Sunday, May 15, 2011

Hillsboro cop is haunted by a welfare check that turned into gunfire

One year later, a Hillsboro cop is haunted by a welfare check that turned into gunfire
Published: Saturday, May 14, 2011, 2:00 PM
By Rebecca Woolington, The Oregonian




Thomas Boyd / The Oregonian
Hillsboro Officer Ryan Johnson was shot at while checking on a possibly suicidal man last June. Another Hillsboro officer was shot and wounded. Nearly a year after the shooting, Johnson thinks about it every day.

HILLSBORO -- Police Officer Ryan Johnson talked to the middle-aged man for seconds outside the blue-gray duplex. A storm door, primarily made of glass, separated the officer from the scowling man, whose doctor called police fearing he may be suicidal.

Abruptly, the man lifted up the back of his T-shirt and whipped out a black pistol from the waistband of his desert-toned, camouflage pants.

And without uttering a word, he pointed the gun square at the officer.

Johnson dashed against the outside wall of the duplex, pulled his own gun and radioed for help. Dragging his left shoulder against the home, he slid out of the man's sight but stumbled into a fold-up chair left in front of the cluttered property. He paused.

A bullet ripped through the house less than two feet in front of him; wood chips flew into the air. Johnson ran behind a red pickup in the driveway.

Officers citywide sped to the duplex and set up outside, their rifles and pistols drawn.

Suddenly, Johnson heard a handful of shots. But he didn't know who was shooting at whom.

Then, over his radio, he heard, "officer down." One of the responding officers, Justin Morris, had been shot in the shoulder.

Eventually, the man, who had also thrown what looked to be a grenade toward officers, crawled out of the unit and into custody. Police had shot him in his right leg.

As Johnson rendered aid to the man, he felt only resentment.
read more here
One year later, a Hillsboro cop is haunted

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Vietnam Vets, first to fight for PTSD care, now last to get it


Other generations came home with what ended up being called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder but unlike other generations, the Vietnam Veterans decided to do something about it. Because of them and their courage to take a stand, we have what is available to todays veterans even though it is far from perfect. Because the newer veterans have all the media attention, what little is given to veterans that is, the Vietnam Veterans end up being pushed aside, told they don't get what is being given to the newer veterans. Take a look at some of the programs for PTSD veterans and you see they are not included in most of them even though they suffered longer without much at all. None of this is fair.


The Invisible Veteran Part 2: Veterans Fight Mental Health


Posted: May 13, 2011 6:33 PM


Associated Links
The Invisible Veteran Part 1: Fighting the Claims Battle
Reporter: Mark Kelly l Photojournalist: Sally Delta

Lynchburg, VA - Post-traumatic stress disorder has gotten more attention in recent years, but the condition is nothing new. Soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan feel it; Vietnam-era vets have felt it for decades. Many came home from war angry and they acted out. But for thirty years, they say, their mental health was ignored and went untreated.

And just when these Vietnam vets got the tools to tackle their mental health, they say, the tools were taken away.

Bud Perry remembers what Vietnam did to his mind. He took a job at a prison, but says he should've been locked up.

"You didn't think about what you were doing. You just wanted to do something, or a crazy idea came up or somebody got you mad, you let go," said Perry.

Perry says PTSD took over him and many fellow vets.

Dr. Thomas Eldridge credits Vietnam vets for shedding light on PTSD.

"The Vietnam era veterans brought this to our attention," said Dr. Thomas Eldridge, Associate Chief of Staff for Primary Care in VA in Salem.

And the VA works to treat it. To save Lynchburg Veterans a drive to the VA hospital in Salem, they brought both mental and physical healthcare closer to home. The community-based outpatient clinic, CBOC, was built on Lakeside Drive in Lynchburg. It provides basic medical care to treat conditions like diabetes, hypertension, and arthritis.

Vietnam Veterans say CBOC gives the physical healthcare they earned. But when it comes to mental healthcare, the Vietnam generation is being pushed aside, just as progress is being made and support groups are gaining ground.
read more here
Fighting the Claims Battle

Army 16 "potential" suicides for April with 9 "potential" more in Reserves

IMMEDIATE RELEASE No. 405-11
May 13, 2011
Army Released April Suicide Data

The Army released suicide data today for the month of April. Among active-duty soldiers, there were 16 potential suicides: none have been confirmed as suicide, and 16 remain under investigation. For March 2011, the Army reported seven potential suicides among active-duty soldiers. Since the release of that report, no cases have been confirmed as suicide, and seven cases remain under investigation.

During April 2011, among reserve component soldiers who were not on active duty, there were nine potential suicides: none have been confirmed as suicides, and nine remain under investigation. For March 2011, among that same group, there were twelve total suicides (three additional suicides for March were reported after the Feb. 28 cutoff date). Of those, two were confirmed as suicide and 10 are pending determination of the manner of death.

The Army continues to improve avenues to seek help. "When a soldier is in a personal crisis and would like to reach out, location should not be the determining factor," said Brig. Gen. Colleen McGuire, director of the Army Health Promotion and Risk Reduction Task Force. "Now, soldiers everywhere can use the services offered through the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline using a Defense Switched Network (DSN) access code, available at military installations around the world."

Soldiers and families in need of crisis assistance can contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. Trained consultants are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year and can be contacted by dialing 1-800-273-TALK (8255) or by visiting their website at Suicide Prevention Lifeline

Army leaders can access current health promotion guidance in newly revised Army Regulation 600-63 (Health Promotion) at: Army Regulation and Army Pamphlet 600-24 (Health Promotion) at Risk Reduction and Suicide Prevention .

The Army's comprehensive list of Suicide Prevention Program information is located at Prevent Suicides

Suicide prevention training resources for Army families can be accessed at Training Resources (requires Army Knowledge Online access to download materials).

Information about Military OneSource is located at http://www.militaryonesource.comor by dialing the toll-free number 1-800-342-9647for those residing in the continental United States. Overseas personnel should refer to the Military OneSource website for dialing instructions for their specific location.

Information about the Army’s Comprehensive Soldier Fitness Program is located at http://www.army.mil/csf/.

The Defense Center for Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury (DCoE) Outreach Center can be contacted at 1-866-966-1020, via electronic mail at Resources@DCoEOutreach.org and at Defense Center for Excellence .

The website for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention is American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, and the Suicide Prevention Resource Council site is found at SPRC.org .

The website for the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors is http://www.TAPS.org, and they can be reached at 1-800-959-TAPS (8277).

Cape Guard unit returns from Iraq

Cathy Darling waits for daughter Lily to step off the plane.
Cape Guard unit returns from Iraq
By K.C. MYERS
kcmyers@capecodonline.com
May 14, 2011
OTIS AIR BASE — The family members, carrying balloons, banners and babies, surged forward with a cheer that sounded more like a roar when they saw the airplane taxi toward them.

Minutes later, troops emerged from the transport aircraft and the tarmac was filled with long embraces and children hugging camo-clad legs. Babies stared at fathers they've barely ever met. And mothers and fathers clutched their now-grown boys and girls after a yearlong deployment in Iraq.

"I'm overwhelmed at the moment," said Damon Solomon, a sergeant in the 3rd Battalion, 126th Aviation Regiment.

His father, mother, grandmother, aunts, nieces, two sons and daughter swarmed around the 30-year-old Plymouth man when he got off the plane.

"To see so many people, it's surreal," Solomon said.

About 160 members of the 3rd Battalion, 126th Aviation Regiment of the Massachusetts National Guard traveled home from Kuwait on Friday.
go here for more and some great pictures
Cape Guard unit returns from Iraq

PTSD: When you can't see the tears

When you see a picture like this it is clear they are wounded and will have to adjust to a different life.
Everything in his life changes. What if he loved to play football? He'd have to adjust to not being able to do that anymore. What if he loved to run and play with his kids? He'd have to learn how to spend time with them in a totally different way. He has to learn how to walk with a metal replacement to his missing leg and foot. Everyone seems to be able to understand the emotional healing he'll have to do.

When you see a picture like this, it is clear someone is in emotional pain.

While this image is all over the web, most people don't know what was behind the story that goes back to 2003.

U.S. military policeman Sgt. 1st Class Brian Pacholski, left, comforts his hometown friend, U.S. military policeman Sgt. David J. Borell, right, both from Toledo, Ohio, at the entrance of the U.S. military base in Balad, about 50 kilometers (30 miles) northwest of Baghdad, Friday, June 13, 2003. Borell broke down after seeing three Iraqi children who were injured while playing with explosive materials. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)


Published on Monday, June 23, 2003 by the Associated Press
Burned Iraqi Children Turned Away By US Army Doctors
by Donna Abu-Nasr

BALAD, Iraq - On a scorching afternoon, while on duty at an Army airfield, Sgt. David J. Borell was approached by an Iraqi who pleaded for help for his three children, burned when they set fire to a bag containing explosive powder left over from war in Iraq.

