Saturday, April 16, 2011

Marine Clay Hunt's suicide not counted as "military suicide"


In this report, it is pointed out that Clay Hunt's suicide will not be considered "military suicide" but the painful truth is, none of them are considered that after they are no longer in the service. It doesn't seem to bother the Pentagon that young men and women are taking their own lives after they leave the service because they were in the service, deployed into combat, survived combat but could not survive being back home. Full circle, all tied to their service but the military does not have to count them anymore and they, well, they can't count on the military anymore. The startling truth is that yesterday was no different than the day Clay joined 17 other veterans in ending their own pain with suicide. 18 veterans take their lives everyday in this country with over 1,000 attempting suicide every month.

Hunt did everything right in combat and afterwards. He was told to get help and he did. His family did all they could to be supportive. Hunt not only sought help but offered to give it to others and that is one more thing experts tell them to do. No matter what, nothing was enough to help him heal the pain he brought back with him.

While the Daily Mail reporter does not seem to know that a Purple Heart is for being wounded and is not "won for bravery" they did a good job otherwise on this report.


Heartbroken: His parents, Stacy Hunt and Susan Selke, said he had battled through his difficulties and seemed to be turning his life around
He had turned his life around

Mystery of handsome Purple Heart-winning Marine and mental health advocate who killed himself

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
Last updated at 11:39 AM on 16th April 2011


He won a Purple Heart for his bravery in Iraq and so epitomised the survivor spirit he appeared as a mental health advocate in a public service announcement to help veterans cope.

But last month, 28-year-old former Marine corporal Clay Hunt shot himself in his Houston apartment.

His heartbreaking suicide has deeply shaken his fellow veterans, who are at a loss to explain why the handsome Marine - who outwardly was coping well after leaving the military - would take his own life.

They say it is a 'wake-up call for America', and are demanding the military does more to help its veterans of war cope.

The haunting question of 'why' hung over a memorial service for the popular former Marine attended by more than 1,100 mourners in Houston last week.

Moving on: Mr Hunt travelled to Haiti to help the earthquake relief effort with an organisation called Team Rubicon.

Although he battled post-traumatic stress disorder, he had 'turned his life around' and thrown himself into charity work and lobbying.

His mother, Susan Selke, told CNN: 'In my mind he is a casualty of war. But he died here instead of over there. He died as a result of his war experience. There is no doubt in my mind.'
His death will not be counted as an official military suicide by the Pentagon, because he left the Marines in 2009.

His best friend, Jacob Wood, told CNN: 'That is a complete sham in my opinion. Part of Clay was killed in Iraq. Part of Clay was killed in Afghanistan and the rest of him was killed in Houston, Texas. And if that is not reflected in military statistics, it's a shame.'

When Mr Hunt left the military in 2009, he seemed to put the trauma of war behind him, travelling to Chile and Haiti to help the rescue effort after the earthquakes, road-biking with wounded veterans and lobbying on Capitol Hill.

But friends and family say although outwardly he seemed to be coping, he suffered post-traumatic stress disorder, depression - and was wracked with survivor's guilt.

They said he never truly recovered from the deaths of four of his closest friends in Iraq.

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Army is investigating death of Fort Drum soldier

Army is investigating death of Fort Drum soldier
FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 2011
FORT DRUM — The Army’s Criminal Investigation Division is investigating the non-combat-related death of a 10th Mountain Division soldier last month in the final days of his Afghan deployment.

Spc. Andrew P. Wade, 22, of Antioch, Ill., died March 10 in Kunduz, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered March 7.
read more here
Army is investigating death of Fort Drum soldier

Southampton police officer found dead, Police Chief suffers heart attack responding

UPDATED: Township Mourns Loss of Veteran Officer
Officials said Officer Richard Lizzio was found in his patrol car Friday morning, following a self-inflicted gun shot wound.
By Jennifer Mohan
April 15, 2011

Flags around the township are flying at half-mast in honor of an Upper Southampton police officer found dead early Friday morning.

Just after 8:30 a.m., Officer Richard Lizzio, a 24-year veteran of the Upper Southampton police force was found in his patrol car, which was parked at the Jesus Focus Ministry.

Upper Southampton Chief of Police Ron MacPherson said Ofc. Lizzio was a firearms instructor for the department as well as an officer in charge, a position that often required him to substitute for an off-duty sergeant.

“He was a valuable member of our team,” said MacPherson. “He will be sorely missed.”

Lizzio was on duty at the time of the incident, but was not answering a call at the church.

MacPherson said Ivyland Borough Police Chief Nicholas Rosato was out in the street directing traffic around the area of the incident when he suffered a heart attack

read more here

Township Mourns Loss of Veteran Officer

Friday, April 15, 2011

Remember Clay Hunt's life as much as his death

Team Rubicon, is where Clay Hunt's family wants donations sent to. (Please read down to the bottom for the address.) By all accounts he tried very hard to make a difference for other veterans with PTSD. Remembering his life will end up helping other veterans survive after war. To lose 18 veterans a day, is just too much to ignore.





HUNT
Clay Warren Hunt, a war hero and giant-hearted humanitarian, died in Houston, Texas on Thursday, the 31st of March 2011, at the age of 28.



Following his heart, Clay joined the United States Marine Corps in May of 2005, completed the School of Infantry in 2006, and shipped out to Iraq in January of 2007 as part of the Second Battalion, Seventh Regiment of the U.S.M.C. While on patrol in Anbar Province, near Fallujah, he was wounded in a sniper attack, earning a Purple Heart. Clay recuperated in 2007, and applied for and graduated from the Marine Corps Scout Sniper School in February of 2008.

His scout sniper teams shipped out to an area near Sangin, Afghanistan in March of 2008 as part of NATO's multi-national force deployed against the Taliban in southern Afghanistan. Clay's unit returned to the states in October of 2008, and he was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps in April of 2009.

Clay cherished his time in the Marine Corps and the unconditional and absolute bonds of camaraderie that he built with his band of brothers in Iraq and Afghanistan. He often wondered why he survived when so many close friends and others paid the ultimate price for our nation's freedom.

Clay continued to give back to ease the suffering of others in January of 2010, when he and Marine brother Jake Wood and others founded Team Rubicon, an early response team for natural disaster relief. Clay and Team Rubicon entered Port-Au Prince, Haiti one week after that country's devastating earthquake, and immediately established field medical facilities, and secured transportation to those facilities for thousands of injured Haitians during a month-long stay in that ravaged country. Team Rubicon was on the ground saving lives long before the Red Cross and other institutional organizations were up and running. Clay found his true calling for service in the chaos of Haiti, and his warrior mentality along with his compassion for others were the perfect combination to deliver "hands-on" medical and other humanitarian aid to those so desparately in need.

Clay also went to Chile in 2010 with Team Rubicon to aid earthquake victims in that nation, and returned to Haiti in June of 2010 on a follow-up mission. He also "felt the pain and did something about it" of his fellow veterans by participating in four Ride2Recovery challenges to raise money for struggling wounded veterans across the U.S. Additionally, he helped lobby Congress on behalf of Iraq-Afghanistan Veterans of America for better and more timely delivery of benefits for our veterans of these two conflicts.

Clay had a smile that would light up a room, and his boundless energy was his greatest asset. No family could have had a better son.


In lieu of customary remembrances, the family requests with gratitude that memorial contributions in Clay's name be directed to Team Rubicon, Inc., P.O. Box 7476, Santa Monica, CA, 90406 (www.teamrubiconusa.org); or to Ride2Recovery, 23679 Calabasas Rd., #420, Calabasas, CA, 91302, (www.ride2recovery.com).

UK report tries to blame the veteran for US PTSD higher rates

Here's another theory for the UK. Maybe the UK has not diagnosed as many of their veterans but that does not mean they do not have PTSD. The 4th paragraph of this "report" is one sentence typed twice, so it was a little hard to take seriously.

The US has longer tours of duty and is expected to carry most of the load no matter how many other nations are involved in the operations. They are redeployed more with less dwell time. The list of reasons for PTSD is longer than in the UK but with all the other reports coming out of the UK, the evidence points to the lack of soldiers being diagnosed with PTSD and not the lack of PTSD in UK soldiers.

Over the years there have been many other studies boiling down to blame the veteran but this one may very well top the others.

