Sunday, May 3, 2015

Jacksonville PTSD Veteran On Wait List for Service Dog

Local vet just wants to go to the grocery store 
First Coast News
Jeannie Blaylock
May 1, 2015
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Let's say you're craving ribs or chocolate chip cookies. What do you do? Head to the grocery store of course. And so a trip to the grocery store is no big deal to most of us, but it is to many of our veterans dealing with PTSD. In fact, to them it can be a nightmare.

James Rutland is a 12-year veteran who lives in Jacksonville. Obviously a sharp guy, Rutland is frustrated with the 41 pills he got from the VA.

He says they just throw him into a zombie state. His medical diagnosis of PTSD, however, enabled him to apply for K9s for Warriors, a local non-profit which matches trained and certified service dogs to veterans.

Rutland visited with the K9s staff and put in his application. He recently found out he's been accepted into the program.

The problem? He has to be on the waiting list until January 2016.
read more here

Green Beret Becomes Seahawk

Former Green Beret and Texas long snapper Nate Boyer hopes to hook on in NFL 
USA TODAY
Nate Davis
Sports
May 2, 2015

(UPDATE: Boyer was offered a contract by the Seattle Seahawks after the NFL draft concluded Saturday evening.)
Boyer served multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. (Photo: Courtesy Nate Boyer)
Nate Boyer is a special teams ace, which seems highly appropriate once you're familiar with his background.

A man who willingly tackles challenges, Boyer is currently trying to surmount a huge one — latching on with an NFL team as a long snapper.

At 5-11, 220 pounds and 34 years of age, he is the longest of long shots. But unfavorable odds typically don't deter men who have served with the Green Berets, and Boyer's beaten them before.

After serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, he decided at age 29 that he better attend college, fearing he never would otherwise. In the process of matriculating at the University of Texas, Boyer also walked onto the football team even though he'd never played a competitive down in his life.
read more here

Senator Bill Nelson Calls for Veterans Crisis Line Investigation

VA Crisis Line under investigation
Military Times
By Patricia Kime, Staff writer
May 2, 2015

Amid concerns that the Veterans Affairs Department's suicide hotline has left veterans stranded during high-volume call periods, a senator has asked VA to investigate the service to ensure it is meeting veterans' needs.

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., recently sent a letter to VA Secretary Bob McDonald asking for data on the Crisis Line's call volume, hold times, and average wait times between when a call is made and the caller can see a VA therapist or counselor, or a community provider, in person.

Nelson's request was made in response to a news report by Tampa television station WFTS that Air Force veteran Ted Koran was placed on hold repeatedly for up to 10 minutes at a time as he fought off suicidal thoughts.

According to the report, Koran's wife died of cancer last year and he was despondent the day he made the call.

But when he dialed, he was placed on hold numerous times. After he reached a counselor, he said he did not feel comforted, according to the report.

"They had me on the [verge] of saying to hell with it," he said, according to WFTS.

Since its creation in 2007, the Veterans Crisis Line has fielded more than 1.6 million calls and is credited with 48,000 rescues, according to VA.
read more here Here is the story of what happened that time.
Veteran says he was repeatedly put on hold by veterans' suicide hotline
Hotline has problems with handling number of calls
ABC News
Adam Walser
Apr 13, 2015

He put himself in danger to protect our country, but when he needed help to save his own life all he got was a recorded message. Ted Koran was thinking about committing suicide Saturday night.

He reached out to the VA and the Veterans Suicide Hotline for help, but said he couldn't get any until after he was repeatedly put on hold for up to 10 minutes at time.

Veterans in Crisis: Vets put on hold for 36 minutes His case is just the latest the I-Team has been exposing for months now.

When the Veterans Crisis Hotline was first set up by the VA in 2007, it averaged 60 calls a day on four manned phone lines.