Borell immediately called for assistance. But the two Army doctors who arrived about an hour later refused to help the children because their injuries were not life-threatening and had not been inflicted by U.S. troops.

Now the two girls and a boy are covered with scabs and the boy cannot use his right leg. And Borell is shattered.

"I have never seen in almost 14 years of Army experience anything that callous," said Borell, who recounted the June 13 incident to The Associated Press.

A U.S. military spokesman said the children's condition did not fall into a category that requires Army physicians to treat them — and that there was no inappropriate response on the part of the doctors.

The incident comes at a time when U.S. troops are trying to win the confidence of Iraqis, an undertaking that has been overwhelmed by the need to protect themselves against attacks. Boosting security has led to suspicion in encounters between Iraqis and Americans. There are increased pat-downs, raids on homes and arrests in which U.S. troops force people to the ground at gunpoint — measures the Iraqis believe are meant to humiliate them.

In addition, Iraqis maintain the Americans have not lived up to their promises to improve security and living conditions, and incidents like the turning away of the children only reinforce the belief that Americans are in Iraq only for their own interests.

For Borell, who has been in Iraq since April 17, what happened with the injured children has made him question what it means to be an American soldier.

"What would it have cost us to treat these children? A few dollars perhaps. Some investment of time and resources," said Borell, 30, of Toledo, Ohio.

"I cannot imagine the heartlessness required to look into the eyes of a child in horrid pain and suffering and, with medical resources only a brief trip up the road, ignore their plight as though they are insignificant," he added.

Maj. David Accetta, public affairs officer with the 3rd Corps Support Command, said the children's condition did not fall into a category that requires Army doctors to care for them. Only patients with conditions threatening life, limb or eyesight and not resulting from a chronic illness are considered for treatment.

"Our goal is for the Iraqis to use their own existing infrastructure and become self-sufficient, not dependent on U.S. forces for medical care," Accetta said in an e-mail to AP.

The incident came to light after an AP photographer took a picture of Borell being comforted by a colleague after the doctors refused to care for the children. When Borell's wife, Rachelle Douglas-Borell, saw the photo, she contacted AP with a copy of a letter he sent her describing what happened.
read more of this here
Burned Iraqi Children Turned Away By US Army Doctors

We think of them as soldiers but forget just how human they are. We have a harder time thinking of Marines as humans with the same emotions the rest of us have. When we see an image like this, we have our heart tugged for a moment but then we let it go just as we expect that Sgt. Borell should have just let it go after. The problem comes when they can't let it go and there is no one like Sgt. 1st Class Brian Pacholski to comfort them. When they are back home, alone with their thoughts, families with no clue how much pain they brought back with them. The pain is still there even when you can't see the tears anymore.

While everyone adjusts after combat, we cannot assume the adjustment is always positive. Two out of three may live with the traumas of combat and end up stronger, more appreciative of what and who they have in their lives. One out of three are facing a negative adjustment afterwards. For them, the pain changes everything. The way they feel about people in their lives changes. The way they look at the world changes. The way they see themselves changes at the same time the people in their lives want to see the same person they always knew.

This leads families into dangerous territory. They respond to the veteran with anger, judgment and demands, expecting the veteran to return to the way they were before. While the veteran can heal, they will never be the same again. Everyone is changed by events in our lives. Some more profoundly than others. Their minds automatically build walls around their emotions to protect them from more harm. The process traps out good feelings as well as bad, releasing anger more than any other emotion because anger kept them prepared in combat. As the above picture shows, there are moments when emotional pain takes over even while anger is strong.

Jerry Beck came home in pain and now his family wants Senator Bill Nelson to get involved with helping the troops come home properly to the help they need to heal. This is not the first family to ask the congress to do the right thing. Helping the families is just as important as helping the soldiers but few families know what to do to help.

Report after report comes out on steps taken to address suicides and PTSD but they are always followed by reports showing these steps are not working. Congress keeps holding hearings on listening to heartbroken families but they don't seem interested in families that have suffered the heartbreak of PTSD veterans and ended up coming out of the dark. When will congress be interested in what has worked since men like this came home?
No one was interested when Vietnam Veterans came home with PTSD any more than they were interested in Korean veterans coming home or older generations. No one was interested in telling families what actually worked to get them through all of it when congress could have held hearings on the problems to finance the healing and then taken a step further, having hearings on what works to make sure those programs received the funds and not research projects for businesses façade pretending to be a program.

Why is congress still hearing about families suffering when they could be listening to families talking about healing?



His family says they've contacted Senator Bill Nelson's (D-FL) office, hoping to raise more awareness about the need for returning military to receive mental health treatment.


Missing soldier with Bay area ties found on Florida east coast
6:42 PM, May 13, 2011
Written by
Adam Freeman
TAMPA, FLORIDA-- A soldier with ties to the Tampa Bay area, missing for more than two weeks, was found early Friday hundreds of miles away from home.

Jerry Beck was found by Brevard County deputies walking alone along the side of a road.

Since disappearing from Georgia, the only sign of Beck, a husband and father of three, came when his car was found abandoned near I-75 and the Lee Roy Selmon Expressway in Hillsborough County.

Beck used to live in Temple Terrace and still has friends in the area, so his family believed he was near Tampa.

"We're so happy now because we know he's alive," said Beck's father, Dewey.
read more here
Missing soldier with Bay area ties found on Florida east coast

Mississippi tops list of states with most on food stamps

Tax dollars and socialism at work feeding hungry people.

10 States That Rely The Most On Food Stamps: USDA
The Huffington Post
Harry Bradford Posted: 05-13-11 12:52 PM

Of all the disastrous consequences of the economic crisis, perhaps the most devastating is the idea of even more Americans struggling to feed their families.

Recent statistics from the USDA indicate that 14.2 percent of the U.S. population was using food stamps in February 2011, or around 44.2 million total, up from 33 million just two years before in 2009.
read more here
10 States That Rely The Most On Food Stamps

1 Mississippi

Percentage of Population on Food Stamps: 20.7 percent
Annual Change in Food Stamps from 2010: 8.4 percent
2010 Total State Population: 2,967,297

2 Oregon

Percentage of Population on Food Stamps: 20.1 percent
Annual Change in Food Stamps from 2010: 9.6 percent
2010 Total State Population: 3,831,074

3 Tennessee
Percentage of Population on Food Stamps: 19.8 percent
Annual Change in Food Stamps from 2010: 17.9 percent
2010 Total State Population: 2,059,179

4 New Mexico

Percentage of Population on Food Stamps: 19.8 percent
Annual Change in Food Stamps from 2010: 17.9 percent
2010 Total State Population: 2,059,179

5 Michigan
Percentage of Population on Food Stamps: 19.7 percent
Annual Change in Food Stamps from 2010: 11.4 percent
2010 Total State Population: 9,883,640
click like above for the rest of the top ten


FEMA, government program
Social Security, government program
Medicare and Medicaid, government programs
VA medical, government
National Guards, government
Military bases, government

For all the screaming about people not wanting to pay taxes, taxes pay for all of the above and everyone seems to want these to all be there when they need them for their own lives, but then complain about having to pay for them. I don't know about you but taxes helping to feed hungry people is fine with me but taxes going to help oil companies take money out of my wallet on top of tax breaks is not fine by me. Taxes paying to keep rich companies getting cuts is not ok with me either. No one wants to pay taxes but everyone seems to want to get whatever they need.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Stress Disorder, Brain Injury Science Lacking Still

Chiarelli: Stress Disorder, Brain Injury Science Lacking

By Terri Moon Cronk
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 12, 2011 – The therapies used for the treatment of brain injuries lag behind the advanced medical science employed for treating mechanical injuries, such as missing limbs, Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli told reporters here today at the Defense Writers Group breakfast.

Chiarelli said more work must be done to properly diagnose and treat service members suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury and suicidal thoughts.
“There’s a lot of criticism with how we handle PTSD and TBI and other behavioral health issues,” he said. “I think a lot of that is unfair, because if you study this, we don’t know as much about the brain. That is the basis of the problem.”

Meanwhile, Chiarelli said, the stigma that some service members associate with actively seeking treatment for mental health issues is still active.

“Breaking the stigma of mental health issues is the hardest part,” the general acknowledged.
Chiarelli said military medicine has been very successful in replacing injured service members’ lost arms and limbs with high-tech prosthetics in tandem with rehabilitation training.

“None of you has asked what we’re able to do with soldiers who lose arms and legs,” Chiarelli told reporters. “I’ve been using my bully pulpit in the last year or so to say that as an agency we do everything we can to understand the brain as we do the rest of the body.”