The invisible division: US soldiers are seven times as likely as UK troops to develop post-traumatic stress
By Ethan Watters
Something is happening at the end of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that mental health experts are finding hard to explain: British and American soldiers appear to be having markedly different reactions to the stress of combat. In America, there has been a sharp increase in the number experiencing mental-health problems, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Between 2006 and 2007 alone, there was a 50 per cent jump in cases of combat stress among soldiers and suicides more than doubled. Why the precipitous rise? And why hasn't there been an accompanying rise in these symptoms among British troops?

The conclusion that British soldiers appear to have a different psychological reaction to the stresses of these modern conflicts was the finding of several recent high-profile studies. This year, in a Royal Society journal, Neil Greenberg of the Academic Centre for Defence Mental Health at King's College London and colleagues reported that studies of American soldiers showed PTSD prevalence rates of in excess of 30 per cent while the rates among British troops was only four per cent. UK soldiers were more likely to abuse alcohol (13 per cent reported doing so) or experience more common mental disorders such as depression (20 per cent).

Such differences were found even when comparing soldiers who served in the most intense combat zones. In addition, while researchers found increased mental-health risk for American personnel sent on multiple deployments, no such connection was found in British soldiers.

One theory to explain these differences is that the minds of soldiers are responsive to cultural expectations of how they should feel – and that those expectations can be different from one place (or time) to another. One theory to explain these differences is that the minds of soldiers are responsive to cultural expectations of how they should feel – and that those expectations can be different from one place (or time) to another.

"Despite some claims to the contrary," Greenberg et al write, "PTSD seems not to be a 'universal stress reaction', arising in all societies across all time. Evidence from both world wars suggests that the ways in which service personnel communicate distress is culturally determined and that the development of PTSD may be one more phase in the evolving picture of human reaction to adversity."
read more here
The invisible division

Dark Horse Marines "relatively unscathed mentally"

Sounds like a great story and while it may make you want to go "yippie" this story is filled with warnings. First, they just got back home. People are all happy to be back together. Then comes the time when life gets back to normal as much as possible and they realize that it is not back to "normal" for them.

There is a report they will be kept with their units for three months. Good news on that one and it very well may save some lives. They will have support behind them. This offers a warning for the National Guards and Reservists coming home with no support after the welcome home parties are over.

Marines Battalion Mentally Upbeat, Despite Record Deaths
1 in 5 Combat Veterans Get Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, But Training, Unit Cohesion Can Foster Resilience

POST A COMMENT BY SUSAN DONALDSON JAMES
April 15, 2011

The Marine 3-5 battalion returned home from one of Afghanistan's deadliest war zones this week after a grueling eight-month deployment with record casualties. Remarkably, military psychiatrists say the men appear, for the most part, to be relatively unscathed mentally.

"So far so good," said their second-in-command, Maj. Mark Carlton, who endured the 20-hour flight back with the first wave of Marines and Navy personnel from Afghanistan's Helmand Province to California's Camp Pendleton.

The battalion witnessed 25 dead, 140 wounded and more than a dozen amputees. But overall rates of combat stress among the 250 mostly infantrymen, at least in their first medical evaluations, appeared to be no higher than other units in the southern province, experts said.

Some wonder why that battalion -- nearly 1,000 in all in the heart of the Taliban insurgency -- appears so psychologically intact, when some reports show as many 37 percent of recent war veterans are being treated for post-traumatic stress disorder or PTSD.

Carlton attributed much of the good mental health to the battalion's "proactive" small-unit leadership structure.

"They know each other and live with each other the entire deployment and are never far from someone on the team," he said. "If there's a change in behavior or signs of stress, it's immediately picked up by someone who knows the guy really well."

"You absolutely see that in a lot of places and not just the military," he said. "On high school sports teams, kids get tight over time. Common understanding can't be replicated."

The 3-5 battalion faced combat almost immediately when they took control of the Sangin District from the British last September. One of the fatalities was 2nd Lt. Robert Kelly, son of Lt. Gen. John Kelly, the personal military aide to Defense Secretary William Gates, the most senior officer to lose a child since American troops arrived in the country in 2001.

But as casualties mounted, visiting mental health professionals said they didn't see a comparable rise in mental health issues and were surprised by the unit's resiliency.

Now, back at Camp Pendleton, the Marines have ordered the unit to stay intact with their families for three months to allow them to decompress together. There, additional mental health professionals have been brought in to watch for signs of post-traumatic stress disorder.

An estimated 1 in 5 combat veterans will eventually be diagnosed with PTSD and 1 in 3 will have some emotional or neurological problems related to war, according to a New York University study of 300,000 returning soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan at veterans' hospitals.
read more here
Marines Battalion Mentally Upbeat, Despite Record Deaths

Thursday, April 14, 2011

No further results of investigation of death of Maj. Michael Evarts

The pain of losing someone you love is hard enough, even when you know the cause but when you have no idea what happened, why they are not here anymore, it never stops hurting. Why should it take over three months to find out what happened? Why does the military allow families to suffer waiting for answers? Honestly I don't care if the family releases the information to the public or not but they should not be forced to wait any longer before they know why Major Evarts did not come home alive.

No further results of investigation of death of Maj. Michael Evarts likely to be released
Published: Wednesday, April 13, 2011
By Cassandra Shofar
CShofar@News-Herald.com

The investigation surrounding the death of a local soldier will likely take a few more months to complete, according to Maj. Matthew Lawrence of the 807th Medical Command in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Maj. Michael S. Evarts, 41, of Concord Township, who died on Jan. 17 in Tikrit, Iraq, in a noncombat related incident, was a father of two sons, Zachary and Lukas, and husband to Monique Evarts.

While the circumstances surrounding his death are still under investigation, Lawrence said any more information about the results is up to the family to release.

“And they have said they do not want to do so,” Lawrence said via e-mail. “The official military classification is that it was a non-combat related death.”

Evarts — who has been described by family and friends as infectious, funny, selfless and full of life — had been deployed to Iraq in support of Operation New Dawn in November 2010.
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No further results of investigation of death of Maj. Michael Evarts

A soldier's-eye view of PTSD

Published: Thursday, March 31, 2011, 8:46 AM



found on
A soldier's-eye view of PTSD

PTSD veteran in custody after standoff

Breaking news: Man in custody after standoff
Suspect was armed in Kronenwetter home

KRONENWETTER — A man who held police and SWAT team members at bay outside his home has been taken into custody, according to official sources.

Police said the man, a 41-year-old Kronenwetter resident, apparently phoned the VA Clinic in Wausau this morning and threatened to show up there with a gun. The suspect's family told police the man suffers from post traumatic stress disorder and was having a crisis, police said.

Wausau police were at the VA Clinic at about 10:30 a.m. interviewing employees to learn more about the suspect and what he said.
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Breaking news: Man in custody after standoff

Obama to Honor Two Korean War GIs With Medal of Honor

Obama to Honor Two Korean War GIs With MoH

April 14, 2011
Stars and Stripes|by Travis J. Tritten
CAMP FOSTER, Okinawa -- Two Soldiers who gave their lives fighting in the Korean War will be posthumously given the nation’s highest military honor by President Obama during a ceremony next month, the White House said Wednesday evening.

Pfc. Anthony Kaho’ohanohano and Pfc. Henry Svehla will be recognized with the Medal of Honor for braving certain death and painful wounds to charge and repel overwhelming enemy forces during the war.

Family members of both Soldiers will attend the May 2 ceremony at the White House to commemorate their “selfless service and sacrifice,” according to a presidential news release.

In September 1951, Kaho’ohanohano was in charge of a machine gun squad near Chopra-Ri, Korea, while assigned to the U.S. Army’s 7th Infantry Division, according to the Army.

