Attorney: Death row inmate missing part of brain
BRETT BARROUQUERE
Associated Press
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Kevin Wayne Dunlap's decision to plead guilty to killing three children and attacking a woman in her home near Fort Campbell caught his attorneys by surprise. Now, they think they understand why.
Defense attorneys say the former special operations soldier is missing the frontal lobe in his brain that controls impulses and decision making. The damage rendered Dunlap incompetent to plead guilty to a capital offense, defense attorney Kathleen Schmidt wrote in a brief to the Kentucky Supreme Court, which will hear arguments in Dunlap's case Aug. 16 in Frankfort.
Schmidt raised the issue of Dunlap's competency in a brief and also wrote that the motivations behind Dunlap's decision to plead guilty "are murky at best, unfathomable at their heart."
"Dunlap's behavior was perplexing from the start," Schmidt said. "In short, he was willing to plead guilty even though he did not even know for certain what he was pleading to at the time the judge conducted the plea colloquy and he admitted guilt.
What could be more impulsive?"
The judge who sentenced Dunlap to death, as well as prosecutors, say he's been examined and they found no basis for a claim of mental incompetence.
Dunlap, 40, was sentenced to death March 19, 2010. He pleaded guilty to stabbing and killing 5-year-old Ethan Frensley, 17-year-old Kayla Williams and 14-year-old Kortney Frensley when they returned home from school on Oct. 15, 2008, in Roaring Springs, near the sprawling Fort Campbell military installation on the Kentucky-Tennessee state line. Dunlap remains on Kentucky's death row at the state penitentiary in Eddyville.
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Wednesday, August 1, 2012
DoD outlines impact of ‘irrational’ budget cuts
DoD outlines impact of ‘irrational’ budget cuts
By Rick Maze
Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Aug 1, 2012
An Obama administration decision to exempt military personnel programs from potential across-the-board budget cuts in January does not mean troops and their families would feel no impact from the budget process known as sequestration.
Testifying before the House Armed Services Committee, Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter warned of potential widespread effects.
For service members, retirees and families, Carter warned, reductions in health care funding would result in “delays in payments to service providers and, potentially, some denial of service” under the Tricare health care program.
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By Rick Maze
Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Aug 1, 2012
An Obama administration decision to exempt military personnel programs from potential across-the-board budget cuts in January does not mean troops and their families would feel no impact from the budget process known as sequestration.
Testifying before the House Armed Services Committee, Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter warned of potential widespread effects.
For service members, retirees and families, Carter warned, reductions in health care funding would result in “delays in payments to service providers and, potentially, some denial of service” under the Tricare health care program.
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An Anniversary of Anguish
In August of 2007 one of the first post I put up on this blog was Why Isn't the Press on a Suicide Watch? because of a report written by Greg Mitchell. The link must have been broken since then but the truth of his report shows that the link between service and suicide has not been broken.
I did what I usually do with a suicide report. I made it personal. We can look at a number and then move on but a name, a story about the person or the voice of a family left behind to grieve makes that "number" matter.
There is a very long list on that post and that's why I am so depressed today.
Wounded Times Blog is 5 years old this month and I am still having to post about military suicides along side of claims the DOD and the VA are doing something about all of this. They also claim what they are doing will work. Nothing has worked.
So I sit here reading more emails and comments from families after they had to bury their sons and daughters, wondering why they came home from combat but didn't want to live anymore. Wondering what they could have done. Wondering why no one told them about what they are painfully discovering now.
This is not an anniversary to celebrate. It is one of anguish because of how little has been actually achieved.
Why Isn't the Press on a Suicide Watch?
You'd never know that at least 3% of all American deaths in Iraq are due to self-inflicted wounds. And that doesn't include the many vets who have killed themselves after returning home.
By Greg Mitchell
NEW YORK (August 13, 2007) -- Would it surprise you to learn that according to official Pentagon figures, at least 118 U.S. military personnel in Iraq have committed suicide since April 2003? That number does not include many unconfirmed reports, or those who served in the war and then killed themselves at home (a sizable, if uncharted, number).
While troops who have died in "hostile action" -- and those gravely injured and rehabbing at Walter Reed and other hospitals -- have gained much wider media attention in recent years, the suicides (about 3% of our overall Iraq death toll) remain in the shadows.
I did what I usually do with a suicide report. I made it personal. We can look at a number and then move on but a name, a story about the person or the voice of a family left behind to grieve makes that "number" matter.
