Friday, November 7, 2008
4 Year old son of police officer dies after shooting himself
Calif. 4-year-old dies after home shooting
Friday, November 7, 2008
11:36 PST Shasta Lake, CA (AP) --
Authorities say the 4-year-old boy of a Redding police officer has died after an apparent accidental shooting.
Dave Compomizzo, a captain at the Shasta County sheriff's office, told The Associated Press that investigators believe the child got a hold of a handgun in his parent's bedroom.
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Search suspended for children washed away in car
Search for car swept away with two boys inside in Green River will not resume today
AUBURN — Police believe they have found a car in the Green River that was swept away with two children inside this morning, but the search was suspended because of the strong current.
By Nancy Bartley and Sonia Krishnan
Seattle Times staff reporters
AUBURN — Police believe they have found a car in the Green River that was swept away with two children inside this morning, but the search has been suspended for the day because of the strong current.
After evaluating the water conditions, the King County Sheriff's Office's dive team decided a short time ago that the search will not resume today. It wasn't immediately known when divers would be able to go back into the water.
Authorities had said earlier the current is so swift that it pulled a regulator out of a rescue diver's mouth.
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AUBURN — Police believe they have found a car in the Green River that was swept away with two children inside this morning, but the search was suspended because of the strong current.
By Nancy Bartley and Sonia Krishnan
Seattle Times staff reporters
AUBURN — Police believe they have found a car in the Green River that was swept away with two children inside this morning, but the search has been suspended for the day because of the strong current.
After evaluating the water conditions, the King County Sheriff's Office's dive team decided a short time ago that the search will not resume today. It wasn't immediately known when divers would be able to go back into the water.
Authorities had said earlier the current is so swift that it pulled a regulator out of a rescue diver's mouth.
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Obama's victory inspires homeless painter
Obama's victory inspires homeless painter
By Kainaz Amaria, Times Staff Photographer
In print: Friday, November 7, 2008
It began when Daryle Burch took a break from painting a business on E Martin Luther King Boulevard. He saw a Barack Obama campaign flier and noticed Obama's skin tone matched a nearby convenience store. Inspiration met opportunity. In 30 minutes he was done. He had painted Obama's face on the store's side wall. The impressed owner asked for another Obama on the front. Then barber Abdur-Rahim "Max" Abdullah, whose shop is nearby, commissioned a mural for his building. He wanted Obama getting a hair cut
go here for more of this great story
http://www.tampabay.com/features/humaninterest/article893528.ece
By Kainaz Amaria, Times Staff Photographer
In print: Friday, November 7, 2008
Daryle Burch, front, looks into the distance from the front of the barbershop belonging to Abdur-Rahim “Max” Abdullah, left. Abdullah’s son, Waleed McFarland, center, also works there. Max commissioned Burch to paint the Obama mural.
It began when Daryle Burch took a break from painting a business on E Martin Luther King Boulevard. He saw a Barack Obama campaign flier and noticed Obama's skin tone matched a nearby convenience store. Inspiration met opportunity. In 30 minutes he was done. He had painted Obama's face on the store's side wall. The impressed owner asked for another Obama on the front. Then barber Abdur-Rahim "Max" Abdullah, whose shop is nearby, commissioned a mural for his building. He wanted Obama getting a hair cut
go here for more of this great story
http://www.tampabay.com/features/humaninterest/article893528.ece
Ex-Marine with mental problems gets probation for identity theft
Ex-Marine with mental problems gets probation for identity theft
TAMPA -- Steven Lee Fickey doesn't hear the voices inside his head anymore, he said today in court.
The former Marine lance corporal takes anti-psychotic medication to stop them. Another prescription has helped curb his seizures, described by his defense attorney as a catalyst for his criminal behavior.
Fickey, 30, pleaded guilty in August to fraud and stealing the identifies of other Marines.
Prosecutors said he used the names of current and former Marines to open accounts with the Army and Air Force Exchange Services and purchase more than $100,000 in electronics, china and filet mignon.
Fickey faced 12 to 18 months in prison. As of today, he'd already spent about 14 months in custody, defense attorney Rochelle Reback said.
"I feel like he has been adequately punished by being incarcerated for that period of time, and I feel that probation would be sufficient," U.S. District Judge Richard Lazzara said.
He also ordered that Fickey pay more than $76,000 in restitution.
go here for more
http://blogs.tampabay.com/breakingnews/2008/11/ex-marine-with.html
TAMPA -- Steven Lee Fickey doesn't hear the voices inside his head anymore, he said today in court.
The former Marine lance corporal takes anti-psychotic medication to stop them. Another prescription has helped curb his seizures, described by his defense attorney as a catalyst for his criminal behavior.
Fickey, 30, pleaded guilty in August to fraud and stealing the identifies of other Marines.