Chiarelli said progress has been made in diagnosing and treating PTSD and TBI, though he acknowledged that much work remains.

“We’re beginning to get some traction,” Chiarelli said of new information provided by recent studies of PTSD and TBI issues. The general said he’s “harkened” by the Army and National Mental Health Institute all-soldier study of PTSD and TBI, now into its third month.

“We’re starting to get back some data,” he said. “I feel good about it.”

The study starts with monitoring new trainees -- a process that has never been done before, the general said. The Army study, he added, will track soldiers during their careers to monitor them for potential risks.
read more here
Stress Disorder, Brain Injury Science Lacking

This is one more case of what is still being done wrong.

Family seeks changes to VA treatment rules following soldier's death
Published: Monday, May 09, 2011, 9:00 AM
By Holly Setter
Booth Mid-Michigan

BAY CITY — U.S. Army Pfc. Kyle Brooks didn’t die while serving his country in Iraq, but his family says the experience is what ultimately killed him.

Now, family members are taking action and speaking out about the soldier’s death, hoping to prevent further loss of life.

Brooks, a 23-year-old Bay City native, served in Iraq from November 2008 to June 2009. He returned home suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, a form of anxiety that can occur after a person has seen or experienced a traumatic event.

In February, Brooks committed suicide, leaving behind a wife and 2-year-old son. His family buried him April 25 in St. Patrick Cemetery in Bay City.

Family members say Brooks still would be alive had he received the care and support he needed.
“They were treating him for PTSD while he was still over there (in Iraq),” said Mark Charters of Midland, Brooks’ uncle. “They gave him an honorable discharge, a month’s worth of pills and then told him that he wasn’t eligible for help at the VA hospital because he hadn’t served 24 months of active duty.”
The law regarding benefits for veterans does say that a member of the military “must have 24 months continuous active duty military service,” although there are a number of exceptions, including treatment for service-related conditions.
read more of this here
Family seeks changes to VA treatment rules following soldier's death

Yesterday when I read this story I couldn't believe it. (It is one of the posts that Blogger lost somehow) How can something like this happen especially after all the DOD has claimed they have learned about PTSD? Who dropped the ball on making sure this honorably discharged wounded soldier got what he not only needed, but what he paid the price for? What is worse, since Brooks was discharged before he committed suicide, his death won't even be counted by the DOD or the VA.

Posts for May 12th

UPDATE
Blogger fixed the problem and posts are back.

Blogger lost some posts for whatever reason. These posts from yesterday are gone in case you got an update as a subscriber. I will repost most of these as soon as I can.


Wounded Times

Majority of recent war vets treated by VA have mental health problems
Family says Pfc. Kyle Brooks would still be alive if he was helped
A Devastating Injury Spawns New Role for TV Anchor Bob Woodruff and Wife
Police: Gunman tried to enter Leonard Wood Army Base
Words for a Son Home from War
Tom Rooney Wants Feds to Help Vets Fighting Drug Abuse and PTSD
A Vietnam Veteran, hero laid to rest with love
Navy researcher links toxins in war-zone dust to ailments
Soldiers back from combat get help dealing with stress disorder
Batteries Plus Launches "Time to Care" Campaign for military families
Families of war veterans don't get the help they need
Lance Cpl. Victor Zepeda home safe after third tour, killed day after in accident
Thugs learn jumping a former Marine is not a good idea
Lawyer trying to restore good name of good Marine after SWAT shooting
Majority of recent war vets treated by VA have mental health problems
Posted: 12 May 2011 01:14 PM PDT
Majority of recent war vets treated by VA have mental health problems By JOAQUIN SAPIEN ProPublica Published: May 11, 2011 More than half of all Iraq and Afghanistan veterans treated in...

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Family says Pfc. Kyle Brooks would still be alive if he was helped
Posted: 12 May 2011 01:10 PM PDT
Pay really close attention to this part. “They were treating him for PTSD while he was still over there (in Iraq),” said Mark Charters of Midland, Brooks’ uncle. “They gave him an honorable...

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A Devastating Injury Spawns New Role for TV Anchor Bob Woodruff and Wife
Posted: 12 May 2011 01:02 PM PDT
A Devastating Injury Spawns New Role for TV Anchor and Wife By Kerry Hannon|May 9, 2011 Lee Woodruff's first book, In an Instant, is aptly named. She begins with this sentence: "There is a ride...

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Police: Gunman tried to enter Leonard Wood Army Base
Posted: 12 May 2011 12:41 PM PDT
Police: Gunman tried to enter Leonard Wood By Alan Scher Zagier - The Associated Press Posted : Thursday May 12, 2011 13:33:47 EDT ROLLA, Mo. — A gunman tried to break into a Missouri Army base...

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Words for a Son Home from War
Posted: 12 May 2011 10:17 AM PDT
Words for a Son Home from War Minefields of the heart, a Mother's story Minefields of the hearthttp://feeds2.feedburner.com/WoundedTimes

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Tom Rooney Wants Feds to Help Vets Fighting Drug Abuse and PTSD
Posted: 12 May 2011 08:56 AM PDT
Tom Rooney Wants Feds to Help Vets Fighting Drug Abuse and PTSD KEVIN DERBY'S BLOG | POSTED: MAY 12, 2011 11:26 AM Florida Republican U.S. Rep. Tom Rooney, a member of the House Armed Services...

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A Vietnam Veteran, hero laid to rest with love
Posted: 12 May 2011 08:36 AM PDT
Vietnam Veteran Kenneth Mead will be laid to rest tomorrow surrounded by people who cared so much, they stepped up to make sure his life was honored. This is one of those stories that happens all...

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Navy researcher links toxins in war-zone dust to ailments
Posted: 12 May 2011 08:03 AM PDT
Navy researcher links toxins in war-zone dust to ailments By Kelly Kennedy, USA TODAY U.S. troops in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait have inhaled microscopic dust particles laden with toxic...

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Soldiers back from combat get help dealing with stress disorder
Posted: 12 May 2011 07:52 AM PDT
Soldiers back from combat get help dealing with stress disorder by SHELLY SLATER WFAA Posted on May 11, 2011 at 10:41 PM DALLAS — When you see a piece of trash in the road, you probably...

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Batteries Plus Launches "Time to Care" Campaign for military families
Posted: 12 May 2011 07:46 AM PDT
Batteries Plus Launches "Time to Care" Campaign National Retailer Teams up with USA Cares to Benefit Jobs for Vets Program HARTLAND, Wis., May 12, 2011 PRNewswire Recent studies from the...

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Families of war veterans don't get the help they need
Posted: 12 May 2011 07:25 AM PDT
We don't get the help we need to help them and that is a fact. It has been a fact in this country since the first battle. Men and women serving in the military are always first on the list to do...

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Lance Cpl. Victor Zepeda home safe after third tour, killed day after in accident
Posted: 12 May 2011 06:48 AM PDT
Homecoming Turns Tragic For Family Of SA Marine Car Accident In Atascosa County Kills Marine, Injures Wife Eileen Gonzales, KSAT 12 News Reporter POSTED: Wednesday, May 11, 2011 SAN ANTONIO...

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Thugs learn jumping a former Marine is not a good idea
Posted: 12 May 2011 06:42 AM PDT
Robbers attack armed man in Uptown Article by: MATT MCKINNEY and PAT PHEIFER , Star Tribune staff writers Updated: May 11, 2011 - 9:38 PM Police say brazen robbers have struck again in Uptown,...

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Lawyer trying to restore good name of good Marine after SWAT shooting
Posted: 12 May 2011 06:36 AM PDT
Lawyer wants Marine's good name restored Posted: May 12, 2011 12:39 AM Reporter: Joel Waldman TUCSON, Ariz. (KGUN9-TV) - He was one of the few, one of the proud. But, the family of Marine,...

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Thursday, May 12, 2011

Majority of recent war vets treated by VA have mental health problems

Majority of recent war vets treated by VA have mental health problems
By JOAQUIN SAPIEN
ProPublica
Published: May 11, 2011


More than half of all Iraq and Afghanistan veterans treated in Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals since 2002 have been diagnosed, at least preliminarily, with mental health problems, according to statistics obtained by the advocacy group Veterans for Common Sense.

The data, which is released quarterly, also shows that the raw number of returning soldiers with psychological problems is rising. Nearly 18,000 new patients were treated for mental health issues at VA facilities in the last three months of last year—the most recent time period for which data is available— upping the total to more than 330,000.

The latest numbers confirm a trend that has intensified over the last several years. Paul Sullivan, the executive director of Veterans for Common Sense, said that when the organization first began to collect the data in late 2004, only 20 percent of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans in VA hospitals had been diagnosed with mental problems.
read more here
Majority of recent war vets treated by VA have mental health problems

Family says Pfc. Kyle Brooks would still be alive if he was helped

Pay really close attention to this part.