There is a very long list on that post and that's why I am so depressed today.
Wounded Times Blog is 5 years old this month and I am still having to post about military suicides along side of claims the DOD and the VA are doing something about all of this. They also claim what they are doing will work. Nothing has worked.
So I sit here reading more emails and comments from families after they had to bury their sons and daughters, wondering why they came home from combat but didn't want to live anymore. Wondering what they could have done. Wondering why no one told them about what they are painfully discovering now.
This is not an anniversary to celebrate. It is one of anguish because of how little has been actually achieved.
Soldier with PTSD sues D.A. for lack of care
Veteran with PTSD, jailed on attempted murder charges, sues D.A.
By David Zucchino
July 31, 2012
WILMINGTON, N.C. -- A North Carolina soldier diagnosed with combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder has filed a civil lawsuit against a local district attorney for allegedly failing to allow access to specialized PTSD treatment while the soldier is imprisoned on attempted-murder charges.
Staff Sgt. Joshua Eisenhauer, 30, has asked that his case be transferred from civilian courts to the military justice system so that he can receive specialized PTSD treatment mandated by the military. The soldier's civil suit, filed last week, alleges that his right to comprehensive mental health treatment has been violated by the Cumberland County, N.C., district attorney's refusal to transfer jurisdiction.
Eisenhauer was charged in January with 15 counts of attempted murder and assault for firing on firefighters and police responding to a minor fire in Eisenhauer’s apartment complex in Fayetteville. Eisenhauer and his attorney say the soldier was experiencing PTSD-related flashbacks and believed that police were Afghan insurgents attacking his position.
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Parents say Fort Bragg soldier charged with shooting at firefighters has PTSD
By David Zucchino
July 31, 2012
Staff Sgt. Joshua Eisenhauer, with his mother Dawn Erickson, was diagnosed with severe PTSD from two combat tours in Afghanistan. Charged with attempted murder after opening fire on emergency workers, he said he believed police and firemen were insurgents attacking his position. (Courtesy of Dawn Erickson)
WILMINGTON, N.C. -- A North Carolina soldier diagnosed with combat-related post-traumatic stress disorder has filed a civil lawsuit against a local district attorney for allegedly failing to allow access to specialized PTSD treatment while the soldier is imprisoned on attempted-murder charges.
Staff Sgt. Joshua Eisenhauer, 30, has asked that his case be transferred from civilian courts to the military justice system so that he can receive specialized PTSD treatment mandated by the military. The soldier's civil suit, filed last week, alleges that his right to comprehensive mental health treatment has been violated by the Cumberland County, N.C., district attorney's refusal to transfer jurisdiction.
Eisenhauer was charged in January with 15 counts of attempted murder and assault for firing on firefighters and police responding to a minor fire in Eisenhauer’s apartment complex in Fayetteville. Eisenhauer and his attorney say the soldier was experiencing PTSD-related flashbacks and believed that police were Afghan insurgents attacking his position.
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Parents say Fort Bragg soldier charged with shooting at firefighters has PTSD
Four people charged with kidnapping and torturing soldier
Four charged with kidnapping JBLM soldier for “snitch” money
STACIA GLENN
Staff writer
Published July 31, 2012
A Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier was kidnapped and tortured last week by four people who sold him drugs and then demanded money because they thought he was a snitch, Pierce County prosecutors allege.
The 23-year-old soldier was tied up with electrical cord, Tased, shot with a pellet gun more than 100 times and repeatedly punched while being held in a mobile home in the 14600 block of Union Avenue Southwest, prosecutors said.
On Monday, prosecutors charged Frederick Clifford, 34; Melissa Parr, 33; Krista James, 30; and Jacques Gerber, 33, with first-degree kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment.
Gerber and Parr also face charges of unlawful possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and unlawful use of a building for drug purposes.
A bench warrant has been issued for Jacques Gerber’s arrest. The other defendants are in custody and pleaded not guilty at their arraignments Monday.
The victim reported the incident July 25 after persuading Clifford to take him to the JBLM gate so he could get cash from a bank on post, prosecutors said. Instead, he asked a clerk at the gate to call Lakewood police. Clifford was arrested and the others later taken into custody.
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STACIA GLENN
Staff writer
Published July 31, 2012
A Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier was kidnapped and tortured last week by four people who sold him drugs and then demanded money because they thought he was a snitch, Pierce County prosecutors allege.