“He was 6’1” and he was all muscle and he could hit like a horse kicks. I’ll testify to that,” his younger brother David Kaho’ohanohano, 77, of Hawaii told Stars and Stripes on Thursday.
read more here
Obama to Honor Two Korean War GIs With MoH

Senator Olympia Snowe's Bill to Give Military Funerals More Protection

Bill to Give Military Funerals More Protection



April 14, 2011
Portland Press Herald
WASHINGTON -- Families of fallen troops "have earned the right to bury their loved ones in peace," says U.S. Sen. Olympia Snowe.
And in the wake of a Supreme Court decision earlier this year to permit the Westboro Baptist Church to carry on its disruptive protests at military funerals, lawmakers must step in with stronger protections for those families, says Snowe, R-Maine.
On Wednesday, Snowe introduced the Sanctity of Eternal Rest for Veterans Act -- dubbed the SERVE Act -- an effort to keep raucous protesters from getting too close to military funerals and increase penalties for breaking the rules of conduct.
Snowe's involvement in the issue was prompted by a Maine high school student's campaign to ban such protests.
"Those who fight and die in the service of our country deserve our highest respect," Snowe said in a prepared statement. "The SERVE Act strikes a balance between the sanctity of a funeral service and the right to free speech."
Snowe's proposal would alter federal law to increase the "quiet time" in which protests are prohibited before and after military funerals from one hour to two hours, and increase the distance that protesters must stay from services.
read more here
Bill to Give Military Funerals More Protection

"Our welcome home was whoever came to pick us up at the airport"

Medics return from serving in Afghanistan
Eleven Navy corpsmen back in Akron

By Jim Carney
Beacon Journal staff writer

Published on Thursday, Apr 14, 2011

Eleven Navy corpsmen who were deployed to Afghanistan with an Akron-based Marine Reserve unit and other area Marine reservists finished their paperwork Wednesday, completing their overseas tour of duty.

The Navy reservists spent part of Wednesday at the Navy Operational Support Center on Dan Street in Akron, winding up their war time service a few weeks after Marines they served with came home.

While more than 100 Marine reservists attached to 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines, 4th Division, Weapons Company arrived to publicized homecoming ceremonies in late March, the sailors arrived home with little fanfare.

''Our welcome home was whoever came to pick us up at the airport,'' said Hospital Corps
man 1st Class Mark Albert Sr., 40, of Jackson Township, who works for UPS as a driver in his civilian job.

Albert, a former Lakemore reserve police officer, said he and some other Weapons Company corpsmen, who work as medics, were attached to 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines, in southern Afghanistan. The unit suffered numerous combat casualties — Marines killed or wounded.
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Medics return from serving in Afghanistan

National Guard soldiers given "bum's rush in favor of regular Army troops"

There are so many secrets this country has, it is hard to know where to begin. It isn't that no one is talking about these things, but too many are dismissing them as just rumors. Nothing new really. Considering when veterans of wars going back to the Revolution, came home with what we call Post Traumatic Stress Disorder today, up until 40 years ago, no one was doing anything about it other than looking for excuses to ignore their pain.


They used to shoot the wounded for being cowards. Reports have come out going all the way up to WWII.

It is not a unique problem to the USA. The UK dealt with soldiers in pain by shooting them as well.


Pardons Granted for Shell-Shocked WWI Soldiers
Shot for Cowardice or Desertion
Friday August 25, 2006
By Angela Morrow, RN,
Soldier’s Heart=Shell Shock=Combat Fatigue=War Neurosis=PTSD

Nearly 90 years after their deaths, 306 soldiers who were shot for military offences during World War I have been granted posthumous pardons from the British Ministry of Defense. These soldiers were executed between 1914 and 1918 for breaches of military discipline that included desertion, cowardice, quitting their posts and casting away their arms.

Many men of the men executed for cowardice or desertion were suffering from "Shell Shock" after enduring months of military combat and horrors during WWI. British Defense Secretary Des Browne said these men were "as much victims of World War One as those who died in the battlefield." The group pardon recognizes that the men were not "cowards" or "deserters" and should not have been executed for military offences. This group of soldiers has been upgraded to being "Victims of War." Not one of the executed soldiers would have been executed today, since the British military death penalty was outlawed in 1930.

Many family members are glad that their ancestors are finally receiving these pardons and official vindication after all this time.

Recognizing Soldier’s Heart, Shell Shock or Combat Fatigue as PTSD
Shell Shock is the terms used during World War I for what is has been termed Post Traumatic Stress Disorder since the 1980’s. During the Civil War, the condition was referred to as "Soldier’s Heart." During World War II Shell Shock went by several names including "Combat Fatigue," "Traumatic War Neurosis," "Combat Exhaustion" and "Operational Fatigue." However, it wasn’t until after World War II that psychiatrists started to recognize that the symptoms of Shell Shock were not due to an inborn mental illness, such as depression or schizophrenia. Instead they determined that this form of psychological dis-ease was caused by too much exposure to war trauma.

According to the National Center for PTSD, studies have shown that the more prolonged, extensive, and horrifying a soldier's or sailor's exposure to war trauma, the more likely it is that she or he will become emotionally worn down and exhausted. This happens to even the strongest and healthiest of individuals, and often it is precisely these soldiers who are the most psychologically disturbed by war because they endure so much of the trauma.

When they came home, they were still haunted by what they saw with their own eyes as their minds tried to come to terms with horror movies playing with their nerves. Wives would hear their screams in the middle of the night. Kids would learn quickly they couldn't make any sudden moves and they were terrified of Dad lashing out because something they did surprised him in a bad way. Families were reluctant to let anyone outside the family know the war came home long after peace was declared by the governments and the powers ordering them to kill.

How does one declare peace of mind? How does a family explain to the rest of the population the war is still going on? There is a story being told all across this country from Vietnam Veterans when they are asked "When were you there?" and they respond with "Last night." More and more are talking about it but it was no less real when no one else was.

Now we have a new secret tied to war. As bad as it has been for regular military folks coming home, it's been even worse for the National Guards and Reservists. First, we need to begin when they arrived in Iraq as reports came out about how they were belittled by the active military. No one wanted these "weekenders" there. They were regarded as more trouble than they were worth. That attitude held. The National Guards and Reservists families knew about it, but they wouldn't talk about it. They just sucked it up. That was not the last insult to their service. That came after they were back and needing help to heal, just like the regular military folks but as we focused on the trouble they had getting help, we ignored the worst of their problems. The "weekenders" were getting even less help.

They were told to just go back to their lives, back to their families and jobs. Too many ended up risking their lives back home after risking them over there. Not just on jobs with law enforcement or in fire departments as many think, but risking them while carrying their own secret war just as every other generation had waged.

They were easy to ignore. Less than one percent of the population of this nation has served in Afghanistan or Iraq. Even less were "weekenders" expected to take off their boots and put on work shoes or college sandals. The regular military folks, well they suffered too, but they had the rest of their unit to lean on. Guardsmen came back to a nation filled with more people knowing who was winning American Idol more than they knew troops were still dying in Iraq and Afghanistan. While the media spent more time making celebrity "heroes" out of people like Sarah Palin and her every tweet along with other famous idiots last scandal, they just didn't have time to cover anything about any of this.

As 18 veterans committed suicide on a daily basis families knew what was going on. More and more of them began to talk about it openly but the media had other things to report on cable TV for.

Now we have this fantastic look inside one National Guard unit painting the picture crystal clear so that the whole nation can see it, feel it and understand how real all of this is but I doubt you'll see it on CNN, FOX or MSNBC. The less than one percent serving can't compete with the budget battle, or if the Idol judges are "too nice."

These are our neighbors coming home. These are our coworkers. They go to our churches. They shop in our stores. They are suffering and they have been screaming for help but this is one more case of ignorance. Instead of shooting them for being cowards, we let them suffer to the point where they regret surviving.


Brandon Barrett's War
The Army didn't tell anyone about a disturbed AWOL soldier until it was too late.
By Rick Anderson Wednesday, Apr 13 2011

Two of Spc. Brandon Barrett's fellow Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldiers were killed and more than 20 wounded in three major firefights and suicide bombings the 5th Stryker brigade endured during its year in Afghanistan. Between the summers of 2009 and 2010, Barrett and his colleagues came under fire from snipers, mortars, and roadside bombs in sparsely-settled Zabul province, bordering Pakistan, and, to the south, in the Taliban-controlled Helmand province.

One particular firefight between the Taliban and Barrett's 5th Stryker detail lasted five hours. "His unit saw some of the worst combat in Afghanistan," says Barrett's brother, Shane, a Tucson, Ariz., police detective. Firefights were so intense the Lewis-McChord soldiers were sometimes known as the Shit Magnets. "If it was bad and it happened," a grunt told a reporter last year, "it happened to us."

Brandon Barrett, who killed at least two enemy fighters during his year-long tour, didn't seem to fare badly, however. During a post-deployment health screening last summer, he told doctors only that he was a bit nervous, could be startled from time to time, and had seen lots of dead people. Otherwise, he was fine, he added, and certainly not suicidal. But doctors, according to a 200-page Army report on Barrett's case obtained exclusively by Seattle Weekly, worried he was keeping his real feelings to himself. He denied having any medical or mental-health issues, doctors noted, although they did refer him to the service's substance-abuse program.