Now, 52 operators at a time field about a thousand calls a day, and that's not always even enough to keep some veterans on the verge of suicide from being placed on hold.
read more here

And before that
Veterans describe runaround when calling crisis line; Texas man records 36 minutes on hold
KJRH News
Amanda Kost, Scripps News
Isaac Wolf, Scripps News
Feb 23, 2015

WASHINGTON D.C. - On an evening last March, 42-year-old Dedra Hughes’ thoughts turned to suicide.

The Army veteran, who had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder five years earlier, had split with her boyfriend days before. She was unemployed and had stopped taking classes. And she was convinced her two daughters would be better off without her. Sitting on the floor of her suburban Chicago living room, Hughes attempted to slash her wrist but didn’t draw blood, and says she passed out from anxiety. Her 12-year-old discovered her there on the floor with the knife beside her.

Hughes decided that night to turn to the national Veterans Crisis Line, a 24-hour, seven-day-a week service that promises an immediate, open line to professional help. But when Hughes phoned, she said, her call went straight to hold. After several minutes, she became frustrated and hung up. “I would never call the hotline again,” said Hughes. She said she needed to quickly get to someone that night who could give her help and reassurance.
read more here

His story came out the same day this did.
Oscars 2015: Who Dana Perry Is and Why She Want Us to Pay Attention to Suicide
ABC News
By JOI-MARIE MCKENZIE and EMILY SHAPIRO
Feb 23, 2015

While accepting the Oscar for best documentary short subject, director Dana Perry said suicide should be talked about "out loud," dedicating the award to her son.

During her acceptance speech on behalf of "Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1," the music abruptly cut off when Perry mentioned her son, Evan Scott Perry, who committed suicide at age 15 in 2005. "I lost my son," Perry told reporters after the speech.

"We need to talk about suicide out loud to try to work against the stigma and silence around suicide because the best prevention for suicide is awareness and discussion and not trying sweep it under the rug."

Perry also mentioned veteran suicide in her Oscar speech, which she called "a crisis." Tonight's Oscar-winning HBO documentary, directed by Perry and Ellen Goosenberg Kent, is about the Department of Veterans Affairs' 24-hour call center for veterans.
read more here

Wonder if they thought to include what else was going on?

This was part of the Joshua Omvig Suicide Prevention Act in 2007. Ever since then veterans have been complaining to members of Congress about what was happening to them when they did call. Not much changed. So now we get yet another investigation to be followed by even more hearings. No one seems to know when we get something that actually works.

When Will Nation Make Veterans High Profile Story?

I was watching WESH 2 News this morning and they were reporting on the protest in Orlando over the death of Freddie Gray in Baltimore. They called it a "high profile" story.
'We're human beings. We all need to care about each other and that's not what I'm seeing," demonstrator Krystal Pherai said.

She is right. We should care about each other. What she isn't seeing is what is happening to veterans all over the country everyday in America. They come home from wherever they are sent and simply don't get the help they need to be pulled from the brink of total despair. No matter how many times we've heard the American people care about them, the result is always the same. They are forgotten about. People move on until the next scandal and they become a story that is supposed to matter.

What doesn't matter is people forget all about everything they just learned. Their suffering doesn't end, nothing substantial happens and then the next time a reporter covers another scandal, folks get to pretend it is something new. The cycle goes on and on as history is repeated.

They have no clue how bad it has been for veterans. This report out of Boise sums up what the average citizen isn't aware of.
Boise Police Department On average, Boise police officers encounter approximately one veteran per week facing a crisis and in need of assistance, and officers are provided the opportunity to aid in referring the veteran to one of the network partners. These interactions demonstrate the value of the program, and that its objective is being met.

At least they are talking about what veterans are going through. Too bad it hasn't become a "high profile" news story. The population of Boise is 214,237 yet every week they have to respond to a veteran in crisis. There are only 16,725 in Boise.

There is the National Veterans Crisis Line veterans can call 1-800-273-8255 24-7. But over and over again we find that veterans are still committing suicide double the civilian population.