“They were treating him for PTSD while he was still over there (in Iraq),” said Mark Charters of Midland, Brooks’ uncle. “They gave him an honorable discharge, a month’s worth of pills and then told him that he wasn’t eligible for help at the VA hospital because he hadn’t served 24 months of active duty.”

When you are done screaming, read more because it gets worse.
Family seeks changes to VA treatment rules following soldier's death
Published: Monday, May 09, 2011, 9:00 AM
By Holly Setter
Booth Mid-Michigan

BAY CITY — U.S. Army Pfc. Kyle Brooks didn’t die while serving his country in Iraq, but his family says the experience is what ultimately killed him.

Now, family members are taking action and speaking out about the soldier’s death, hoping to prevent further loss of life.

Brooks, a 23-year-old Bay City native, served in Iraq from November 2008 to June 2009. He returned home suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, a form of anxiety that can occur after a person has seen or experienced a traumatic event.

In February, Brooks committed suicide, leaving behind a wife and 2-year-old son. His family buried him April 25 in St. Patrick Cemetery in Bay City.

Family members say Brooks still would be alive had he received the care and support he needed.
read more here
Family seeks changes to VA treatment

A Devastating Injury Spawns New Role for TV Anchor Bob Woodruff and Wife

A Devastating Injury Spawns New Role for TV Anchor and Wife
By Kerry Hannon|May 9, 2011

Lee Woodruff's first book, In an Instant, is aptly named. She begins with this sentence: "There is a ride at Disney World called the Tower of Terror, and on the weekend of January 28, 2006, my four children, even the twin 5-year-olds, begged me to go on that ride over and over again."

The ride begins on a creaky elevator, and then it suddenly drops. "The descent is so rapid, so sudden, that it almost sucks your diaphragm up into your throat... there is a moment where you are literally suspended in air, too stunned to scream."

The following morning at 7 a.m., while her kids slept in their hotel room, the ride began anew when she learned that her husband, ABC News Anchor Bob Woodruff, was critically injured in Iraq.

While embedded with the military, the newsman suffered a traumatic brain injury when an explosive device went off near the tank he was riding in. Bob Woodruff's five-year recovery has been painful and protracted at times, and the experience led the family to take on an unexpected mission.

Spurred by the stories of brain-injured soldiers at Bethesda Naval Hospital, the couple created the Bob Woodruff Foundation (BWF) to aid injured service members and their families, with a special emphasis on the hidden injuries of war -- traumatic brain injury (TBI) and combat stress.

"Difficult experiences can't help but force life in new directions," says Lee Woodruff, who has written another book, Perfectly Imperfect: A Life in Progress.
read more here
A Devastating Injury Spawns New Role for TV Anchor and Wife

Police: Gunman tried to enter Leonard Wood Army Base

Police: Gunman tried to enter Leonard Wood
By Alan Scher Zagier - The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday May 12, 2011 13:33:47 EDT
ROLLA, Mo. — A gunman tried to break into a Missouri Army base Thursday and fired on police who pursued him before crashing a vehicle at a nearby university, which went on lockdown after he was seen walking into a campus building, officials said.

The Missouri University of Science and Technology campus remained locked down at midday as the search continued for the man, who fired shots near campus but apparently not on school grounds, a school spokeswoman said. The university sent an alert at 8:50 a.m. warning that a gunman was seen entering a building that houses classrooms and offices, then noted 15 minutes later that he had left campus.
read more here
Police: Gunman tried to enter Leonard Wood

Words for a Son Home from War

Words for a Son Home from War



Minefields of the heart, a Mother's story


Minefields of the heart

Tom Rooney Wants Feds to Help Vets Fighting Drug Abuse and PTSD

Tom Rooney Wants Feds to Help Vets Fighting Drug Abuse and PTSD
KEVIN DERBY'S BLOG | POSTED: MAY 12, 2011 11:26 AM

Florida Republican U.S. Rep. Tom Rooney, a member of the House Armed Services Committee and a veteran of the Army who taught at West Point, went to bat on Thursday for veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and drug abuse by proposing amendments to be tacked onto the National Defense Authorization Act for the 2012 fiscal year.
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Tom Rooney Wants Feds to Help Vets Fighting Drug Abuse and PTSD

A Vietnam Veteran, hero laid to rest with love

Vietnam Veteran Kenneth Mead will be laid to rest tomorrow surrounded by people who cared so much, they stepped up to make sure his life was honored. This is one of those stories that happens all over this country that you don't read about in the newspapers or see reported on the local news but should be covered since it shows how many people do in fact care about our veterans. The people who used to be in Kenny's life may have forgotten about him, but he was not forgotten by everyone. Read this and see what miracles can happen.
Dear Friends and Family,

Several days ago, I sent you the email below. The response was nothing short of one miracle after another. First, as we were trying to figure out exactly what the Veterans Affairs would cover and what it would not cover for Kenneth's burial, Kenneth's body was erroneously released to be buried as a penniless indigent. Upon learning this, our hero (who does not want to be considered a hero) Tony Rufrano instantly went to work, and conscripted his faithful assistant, Allan Hawthorne the funeral director with the Veterans Funeral Care in Clearwater, who rescued Kenny's remains at the last hour and has since become the custodian and caretaker at this point.

We learned that the Veteran's Affairs will cover a burial plot and small headstone. So we are paying for Kenny's proper internment with the assistance of Allan's generous discounts. Kenneth will be buried with full military honors. The total that we are paying for the preparation of the remains and other requisite items is $2200.00 which includes the $300.00 fee that we must pay to the previous funeral home that was going to handle Kenny as a nameless indigent, and which thereafter released Kenny's remains to the Veterans Funeral Care.

Kenny has now acquired many more friends than I imagine he ever thought possible. And we who never had the privilege of knowing Kenny, are learning more about him from his musician friends in New York.

We know now that Kenny served in the Army and was honored with two (2) purple hearts for his bravery in Viet Nam. Kenny was shot while serving in Viet Nam, rehabilitated, sent back to Viet Nam, and shot yet again. Upon returning home from active duty, Kenny worked an undercover Sky Marshall on commercial airline flights; and thwarted an attempted high-jacking without any loss of life. According to Kenny's dear friend Michael Secondo, that just scratches the surface of the Kenny Mead survival stories.

We also discovered that Kenny was not just tapping a tabletop with his drum sticks. No, Kenny was an accomplished jazz drummer and arranger. Yes, it turns out that our nameless unknown Kenny was in fact a Jazz Great --right there with the best of the best. Oddly no one could locate many pictures of Kenny. Perhaps this is because, as most Greats go, Kenny appears to have avoided the camera. Perhaps Kenny was most comfortable making music rather than showcasing it. My regret as a jazz singer, is that I was never able to meet Kenny. Somehow I feel as if I know him now.

In several days, we have raised a total of $1710.00 and my law firm will be covering the difference as Tony Rufrano has graciously fronted all of the burial expenses.

Funny thing about those veterans. They REALLY DO love our country, and I have seen a very fierce love and loyalty for one of their own. The emails that have come across my desk from members of the Nam Knights and Patriot Guard, -- motorcycle veterans who humbly without seeking any recognition honor their beloved fallen brothers (and sisters I interject) -- have been staggering.

Dean Clark, Army Chaplain and Dean of the St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Orlando, immediately jumped into action and will be conducting the gravesite ceremony.

What began as a man dying alone in his home seemingly with no family or friends, has become a concert of patriotic lovers of country, man, and music who have all come together to honor Kenneth Mead. I created a little flyer, it is attached, letting everyone know when and where the ceremony will be held. We welcome everyone who can attend.

Allan and the Veterans Funeral Care have extended a website where people can go to post and read sentiments and memories about Kenny. The website is: www.veteransfuneralcare.com.

On a personal note, my two grandfathers served in the Navy in WWII, active duty, and my Father-In-Law Anthony DiLorenzo was a Pearl Harbor Survivor (yes, right there as the bombs were being dropped all around him), Navy, who also saw active duty in WWII. You have not only honored Kenneth, but you have honored these precious family members of mine, and all of our priceless veterans. And you have made me very proud to be an American.

Those who can join us on Friday, I have a feeling this will be a very moving experience. -Joyce

(Please feel free to pass this around to anyone that you think would be interested or who would know Kenny.)

Joyce Fuller
Attorney at Law

JC FULLER, PA
1700 N Maitland Avenue
Maitland FL 32751

Navy researcher links toxins in war-zone dust to ailments

Navy researcher links toxins in war-zone dust to ailments
By Kelly Kennedy, USA TODAY


U.S. troops in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait have inhaled microscopic dust particles laden with toxic metals, bacteria and fungi — a toxic stew that may explain everything from the undiagnosed Gulf War Syndrome symptoms lingering from the 1991 war against Iraq to high rates of respiratory, neurological and heart ailments encountered in the current wars, scientists say.