The base also was in turmoil over claims that it mistreated members of an Oregon National Guard team that was demobilized at Lewis-McChord after returning from Iraq last year. Madigan Army Medical Center officials handled them as second-class soldiers, Guard members told reporters, citing a briefing held by Madigan staff to prepare for the unit's arrival. It included a PowerPoint presentation that showed a ball cap emblazoned with the words "Weekend Warrior," and a staff advisory that suggested Guard members might try to game the system to extend their active-duty pay. The soldiers say they didn't get necessary treatment, and were given the bum's rush in favor of regular Army troops.

Spc. Nikkolas W. Lookabill, 22, was shot to death by Vancouver (Wash.) police outside his house four months after he was processed at Lewis-McChord. He was killed September 7 after refusing to put down his gun.

Army veteran Robert Quinones, 29, armed with four guns, held three hostages at gunpoint at a Fort Stewart, Ga., hospital, threatening to kill them as well as President Obama and former President Clinton. He pleaded for mental-health treatment, then surrendered. Injured in Iraq and suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, Quinones had recently been medically discharged from Lewis-McChord.

"Who'd miss me anyway?"
Spc. Dustin Knapp, 23, got into a fight with his uncle, stormed out of his Wisconsin home, and was struck and killed by a car as he walked down a two-lane road at 4:30 a.m. His August 16 death, two months after he returned to Lewis-McChord from Afghanistan, was ruled an accident, although there was speculation he'd jumped in front of the car.

read more here
Brandon Barrett's War


Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Camp Pendleton's 3/5 Finally Home

Camp Pendleton's 3/5 Finally Home
by Katia Lopez-Hodoyan

Any Marine or sailor who has seen combat has stories to tell but few have seen action in recent years like the troops from Camp Pendleton's 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment.
They've experienced some of the most violent attacks from insurgents in Afghanistan. Dozens died in the line of duty.
All that was set aside for just a moment Monday night when families celebrated the safe return of more than 150 troops.
Some may say it was a homecoming that never felt so sweet.
read more here
Camp Pendleton's 3/5 Finally Home

Divorce Rate For Women In Military Double That Of Men

Divorce Rate For Women In Military Double That Of Men

Laura Stampler



When naval officer Amanda Smith was deployed to Kuwait in August of 2009, her job was to find holes in existing military medical programs and fix them. Smith (her name has been changed) was a mender. She held together the morale of her peripatetic unit. When she found out that a child of one of her soldiers had been molested during their deployment, Smith stayed up nights comforting the inconsolable single mother.

She also tried to maintain the fabric of her own dislocated family. Her husband, Jeff, had returned from Iraq only three months before her own deployment, and their children were living with extended family in Oklahoma while their father went back to school in California.

Then, without any reason for suspicion, Jeff began to berate her for having an affair while abroad. “When the accusations kept flying at me, I wondered if he had a guilty conscience,” said Smith, who never questioned Jeff during his deployment. “Is that what he did when he was gone?”

On a cold Friday in December 2009, Jeff called Smith in Kuwait to say he wanted a divorce. Emotionally overwhelmed, she did not contact him again until she returned to an empty house in April. She found out that he was engaged to someone else Mother’s Day weekend; although their divorce was finalized only last week, Jeff filed for “single status” so that he could remarry last November.

Smith joined the rank and file of military divorcées.
read more here
Divorce Rate For Women In Military Double That Of Men

First lady wants you: to help military families

First lady wants you: to help military families
(AP) – 20 hours ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — Drawing in everyone from Best Buy's Geek Squad to the Afghan war commander fired by her husband, Michelle Obama ramped up her campaign to support military families on Tuesday and prodded everybody else in the country to get in on the act.

The first lady, joined in the East Room by the president and Vice President Joe Biden and wife Jill, launched "Joining Forces," an initiative to help military families who face a long list of unique challenges, such as moving around a lot and having a parent or spouse facing wartime perils far away.

Mrs. Obama didn't dangle federal grants or incentives, rather a call to be civic-minded.

"This is a challenge to every segment of American society not to simply say thank you but to mobilize, take action and make a real commitment to supporting our military families," Mrs. Obama said.

President Barack Obama, for his part, said it was time to do more to support "the force behind the force."

"They, too, are the reason we've got the finest military in the world," he said.

Over the past year, Mrs. Obama's primary focus has been an ambitious campaign against childhood obesity, in which she urged businesses, non-profits, school and others to get involved in fighting the problem. Now Mrs. Obama, working closely with Mrs. Biden, wants to use that same model to tackle military family issue.

As a down payment, the White House released a list of companies and groups that already have signed on to the effort.

For example, Best Buy's Geek Squad will help military families use technology to connect with loved ones who are deployed, Sears and WalMart will offer transfers to employees who are military spouses who have to move, and the national PTA will expand efforts to help military children adjust to new schools.

Mrs. Obama, in an interview with The Associated Press, said she first got to know about the special challenges facing military families during the 2008 presidential campaign, as she met with military spouses while participating in roundtable discussions with women.
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First lady wants you: to help military families

UK War hero sues police force after they wrongly brand him a paedophile

There can't be enough money to make up for what this additional stress did to this man when he already had PTSD from serving his country in Bosnia.


War hero sues police force after they wrongly brand him a paedophile
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
A war hero with post-traumatic stress disorder is suing a police force for tens of thousands of pounds after they wrongly branded him a paedophile.

Devastated Michael Bennett, 35, suffered vigilante attacks and was banned from seeing his girlfriend's three young children.

Mr Bennett, a Royal Artillery gunner and soldier for nine years, suffered a breakdown after witnessing horrific atrocities while serving in Bosnia.

But his life went from bad to worse when blundering cops got him mixed up with another genuine sex offender living near his home in Nuneaton, Warwickshire.

Warwickshire Police reported him to social services after they received a malicious phone call from a man who claimed Mr Bennett was a paedophile.

Shockingly, officers did not carry out any checks before reporting the innocent man, who now works as a lorry driver, to the authorities last summer.


Read more:
War hero sues police force

Veteran in college says "I paid a steep price to have my butt in that seat"

How can most civilians understand any of them if they do not even know what veterans went through in combat? The news stations won't cover any of it, not that the average college aged student would watch much news in the first place. Veterans go back to school with a whole different mindset after combat than they had during high school. When you consider most enter into the military right after high school by the time they serve their time, they enter into college a few years older than other students, but that obvious fact is overshadowed by what they were doing with those years.

I attend Valencia College and I'm a member of the Veterans Council. My husband is a Vietnam Veteran. I thought college life was over when our daughter graduated but the month she was done, I went in. One of the problems this article does not address is that for families, we don't seem to fit in with anyone. We are not really civilian. When you look at the back of a military ID issued to families of disabled veterans, it has "civilian NO" and this allows us to go to military commissaries and get onto bases. We are not veterans, so we don't really belong to them. Wives have no idea what it is like to be gone for a year risking our lives. They only know what it is like to worry about them and do the best they can to take care of what they used to do. In my case, I didn't even do that part. I met my husband over 10 years after he got back from Vietnam, so I don't really fit in with them. There is always a price to pay for membership in any of these groups but the fact is, less than 10% of the population of this nation has a clue about any of this.

While Valencia has veterans attending classes, most of them have the same experience with coming back from combat duty. They can't understand fellow students showing up late for class any more than they can understand assignments not being turned in on time. The attitude of some students bother veterans a great deal when the price of a veteran's education came with putting their lives on the line, as this veteran put it, “I paid a steep price to have my butt in that seat.”

The good thing is that more and more colleges are stepping up to help veterans feel better about their days of learning instead of fighting.

Colleges, VA work to help veterans on campus
By Trevor Hughes - The (Fort Collins,Colo.) Coloradoan
Posted : Monday Apr 11, 2011 21:02:12 EDT
After a four-year stint in the Marines that took him to Iraq and Afghanistan, Michael Dakduk returned home to Las Vegas in 2008, enrolled in the University of Nevada, and got bored.

It wasn’t that Dakduk, now 25, lacked the discipline or drive to succeed in school. But the former sergeant says he found it hard to study calculus or write English papers — and listen to fellow students complain about the workload — when his mind was still replaying what he had seen and been through.

“I’d revert back to thinking about guys getting blown up, getting shot at,” he says, instead of focusing on what he called his “mundane and menial” schoolwork.