There is now an investigation into veterans being put on hold by the Crisis Line topped off with the fact that when veterans call the VA the automated phone message says "If this is an emergency call 911.

The VA has the Veterans Center where veterans are supposed to be able to get help they need before they end up in crisis.
The Vet Center
Ten Minutes Away
As fate would have it, there was a Vet Center just 10 minutes down the road from where Beatty worked at Fort Belvoir.

“When I walked in there, everything changed for me,” she said. “I had individual sessions with a female therapist, and 12 weeks of Cognitive Processing Therapy to specifically address my PTSD. I also completed a 12-week trauma group that was designed for women Veterans. I had always felt alone in my trauma, but being surrounded by supportive women who understood what I was going through was comforting. It helped me a lot.”

On April 4th a freeway was shut down because there was a police standoff with a suicidal veteran.
WacoTrib.com It was then that the man told officers he was trying to get to the Veterans Administration hospital in Temple when he ran out of gasoline.

Police confirmed he was a veteran and took him to the hospital. Investigators were waiting Saturday afternoon to talk to doctors and decide whether to file charges, Dickson said.

But here is another one that was resolved and the veteran is finally getting help.
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Less than one week after being found not guilty by a Travis County jury on charges of assaulting a police officer, Marine veteran Gene Vela says he will check himself into a Veteran Affairs clinic in Temple on Tuesday.

In an exclusive interview with KXAN’s Sally Hernandez, Vela, 31, says he’ll be getting treatment for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Treatment was something he was trying to do for months before he was shot three times by Austin police during a stand-off in November 2013, the day before Veteran’s Day.

Why didn't he get help before that? Why did it all this happen?
Brian Babb, Oregon National Guard, had PTSD and TBI. He called for help because he was suicidal. He ended up being shot by police instead.

Veteran’s family pledges to push for changes
Brian Babb’s relatives are proposing a new protocol for police responding to similar incidents in the future
The Register-Guard
By Christian Hill
MAY 3, 2015 (Edited for summary)
The therapist called police to Babb’s home in west Eugene after Babb reported to her that he was contemplating suicide and had fired a handgun in his home.

The therapist, Becky Higgins, remained on the phone with Babb for about 45 minutes. She said her client was beginning to calm down and had unloaded the handgun.

But Higgins said Babb walked away from the call after police directed Babb over a loudspeaker mounted on an armored vehicle to exit his home unarmed, and when a 911 dispatcher directed Higgins over her objections to hang up her line so a crisis negotiator on scene could get in touch with Babb.

Higgins said she had repeated to the 911 dispatcher that Babb had unloaded the handgun, but it’s unclear what information got to the officers on scene.

“We have said that we believe there were multiple points in time that if where a single action had been changed, he would be alive,” said Ronda McGowan, Babb’s other sister. “It would have been a better outcome.”
read more here

May 1, 2015
Officials layout a moment by moment timeline of events leading to the fatal shooting of Brian Babb by a Eugene Police Officer during a standoff in Eugene March 30th, 2015. (Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard)
My first thought was why didn't the negotiator talk to his therapist? After all, she was on the phone with 9-11.
“Nothing I’ve said here is intended to suggest there was no possible alternative or no possible better outcome or nothing could have fallen differently,” Gardner said. “We have the benefit of lots of information now that we didn’t have then.”
It is also puzzling as to why they didn't use tear gas or a flash grenade?
A stun grenade, also known as a flash grenade or flashbang, is a non-lethal explosive device used to temporarily disorient an enemy's senses. It is designed to produce a blinding flash of light and intensely loud noise "bang" of greater than 170 decibels (dB) without causing permanent injury.
After the roommate walked out of the house, there was no one else in the home other than Babb.

So yes, veterans should be a high profile story. The question is, when will the national media notice a national crisis for our veterans?