Prosecutors said he used the names of current and former Marines to open accounts with the Army and Air Force Exchange Services and purchase more than $100,000 in electronics, china and filet mignon.
Fickey faced 12 to 18 months in prison. As of today, he'd already spent about 14 months in custody, defense attorney Rochelle Reback said.
"I feel like he has been adequately punished by being incarcerated for that period of time, and I feel that probation would be sufficient," U.S. District Judge Richard Lazzara said.
He also ordered that Fickey pay more than $76,000 in restitution.
go here for more
http://blogs.tampabay.com/breakingnews/2008/11/ex-marine-with.html
How is it possible less people voted in Alaska this year?
How could this be possible? There are more people registered to vote in Alaska this year and their own Governor was on the ticket for the highest office in the nation. This makes no sense at all.
Observers sense 'something fishy' in Alaska vote
David Edwards and Muriel Kane
Published: Friday November 7, 2008
The 2008 presidential race is over, but several Senate races still remain undecided. Georgia is headed for a runoff, Minnesota for a recount -- and in Alaska things just keep getting stranger.
"It looks like senator and convicted felon Ted Stevens and Congressman-currently-under-investigation Don Young will both hold onto their seats," MSNBC's Rachel Maddow noted on Thursday. "That said, there's a case to be made that there's something fishy going on up there."
Even though the polls this year have generally been pretty accurate, they were way off in Alaska. Stevens was running between 7% and 22% behind his Democratic challenger in the polls, but now he is narrowly ahead in the vote countAt the same time, total voter turnout appears to be about 11% lower in Alaska this year than in 2004 -- despite over 20,000 new registrations, heavy turnout in the primaries, record early voting, long lines at the polls on Election Day, and the state's own governor being on the ballot, all of which had led to an expectation of record participation.
go here for more
http://rawstory.com/news/2008/Nate_Silver_Lawyers_
should_review_Alaska_1107.html
Search on for car swept down Green River with kids inside
Search on for car swept down Green River with kids inside
By KOMO Staff AUBURN, Wash. -- Police and firefighters are searching the Green River for a vehicle that may have been swept away with a teenager and 2-year-old child inside.
Auburn police Sgt. Scott Near said a woman called 911 just before 9 a.m. and said she lost control and ended up in the river in the 29800 block of Green River road.
The woman told police that as water began to fill the car, she got out to call for help and the vehicle was swept away with a 14 year old and 2-year-old child still inside.
She tried to get the kids out of the car but was unable to do so, Near said. "She's pretty distraught and shaken up."
Near said rescuers are looking for the silver Volkswagen Bug, but so far they have not found the car.
go here for more
http://www.komonews.com/news/34091864.html
linked from CNN
By KOMO Staff AUBURN, Wash. -- Police and firefighters are searching the Green River for a vehicle that may have been swept away with a teenager and 2-year-old child inside.
Auburn police Sgt. Scott Near said a woman called 911 just before 9 a.m. and said she lost control and ended up in the river in the 29800 block of Green River road.
The woman told police that as water began to fill the car, she got out to call for help and the vehicle was swept away with a 14 year old and 2-year-old child still inside.
She tried to get the kids out of the car but was unable to do so, Near said. "She's pretty distraught and shaken up."
Near said rescuers are looking for the silver Volkswagen Bug, but so far they have not found the car.
go here for more
http://www.komonews.com/news/34091864.html
linked from CNN
Alaska Brig. General's death ruled suicide
General’s death in July ruled a suicide
Investigators say they can find no motive
By Erik Holmes - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Nov 7, 2008 12:42:20 EST
The July 27 death of Brig. Gen. Thomas Tinsley by self-inflicted gunshot wound seems likely to remain shrouded in mystery.
A three-month Air Force Office of Special Investigations inquiry, which concluded in early November, determined that Tinsley intentionally shot himself once in the chest with a large-caliber handgun, but investigators were unable to turn up a motive.
Investigators found no suicide note, history of mental illness or evidence of financial or criminal trouble that might lead someone to take his own life.
“Often with a suicide, you have a pretty good idea” of motive, said an Air Force official familiar with the case. “This investigation did not yield that. ... There wasn’t anything definite that provided the ‘why.’ ”
Tinsley was commander of the 3rd Wing at Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska, when he was found dead in the basement of his home on base.
An autopsy and toxicology report found alcohol in Tinsley’s blood, according to an Air Force official, but investigators were not able to determine whether the alcohol was a contributing factor to his death. The Air Force declined to release the specific blood-alcohol content.
No other substances were found in Tinsley’s body, according to a press release from Pacific Air Forces.
Investigators determined the cause of death was one gunshot wound to the chest with Tinsley’s personal weapon — a Smith & Wesson Model 500 .50-caliber revolver, which the manufacturer touts as the world’s most powerful revolver. The five-chamber weapon, found with Tinsley’s body, contained one spent shell casing and four empty chambers.