As returning veterans struggle to make the transition from military to civilian life on campuses with younger students without their kind of life experience, colleges and universities are increasingly developing programs to address their needs.

“I paid a steep price to have my butt in that seat,” says Matt Randle, 30, a former Army combat medic who is now a senior at the University of Arizona. “I had a keen sense of not fitting in.”

Dakduk graduated in December and now helps other returning veterans as executive director of the Student Veterans of America in Washington. Randle founded and is student-director of the Arizona campus’ Veterans Education and Transition Services office.
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Colleges, VA work to help veterans on campus

Camp Lejeune Marine receives second Bronze Star for Valor

Marine Receives Second Bronze Star With Combat Valor


By WCTI Staff

CAMP LEJEUNE -- The Operations Officer for 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, received his second Bronze Star with combat distinguishing device aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C., April 8, 2011.

The award was presented to Capt. Matthew J. Martin for actions while in command of Golf Company, 2nd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, during the battalion's deployment to Afghanistan from May to November 2009.

While deployed to Iraq in 2003, Martin served as a company executive officer with Company A, 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division. Martin and his Marines fought for four days to secure the bridges outside of An Nasiriyah. Although he and his Marines were outnumbered and took heavy casualties, Martin directed tank and mortar fire toward enemy strongholds and successfully held off the insurgents. Martin received his first Bronze Star for heroic actions during this battle.

While being awarded the countries fourth highest medal is a rare achievement, eight years after Martin received his first Bronze Star with combat distinguishing device, he was presented with his second.

As the commanding officer of Company G, 2/8, Martin and his Marines were tasked with patrolling, on foot, more than 11 miles to secure a city in Helmond Province, Afghanistan.

Over the three days it took to conduct the movement, he and his Marines fought the enemy and encountered multiple IED's in 130 degree heat.
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Marine Receives Second Bronze Star With Combat Valor

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The homecoming for the "Dark Horse Battalion"

MILITARY: First large wave of battle-scarred Marine unit arrives home
CAMP PENDLETON'S 3RD BATTALION, 5TH MARINE REGIMENT SAW 25 OF ITS TROOPS KILLED, MORE THAN 140 WOUNDED
By MARK WALKER - mlwalker@nctimes.com
Posted: Monday, April 11, 2011
About 250 troops from a Camp Pendleton infantry unit that suffered 25 killed and more than 140 wounded in Afghanistan arrived home to thunderous cheers Monday evening.

It was a bittersweet moment for the men from the base's 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, who were met by hundreds of loved ones and fellow Marines.

The battalion had more casualties during its nearly eight-month deployment than any other similar Marine unit in the 10-year-old war.

"It's tough seeing so many of your friends go down," 21-year-old Lance Cpl. Travis Broussard said moments after climbing off a bus and ending his first combat tour. "There were a lot of long days and long nights, but it's great being home."

The homecoming for the "Dark Horse Battalion" has been among the most anticipated at Camp Pendleton in years.

The 950-member infantry troops were engaged in heavy fighting in the Sangin District of the Helmand province from the time they arrived at the end of the summer until they departed.

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First large wave of battle-scarred Marine unit arrives home

Huffington Post blogger sues AOL for $105 million

Axe to grind here, so off topic but forgive me. An unpaid blogger filed suit against AOL for work done posting on Huffington Post. While I really understand how he feels and part of me really hopes he wins, like most bloggers, he knew what he was getting into. Bloggers always know. Sure we hope that our work will lead to a job or a book deal. We hope that one day we can break into the "real world" of journalists or even find some kind of respect, but seriously, hopes aside, most do it to post on things that matter to them. For me it happens to be veterans and the troops. I am an unpaid staff writer for Veterans Today and I post there when I can grateful that I can post whatever I want to say. They get more hits than this blog does, so the extra exposure matters to me. Would I sue if they ended up making money later? Hell no. I'd be jealous but I wouldn't sue simply because being willing to work for free means exactly that. He wrote what he wrote for free so to turn around and want a pay day now seems wrong. 9,000 unpaid bloggers? Really smart business plan.


Huffington Post blogger sues AOL for $105 million

By Julianne Pepitone, staff reporter
April 12, 2011: 2:58 PM ET


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- A longtime Huffington Post blogger has filed a lawsuit against the site, its two co-founders and new owner AOL, seeking $105 million on behalf of himself and 9,000 other unpaid bloggers.

The suit is being led by Jonathan Tasini, a journalist and union organizer, who filed the complaint Tuesday in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. Tasini is seeking class-action status for the case.
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Huffington Post blogger sues AOL for $105 million

Lawmakers: Protect new GI Bill living stipends

Lawmakers: Protect new GI Bill living stipends
By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Apr 12, 2011 12:57:07 EDT
Two California lawmakers have joined forces to try to prevent Post-9/11 GI Bill living stipends from being cut off between school terms for thousands of students.

Reps. Susan Davis, a Democrat, and Duncan Hunter, a Republican, are co-sponsoring what they are calling the Post 9/11 GI Bill Payment Restoration Act, which would prevent a cutoff of interval payments between terms, quarters or semesters that is scheduled to take effect on Aug. 1.

About 270,000 student veterans will lose money under that provision of law, according to an estimate from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. How much they will lose will depend on the living stipend for their school, and the length of the break.

Denying interval payments, which in some cases have been paid for up to eight weeks a year for full-time students, was included in an overhaul of the Post-9/11 GI Bill approved by Congress in December and signed by President Obama in January.
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Protect new GI Bill living stipends

McChrystal to oversee White House initiative to support military families



also

McChrystal to oversee White House initiative
By Julie Pace - The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Apr 11, 2011 11:20:24 EDT
WASHINGTON — Nearly a year after President Obama fired Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal as his top commander in Afghanistan, the White House has asked him to head a new advisory board to support military families.

The three-person panel will oversee the Joining Forces program, an initiative led by first lady Michelle Obama and Jill Biden, wife of Vice President Biden. The effort will focus on mobilizing communities, businesses and the government to assist the families of those serving their country.
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McChrystal to oversee White House initiative

Bullied in basic behind some military suicides

Whenever suicide figures are released by the DOD, they seem to always go out of their way to mention how many suicides occurred when deployment was not involved. What they never seem to want to address is why this happens.

Charles Williams knows why at least one of them committed suicide. It was his own son, Jeremy. What does a bully do? They terrorize and abuse. More forms of trauma just as child abuse often causes PTSD as well. Maybe, just maybe, this can also help explain why there are so many suicides in the military, deployed or not.

Grieving father says military culture must change
reported this story on Tuesday, April 12, 2011
TONY EASTLEY: The father of a soldier who committed suicide says more young people will kill themselves unless the military's culture is changed.

Charles Williams' son Jeremy killed himself after being bullied during his army training. Mr Williams says his son was a victim of a toxic culture that pervades the armed forces.

Michael Edwards has this report.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: Stories about young recruits being mistreated in the armed forces carry a special resonance for Charles Williams.

His son Jeremy committed suicide at the age of 20 while he was undergoing basic training at a base in Singleton in New South Wales in 2003.

CHARLES WILLIAMS: Jeremy had a leg injury, shin splints, and was transferred to R&D and that platoon was very much the butt of ridicule, and of this culture of abuse and denigration which was fostered and encouraged at the NCO level and junior officer level.

And he basically despaired of his situation.

MICHAEL EDWARDS: Charles Williams says the military treated his son and his family appallingly.

Now his biggest concern is that more young recruits who are bullied and victimised will take their own lives.

CHARLES WILLIAMS: You must remember that when young people go into the ADF they're in a controlled environment from which they can't escape, and if they're subject to bullying then very sinister options emerge. And that's why we've had these suicides. We've had these young people despairing of their situation.
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Grieving father says military culture must change

Bangor PTSD Vietnam vet finds mercy and help

One more story showing how times and attitudes toward veterans has changed for the better. Vietnam Vet David Brown has not been able to do what he was supposed to do 11 years ago, but the city council has been trying to help him. His sister has been trying to help him. A contractor even offered to do the work for free reportedly worth over $20,000. This sounded like one more Vietnam vet needing help but not getting any but after watching the video, it is clear it is a story filled with hope because so many people care.
Property owner is given one last chance
Written by
Jackie Ward
BANGOR, Maine (NEWS CENTER) -- The Bangor City Council is giving a resident one more chance to salvage his property even though he's had 11 years to do so.