The 23-year-old soldier was tied up with electrical cord, Tased, shot with a pellet gun more than 100 times and repeatedly punched while being held in a mobile home in the 14600 block of Union Avenue Southwest, prosecutors said.
On Monday, prosecutors charged Frederick Clifford, 34; Melissa Parr, 33; Krista James, 30; and Jacques Gerber, 33, with first-degree kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment.
Gerber and Parr also face charges of unlawful possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver and unlawful use of a building for drug purposes.
A bench warrant has been issued for Jacques Gerber’s arrest. The other defendants are in custody and pleaded not guilty at their arraignments Monday.
The victim reported the incident July 25 after persuading Clifford to take him to the JBLM gate so he could get cash from a bank on post, prosecutors said. Instead, he asked a clerk at the gate to call Lakewood police. Clifford was arrested and the others later taken into custody.
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Opera opens for Iraq veterans with PTSD
First opera about Iraq War reaches out to veterans suffering from PTSD
By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
NBC News
Can the stirring sounds of opera reach out to a young generation of veterans dealing with the pain of post-traumatic stress disorder? That's what Marine and Iraq War vet Christian Ellis and Iraqi American playwright Heather Raffo are hoping.
Along with composer Tobin Stokes, Ellis and Raffo worked to set Ellis' wartime experiences to music, creating "Fallujah," the first-ever opera written about the Iraq War.
But it wasn't easy for Raffo and Ellis to come together to work on the project. Ellis said that while it's hard for him to admit he held prejudice against those of Iraqi descent, those feelings were there.
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By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
NBC News
Can the stirring sounds of opera reach out to a young generation of veterans dealing with the pain of post-traumatic stress disorder? That's what Marine and Iraq War vet Christian Ellis and Iraqi American playwright Heather Raffo are hoping.
Along with composer Tobin Stokes, Ellis and Raffo worked to set Ellis' wartime experiences to music, creating "Fallujah," the first-ever opera written about the Iraq War.
But it wasn't easy for Raffo and Ellis to come together to work on the project. Ellis said that while it's hard for him to admit he held prejudice against those of Iraqi descent, those feelings were there.
read more here
Veterans Courts help veterans succeed
Vets helping vets succeed
NEW TREATMENT COURT WILL SPECIFICALLY TARGET CONVICTED VETERANS WHO ALSO HAVE UNDERLYING, RELATED ISSUES
KRISTEN ZAMBO
The Journal Times
Veterans and crime
RACINE COUNTY — In about three months, what is believed to be the nation’s 92nd specialty treatment court for military veterans will open in southeastern Wisconsin and, at least initially, will operate from a Racine County courtroom.
This post-conviction Veteran’s Treatment Court is designed to combine substance abuse and mental health treatment, federal benefits and services already available to veterans, and punishment for the crimes they committed, advocates said Tuesday during an unveiling of the specialty court.
Proponents say they want to treat the underlying problems — such as alcohol abuse, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder or drug addiction — which led to these veterans breaking the law.
“It stops the revolving door through the criminal justice system,” Racine County Circuit Judge Eugene Gasiorkiewicz said Tuesday. “If we get these people early, their chance of success is greater than later on. This is less money that the county has to spend (later).”
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NEW TREATMENT COURT WILL SPECIFICALLY TARGET CONVICTED VETERANS WHO ALSO HAVE UNDERLYING, RELATED ISSUES
KRISTEN ZAMBO
The Journal Times
Veterans and crime
According to Wisconsin Department of Corrections statistics:
• Racine County had 12,432 veterans
• Kenosha County had 10,439 veterans
• Walworth County had 6,763 veterans
• The three-county judicial district had a combined total of 29,634 veterans
• In the three-county judicial district, a total of 330 veterans were incarcerated
— Figures as of Sept. 30, 2011
If discharged, it must have been an honorable discharge or general discharge with honorable conditions, according to program requirements. Combat experience is not required
RACINE COUNTY — In about three months, what is believed to be the nation’s 92nd specialty treatment court for military veterans will open in southeastern Wisconsin and, at least initially, will operate from a Racine County courtroom.
This post-conviction Veteran’s Treatment Court is designed to combine substance abuse and mental health treatment, federal benefits and services already available to veterans, and punishment for the crimes they committed, advocates said Tuesday during an unveiling of the specialty court.
Proponents say they want to treat the underlying problems — such as alcohol abuse, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder or drug addiction — which led to these veterans breaking the law.