"From my research and that of others, I really think this may be the smoking gun," says Navy Capt. Mark Lyles, chair of medical sciences and biotechnology at the Center for Naval Warfare Studies at the Naval War College in Newport, R.I. "It fits everything — symptoms, timing, everything."

Lyles and other researchers found that dust particles — up to 1,000 of which can sit on the head of a pin — gathered in Iraq and Kuwait contain 37 metals, including aluminum, lead, manganese, strontium and tin. The metals have been linked to neurological disorders, cancer, respiratory ailments, depression and heart disease, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Researchers believe the metals occur both naturally and as a byproduct of pollution.
read more here
Navy researcher links toxins in war-zone dust to ailments

Soldiers back from combat get help dealing with stress disorder

Soldiers back from combat get help dealing with stress disorder

by SHELLY SLATER

WFAA
Posted on May 11, 2011 at 10:41 PM


DALLAS — When you see a piece of trash in the road, you probably don't think twice.

But for many service members returning from combat, that litter can look like an improvised explosive device — an IED.

It's a gut reaction, triggering memories that are often part of post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

"I went from Iraq to Dallas," said Joseph Pedersen. And just like that, Joseph Pedersen's world changed.

It all happened more quickly than he was prepared for.

"You name it, it was different — how you ate; woke up; what you did in your free time; how you rested; who you associated with," he said.

Pedersen suffers from PTSD. Shortly after starting our interview, we chose to stop after he began having a hard time talking about it.

"When you come back, you deserve... you more than earned... to be taken care of," said Dr. John Hart at the Center for Brain Health. And it's with that passion that he approaches a cutting-edge magnet therapy for soldiers.

"Unfortunately, the cells in the brain are not working right," he explained.

The Department of Defense just granted $3 million for Dr. Hart to help soldiers like Pedersen, because with PTSD, there is damage to the brain.
read more here
Soldiers back from combat get help dealing with stress disorder

Batteries Plus Launches "Time to Care" Campaign for military families

Batteries Plus Launches "Time to Care" Campaign

National Retailer Teams up with USA Cares to Benefit Jobs for Vets Program
HARTLAND, Wis., May 12, 2011
PRNewswire

Recent studies from the Bureau of Labor Statistics find that the jobless rate of veterans is 15.6 percent - far exceeding the national average of nine percent. Batteries Plus, the nation's largest and fastest growing battery franchise, was shocked by this gap and decided to create a campaign called, "Time to Care", to help bridge it.

Batteries Plus, with more than 450 stores nationwide, has teamed up with USA Cares, a 501(c) 3 nonprofit organization that helps post-9/11 military service members, veterans and their families with basic financial needs. USA Cares, founded in 2003, helps bear the burdens of service by providing military families and veterans with financial and advocacy support in their time of need. They have helped families in all 50 states and have received over 27,000 requests for assistance. No fees are ever charged and no repayment is ever requested.

The "Time to Care" campaign's goal is to raise awareness about USA Cares and their Jobs for Vets program and raise funds to help veterans get placed back into the work force after serving their country. For one week in May (May 24th- May 30th Memorial Day) and one week in November (November 5th – November 11th Veterans Day) participating Batteries Plus locations across the nation will be teaming up with USA Cares to:
Donate $5 from each regular or lifetime watch battery replacement to USA Cares during these two designated weeks.
Accept "In-Kind" donations from customers which will go to USA Cares

Batteries Plus, LLC will also be contributing $1 for every person who "likes" the Batteries Plus Facebook page and "supports" the USA Cares Jobs for Vets Cause page – up to $25,000.
read more here
Batteries Plus Launches "Time to Care" Campaign

Families of war veterans don't get the help they need

We don't get the help we need to help them and that is a fact. It has been a fact in this country since the first battle. Men and women serving in the military are always first on the list to do whatever the leaders of this country say needs to be done and then they come last in the minds of the general population. After the "movie quality" action is over and done with, the national media outlets find better things to cover so they move onto it ignoring what is happening to the people we sent in. When they come home, there is even less coverage of what is happening to them and as hard as it is on them, it is even harder on their families.

Families of war veterans don't get the help they need, officials say

Written by
Jon Walker
FILED UNDER
News
Families are the new casualties of war, service officials said Wednesday at a Sioux Falls forum.

"Have we taken our eye off the prize?" said Phil Ringstrom, an American Legion spokesman.

Ringstrom said divorce and family discord are problems far outpacing the government's ability to help veterans returning from war.

He spoke in a roundtable at Legion Post 15 where 25 officials from Veterans Affairs and other agencies discussed issues that rural service members face, such as access to care and strain on families. The Rehabilitation Committee of the Minnesota American Legion came to Sioux Falls to sponsor the session because service needs of Minnesota overlap with South Dakota.

Ringstrom, a former Vets Center leader in Sioux Falls and now a Legion committee member in Minnesota, said the military has trouble keeping up with the needs of its modern forces.
read more here
Familes of war veterans don't get the help they need, officials say
Familes of war veterans don't get the help they need

We've come a long way since the days when men like my husband came home from Vietnam and were expected to "just get over it" and get on with their lives. When I met him in 1982 there was nothing available in terms of support for families, so it was up to us to do the best we could for them on our own. Many of our families fell apart and some kids ended up hating their Dads instead of being able to know why they acted the way they did. We were under so much stress that something as simple as going home at the end of the day left us regretting having to go home to one more day of turmoil. "Would he be himself today or would the stranger take over?" took over thoughts with experience taking out more and more strength to stay. Hope was hacked out of us and we knew there was no place to turn to.

What I would have given back in those days to know I wasn't alone, that there were things I could do to help him heal from what Vietnam did to him and be happily married again? We had to learn the hard way how to get there and live in a "new normal" world of living with PTSD.

It was for this reason I wrote my book, For the Love of Jack, His War/My Battle. I wrote it for wives like me but in 2001 as I was still searching for a publisher, September 11th happened. I knew what was coming and PTSD would be worse for Vietnam Veterans, so I self published it in 2002 because troops were going to Afghanistan and talk of sending them to Iraq began. I revised it later and put it up on the web for free.

I can tell you first hand that we need the right kind of support and not just talk about doing it. We need someone to tell us what we are doing wrong as much as we need someone to explain what all of this is all about. I've been trying to do that for almost 30 years but I'm one person and there are well over a million families just like mine needing to learn. The support groups are great for what they do but they don't do it all. They hold the hands of the families instead of leading the way out of the darkness. These families don't want to be held. They want to be empowered. Give them the tools they need to heal their families and let them run with it. Don't just tell them you understand when you don't know what it is like. Find people who made it and find out how they did it. Learn from the experience they had to learn the hard way and stop talking about just the problem without giving any solutions.

Lance Cpl. Victor Zepeda home safe after third tour, killed day after in accident

Homecoming Turns Tragic For Family Of SA Marine
Car Accident In Atascosa County Kills Marine, Injures Wife
Eileen Gonzales, KSAT 12 News Reporter
POSTED: Wednesday, May 11, 2011


SAN ANTONIO -- Lance Cpl. Victor Zepeda was in San Antonio to reunite with family.

Having survived his third tour of duty in Afghanistan, his family thought he was home safe, but one day after arriving, he was killed in a car accident near Poteet.


Watch Eileen Gonzales' Report

"I mean, this is nothing like out there (Afghanistan). You don't expect or at least you don't think that stuff like this will happen. I mean, you hear it every day but it never feels like it's going to happen to you, especially being back in the states," said Victor's brother, David Zepeda.

David and Victor served alongside each other through dangerous situations in Afghanistan.

"We were with each other almost 80 to100 percent of the time," he said. "He helped me through my deployment. He would always be there with me, talking to me and whatnot."

Victor was 2006 graduate of South San High School and was captain of the basketball team.

He'd just finished a third tour of duty in Afghanistan. He was a husband and father of two children. During his trip home, had just met his newborn son for the first time.

read more here
Homecoming Turns Tragic

Thugs learn jumping a former Marine is not a good idea

Robbers attack armed man in Uptown
Article by: MATT MCKINNEY and PAT PHEIFER , Star Tribune staff writers
Updated: May 11, 2011 - 9:38 PM
Police say brazen robbers have struck again in Uptown, jumping a former Marine. The victim was armed and fired several shots.

A pair of brazen and violent robbers struck again Tuesday night, only this time their victim was armed, Minneapolis police said.

