deployments may not be sufficient for many soldiers to recover

(Health.com) -- Up to 31 percent of soldiers returning from combat in Iraq experience depression or post-traumatic stress disorder that affects their jobs, relationships, or home life, according to a new study by Army researchers.

For as many as 14 percent of these veterans, depression and PTSD cause severe problems in their daily life. These problems are often accompanied by alcohol misuse and aggressive behavior, the study found.

"These things begin to snowball," says Robert Bossarte, Ph.D., an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Rochester Medical Center, in Rochester, New York. "Your work performance suffers; you experience job loss and economic strain."

In extreme cases, the resulting relationship problems and stress can lead to suicide, adds Bossarte, who was not involved in the new study.

The researchers analyzed mental health surveys from more than 13,000 Army and National Guard infantrymen who fought in Iraq. The soldiers completed the surveys between 2004 and 2007, three and 12 months after returning to the U.S.
go here for more
http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/06/07/iraq.vets.ptsd/

also


National Guard Troops question Army Weekend Warrior Healthcare
Robert L. Hanafin

Members of an Oregon National Guard unit have made complaints about medical care they are receiving or have received from the Regular Army in a throwback to the Weekend Warrior mentality of active duty Regular Army prior to the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. Well, frankly an RA attitude of the Guard as weekend warriors was held as the Guard really did transform from an expectation of being weekend warriors to becoming part of the Total Force. We believe that the Guard has earned the right to have that attitude pushed back to the Vietnam War Era when the National Guard truly were weekend warriors enlisting to avoid combat.

In order to politically avoid the publicly unpopular Selective Service Draft, but to have the adequate bodies needed to sustain wartime operations tempo of multi-deployments to two war zones, the Pentagon and Congress has exploited the use of each state’s National Guard. While this approach of avoiding THE DRAFT allows the vast majority of Americans’ to not have to relate to the war(s) that only our federal government, Pentagon, and war profiteers are committed to, it is our National Guard troops and families who take the heat.
click link for more

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Comfort in an hour of greatest need

Comfort in an hour of greatest need
Chaplain Rick Bulman serves sheriff’s office to assist both the public and emergency responders



DEBBY ABE; Staff writer
Rick Bulman always asks prospective police chaplains if they’ve ever cradled a dead baby or seen people with their heads shot off.

Bulman has. Far too many times.

As the full-time chaplain for the Pierce County Sheriff’s Office, he sees the bodies and emotional wreckage of some of the most heartwrenching deaths in the county.

He gives people the worst news of their lives, and as they collapse in disbelief and grief, he helps them navigate those first few horrible hours.

In 2008, he told Judith Mitchell-Ballard her three young daughters had perished in a fire in Graham.

In 2009, he told Angela Harrison her husband had killed himself. Hours later, he broke the news that all five of her children were dead as well.

Last month, he accompanied the mother of slain Deputy Kent Mundell to memorial ceremonies in Washington, D.C., but returned early to confront another tragedy: 11-year Deputy Allen Myron had fatally shot his in-laws in Gig Harbor before killing himself.

But it did. It took a divorce, multiple jobs, a conversion to Christianity, and finally visiting the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall in Washington, D.C., in 1989 before he realized that he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder. Failing to deal with the disorder caused him to be a “major jerk” to his first wife and to his current wife, Kathi, during the first decade of their marriage.

“Anger is the only emotion I showed. And control. It’s a subconscious thing, but when you’re not in control, something bad happens. You have to realize also that military and cops basically are taught to react without thinking to any stimulus. If you take time to think, somebody gets hurts or dies.”

Kathi Bulman recalls he was so controlling, she had to ask permission to go to the grocery store. “He would tell me he how embarrassed he was if my purse wasn’t in order,” she said.

Once he began confronting the stress disorder and the couple grew as Christians, she said, their marriage flourished. The Parkland couple have four adult children and 14 grandchildren.

Today, he leads a military veterans support group in Federal Way and serves as the western state coordinator for a veterans group called Point Man Ministries.



Read more: Comfort in an hour of greatest need


Chaplains follow strict code

Lives shaded by grief: The families of slain police officers

Records reveal horrific details of night Pierce County deputy shot in-laws, himself

body of boy found Officials believe he is one of two missing persons

Pierce deputy's motives in killing in-laws remain unclear