David Brown owns 34 Holland Street in Bangor and hoped to rent it out, but a fire 11 years ago made it uninhabitable. His sister, Judy Judkins says that as a Vietnam veteran, Brown has struggled with serious illnesses that have prevented him from fixing up the home and paying his taxes. Judkins learned of this issue for the first time last week, and says now that she will act as a property manager to help him reconstruct the building.
read more here or watch video report
Property owner is given one last chance

Monday, April 11, 2011

Marine Staff Sgt. Jeremy Smith and Navy Corpsman Benjamin Rast killed by friendly fire

2 US servicemen mistakenly killed by drone attack in Afghanistan
NBC: Pair died in missile airstrike in an apparent case of mistaken identity

By Jim Miklaszewski
Chief Pentagon correspondent
NBC News
updated 4/11/2011 2:04:23 PM ET
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WASHINGTON — A U.S. Marine reservist and a Navy corpsman were killed in a drone airstrike in Afghanistan last week in an apparent case of friendly fire, U.S. military officials tell NBC News.

Marine Staff Sgt. Jeremy Smith and Navy Corpsman Benjamin Rast were reportedly killed Wednesday by a Hellfire missile fired from a U.S. Air Force Predator in what appears to be a case of mistaken identity, NBC reported. Smith and Rast were part of a Marine unit moving in to reinforce fellow Marines under heavy fire from enemy forces outside Sangin in Helmand province in southern Afghanistan.
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2 US servicemen mistakenly killed by drone attack

7 years after hurricanes, Orlando waits for FEMA cash

When we decided to move to Florida, we picked Central Florida because hurricanes were not supposed to hit here. We moved in June of 2004. Charley, Frances and Jeanne decided that it was time Central Florida got a wakeup call from Mother Nature. Our neighbors had a great time blaming us for the welcome party.

7 years after hurricanes, Orlando waits for FEMA cash

By Mark Schlueb, Orlando Sentinel
8:48 p.m. EDT, April 10, 2011


The roofs were repaired long ago and the uprooted trees are just a memory, but nearly seven years after the disastrous 2004 hurricane season, Orlando City Hall is still trying to collect some cash from FEMA.

Long after hurricanes Charley, Frances and Jeanne blew through Florida in quick succession, officials with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the state Department of Emergency Management continue to comb through invoices from truckloads of fallen tree limbs and stump-removal crews, trying to determine how much Orlando should be reimbursed for its cleanup expenses.

"If asked in 2004 how long I would expect the reimbursement process to take, I would not have said seven years," Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer said.

Over the years, FEMA has paid most reimbursement claims from cities, counties and nonprofit agencies for cleanup, rebuilding and other expenses related to Florida's unprecedented hurricane season.
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7 years after hurricanes, Orlando waits for FEMA cash

Is Backmann using troops as political pawns again?





This was on Army times and came from USA Today.

Bachmann wants to secure pay for troops
By Larry Bivins - USA Today
Posted : Sunday Apr 10, 2011 9:40:59 EDT
WASHINGTON — After voting against legislation to keep the government running, Rep. Michele Bachmann said Saturday that she wants to ensure American troops are paid during any budget crisis.

Bachmann, R-Minn., a tea party favorite who is considering a run for president in 2012, said she would introduce legislation that would prevent troops from being “used as pawns in political negotiations. If we reach another impasse like we did last week, our active-duty military and their families must know that their paychecks are secure.”
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Bachmann wants to secure pay for troops
The question is, how could USA Today not know the bill was already introduced to protect military pay April 1st? They reported that Backmann "wants to introduce" a bill 8 days after it was already reported and done by other Republicans.



Bill would guarantee military pay in a shutdown
By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Apr 1, 2011 16:22:07 EDT
A group of House Republicans took the first step Friday toward trying to guarantee the military would get paid if there is a government shutdown.

There are heavy political undertones to the bill, and no guarantee it will pass, but it marks acknowledgement by lawmakers that the Defense Department’s current plan calls for service members to work without pay if Congress fails to keep the government running.

Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, chief sponsor of what is being called the Ensuring Pay for Our Military Act, said the goal is to reassure service members and their families that no matter what happens with the federal budget, they will get paid.

“Ensuring the troops are paid is essential to the morale of our soldiers,” Gohmert said. “The last thing they should be thinking about is whether they are going to be paid.”

“Our troops should not suffer for Washington for Washington’s failure to act,” said Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., one of the cosponsors.
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Bill would guarantee military pay in a shutdown

So how is this news worthy of USA reporting on? Why would Backmann feel it was necessary to make it look like she is the only one wanting to protect the troops from being used as pawns when it turns out, she is the one either not paying attention to what is being done in congress by members of her own party or she thinks she can gain their support. Either way, nothing she can do will ever remove the stain on her reputation when she wanted to cut the VA and stop disabled veterans from receiving their full benefits.

Illinois brothers send veterans to D.C.

Illinois brothers send veterans to D.C.
By Elizabeth Davies - Rockford Register Star Via The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Apr 11, 2011 8:21:06 EDT
SOUTH BELOIT, Ill. — Mark Finnegan stood back and watched as veteran after veteran — more than 100 in all — took in the national memorials before them.

These men, each of whom had seen battle as a member of our nation’s military, never before had made their way to Washington to see the memorials that were built for them. Never before had they been given the chance to properly honor the friends and compatriots who never made it home.

On this day, in this late season of their lives, that mission finally was accomplished.

And Finnegan, a local business owner who brought the veterans to D.C., knew his father would be proud.

“Our father, Cy Finnegan, was a World War II Navy veteran,” Finnegan said. “He had a brutal battle with cancer and passed away in 2000, but he always had a wish to do something for his generation. And he never got to see this memorial they built in D.C.”

So with his brother, John, Finnegan launched a nonprofit organization called VetsRoll. The premise? To take as many Rock River Valley veterans as possible, free of cost, to Washington for a tour of the memorials.

In 2010, the Finnegan brothers raised enough money to take 191 people — 128 veterans, plus caregivers and medical personnel — on a four-day trip to D.C.

“It was just so overwhelming” for veterans to see the memorials, Finnegan said. “Some were so emotional, they couldn’t even talk.”
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Illinois brothers send veterans to D.C.

University of Central Florida researchers try smells

The researchers have part of this right. Smells do play a big role in flashbacks. For Vietnam veterans, even diesel fuel can still be a reminder of war just as the sound of a helicopter can trigger memories.

Humans learn from events in their lives. This article mentions fear of dogs. If someone is attacked or threatened by a dog, they learn from this experience, become afraid the next time and they do have to come into contact with other dogs overcoming their fear as long as it has a different outcome.

For me, my fear was of heights. I was not even 5 when I was pushed off a slide at a drive-in movie playground. My scull was cracked all the way around and I had a concussion. While most kids were daredevils, unafraid to climb trees, I was terrified. I would go with my friends into the woods, climb the rocks to get a view of the city but as they were enjoying it, I was feeling my heart pounding, taking deep breaths to avoid passing out. Amusement parks were even harder when I tried to explain that roller coaster rides were a no go for me. They called me "chicken" but I told them I was only thinking of them and the fact they would end up paying for making me go on when I tossed my "cookies" in their hair. Once they were given the choice of going on without me or having me sit behind them, they decided to let me sit out the ride in peace. That fear stayed with me for many years so I avoided a lot of places that would expose me to the memories of that night when by all accounts, I should not have survived. Time made it a bit easier but I still avoid roller coaster rides.

Dogs come with a "smell" but the scent of a dog is usually not reported to be the cause of a flashback. The sound of a bark or growl can cause nerves to jump. Not all life threatening events come with scents that remind the survivor of it. For me, with drive-in movies, there was the smell of popcorn, hotdogs, burgers and fries but these scents do not remind me of anything other than the fact I usually end up with a craving for them as soon as someone mentions the words. For combat veterans, there are too many reminders of war. While scent therapy wouldn't do much good for someone like me, it can help make a world of difference for combat veterans in helping them heal. It can get them past the "smell" trigger so that other triggers can be addressed like anniversary dates.

Researchers combine smells, combat scenes to treat veterans' stress disorder
By Linda Shrieves The Orlando Sentinel

ORLANDO, Fla. — It's not quite smell-o-vision, but University of Central Florida researchers are kicking off a study that will combine a virtual reality simulation of wartime scenes along with the "smells" of Middle East combat zones to help veterans overcome post-traumatic stress disorder.