Edward A. Curtis, 61, was attacked as he stepped out of his car in the 2500 block of Pillsbury Avenue S., in the Whittier neighborhood. Curtis, who described himself to police as a former Marine, pulled a gun and fired several shots at his assailants and may have winged one, said police Lt. Mike Fossum.

"He had just parked his car in the parking lot," Fossum said. "These guys blitzed him. They just started kicking his ass. He managed to get off three rounds."

The suspects, one a heavyset Hispanic man and another thinner Hispanic man, ran off but may have been injured, police said. Their description and method match that of three other violent robberies that have taken place in the past few days, all within a few blocks of each other in the Uptown area.
read more here
Robbers attack armed man in Uptown

Lawyer trying to restore good name of good Marine after SWAT shooting

Lawyer wants Marine's good name restored


Posted: May 12, 2011 12:39 AM

Reporter: Joel Waldman

TUCSON, Ariz. (KGUN9-TV) - He was one of the few, one of the proud. But, the family of Marine, Jose Guerena, said they want more than just a few answers. And, they want his own children to continue to be proud of their dad.

"He keeps asking that, ‘Is he a bad guy?' said Guerena's wife, Vanessa. She told us that's the only thing on her son's mind since last Thursday's SWAT shooting. It was executing a search warrant for drugs.

The Guerena's insist SWAT found nothing in the home. The family has hired criminal defense attorney Christopher Scileppi. And, he told us restoring the Marine's good name is mission number one, "One of the first and foremost things in her, Vanessa's mind, his wife's mind, is to clear his name and to clear his name with the community and also his own children who saw what happened," said Scileppi.
read more here
Lawyer wants Marine's good name restored
also
Was Marine killed for living in wrong neighborhood

A Captain’s Experience With PTSD

More Than a Memory: A Captain’s Experience With PTSD



From www.DCoE.health.mil
Posted by Robyn Mincher, DCoE Strategic Communications


After a patrol in Baghdad. From L to R: Army Sgt. Jonathan Kindem, Army Staff Sgt. Kevin Robbins, Army Capt. Adrian Veseth-Nelson and Lucas Lewis. (Courtesy photo)
Army Capt. Adrian Veseth-Nelson was 24-years-old when he received the U.S. Army Bronze Star for Valor for his efforts that stopped a group of insurgents in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

“After securing a convoy that was ambushed, my guys got hit by a drive-by shooting. My wingman spotted the shooters in a black sedan. They parked on the side of a school yard and started shooting machine guns. We had to do something,” said Veseth-Nelson. “We chased them onto a crowded entrance to a highway at 65 miles per hour, and I told my driver to ram them. It was out of a movie.”

A survivor, who they pulled out of the wreckage of the insurgent’s vehicle, threw a grenade at them. Fortunately, it didn’t detonate; it was the only one of the 15 grenades later found in the car without a fuse. Veseth-Nelson’s unit was safe, and the sole surviving, injured insurgent was taken away by police.

Once he returned to the states, Veseth-Nelson was considered a home-town hero — respected by family, friends and fans. Celebrations were in abundance, but for Veseth-Nelson, the indulgence didn’t end.

“I was easily drinking two six-packs a day and sometimes would come to work with alcohol on my breath,” he said. “Just like everyone else, I was happy that I was alive. I didn’t know the line between that and self-medicating.”

What Veseth-Nelson didn’t know was that he was self-medicating to cope with symptoms related to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). He developed behavioral and physiological symptoms like disturbed sleep, fluctuating weight, extreme road rage and general anger.

“My first response to any threat was to fight. I even flashed my gun at my colleague,” he said. “My boss pulled me aside and said I needed to change things. He knew the Adrian who he used to see wasn’t the one he was seeing right now.”

Veseth-Nelson took a proactive approach to treatment; he sought out a psychologist on base.

“My psychologist saw my PTSD for what it was,” he said. “She recommended the Specialized Care Program.”
read more here
A Captain’s Experience With PTSD

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Patriot Guard Riders escorting wounded soldier

The Patriot Guard Riders do a lot more than just show up to keep the Westboro Group from attacking military families. They are escorting Spc. Austin Burchard to see his new home built by Homes for Our Troops.


101st Airborne Vietnam Hamburger Hill Veterans return to Fort Campbell






Hamburger Hill Veterans return to Fort Campbell
May 10, 2011
Fort Campbell, KY – Dozens of Vietnam-era, 101st Airborne Division Veterans will return to Fort Campbell, May 12th – 13th, to commemorate the 42nd anniversary of the Battle of Hamburger Hill.
The 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, “Iron Rakkasans” will welcome the Veterans back to Fort Campbell and will host several events in their honor.

Two generations of Rakkasan war-fighters will participate in a memorial run in the early morning hours of May 12th that will be followed by a visit to the Sabalauski Air Assault School, where Veterans will witness a demonstration of 21st Century combat insertion techniques and Air Assault operations. The Vietnam-era “Iron Rakkasans” will also get a chance to rappel off of the famed Air Assault tower here.

On May 13th, a memorial ceremony will be held in honor of the “Iron Rakkasans” who gave their lives assaulting up Hill 937 and will be followed by an open house at the 3rd Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment Headquarters.

go here to read about Hamburger Hill and these veterans of the 101st.
Hamburger Hill Veterans return to Fort Campbell

Pennsylvania pastor said he was a Navy SEAL and Vietnam Vet

After Bin Laden Raid, Fake Navy SEALs Are 'Coming Out of the Woodwork,' Says Watchdog

By CHRIS JAMES
May 9, 2011
A central Pennsylvania pastor who said he was a Navy SEAL and Vietnam vet has been exposed as a fraud – and the man who caught him says the number of wannabes falsely claiming to be veterans of the elite force has "skyrocketed" since the May 1 SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden.

For five years, parishioners of the Christian Bible Fellowship Church in Newville, Pennsylvania believed that their pastor, Rev. Jim Moats, was an ex-SEAL who'd seen combat during the Vietnam War.

In the wake of the bin Laden raid last week, the Harrisburg Patriot-News decided to profile Central Pennsylvania residents who'd served in the SEALs. On Saturday, the paper published a glowing profile of Moats, who reminisced about being waterboarded and about being reassigned to kitchen duty for bad behavior.

"I had almost no discipline," said Moats. "I was as wild as they came. That was my nemesis."

The story soon landed in the email inbox of Don Shipley, a real ex-SEAL in Chesapeake, Virginia who is among the small group of people with access to a database listing all current and former SEALs. Shipley, who has taken it upon himself to expose frauds, has a Google Alert set up to notify him by email whenever someone's claim of having been a Navy SEAL is published on-line.
read more here
Fake Navy SEALs Are Coming Out of the Woodwork

Vietnam Veteran's daughter with spina bifida still seeks justice

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Daughter of Vietnam Vet Seeks Benefits From VA

By Phil Parker
Of the Journal
Gina Montoya believes she is owed benefits by the federal government because of debilitating deformities that might be a direct result of her father's service in Vietnam.

Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., thinks so, too. But officials at the Department of Veterans Affairs disagree.

With Udall's help, Montoya is appealing to get the benefits she has so far been denied, but the process could take months.

"I can't live like this anymore," the 32-year-old Chimayó woman told the Journal, crying. "It's not my fault I was born this way."

The VA says a neurologist who reviewed Montoya's case file found that, while she has a severe congenital problems, she doesn't have spina bifida — a finding in conflict with that of Montoya's current New Mexico doctors. And the VA says rules prohibit giving her benefits, because she wasn't diagnosed with spina bifida at birth.

Meanwhile, Montoya struggles day to day at home in Chimayó. She's low on butane, and her medical bills are piling up. Montoya lives in the house she once shared with her mother, who died 2 1/2 years ago.

Her mother's death, Montoya said, spurred her to apply once again for spina bifida benefits under the Veterans' Benefits Act of 1997. She had been denied previously, in 2004, and gave up until last year.

Gina's father, Ray, was a soldier in Vietnam. He remembers loading barrels into trucks during his service, and remembers an orange band around the drums, from which the chemical inside got its name: Agent Orange.

Read more: ABQJOURNAL UPFRONT: Daughter of Vietnam Vet Seeks Benefits From VA Daughter of Vietnam Vet Seeks Benefits From VA
Subscribe Now Albuquerque Journal

Veterans for Common Sense scores legal win for veterans

Thirty years ago I was probably like most Americans when it came to our veterans. I didn't really think that much about them. I'm ashamed to admit that, but it is the truth even though my Dad was a Korean Vet and my uncles were WWII veterans. Pretty pathetic when you think with all of these veterans, they were all first generation Americans but other than listening to some of their stories when I had to, my thoughts about what they did, where they went and what came home with them ended quickly after I left the room.