The new wing commander, Col. Tom Bergeson, held commanders’ calls on base Nov. 6 to explain the investigation’s findings to his airmen.
Tinsley, who served 24 years, was seen as one of the rising stars of the Air Force. The F-22 pilot was promoted below the zone multiple times, had served for 22 months as then-Chief of Staff Gen. T. Michael Moseley’s handpicked executive officer, and had a plum assignment as commander of the 3rd Wing.
Those who knew him well would not have been surprised to see him become a three- or four-star general.
But despite that dazzling success, Tinsley also was known as an airman’s general — devoted to the well-being of those who served under him. Affection for Tinsley extended to the most junior ranks at Elmendorf, said Airman 1st Class Richard Hernandez, who worked on Tinsley’s staff.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/11/airforce_tinsley_suicide_110608/
Local veterans of earlier wars know what those Iraq and Afghanistan vets are in for
Local Vets of Earlier Wars Say They Know What the New Iraq and ...
OC Weekly - Santa Ana,CA,USA
By NICK SCHOU
Published on November 05, 2008 at 11:57am
The Scars You Can't See
New cases of PTSD are flooding the VA system. Local veterans of earlier wars know what those Iraq and Afghanistan vets are in for.
The Persian Gulf War only lasted a few weeks in winter 1991, but for Tom Fortney, it didn’t end until Feb. 22, 2001, when he checked himself into the Long Beach Veterans Affairs Hospital’s psychiatric-evaluation-and-treatment center. A few days earlier, Fortney, a forward observer with the U.S. Marine Corps who saw combat during Operation Desert Storm, was parking his car at work when another driver looked at him the wrong way.
“You got a problem, buddy?” the man then asked.
It was raining hard outside; Fortney had to wind down the window and lower the volume of the war ballad blasting from the car stereo to make himself heard.
“Yeah,” he responded. “I do have a problem. But it is in my head and has nothing to do with you.”
He parked and sat quietly, while the man exited his car and pounded on Fortney’s window. He calmly opened the door and informed the man that if he left quickly, Fortney wouldn’t kill him. “I was going to reach for his left eye with my right hand and pull out his eye, push my thumb into his socket and pull him to the ground, and he would have been dead,” he recalls. “He was in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
Just as Fortney’s thumb and forefinger brushed the man’s eyelashes, he spotted a co-worker walking toward them. He also noticed that the rain that moments earlier had been pouring down had suddenly stopped, and there was no wind. “I put my finger in his chest and said I’d give him until the count of three to get out of there,” he says. “I literally saw him shrink, and his eyes watered up. He said, ‘I can see you got some issues or something,’ and he put his hands up and started walking away.”
Fortney remembers screaming a basic-training battle cry for “a good minute” before jumping in his car. The rain had started up again. He went home and opened a bottle of whiskey. Then he started running around his neighborhood in the rain. His wife found him and convinced him to come back inside. He called a few friends from the Orange County Veterans Center; they came to his house and sat down with him.
“My body shut down, and I started bawling,” Fortney remembers. “I didn’t want to be a killer, but I had never left the battlefield; there was no deprogramming. I was clearly off the deep end. If I wasn’t married, I would have been the psycho vet out in the forest.”
* * *
After years of psychiatric counseling and group therapy, Fortney, now 40, has come to terms with a condition he expects will never go away: posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). He is just one of thousands of veterans in Southern California who have been diagnosed with the disorder. Known as “trench fatigue” in World War I, “shell shock” in World War II and later as “Vietnam syndrome,” PTSD mostly afflicts combat veterans, but it has also been diagnosed in victims of violent crime, rape, accidents, even natural disasters. Symptoms include sleeplessness, nightmares, hypervigilance, depression and rage.
With the United States currently at war in both Iraq and Afghanistan, PTSD is on the rise. According to a 2005 Veterans Affairs (VA) study, 20 percent of recent combat troops suffer from severe depression and PTSD. Some veterans, like Fortney, are able to keep their symptoms under control. Others aren’t so lucky: As of March 2008, 145 Iraq war veterans had committed suicide.
click link for more
OC Weekly - Santa Ana,CA,USA
By NICK SCHOU
Published on November 05, 2008 at 11:57am
The Scars You Can't See
New cases of PTSD are flooding the VA system. Local veterans of earlier wars know what those Iraq and Afghanistan vets are in for.
The Persian Gulf War only lasted a few weeks in winter 1991, but for Tom Fortney, it didn’t end until Feb. 22, 2001, when he checked himself into the Long Beach Veterans Affairs Hospital’s psychiatric-evaluation-and-treatment center. A few days earlier, Fortney, a forward observer with the U.S. Marine Corps who saw combat during Operation Desert Storm, was parking his car at work when another driver looked at him the wrong way.
“You got a problem, buddy?” the man then asked.