Because smells are so acutely tied to memories, researchers hope that the combination of reliving painful experiences — along with the smells of war — will help Iraq and Afghanistan veterans overcome their anxieties.

Known as exposure therapy, the technique teaches people to face their fears by confronting them gradually.

"If you're afraid of a dog, how do you get over it? By being around a dog," said Dr. Deborah Beidel, a University of Central Florida psychology professor who is leading the study.

In the program, Beidel and a team of therapists will use software programs known as Virtual Iraq and Virtual Afghanistan — which look like a video game but simulate the experience of being in those countries — to duplicate the traumatic experiences the soldier witnessed.

Gradually, the teams will take the soldier back through the experience, talking about it and reliving it until he or she overcomes the fear.
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http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/SCI-PTSD_4823222/SCI-PTSD_4823222/

Heartache follows call to duty

Heartache follows call to duty
Monday, April 11, 2011

SALISBURY — When Mo Hopper is out running errands, she likes to say she’s killing rats.

Last week, she was killing a lot of rats, putting the finishing handiwork on a surprise going-away party for her husband, Tim, who will be leaving Saturday for a year’s deployment in Iraq.

Tim, 55 and silver-haired, commands a Black Hawk helicopter unit for the Army National Guard in Salisbury, and he’ll be leading its Iraqi mission. He says he has no worries about the wartime job because he’ll be with soldiers he has complete trust in.

The toughest thing for Tim is leaving Mo behind. She continues to battle a blood and bone marrow disease — MPD, for short — that doctors have said will eventually claim her life.

Mo deflects any concerns about herself — the progression of the disease varies considerably from person to person — and says she has a great support system at home with her friends and military family.

“We definitely do not want Tim worrying about anything here,” she says. “He needs to go — for country, family and God.”

Despite dealing with pain around the clock, Mo remains a fireball. She runs her own business — Hopper’s Quick Bite, a food service at area auctions through the week.

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Heartache follows call to duty

Marine reservists return from Afghanistan with joyful homecoming in Orlando

Marine reservists return from Afghanistan with joyful homecoming in Orlando
They transported troops and supplies across Afghanistan
By Dave Weber, ORLANDO SENTINEL
8:58 p.m. EDT, April 10, 2011
A crowd of more than 100 people, waving little American flags, welcomed the returning Marines, who had just flown in from California, at the Armed Services Reserve Center near Orlando International Airport. The reservists with Motor Transport Company A11 had carried troops and supplies across Afghanistan's rugged terrain during their seven-month deployment.

Home from Afghanistan and safe at last, 14 Marine reservists from Central Florida had a joyful reunion in Orlando Sunday night with family and friends.

"I am glad to be back!" said Lance Cpl. Ricky Herndon, 23, of Inverness, as he hugged his wife and two tiny daughters. "Words can't explain it. I am so happy."

Hayden, 2, and Madysen, 3, had grown, but Herndon's wife, Renae, laughed that she had not. She took his seven-month deployment as an opportunity to lose 116 pounds. When he saw her, Herndon lifted her up, swung her around and kissed her.

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Marine reservists return from Afghanistan with joyful homecoming in Orlando

Wounded Marine receives hero's welcome from Atlanta



Johnny Crawford, Jcrawford@ajc.com Mindi Bennett holds a sign welcoming Marine Cpl Todd Simpson Love home at McCollum Field on Saturday, Apr 9, 2011. Over 500 people welcomed him home from the hospital.
Wounded Marine receives hero's welcome from Atlanta

By Shelia M. Poole
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cpl. Todd Simpson Love is a third-generation Marine, so the words quit and give up aren't found in his vocabulary.


Love was the point man on foot patrol in the Sangin district of Afghanistan on the morning of Oct. 25 last year, when he triggered an improvised explosive device. The most severely injured among his fellow Marines, he lost two legs and part of his left arm.

On Saturday, Love, 20, received a hero's welcome when he returned to Georgia. The wounded member of the 1st Reconnaissance Battalion, B Company, which is stationed at Camp Pendleton, Calif., was met by a motorcade of cars and more than 250 motorcyclists from several groups, including Warrior Watch Riders and the American Legion Post 111, at Cobb County Airport-McCollum Field. He next was whisked to Dallas Landing Park in Acworth for a celebration and mayoral commendation.

A relative kept people informed of the Marine's arrival using Twitter and Facebook messages. When his plane landed from Virginia, courtesy of Angel Flight, he was greeted by hundreds of people with applause, cheers and more than a few tears. Streets to Acworth were lined with well-wishers, signs and American flags.
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Wounded Marine receives hero's welcome from Atlanta

Virginia Community Surprises Returning Wounded Marine


Virginia Community Surprises Returning Wounded Marine – With Video
Posted By Angelia Phillips
April 10th, 2011
DALE CITY,Va. – Twenty-seven-year-old Josh Himan wept with gratitude, Saturday, when he returned to his family’s home after 18 months of recovery and rehabilitation at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

Hundreds of residents of Dale City, Virginia lined the streets and held up homemade signs. 18 police motorcycle officers formed an honor guard. Then, when Josh reached home, he was shown the addition that volunteers constructed in the back of the house. That addition includes a wheelchair-friendly bedroom and bathroom.

An improvised roadside bomb destroyed the Humvee in which Himan was riding in Afghanistan in September of 2009. The Marine Corporal suffered severe spinal damage, among other injuries.
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Virginia Community Surprises Returning Wounded Marine

Marine Sergeant Kenny Lyon received more than just a house

Marine Sergeant Kenny Lyon received more than just a house from Homes for Our Troops. Over 100 roaring motorcycle riders made sure he did not make the journey to the next part of his life alone. Ahead of this day, over 150 people donated supplies and labors of love so that Lyon would never have to worry about having a roof over his head ever again. Simple acts of kindness reminding the country there are still people out there thinking about others. Lyon had seen this kind of kindness before in Iraq when Col. Paulette Schank pumped her own blood into him so that he could live.

Lyon, for his part, was willing to give up his life if that day ever came. As a Marine, he served watching the backs of his brothers. Just as other men and women spend their days willing, able and ready to do whatever it takes to do what they were sent to do and take care of their "family" Lyon knew what it was like to be unselfish. With all the heroes in this story, the story won't end here. Everyone driving by this house, from this day on, will remember the story of the community coming together, working together, for the sake of someone willing to die in service. They will remember the story of Schank so determined to save Lyon, she took her own blood for his sake. They will remember that heroes come in and out of uniform and the next time they are asked to help someone, they may remember all of these wonderful people saying they wanted to help.

Sgt. Kenny Lyon (left) tells how Col. Paulette Schank (right) directly transfused her own blood into his in her successful attempt to save his life after a mortar attack in Iraq. Homes for Our Troops arranged for Col. Schank, seen here hugging Sgt. Lyon's mother, to surprise Sgt. Lyon on the day the organization presented him a new home. (Photo: Business Wire)
Homes for Our Troops Presents Home to Injured Marine
April 10, 2011
FREDERICKSBURG, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Over 100 motorcycles escorted Marine Sergeant Kenny Lyon to the home that will change his life. Homes for Our Troops, a national nonprofit presented Lyon the keys to a specially adapted home, completely mortgage-free.

Lyon suffered life-threatening injuries after a mortar attack, resulting in a left leg above the knee amputation. Homes for Our Troops, Atlantic Builders and 150 businesses and professional volunteers constructed the home in just four days. The home, the fastest built by the organization, marked the 100th home launched by Homes for Our Troops.

“I’ve travelled all over the country and witnessed communities stepping up for these veterans. Every now and then you’ll see one of these communities pull off something extra special, and what the Fredericksburg community did this week was absolutely amazing,” said John Gonsalves, founder and president of Homes for Our Troops.

The emotional high note of the ceremony came when Lyon reunited with the nurse who saved his life, Col. Paulette Schank. After a tearful embrace, Lyon explained how Schank directly transfused her own blood into his body, keeping him alive.

Lyon later expressed his appreciation to the crowd, saying, “The words ‘thank you’ feel so cheap when I won’t have to worry about anything anymore.”
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Homes for Our Troops Presents Home to Injured Marine

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Japanese PM thanks U.S. troops during visit to devastated region

Japanese PM thanks U.S. troops during visit to devastated region
By SETH ROBSON
Stars and Stripes
Published: April 10, 2011
ISHINOMAKI, Japan — Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan praised U.S. troops for their efforts to help people recover from last month’s devastating earthquake and tsunami during a visit here Sunday.