That all changed in 1982, thirty years ago as of next year for the math impaired. That was when I met a Vietnam Vet, fell in love and then became a Vietnam War statistic to over come. I married a wonderful man with a very big heart and a very deep pain.

Back then PTSD or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder was talked about in clinical circles. Those were the only books I could find on PTSD. Then there were the untitled whispers in homes all over the country. PTSD back then was a secret. Now all of that has changed but the pain hasn't changed. The help they need to heal has not changed any more than the help the families need has. When I started this work way back then, there was a driving force behind me and that was my husband. Not because he supported what I was doing but because I saw this wonderful man suffering and there are still too many going through hell waiting to finally find their service along with the wounds they carried home are acknowledged. They want to have their wounds treated no matter if they are wounds to their body or to their heads or even their souls. They want to make sure they can pay the rent and feed their families if they are unable to work because of their disabilities. Is that too much to ask in return for asking them to lay down their lives? Isn't that exactly what we asked of them when we sent them to war?

All these years later and so much hope of getting where we need to be on helping them but then we still have to read stories like this one and Veterans for Common Sense still having to fight a legal battle for those we sent into combat. All I can say is thank God they are there!


Major VCS Legal Victory in New York Times
Written by James Dao
Wednesday, 11 May 2011 10:43

Federal Appeals Court Backs Veterans’ Complaints on Mental Health Services

May 11, 2011 (New York Times) - In a sweeping decision released Tuesday, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that “unchecked incompetence” by the Department of Veterans Affairs had led to poor mental health care and slow processing of disability claims for veterans.

“The United States Constitution confers upon veterans and their surviving relatives a right to the effective provision of mental health care and to the just and timely adjudication of their claims for health care and service-connected death and disability,” Judge Stephen Reinhardt wrote for the majority.

In its 2-1 decision in the case, Veterans for Common Sense v. Eric K. Shinseki, the court agreed with the plaintiffs’ claims that the department must put mental health initiatives into effect “systemwide” and alter the disability adjudication process in its regional office.

The ruling came in a lawsuit filed by Veterans United for Truth and Veterans for Common Sense, two nonprofit organizations that are seeking to force the department to make systemic changes to the way it treats veterans with mental health problems and handles compensation claims for injured veterans.

The veterans groups asserted that the department was unprepared for the flood of psychologically troubled or physically injured troops returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, had inadequate services at veterans clinics and had allowed a huge backlog of compensation applications to grow.

In a statement released after the ruling, Veterans for Common Sense said that recent war veterans had filed more than 550,000 disability claims.
read more here
Major VCS Legal Victory in New York Times

OEF and OIF veterans come home but not everyone cares

We've read hundreds of stories about troops coming home and being thanked for their service. Some people wait for hours at an airport to welcome them back from Iraq and Afghanistan. Other people show up to make sure wounded have a home adapted for disabilities. Really wonderful, heartwarming stories that make it seem as if this nation really cares about them but then we read about stories that happened in Gloucester when the VFW wanted to hold and event to honor them and no one came.

Low turnout to thank our veterans
Published: Wednesday, May 11, 2011, 3:00 AM
By Letters to the Editor/Gloucester County Times


I am an Army veteran and captain of the Mantua Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 7679 Color Guard.

On May 1, our color guard was invited to Williamstown VFW Post 1616 for a loyalty day to thank our veterans for their efforts in protecting us. The ladies auxiliary had prepared food for everyone. Present were the Williamstown Color Guard and their officers, our color guard and Air Force ROTC representatives. Also present were the Monroe Township mayor, and county and state officials.

They had the hall set up with 16 tables of eight each. The event was open to the public, and a sign posted out front welcomed everyone to attend.

There was only one problem. Nobody from the general community showed up.
read more here
Low turnout to thank our veterans
But this is not just one case of one community not showing up to even say thank you. It happens more than it should. It isn't just the government letting these men and women down, it is town after town and city after city, which is really terrible considering they are deployed from all over the country. It should never depend on where they live when they come back if they feel appreciated or not.


Iraq Veteran Comes Home to Warm Welcome Then Apathy!
May 10, 2011 posted
by Robert L. Hanafin

Iraq and Afghanistan Vets Come Home to War
We’ve done a series of stories here at Veterans Today (VT) dealing with the shocking scandals that tend to plague the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) system. My last update on the Dayton VA Medical Center scandal was on 25 April, also back in late April VT was contacted by a young Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) Wounded Warrior asking us to tell his story.

Although this is the story of only ONE Iraq and Afghanistan War Veteran, we at VT know enough about the flaws of the VA system, most recently a VA admitted failure of leadership that we believe is system wide and fixable.

However, one only need go to young Veteran blogs regardless of their own personal political views on the war(s) to find one thing they all have in common – far too many young Veterans (well old Vets too) are still falling through the cracks of a broken VA system.

OIF Veteran David Kendrick contacted our senior editor Gordon Duff noting that he came across our website looking for military friendly news sites. David told VT that he made a short documentary on You Tube that he was trying to bring some media attention to. David was shot in both legs in 2007 and now he feels as if he has nowhere to turn. He asked us to view the video and consider posting it on Veterans Today.

We have decided to do just that, because we believe David is the tip of the iceberg when it comes to young Veterans falling through the VA cracks, not getting the word about VA benefits (despite in all fairness VA outreach efforts now appearing to include excellent TV ads outreaching to younger Veterans at least here in SW Ohio).
read more here
Iraq Veteran Comes Home to Warm Welcome Then Apathy
OIF Vet Cry for Help!

Was Marine killed for living in the wrong neighborhood?

SWAT officers go to the home of a veteran Marine to search the house for drugs with a "narcotics conspiracy search warrant" but found nothing.
Authorities tell us three other neighborhood homes were targeted Thursday, all tied to a narcotics conspiracy.
but this Marine came home from work, went to sleep and was woken up by screams, smashing glass and bullets. Did they know anything about this veteran or his family? Did they have any clue if he was involved with drugs or if he just lived in the wrong neighborhood? It looks like they didn't know very much at all.



Marine killed by SWAT was acting in defense, says family


Posted: May 10, 2011 9:14 PM

Reporter: Joel Waldman

TUCSON, Ariz. (KGUN9-TV) - A smashed window and a barrage of bullet holes might be the type of scene a battle-hardened marine finds in a war zone; not the Tucson home he shares with his two children and wife, "I saw this guy pointing me at the window. So, I got scared. And, I got like, ‘Please don't shoot, I have a baby. I put my baby (down). (And I) put bag in window. And, I yell ‘Jose! Jose! Wake up!" explained wife Vanessa Guerena.

Husband Jose had just come home from working at the mine. His wife Vanessa said he had just slept two hours, only to wake up to chaos in his house. It was Pima County SWAT executing a narcotics conspiracy search warrant.

SWAT gunned Jose down with 71-rounds fired in just about 7-seconds; officials say they did not expect Vanessa to be home with four year old son Joel, who has questions like so many others, "The only thing he asked me, "Mom, my dad a bad guy? They killed my dad! Police killed my dad? Why? What did my dad do?" explained Guerena.
read more here
Marine killed by SWAT was acting in defense

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Budget cuts by GOP would hurt veterans

This reminds me of a conversation I had last night after class. A fellow student and I were talking about being our age in Digital Media classes and one thing lead to another. We started talking about what I do when she told me she was Republican for a lot of reasons but one of them was that they supported the troops. I told her what the truth was and she was shocked. The only part of the military the Republican elected support are contractors. When it comes to the troops, just as when it comes to veterans, they seem to have a huge problem with paying them back for their service. When you look up their voting records along with their lack of bills written for the sake of the men and women risking their lives, you see their "support" is not even close to how much the support defense contractors. If you are shocked with what they are doing to veterans instead of for veterans around the country, you just didn't pay enough attention to them.


State VA chief: Budget cuts by GOP would hurt veterans
Article by: RACHEL E. STASSEN-BERGER , Star Tribune Updated: May 5, 2011 - 11:18 PM
Republican committee chairman in the House called Shellito's analysis "a complete overreaction."


Republican budget cuts could trigger the closure of at least one veterans' home, higher burial fees for veterans' families and elimination of the Bronze Star grave marker program, according to state Veterans Affairs Commissioner Larry Shellito.

Shellito, who led the state National Guard under former Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty, said the budget as it stands would result in layoffs and other cuts, even though Republicans had pledged to protect veterans from spending reductions. "I'm very concerned," Shellito said.

Rep. Morrie Lanning, R-Moorhead, the House State Government Finance chair, said the administration's estimates are a "worse, worse, worse case scenario." He called Shellito's analysis "a complete overreaction."

Sen. Mike Parry, R-Waseca, Lanning's counterpart in the Senate, was not available for comment, despite repeated requests.