It was raining hard outside; Fortney had to wind down the window and lower the volume of the war ballad blasting from the car stereo to make himself heard.
“Yeah,” he responded. “I do have a problem. But it is in my head and has nothing to do with you.”
He parked and sat quietly, while the man exited his car and pounded on Fortney’s window. He calmly opened the door and informed the man that if he left quickly, Fortney wouldn’t kill him. “I was going to reach for his left eye with my right hand and pull out his eye, push my thumb into his socket and pull him to the ground, and he would have been dead,” he recalls. “He was in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
Just as Fortney’s thumb and forefinger brushed the man’s eyelashes, he spotted a co-worker walking toward them. He also noticed that the rain that moments earlier had been pouring down had suddenly stopped, and there was no wind. “I put my finger in his chest and said I’d give him until the count of three to get out of there,” he says. “I literally saw him shrink, and his eyes watered up. He said, ‘I can see you got some issues or something,’ and he put his hands up and started walking away.”
Fortney remembers screaming a basic-training battle cry for “a good minute” before jumping in his car. The rain had started up again. He went home and opened a bottle of whiskey. Then he started running around his neighborhood in the rain. His wife found him and convinced him to come back inside. He called a few friends from the Orange County Veterans Center; they came to his house and sat down with him.
“My body shut down, and I started bawling,” Fortney remembers. “I didn’t want to be a killer, but I had never left the battlefield; there was no deprogramming. I was clearly off the deep end. If I wasn’t married, I would have been the psycho vet out in the forest.”
* * *
After years of psychiatric counseling and group therapy, Fortney, now 40, has come to terms with a condition he expects will never go away: posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). He is just one of thousands of veterans in Southern California who have been diagnosed with the disorder. Known as “trench fatigue” in World War I, “shell shock” in World War II and later as “Vietnam syndrome,” PTSD mostly afflicts combat veterans, but it has also been diagnosed in victims of violent crime, rape, accidents, even natural disasters. Symptoms include sleeplessness, nightmares, hypervigilance, depression and rage.
With the United States currently at war in both Iraq and Afghanistan, PTSD is on the rise. According to a 2005 Veterans Affairs (VA) study, 20 percent of recent combat troops suffer from severe depression and PTSD. Some veterans, like Fortney, are able to keep their symptoms under control. Others aren’t so lucky: As of March 2008, 145 Iraq war veterans had committed suicide.
click link for more
GAO report on VA and what needs to be done
Department of Veterans Affairs
The Department of Veterans Affairs' (VA) mission reflects the nation's commitment to care for veterans, their families, and their survivors.
About a quarter of the nation's population, approximately 74.5 million people, are potentially eligible for VA benefits and services because they are veterans, family members, or survivors of veterans.
VA is responsible for providing federal benefits to eligible veterans and their families and operates nationwide programs for health care, financial assistance, and burial benefits.
The health care delivery system operated by VA is the largest in the nation and provides a broad range of services, including services uniquely related to veterans' health or special needs.
VA also provides disability compensation to veterans who are disabled by injury or disease incurred or aggravated during military service as well as pensions for certain wartime veterans with disabilities.
VA faces a range of key management challenges in the areas of disability benefits, health care delivery, property management, and information technology.
VA's eligibility criteria for disability compensation do not fully incorporate a modern understanding of how technology and the labor market affect disabled veterans' ability to work. In addition, VA continues to face long-standing problems with large pending disability claims inventories, lengthy processing times, concerns about decision accuracy and consistency, and replacing an aging benefits processing system it relies on to accurately process benefits to more than 3.5 million veterans. Further, both VA and the Department of Defense (DOD) face challenges in meeting the health care and disability evaluation needs of servicemembers returning from military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as veterans of those military operations.
VA has faced difficulties in managing its resources to be consistent with a substantial increase in its patient workload, has allowed internal control weaknesses and inadequate oversight to limit its ability to maximize revenue from third-party insurers, and has challenges recruiting and retaining health care professionals to provide care to its veteran population. In addition, VA lacks policies and procedures designed to provide adequate controls over funds used for the procurement of goods and services.
Compounding VA's challenge to manage its resources is its vast inventory of underutilized and vacant space.
VA faces challenges in controlling its IT equipment and managing its IT resources.
http://www.gao.gov/transition_2009/agency/vad/
linked from Veterans For Common Sense
The Department of Veterans Affairs' (VA) mission reflects the nation's commitment to care for veterans, their families, and their survivors.
About a quarter of the nation's population, approximately 74.5 million people, are potentially eligible for VA benefits and services because they are veterans, family members, or survivors of veterans.
VA is responsible for providing federal benefits to eligible veterans and their families and operates nationwide programs for health care, financial assistance, and burial benefits.
The health care delivery system operated by VA is the largest in the nation and provides a broad range of services, including services uniquely related to veterans' health or special needs.