“It stops the revolving door through the criminal justice system,” Racine County Circuit Judge Eugene Gasiorkiewicz said Tuesday. “If we get these people early, their chance of success is greater than later on. This is less money that the county has to spend (later).”
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Army Dumps Special PTSD Screenings
Army Dumps Special PTSD Screenings
Austin Jenkins
OPB News
July 31, 2012
The U.S. Army is revising the way it diagnoses soldiers with post traumatic stress disorder. In the Northwest, it means the Army will no longer use a special psychiatric unit at Madigan Army Medical Center near Tacoma.
Some soldiers at Madigan complained the psychiatric team downgraded or reversed their PTSD diagnoses. That limited what benefits they are eligible for.
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also
Army reinstates medical center head in PTSD investigation
Austin Jenkins
OPB News
July 31, 2012
The U.S. Army is revising the way it diagnoses soldiers with post traumatic stress disorder. In the Northwest, it means the Army will no longer use a special psychiatric unit at Madigan Army Medical Center near Tacoma.
Some soldiers at Madigan complained the psychiatric team downgraded or reversed their PTSD diagnoses. That limited what benefits they are eligible for.
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also
Army reinstates medical center head in PTSD investigation
Sergeant gets 30 days for Pvt. Chen
Army sergeant sentenced to 30 days for private's suicide death
By David Zucchino
July 31, 2012
WILMINGTON, N.C. -- Army Sgt. Adam Holcomb was sentenced to 30 days in prison Tuesday and was reduced in rank for assaulting and maltreating Pvt. Danny Chen, 19, a Chinese American who endured abuse and ethnic slurs before committing suicide in Afghanistanon Oct. 3.
A court-martial panel of 10 service members could have sentenced Holcomb, 30, to a maximum of two years in prison with a dishonorable discharge. He was convicted at Ft. Bragg, N.C., on Monday of assault and maltreatment for dragging Chen across a rocky pathway, bloodying his back, and for calling him "dragon lady’’ and other slurs.
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By David Zucchino
July 31, 2012
WILMINGTON, N.C. -- Army Sgt. Adam Holcomb was sentenced to 30 days in prison Tuesday and was reduced in rank for assaulting and maltreating Pvt. Danny Chen, 19, a Chinese American who endured abuse and ethnic slurs before committing suicide in Afghanistanon Oct. 3.
A court-martial panel of 10 service members could have sentenced Holcomb, 30, to a maximum of two years in prison with a dishonorable discharge. He was convicted at Ft. Bragg, N.C., on Monday of assault and maltreatment for dragging Chen across a rocky pathway, bloodying his back, and for calling him "dragon lady’’ and other slurs.
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Marine Gunnery Sgt. Jonathan Gifford 2nd KIA in a week from Palm Bay
Marine killed in Afghanistan was due home in a month
Gifford is 2nd service member from Palm Bay to die in a week
Written by
R. Norman Moody
FLORIDA TODAY
12:48 AM, Aug 1, 2012
Marine Gunnery Sgt. Jonathan Gifford of Palm Bay was one month from completing his deployment to Afghanistan when he and another Marine were killed while on patrol.
Gifford — a 1996 graduate of Melbourne Catholic High, where he played soccer and baseball — had been in the Marine Corps for about 15 years.
He is the second service member from Palm Bay killed within a week in the war in Afghanistan, and the third in the past year.
Army Spc. Justin Louis Horsley, 21, a 2009 graduate of Bayside High, died July 22 while on patrol in Pul-E Alam, Afghanistan. Jeremiah T. Sancho, 23, died Oct. 13, 2011 in Kandahar province, Afghanistan. Both their units were attacked with improvised explosive devices.
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Gifford is 2nd service member from Palm Bay to die in a week
Written by
R. Norman Moody
FLORIDA TODAY
12:48 AM, Aug 1, 2012
Marine Gunnery Sgt. Jonathan Gifford of Palm Bay was one month from completing his deployment to Afghanistan when he and another Marine were killed while on patrol.
Gifford — a 1996 graduate of Melbourne Catholic High, where he played soccer and baseball — had been in the Marine Corps for about 15 years.
He is the second service member from Palm Bay killed within a week in the war in Afghanistan, and the third in the past year.
Army Spc. Justin Louis Horsley, 21, a 2009 graduate of Bayside High, died July 22 while on patrol in Pul-E Alam, Afghanistan. Jeremiah T. Sancho, 23, died Oct. 13, 2011 in Kandahar province, Afghanistan. Both their units were attacked with improvised explosive devices.
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