Kan arrived in a motorcade with a large group of other Japanese dignitaries to check on the work of 36 U.S. soldiers and four Marines working alongside Japan Self-Defense Force personnel at Ishinomaki Commercial High School. He found the U.S. and Japanese troops hard at work using shovels, Bobcat mini bulldozers and a bucket loader brought by the Americans to remove the mud dumped by the tsunami on the school’s sports fields.

“The U.S. military is working alongside the Japanese Self-Defense Force,” Kan told a group of Japanese reporters. “I’m happy to see that happen here at this high school.”
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Japanese PM thanks U.S. troops

Internet helps veterans suffering traumas find help, support

Internet helps veterans suffering traumas find help, support

Written by
Carter Andrews

More than 2 million soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. According to RAND Corp. statistics, about 360,000 will suffer from severe depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

One of the particularly heinous consequences of PTSD is it makes people lose trust in institutions set up to support them. They've seen so much and they've lost so much, they don't trust anyone but those who were in the trenches with them.

That's where the Internet comes in. We started notalone.com as a community to help warriors and families support each other as they deal with life after war. To serve the community, we layer in services such as online support groups and online education. These services create the trust we need to persuade warriors and their families to seek our in-person services.

For National Guardsmen and women, the Internet is their life support when they return back to their local communities, where few people can understand what they've been through and how to help.

Through our online portal, Not Alone is helping military families, warriors and veterans heal from devastating psychological and emotional traumas including PTSD, depression, anxiety and alcohol and drug addiction. Without immediate access to behavioral health services, these traumas can have disastrous effects on warriors, their families and communities.
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Internet helps veterans suffering traumas find help, support

Jury rules against Westboro hate group, acquits West Virginia man

W.Va. man acquitted in Westboro spitting trial
The Associated Press
Posted : Saturday Apr 9, 2011 15:32:53 EDT
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A West Virginia man has been acquitted of battery charges for spitting on a member of the Westboro Baptist Church during a protest outside a Catholic church in Charleston last year.

The Charleston Gazette reports that Billy Spade of Hico was found not guilty by a jury in Charleston Municipal Court on Friday after deliberating for less than an hour.

Spade told jurors that as the son of a deceased coal miner, he was offended by protesters holding signs that said “Thank God for dead coal miners.” But it was the sign that said “Thank God for dead Marines” that prompted him to take aim at Shirley Phelps-Roper’s sign and spit at it.

Spade said a roadside bomb killed a friend whom he considered a little brother while he was serving as a Marine in Afghanistan.
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W.Va. man acquitted in Westboro spitting trial

Chicago Marine officers rescue man, woman in wheelchair who fell in lake

Marine officers rescue man, woman in wheelchair who fell in lake
BY SUN-TIMES STAFF Apr 9, 2011 11:13PM

They had just finished a training drill on how to treat near-drowning victims.

Not long after, two Chicago Police Marine Unit officers put that training to use Friday night to rescue a man and a woman who had accidentally fallen into Lake Michigan at DuSable Harbor.

The 60-year-old woman, who uses a wheelchair, and 59-year-old man were leaving a party at the Columbia Yacht Club. The man was wheeling the woman down a ramp when they fell into the water about 9:45 p.m. Friday, police said.
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Marine officers rescue man, woman

Spc. Keith Buzinski Soldier from Daytona Beach killed in Afghanistan

Soldier from Daytona Beach killed in Afghanistan
By Anika Myers Palm, Orlando Sentinel
1:52 p.m. EDT, April 9, 2011
The Department of Defense announced today that a Daytona Beach man died this week while serving with the U.S. Army as part of Operation Enduring Freedom.

Spc. Keith Buzinski, 26, was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 30 Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division out of Fort Drum, N.Y.
Soldier from Daytona Beach killed in Afghanistan

Vet on Death Bed Ejected by VA

Report: Vet on Death Bed Ejected by VA
April 02, 2011
The Virginian-Pilot
HAMPTON -- The Hampton VA Medical Center inappropriately discharged a terminally ill veteran from its emergency room and failed to provide him hospice care requested by his wife, a federal investigation has found.

Investigators from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs' Office of Inspector General found that staff members at the Hampton center were unaware of a VA policy requiring that end-of-life care be provided when veterans and their families ask for it.

The investigators' report, issued Wednesday, came in response to a confidential complaint about the treatment of the veteran, a man in his 50s, who came to the center in August ill with lung cancer that had spread to the brain.
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Vet on Death Bed Ejected by VA

Orlando's Wade Coye, attorney and veteran of the U.S. Army PSA on fallen soldiers




(2011-04-08)
Veteran and Attorney Shoots PSA and Commercial at Local Vietnam Museum

Wade Coye, attorney and veteran of the U.S. Army, recently completed two video shoots

The Coye Law Firm is pleased to announce the completion of a new public service announcement for the Larry E. Smedley National Vietnam War Museum located in East Orlando. This museum was built to remind current and future generations of Americans of the legacy of courage, valor, and sacrifice that Vietnam veterans showed and that our troops currently overseas continue to show.

Wade Coye, a personal injury attorney in central Florida, recently shot a public service announcement at the Larry E. Smedley National Vietnam War Museum to speak of the importance in remembering our fallen soldiers.

The Larry E. Smedley National Vietnam War Museum, formally the National Vietnam War Museum, is a non-profit war museum dedicated to reminding the people of central Florida of the courage and valor of our servicemen and women during the Vietnam War. The museum was currently renamed after Larry E. Smedley for his actions during the Vietnam War who posthumously received the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions. The museum contains a monument to fallen Vietnam War veterans in the state of Florida as well as a U.S. Navy Patrol Boat River, a Douglas A-4B Skyhawk aircraft, and a Bell UH-1 Dustoff helicopter.

Wade Coye has a special bond with this museum and its meaning as he served in the United States Army, 1st Infantry Battalion, 1st Brigade, 2nd Armored Division in Fort Hood, Texas prior to his legal career. As a veteran, Mr. Coye knows that just because a soldier is not at war anymore doesn’t mean that the battle is over. Having successfully handled cases that deal with USERRA and veteran’s benefits, the attorneys at the Coye Law Firm are acutely aware of the challenges that veterans and current soldiers face.

The Coye Law Firm handles personal injury, workers’ compensation, insurance claims, social security disability, and many different types of legal claims. The Coye Law Firm has five locations in the Central Florida area located in Orlando, Tampa, Kissimmee, Melbourne, and Clermont to meet the diverse needs of Central Florida’s communities. Visit our website at www.coyelaw.com or call (800) 648-4941 to discuss your case today.

About Us: The Coye Law Firm works to help people recover from injuries or civil disputes. Our clients may be dealing with personal injuries, workers compensation claims, or denied disability benefits. We also help individuals with estate planning and probate.

Contact Info: Coye Law Firm
730 Vassar Street
Orlando, FL 32804
www.coyelaw.com
800-648-4941

Additional:

Company: Coye Law Firm

Country: United States

Contact:

Website:
Coye Law

Bus E-Mail: coyelawfirm@gmail.com

Phone: 800-648-4941

Morale is suffering among chaplains in Canada's Military




Military chaplains losing programs that help them cope
The Canadian Press
Date: Saturday Apr. 9, 2011 11:41 AM ET
HALIFAX — Some chaplains in the Canadian military say they are losing the very programs meant to help them cope with the suicides, marital breakdowns and combat-related stress they face in their work.

Monthly reports prepared for the Chaplain General highlight concerns over funding cuts that are affecting some chaplaincy training courses, retreats and meetings that address the strain of tending to Canadian Forces personnel.

One branch of the chaplaincy in Halifax reported concerns about the loss of these programs at a time when staff are heavily affected by the ongoing combat mission in Afghanistan, post-traumatic stress disorder among soldiers and increasing workloads.

"This is particularly disheartening given that many of these programs were put in place to ensure chaplaincy resilience after so many chaplains were lost to PTSD," states a report from last July that was obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act.

"Nearly every chaplain in the (Canadian Forces) has felt the effects of the Afghanistan deployment. Yet we are heading into a period where we will be unable to provide chaplains with the very programs that were developed to mitigate these effects."

The document from last July states that funding for Maritime Forces Atlantic was reduced to $79,000 for that fiscal year, down from $105,000 for the previous year.

It adds that staff are being asked to project the impact of greater cuts in the future.
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Military chaplains losing programs that help them cope