VA also provides disability compensation to veterans who are disabled by injury or disease incurred or aggravated during military service as well as pensions for certain wartime veterans with disabilities.
VA faces a range of key management challenges in the areas of disability benefits, health care delivery, property management, and information technology.
VA's eligibility criteria for disability compensation do not fully incorporate a modern understanding of how technology and the labor market affect disabled veterans' ability to work. In addition, VA continues to face long-standing problems with large pending disability claims inventories, lengthy processing times, concerns about decision accuracy and consistency, and replacing an aging benefits processing system it relies on to accurately process benefits to more than 3.5 million veterans. Further, both VA and the Department of Defense (DOD) face challenges in meeting the health care and disability evaluation needs of servicemembers returning from military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as veterans of those military operations.
VA has faced difficulties in managing its resources to be consistent with a substantial increase in its patient workload, has allowed internal control weaknesses and inadequate oversight to limit its ability to maximize revenue from third-party insurers, and has challenges recruiting and retaining health care professionals to provide care to its veteran population. In addition, VA lacks policies and procedures designed to provide adequate controls over funds used for the procurement of goods and services.
Compounding VA's challenge to manage its resources is its vast inventory of underutilized and vacant space.
VA faces challenges in controlling its IT equipment and managing its IT resources.
http://www.gao.gov/transition_2009/agency/vad/
linked from Veterans For Common Sense
PTSD:When the front lines of combat are at home
When the troops come home the families have to fight for them. If we don't, they don't get taken care of. Odd coming from the same country that managed to send millions to wars on foreign lands claiming how much it was necessary for the sake of this nation. You would think that when they came home with wounded bodies or minds, this same nation would be ready to take care of them as much as they prepared to send them into combat. You would also be very, very wrong.
The suffering of the men and women serving this nation is not new. What this generation is going thru is the same as other generations before them. The difference is people across this nation have mobilized to deploy on the front lines of this nation to have our veterans taken care of. Quiet heroes arise daily, educated, trained and ready for battle to save the lives of the ones that did come home from combat.
Rev. Mosby is one of the warriors for the warriors battling for lives that do not need to be lost.
Summit hopes to reach veterans
News Virginian - Waynesboro,VA,USA
By Jimmy LaRoue
Published: November 6, 2008
FISHERSVILLE — “If this is what I’m coming home to – forget it,” Steven Moore said.
He and his godmother, Angita Szelesta, were in the emergency room at a Veterans Administration Medical Center, where she had taken him to get treated for a drug overdose.
Moore had suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury following his one-year of military service in Iraq.
They waited for more than six hours, and in that time, the medical center lost Moore’s records, Szelesta recalled.
They left.
Moore had earned a Purple Heart at age 18 following a roadside bomb attack, and when he returned home, he wasn’t the same.
“Steven says he wishes this was one medal he never received,” Szelesta said.
Szelesta spoke also about her own son, Stan Crowder, and his combat experiences. His problems were similar to Moore’s, following a helicopter crash in Afghanistan, but was able to return to combat.
Szelesta, along with a number of speakers, are taking part in the Virginia Wounded Warrior Program Summit at the Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center, which continues today. The conference is designed to increase awareness of combat stress-related issues and brain trauma injuries that affect military members – both active duty and retired – as well as their families.
Rick Sizemore, director of the Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center, said the goal is that no matter where a combat veteran goes, that he or she can find the needed help.
“That’s the purpose of the Virginia Wounded Warrior network ... to connect all those various services so that there’s no wrong door for a veteran,” Sizemore said.
The Rev. C. Diane Mosby, of Glen Allen, said her son, Geoffrey Mosby, Jr., served for a more than a year in Iraq. Far from the well-adjusted son she knew prior to his joining the Virginia Army National Guard, when he returned in February 2005 as a decorated soldier, her family noticed that he started having increased nightmares and became more reclusive.
“We began to notice a deep dark, darkness in his eyes,” Mosby said. “It was as if he had separated body and spirit.”
click link for more
The suffering of the men and women serving this nation is not new. What this generation is going thru is the same as other generations before them. The difference is people across this nation have mobilized to deploy on the front lines of this nation to have our veterans taken care of. Quiet heroes arise daily, educated, trained and ready for battle to save the lives of the ones that did come home from combat.
Rev. Mosby is one of the warriors for the warriors battling for lives that do not need to be lost.
The Rev. C. Diane Mosby talks about her son’s struggle with post-traumatic stress disorder Thursday at the Virginia Wounded Warrior Program summit at Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center. (Rosanne Weber/staff)
Summit hopes to reach veterans
News Virginian - Waynesboro,VA,USA
By Jimmy LaRoue
Published: November 6, 2008
FISHERSVILLE — “If this is what I’m coming home to – forget it,” Steven Moore said.