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Vietnam Veteran Patriot Guard Rider Killed in Motorcycle Accident

Victim Of Deadly Interstate 35 Motorcycle Crash Was Vietnam Veteran
KWTX News Texas
By: Ben Griffin
May 1, 2015

A 67-year-old man who died Friday morning in a motorcycle accident on Interstate 35 was a Vietnam veteran and a member of the Central Texas chapter of the Patriot Guard Riders.

SALADO (May 1, 2015) The motorcyclist killed Friday morning when his three-wheeled bike overturned and landed on top of him following a crash with another vehicle on Interstate 35 in Salado was identified Friday evening as Robert D. Binkely 67, of Round Rock.

Binkely was a Vietnam Veteran and member of the Patriot Guard Riders, Ron “Joker” Smith of the Patriot Guard Riders Central Texas Region said.

Binkley participated in more than 850 honor missions over the past five years, Smith said, and was dedicated to veterans and the veterans’ community. read more here

Memorial For Homeless Veteran Attended by Hundreds

Hundreds Gather For Funeral Of Homeless Oklahoma Veteran 
6 News Oklahoma
Posted: May 01, 2015

OKLAHOMA CITY - Hundreds packed into the chapel to say goodbye to Jerry Bryan Billings. Even more stood outside. Billings was born in 1945 in Sulphur. He died on Christmas Eve at the age of 69. 

For two months, Christine Hoffman with Oklahoma County Social services tried to track down his family. But after having no success, she contacted Dignity Memorial Homeless Veterans Burial program. And after word got out on social media about the memorial service, it went viral.

"This was just amazing, absolutely amazing, my heart is swollen," said Hoffman.

“The more people that will show up to celebrate the life of these veterans, the more meaningful it is,” said Chapel Hill Funeral General Manager, Todd Tramel.

“Sometimes it brings tears to you just because these men and women gave so much for our country and just to celebrate their lives, and to give back in a manner like this is beautiful.”
read more here
NewsOn6.com - Tulsa, OK - News, Weather, Video and Sports - KOTV.com |

PTSD Marine Travels Country Hugging Veterans

Former Marine Travels Country Offering Free Hugs to Veterans 
ABC WSIL News
By Matthew Searcy
Apr 30, 2015

MARION -- A former Marine is traveling across the country, offering a different type of healing to veterans who suffer from PTSD.

Hugs have become a part of the daily routine for former Marine Ian Michael.
"Once the initial hug is made it's like the pebble in the water," said Michael. "Everything ripples out."

Michael travels the country, hitting veteran's hospitals like the Marion VA, all with one goal in mind. He wants to share a heartfelt moment with veterans who may suffer from the same illness he does. 

"At the end of the day love is a powerful emotion," explained Michael. "And when you are suffering from PTSD it's a very distant emotion." Michael has suffered from PTSD for years.

"I had to overcome a lot of physical, mental, emotional and spiritual barriers," said Michael.
He says hugging people has become a source of healing, allowing him to step outside his comfort zone and raise awareness about PTSD.
read more here

Amputee Iraq Veteran Golfing Again

Iraq War vet off the sideline, on the links after leg amputation 
KSL Golf
By Rod Zundel
May 1, 2015

HERRIMAN — Bryant Jacobs of Herriman is an Iraq War veteran who was hit by a roadside bomb in 2004. He eventually lost his leg, but that hasn’t stopped him from enjoying the game of golf he loves.

Jacobs almost enlisted right out of high school, but went to college briefly and “absolutely hated it,” he said.

After the events of Sept. 11, he and a friend quickly joined the Army. “I think that patriotism came out of everybody,”
Jacobs said.

“Whether it was joining the military or gaining a new respect for our country, we really focused on what our country was about and what we do.”

Jacobs was stationed in Hawaii, but the day he got to his unit, they left for Iraq.

He was a combat engineer, or in other words, a fancy way of playing with C-4 every day, he said. 