Although rhetoric at the Capitol has heated up as the budget process grinds toward a May 23 adjournment, Shellito said his projections are not part of that fight. "I don't play games," said Shellito, a major general in the Guard. "It's really serious."

In a letter to Gov. Mark Dayton on Thursday, Shellito said the budget proposals for his department would result in layoffs for more than 100 employees.
read more here
Budget cuts by GOP would hurt veterans

Nationwide 2K Event Will Support Homeless Veterans and

Nationwide 2K Event Will Support Homeless Veterans and

Promote Employee Wellness



WASHINGTON (April 22, 2011) - The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is
hosting a nationwide 2K Walk and Roll event at more than 130 VA
facilities on June 2 in support of employee wellness month. The event
will also encourage employee and local community support of homeless
Veterans.



"Worksite wellness activities enhance employee engagement and contribute
to a more productive and healthy workforce," said Secretary of Veterans
Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. "These 2K Walk and Roll events are an
excellent way to involve the entire VA community, highlight the
importance of physical activity in maintaining a healthy lifestyle, and
help homeless Veterans get the assistance they need."



VA facilities across the Nation will be holding individual 2K events on
June 2 in each of their respective locations. While there is no
registration fee, employees and volunteers participating in the event
are asked to donate to support homeless Veterans. Participation is open
to the community; donations are optional.



VA's employee wellness program is known as WIN (Wellness Is Now). WIN
empowers employees with the knowledge, skills and tools they need to
create a culture of health and wellness. Further, the group encourages
employees to use their appreciation of wellness to inspire Veterans to
live healthier lifestyles.



WIN integrates traditional occupational safety and health programs with
health promotion activities, addressing both workplace and worker
health. Through this program staff find opportunities to embrace healthy
and positive lifestyle choices that sustain and improve their own
health, reduce preventable injuries and illnesses, reduce absenteeism
and enable them to do their important work of serving the Nation's
Veterans.



Email AskVHAEmployeewellness@va.gov to find out if your VA facility is
hosting a 2K event. VA facilities can be located by visiting
www.va.gov/directory.

Wounded Marine has tomorrow in his power after loss of all limbs

‘He’s just a great guy’
By Diana Kuyper Special to The News-Sun May 10, 2011 2:19AM

ANTIOCH — Marine Sgt. John Peck wheeled into the VFW on Monday morning in his motorized wheelchair and was inundated with attention from area residents and officials. They wanted to thank him for his service and the sacrifice he made when he lost four limbs in an IED explosion in Afghanistan almost a year ago.

Peck arrived in a motorcade escorted by police and fire vehicles and a Patriot Guard motorcycle contingent. More than 2,500 supporters, including hundreds of grade and high school students, lined the sidewalks on Main Street and waved American flags as he passed by in a van donated by the Semper Fi Fund.

With parents Zenio and Lisa Krutyholowa by his side and his Siberian husky puppy, Mischa, on his lap, he at times looked overwhelmed, wiping tears from his face on his dad’s shirtfront. But then he playfully flexed the muscles in his upper left arm after someone mentioned the hours he’s spent in physical therapy over the past year.

“My arrival home this week was different than I expected. It is nice that people genuinely care, but all of this is overwhelming,” said Peck, who since arriving home a week ago has had several television interviews, was center court at a Bulls game and was treated to a weekend in Chicago courtesy of the Semper Fi Fund. “It is amazing to me how much effort people have made on my behalf.”

He readily admits at times he is down and depressed, “but I can’t do anything about what happened. I can’t get in a time machine and go back and change anything. But I have found out I can overcome a lot and still have a smile on my face. My goal is to wake up every morning and just do what I have to do. It’s not like I have a choice.”
read more here
‘He’s just a great guy’

"It's not unusual" for soldiers to dance but this one did it to rocket!

Eat your heart out Tom Jones. Even you couldn't pull off a performance like this in your prime.
Soldier Does 'The Carlton'
Soldier Does 'The Carlton' Dance While Rocket Launches Behind Him (VIDEO)

4 Kansas National Guardsmen save 2 Liberians

4 Kansas National Guardsmen save 2 Liberians
The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday May 10, 2011 9:32:24 EDT
TOPEKA, Kan. — Four Kansas Army National Guard soldiers are credited with saving two Liberian soldiers who got caught in a riptide while swimming in the Atlantic Ocean.

The soldiers are members of the 1st Battalion, 161st Field Artillery. The Topeka Capital-Journal reports they rescued the two Liberians on April 16 while swimming at a beach in Monrovia.

The guardsmen are Sgt. Michael Eicher, of Topeka; Sgt. Joseph Johns, of Great Bend; Sgt. Chad Kuker, of Spearville; and Sgt. Rich Miles, of Topeka.

Kuker told the Capital-Journal that the soldiers and two other Liberian soldiers formed a human chain and waded into the surf to rescue the two swimmers.

The soldiers were recognized in a ceremony led by U.S. Army General Carter F. Ham, who was visiting Monrovia at the time.
4 Kansas National Guardsmen save 2 Liberians

SWAT team stand off ends when veteran takes his own life

New concerns about veterans and PTSD

May 9, 2011
By Bryan Navarro



WHITE CITY, Ore. -- A SWAT team stand off with a veteran has health experts concerned about PTSD, or "Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder."

The stand-off happened Sunday evening in Rogue River and ended with the subject committing suicide.

Police officials did not return calls regarding the incident and could not comment whether post-traumatic stress disorder played a role.

Veteran psychologists say it may be easy to categorize actions as PTSD symptoms, but it can be harmful to do so.

Officials with the V.A. Dom in White City say the percentage of veterans who are diagnosed with PTSD is between 30 and 40% of all vets.

They believe the number of veterans diagnosed with the disorder has increased during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
go here for video report
New concerns about veterans and PTSD

Homeless Veterans displaced by Alabama tornados find refuge in Midlands

Vets displaced by Alabama tornados find refuge in Midlands

By Taylor Kearns - bio | email

COLUMBIA, SC (WIS) - It has been almost two weeks since the deadly tornado outbreak that ravaged seven different states. More than 300 people died in the storm, and hundreds more are now homeless. Some of the displaced are finding shelter in the Midlands.

The Central Midlands Transitional Retreat has opened its doors to 24 homeless veterans displaced by those tornadoes. "We were blessed to make it out of there alive," said Calvin Gates.

Gates, Donald Crenshaw and James Williams saw a lot during their time in the military, though nothing quite like the devastation they saw in Tuscaloosa. "It looked like when they dropped the bomb on Hiroshima," said Williams.
read more here
Vets displaced by Alabama tornados

At VA, a blogger criticizes from the inside

At VA, a blogger criticizes from the inside

By Lisa Rein, Published: May 9

Back from a 15-month deployment to Iraq, Alex Horton penned a 1,000-word rant against the Department of Veterans Affairs.

“How many obscene scandals, misappropriations and misdiagnoses does it take to see there’s a rotten core at the center?” the 23-year-old soldier wrote on his war blog from Austin in 2009. He was in his fourth semester at community college, and VA was holding up money he needed for rent and schoolbooks under the new GI Bill.


His unsympathetic VA counselor “provides the same level of care you would expect from a Tijuana back alley vasectomy,” Horton wrote, expressing a frustration felt by generations of veterans.

What happened next was a watershed for one of the government’s most maligned bureaucracies.

Veterans Affairs hired Horton to keep blogging — about itself.

The agency hopes to use the Internet — and a critic operating from the inside — to help turn around its reputation as obstructionist, antiquated and overwhelmed. The goal is not just to answer veterans’ questions faster and in real time but also to open the bureaucracy to scrutiny. Although they’ve gotten a slower start than the private sector, federal agencies are interacting with citizens on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, a big change for many used to more-controlled communication.

At first Horton said no when the department’s new-media director tried to recruit him last spring. “Then I thought, this might be an opportunity,” he said.

He quit school and a part-time job corralling grocery carts at Costco and drove his Ford Ranger to the District, where he rents an English basement on Capitol Hill.

Instead of blogging without pay in a dusty Internet cafe in Mosul, Horton makes $47,500 a year to write full time from a ninth-floor cubicle at VA headquarters on Vermont Avenue NW. Now 25, he arrived with instant credibility with veterans, who followed his must-read war blog, Army of Dude, during the U.S. troop surge for its unvarnished, eloquent dispatches.

But his job has an inherently awkward dynamic — work for “The Man” and risk selling out (“Now I suppose he will be busy spewing government propaganda,” one military blogger wrote after his hiring); become too critical and irk your bosses.

Brandon Friedman, who oversees the five-member new-media team created last fall, said: “I told everyone upfront, Alex is not here to flack for the agency but to help facilitate our communication with our clients.”
read more here
At VA, a blogger criticizes from the inside