He and his godmother, Angita Szelesta, were in the emergency room at a Veterans Administration Medical Center, where she had taken him to get treated for a drug overdose.
Moore had suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury following his one-year of military service in Iraq.
They waited for more than six hours, and in that time, the medical center lost Moore’s records, Szelesta recalled.
They left.
Moore had earned a Purple Heart at age 18 following a roadside bomb attack, and when he returned home, he wasn’t the same.
“Steven says he wishes this was one medal he never received,” Szelesta said.
Szelesta spoke also about her own son, Stan Crowder, and his combat experiences. His problems were similar to Moore’s, following a helicopter crash in Afghanistan, but was able to return to combat.
Szelesta, along with a number of speakers, are taking part in the Virginia Wounded Warrior Program Summit at the Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center, which continues today. The conference is designed to increase awareness of combat stress-related issues and brain trauma injuries that affect military members – both active duty and retired – as well as their families.
Rick Sizemore, director of the Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center, said the goal is that no matter where a combat veteran goes, that he or she can find the needed help.
“That’s the purpose of the Virginia Wounded Warrior network ... to connect all those various services so that there’s no wrong door for a veteran,” Sizemore said.
The Rev. C. Diane Mosby, of Glen Allen, said her son, Geoffrey Mosby, Jr., served for a more than a year in Iraq. Far from the well-adjusted son she knew prior to his joining the Virginia Army National Guard, when he returned in February 2005 as a decorated soldier, her family noticed that he started having increased nightmares and became more reclusive.
“We began to notice a deep dark, darkness in his eyes,” Mosby said. “It was as if he had separated body and spirit.”
click link for more
Iraq vet honored at service-dog fundraiser
Iraq vet honored at service-dog fundraiser
Kate Santich Sentinel Staff Writer
November 7, 2008
ORLANDO - Almost four years to the day after losing his leg to a bomb in Iraq, 1st Lt. Jeffrey Adams will be guest of honor at the Canine Companions for Independence 12th annual Tales and Tails Gala on Saturday at SeaWorld Orlando. Adams, the first Iraq war veteran helped by the nonprofit organization, graduated from training in February and will attend with his service dog, Sharif.
Kate Santich Sentinel Staff Writer
November 7, 2008
ORLANDO - Almost four years to the day after losing his leg to a bomb in Iraq, 1st Lt. Jeffrey Adams will be guest of honor at the Canine Companions for Independence 12th annual Tales and Tails Gala on Saturday at SeaWorld Orlando. Adams, the first Iraq war veteran helped by the nonprofit organization, graduated from training in February and will attend with his service dog, Sharif.
It's traumatic to lose your job
Job losses mount
The government reported more grim news about the economy today, saying employers cut 240,000 jobs in October -- bringing the year's total job losses to 1.2 million, CNNMoney reports. According to the Labor Department, the unemployment rate rose to 6.5 percent from 6.1 percent in September. It was the highest unemployment rate since March 1994. developing story
The unemployment rate keeps going up and according to this CNN report, it's the highest rate since 1994. I remember what it was like to lose my job. Shocking!
I worked for a Presbyterian Church as the Administrator of Christian Education. It was the perfect job for me. My faith is a big part of my life. Aside from the fact I'm Greek Orthodox, raised in the Orthodox doctrine, there really isn't that much that is different between the two branches and it wasn't that hard to be able to fit in with them. I just went to my own church for the Holy Days. I loved my job! I was there for two years. The job provided me with the part time income I needed and a lot of joy because I love kids and there is a preschool there. Twice a week, the youth pastor and I held chapel with the preschoolers. We sang and danced with the joy of praising the Lord. It was wonderful.
On my daughter's 20 birthday, I was supposed to have my employment review. I thought I was getting a raise. I ended up being told the job was being eliminated. I had to clean out my office and leave. I didn't even have a chance to say goodbye to the kids or most of the people I loved.
It took a month to begin to get over it. For the first couple of weeks, I mostly cried. Yes, I know I was posting at the same time, but while the church was my job, PTSD has been my life for 26 years now. Doing this work is the reason my husband and I moved to Florida so that I could work part-time for a check and be able to do this the rest of the time. I was devastated. I worked hard for the church and was devoted to it.
I spent most of the time wondering what I had done wrong, blaming myself and worrying about what I was supposed to do for income. Working for a church, which is tax exempt, I was not allowed to collect unemployment. The church didn't pay into the system. That was in January and I am still officially unemployed as of today.
In March I became a Chaplain with the IFOC. That cost me some money and so has the traveling I've been doing with PTSD. While I am a Senior Chaplain, certified, insured and ordained, I couldn't find a job with the fire department as a Chaplain because they had a lot of budget cuts and layoffs as well. The VA won't hire me because I do not have a degree but probably know more about PTSD than most of the Chaplains they have. After all, 26 years experience plus living with it does tend to provide a higher degree of knowledge than just college. They would not even consider me, not even as a part time Chaplain.