“Our main objective was taking care of IEDs and caches that we would find,” Jacobs said. “We would dispose of it and blow it up. We got to blow stuff up every day. It was a great job.”

Nearly 11 months into his tour, Jacobs’ unit was clearing the roads before a mission when he got hit by a roadside bomb in December 2004.

They were traveling 50 miles per hour, and then chaos ensued.
read more here

"We Serve" What it Means to Serve as a Soldier

Army soldiers portray themselves in theater production 
KSAT News
May 1, 2015

'We Serve' goes on 8-month nationwide tour
SAN ANTONIO - In an effort to boost morale, the U.S. Army is putting together a live Broadway-style theater production that features the talents of active duty soldiers.

The production, "We Serve," looks at what it means to serve as a soldier. "It's for the soldier, by the soldier, giving the message of hope and strength," said Sgt. Quentin Dorn of the Army National Guard.

Pvt. 1st Class Eric Pendleton never thought the military would allow him to be a medic and a performer.
He said being part of the show has helped him cope with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

"Music helps me immensely, and if I can do what I do best and help people through my music, help them forget about the problems they're having, then that's what I want to do," Pendleton said.
read more here

Thug Fuss and Twisted Attention

After Baltimore riots, some leaders slam 'thug' as the new n-word
By Josh Levs, CNN, April 29, 2015
(CNN)A term used by President Barack Obama and Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake to characterize rioters has given new life to a debate over the word "thug."

"Of course it's not the right word, to call our children 'thugs,'" Baltimore City Councilman Carl Stokes told CNN's "Erin Burnett OutFront." "These are children who have been set aside, marginalized, who have not been engaged by us. No, we don't have to call them thugs."

"Just call them n-----s. Just call them n-----s," he said. "No, we don't have to call them by names such as that."

The Rev. Jamal Bryant drew the same comparison Wednesday morning on CNN. The President and the mayor are wrong, he said. "These are not thugs, these are upset and frustrated children."

This is what the word actually means.
Thug
noun
1. a cruel or vicious ruffian, robber, or murderer.
2.(sometimes initial capital letter) one of a former group of professional robbers and murderers in India who strangled their victims.

Give me a break! If Stokes is offended by this word, then he needs to actually take a step back and consider who it was being directed at.

The right to peacefully protest has been defend across the country over and over again but what people take issue with is when those protests are used to commit criminal acts, like robbery and setting fires topped off with attacking police officers.

Destroying businesses and private property is not part of what most folks were trying to do, yet to others it was an opportunity to act like a bunch of thugs. The word is not used to describe color or even as an insult to the protestors. Deal with it!

If Strokes believes children were being called thugs, then he should think about what some of them were doing at the time then rethink how all the rioters actually did more damage to those children than this word ever could.

What kind of a message does committing crimes send? What kind of a message does it send when only some lives matter?

This isn't about all police officers committing crimes, but has always been about a few doing unspeakable acts. No one seems to want to talk about the 100 good cops being injured just doing their jobs, showing up for work.
Nearly 100 Officers Injured Since Monday: Baltimore Police
Nearly 100 officers have been hurt since violence broke out in the city on Monday, Baltimore Police said.

Capt. Eric Kowalczyk said Thursday afternoon that more than 40 officers required some sort of treatment at the hospital.

Protesters have been throwing bricks, bottles and other items at officers trying to contain demonstrations after the death of Freddie Gray, a black man who suffered critical injuries while he was in police custody.

But why talk about the fact that most of those officers are good and ashamed of the few bad ones giving all of them a bad reputation?

That article had "protestors" instead of thugs. Most of the people protesting should take offense with that because most of them were there to publicly show their outrage peacefully. That word should have been replaced with "thugs" or criminals.

Folks can twist and manipulate whatever they want and they seem to get all the attention of the reporters on TV yet there is so much more going on in this country not getting any attention at all.