I'm as they say, out of luck. I cannot give up the work I do, especially making the videos or going around talking to people, going for training and conferences, which all has me deeply involved on a daily basis. So what do I do? I pray and try to make it from one day to the next.
I am not counted as "unemployed" because I did not get a check. There are a lot of people just like me out there. Once you run out of benefits, or cannot get them in the first place, you drop off the count. As bad as the figures are on unemployment, they are really higher. I often wonder if the people who made a bundle off all of this ever let their conscience bother them? Do they know what they did to people who worked hard and did the right things but were not even considered when ax came down and jobs were cut? I know it bothered some people but too many just never really cared as long as it was not happening to them.
My brother got laid off a week before he passed away. He had a highly paid job in construction with a big, beautiful house and mortgage to pay. He had a massive heart attack less than a week after he lost his job.
There is a lot of suffering out there far beyond what the media reports on. It's almost as if the numbers they report about the unemployed never really make them think of the people who are the numbers, what stories they have and how much suffering they are going thru from financial stress to emotional stress. It would be great if they began to report on the people so that maybe, just maybe, some people in this country will understand people like and my brother didn't do anything wrong, did a good job, but ended up suffering all the same.
PS: If you know anyone in the Orlando area in need of Chaplain specializing in PTSD education, please let me know.
Senior Chaplain Kathie Costos
Namguardianangel@aol.com
www.Namguardianangel.org
www.Woundedtimes.blogspot.com
"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." - George Washington
Army to investigate 5 recruiter suicides from Houston battalion
Army to investigate 5 recruiter suicides
The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Nov 7, 2008 6:31:42 EST
HOUSTON — The Army has appointed a brigadier general to investigate allegations of a cover-up among commanders of a recruiting battalion after a string of recruiter suicides, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn said.
Five Army recruiters from the same Houston battalion have committed suicide since 2001, including two since August.
Cornyn, a member of the Senate Committee on Armed Services who won his second six-year term Tuesday, last month called for an independent investigation in a letter to Secretary of the Army Pete Geren.
Geren responded in a two-page letter dated Nov. 3, writing that he shared Cornyn’s concern about the suicides and reports of “undue command influence within the Houston Recruiting Battalion investigations.” He pledged to work with the senator’s staff to provide answers “after we review and assess these issues,” the Houston Chronicle reported Friday for its online edition.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/11/ap_recruitersuicides_110708/
The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Nov 7, 2008 6:31:42 EST
HOUSTON — The Army has appointed a brigadier general to investigate allegations of a cover-up among commanders of a recruiting battalion after a string of recruiter suicides, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn said.
Five Army recruiters from the same Houston battalion have committed suicide since 2001, including two since August.
Cornyn, a member of the Senate Committee on Armed Services who won his second six-year term Tuesday, last month called for an independent investigation in a letter to Secretary of the Army Pete Geren.
Geren responded in a two-page letter dated Nov. 3, writing that he shared Cornyn’s concern about the suicides and reports of “undue command influence within the Houston Recruiting Battalion investigations.” He pledged to work with the senator’s staff to provide answers “after we review and assess these issues,” the Houston Chronicle reported Friday for its online edition.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/11/ap_recruitersuicides_110708/
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Vets ask local medical services
Vets ask local medical services
Wayne Independent - Honesdale,PA,USA
By Peter Becker
Wayne Independent
Thu Nov 06, 2008
HONESDALE -
Representatives of area veteran organizations asked Wayne County Commissioners Thursday to support the idea of a veteran medical program in the local area.
Backed by several more veterans in their distinctive caps, James Bruck, newly elected commander of American Legion Post 254, Honesdale, and Michael J. O’Hara, commander, VFW Post 531, Honesdale, served as spokesmen. O’Hara explained the difficulty vets can face with the nearest Veteran’s Administration (VA) Hospital 50 miles away.
O’Hara stated that they don’t wish to compete with the VA Hospital in Wilkes-Barre, but if federal or state funds were available, Wayne Memorial Hospital could provide some of the services locally.
He cited news articles about the high suicide rate among vets and the need for addressing post traumatic stress disorder, which some combat veterans suffer for decades. More and more professionals are treating the disorder and the Pentagon is increasing funds to study the disorder.
‘Wayne Memorial Hospital is capable and willing to help the veterans,” said O’Hara, after he and other local veteran officials met with hospital administration recently. He said they were before the Commissioners today to lobby for a satellite treatment facility in Wayne County.
click link for more
Wayne Independent - Honesdale,PA,USA
By Peter Becker
Wayne Independent
Thu Nov 06, 2008
HONESDALE -
Representatives of area veteran organizations asked Wayne County Commissioners Thursday to support the idea of a veteran medical program in the local area.