Does Strokes know about veterans with PTSD in crisis being killed by police officers and SWAT Teams all over the country because they are not getting the help they need? These are some of their stories.
U.S. Air Force dress blue uniform, Francis “Frank” Lamantia Spivey stood with an assault rifle pushed up to his chin just after midnight Feb. 25.

Glendale police fatally shot Joe Tassinari in March 2015, Vietnam veteran.

William Dean Poole, GASTON COUNTY — A veteran was shot and killed by police Monday after he fired his weapon at them, Gaston County authorities said.

Brandon Lawrence, "as observed by officers just inside his residence holding a 23-inch machete"

Brian Babb, a 49-year-old former captain in the Oregon Army National Guard

There was only one protest.
Anthony Hill, a 27-year-old US air force veteran, was shot dead on 9 March at his apartment complex outside Atlanta.

The stories above are only a few of the reports from across the country that I found. How many more are there? Do they merit protests? Why not? They were in crisis because of PTSD and where they were sent!

They risked their lives serving this country but over and over again they didn't get the help the rest of us thought they would get.

The politicians got to say whatever they wanted over and over again yet over and over again we bury veterans. For Heaven's sake! They survived combat but couldn't survived home?

These veterans knew how to use weapons yet a tiny fraction of officers are hit by them before they fired the fatal shot. Depending on what part of the country the story ends differently a lot of the time. 

Some of them are taken to get help after facing off with SWAT Teams and sometimes their bodies are put into bags. Why does this happen? It isn't about good cops vs bad ones but more about how they were trained and it is circumstance by circumstance. We may never know because it seems no one cares to find out what makes the difference.

No one care because we have to spend time on folks like Strokes trying to cause outrage over something that isn't even relevant to what happened.

Ocala WWII Veteran Died After VA Benefits Restored

WWII veteran Joseph Desario dies shortly after benefits restored 
Ocala Star Banner
April Warren
May 1, 2015
Joseph Desario as a top turret
gunner during WWII.

In October 2013, World War II veteran Joseph Desario applied for an increase in his disability benefits.

The VA, instead, slashed the 91-year-old man’s monthly compensation for bilateral hearing loss and post-traumatic stress disorder by about $600.

Desario began fighting to have his benefits reinstated. On April 14, more than a year later, the VA sent a letter to his attorney saying it had reinstated his benefits, with retroactive reimbursement.

While the news was good, it was a little too late. Desario died April 24, a little more than a week after receiving the news.

Desario had been hospitalized with congestive heart failure and end-stage heart and renal failure, according to family members.

“His heart just stopped,” said his daughter, Mary Lynn Miraglia.

She said before he died, however, he had been told, and understood, that his benefits had been restored.

“It made his day, it really did,” Miraglia said.
read more here

WWII Veteran Improved According to VA, Actually Clinically Deaf

Friday, May 1, 2015

Soldier in Uniform Not Protesting But in Wrong Place at Wrong Time

Soldier in uniform mistaken for protester, Army says 
USA Today
USAToday.com
April 29, 2015
A soldier who was shown wearing his uniform at a protest in Baltimore, Maryland, last week was "not actively participating" but a victim of "bad timing," officials said. (Photo: (Photo: 15th Sustainment Brigade Facebook photo))
(USA Today) A soldier who was shown wearing his uniform at a protest in Baltimore, Maryland, last week was "not actively participating" but a victim of "bad timing," officials said.

"The soldier is part of the Maryland National Guard. He was not actively participating in the protest, but his image was captured as he walked home from work near the location where some of the recent anti-police, "Black Lives Matter", Freddie Gray protests have taken place," according to a statement posted on the 15th Sustainment Brigade Facebook page.

The soldier in the photo was wearing the brigade's patch on his right sleeve, and the brigade received numerous messages on its Facebook page after the photo was posted on several military or veterans Facebook sites. read more here

Soldier Found Dead After SWAT Standoff

UPDATE
SAVANNAH, Ga. (WJCL) — A army spokesperson has released the name of the Soldier found dead by Savannah-Chatham Metropolitan Police Department SWAT Wednesday in the Century at Fenwick Apartments in the Berwick area. The Soldier was Spc. Roobelson Viciere, 30, 3rd Infantry Division Artillery.
On Wednesday SCMPD says the solider died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound after a five-hour police standoff. After the SWAT team finally moved in, they found him dead in his residence in the Century at Fenwick Apartments.


Fenwick Village apartment after SWAT incident 
WTOC News
By Alyssa Hyman
Posted: Apr 29, 2015

SAVANNAH, GA (WTOC) - According to Julian Miller, spokesman for the SCMPD, police and SWAT responded to a barricaded gunman inside of Fenwick Village Wednesday afternoon.

The threat is now over after SWAT made entry into the residence and found the active duty Army member dead after the man threatened suicide.

Neither police nor SWAT fired their weapons, and the man, described by police in his early-30s, was alone in the residence at the time of the entry.

The Army is withholding the man's name until the Army can contact other family members.

Residents are now allowed back into their homes and town houses and children are just now being bused home

Fenwick Village is located at Ogeechee and Berwick Boulevard.

Police received a call around 11:30 a.m. about a man barricaded in his home with weapons.

Multiple units responded to the situation including SWAT, hostage negotiators, fire and more.
read more here
WTOC-TV: Savannah, Beaufort, SC, News, Weather
Linked from Army Times

Police Say Medication Sent to Veterans Stolen by UPS Employee

UPS employee stole military veterans' pain medication, police say 
WSOCTV News
By Dave Faherty
April 29, 2015

HICKORY, N.C. — Veterans suffering illnesses and pain reported never receiving their medication. Police believe a UPS employee, trusted to deliver the medications, stole them.

Police said the thefts happened at a UPS distribution center in Hickory. Several veterans in the Hickory area said they are outraged. Police said the worker looked for packages from the Veterans Administration and shook them to see if it sounded like pills were inside.

Police said someone stole $36,000 of pain medication during the last six months. "It's a little bit shocking to hear somebody would do that,” said veteran Eddie Gee. "I think it is crazy.

You put trust in these people to deliver your packages,” said veteran Mike Holley John Laughter did two tours in Vietnam. He now has difficulty getting around and needs the medication for a degenerative back problem.

He said he hasn't gotten his pills three times from the VA during the last six months.
read more here

Kentucky National Guard Getting Something Right on Suicide Prevention

This is part of the problem. "Resilience training" is something that has been "taught" or pushed on them since 2009. When we think about that fact that this was supposed to prevent them from committing suicide, yet they went up afterwards, it does not work!

Kentucky National Guard Suicide Prevention Awareness Public Service Announcement 
Kentucky Guard


The fact remains that suicides among younger veterans is now triple their peer rate after all these years of prevention training.

Sgt Maggie Eveland "behind the scenes" Interview, talks about seeking help after trying to end her own life. She found something that worked and is part of what the National Guard is doing right. She is amazing and what she said is a powerful message for anyone needing help.



Published on Apr 28, 2015
On an average day 22 military veterans take their own life. Of those, 69% are 50 years old or older.

With these sobering statistics in mind, the Kentucky National Guard presents a public service announcement designed to raise awareness about suicide prevention.

The 30-second in-house production features Maj. Bobbie Mayes, Sgt. Maggie Eveland and Eveland's horse, Khaleesi. The video also has messages of support and contact information for military personnel and veterans in need.

This accompanying "behind the scenes" video features Sgt. Eveland discussing the challenges of life, the value of suicide awareness training and how Khaleesi helped inspire her through a period of crisis.

If you need help or know someone who does, call 1-800-273-TALK to discuss veteran suicide.

For more information on suicide awareness contact:

Capt. David W. Shelley, email: david.w.shelley.mil@mail.mil
Resilience, Risk Reduction and Suicide Prevention Program Manager
502-607-1941