Backed by several more veterans in their distinctive caps, James Bruck, newly elected commander of American Legion Post 254, Honesdale, and Michael J. O’Hara, commander, VFW Post 531, Honesdale, served as spokesmen. O’Hara explained the difficulty vets can face with the nearest Veteran’s Administration (VA) Hospital 50 miles away.
O’Hara stated that they don’t wish to compete with the VA Hospital in Wilkes-Barre, but if federal or state funds were available, Wayne Memorial Hospital could provide some of the services locally.
He cited news articles about the high suicide rate among vets and the need for addressing post traumatic stress disorder, which some combat veterans suffer for decades. More and more professionals are treating the disorder and the Pentagon is increasing funds to study the disorder.
‘Wayne Memorial Hospital is capable and willing to help the veterans,” said O’Hara, after he and other local veteran officials met with hospital administration recently. He said they were before the Commissioners today to lobby for a satellite treatment facility in Wayne County.
click link for more
UK takes a look at paramedics and PTSD
Now ambulance workers fall victim to battlefield stress
Independent - London,England,UK
Crippling condition remains taboo among paramedic colleagues
By Terri Judd
Friday, 7 November 2008
During a 20-year career in which he was among the first to reach casualties in the 1996 Manchester IRA bombings, paramedic Jon Bradshaw routinely walked into scenes most people could not comprehend.
When colleagues discovered he had developed post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), they left a letter pinned to the station noticeboard addressed to Jonathan Bradshaw, Chief Ambulance Skiver, c/o The Padded Cell, Rampton Secure Mental Institution (sic). Inside they had inscribed a series of jokes. One read simply "Sick!! RIP".
Although PTSD is now taken seriously by the armed forces, the crippling condition remains taboo among many sectors of the ambulance service, so much so that researchers at King's College London, are about to begin a new research project into the illness.
The Healthcare Commission's annual staff survey found that 34 per cent of ambulance workers had suffered work-related stress last year.
An assessment of Oxfordshire Ambulance Service staff in 1999 estimated that 20 per cent of workers were suffering from PTSD, with cot death rated as the most traumatic event they had to deal with.
With the introduction of stricter response times this year, more ambulance workers are being sent out alone and have less opportunity to talk through traumatic events with colleagues.
"People in this profession are resilient but nobody is totally immune and extreme stress can get to anybody," said Professor Anke Ehlers, the clinical psychologist leading the study into different predictive factors which might help identify and minimise PTSD among ambulance workers. New staff will be interviewed at intervals.
The long-term aim is to develop a prevention programme where paramedics will be taught how to recognise the symptoms as part of their standard training.
Mr Bradshaw, 39, said that suffering from stress carried a stigma: "There is a culture that if you say you have PTSD, depression or anxiety, they think you are nutty. I know of several people who are suffering but they are all being treated abysmally."
click link for more
Independent - London,England,UK
Crippling condition remains taboo among paramedic colleagues
By Terri Judd
Friday, 7 November 2008
During a 20-year career in which he was among the first to reach casualties in the 1996 Manchester IRA bombings, paramedic Jon Bradshaw routinely walked into scenes most people could not comprehend.
When colleagues discovered he had developed post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), they left a letter pinned to the station noticeboard addressed to Jonathan Bradshaw, Chief Ambulance Skiver, c/o The Padded Cell, Rampton Secure Mental Institution (sic). Inside they had inscribed a series of jokes. One read simply "Sick!! RIP".
Although PTSD is now taken seriously by the armed forces, the crippling condition remains taboo among many sectors of the ambulance service, so much so that researchers at King's College London, are about to begin a new research project into the illness.
The Healthcare Commission's annual staff survey found that 34 per cent of ambulance workers had suffered work-related stress last year.
An assessment of Oxfordshire Ambulance Service staff in 1999 estimated that 20 per cent of workers were suffering from PTSD, with cot death rated as the most traumatic event they had to deal with.
With the introduction of stricter response times this year, more ambulance workers are being sent out alone and have less opportunity to talk through traumatic events with colleagues.
"People in this profession are resilient but nobody is totally immune and extreme stress can get to anybody," said Professor Anke Ehlers, the clinical psychologist leading the study into different predictive factors which might help identify and minimise PTSD among ambulance workers. New staff will be interviewed at intervals.
The long-term aim is to develop a prevention programme where paramedics will be taught how to recognise the symptoms as part of their standard training.
Mr Bradshaw, 39, said that suffering from stress carried a stigma: "There is a culture that if you say you have PTSD, depression or anxiety, they think you are nutty. I know of several people who are suffering but they are all being treated abysmally."
click link for more
Austin TX rookie police officer called hero after shootout
Austin police close 7 campuses, kill man armed with AK-47
By JANET ELLIOTT Austin Bureau
Nov. 6, 2008, 5:22PM
AUSTIN — A man armed with an assault rifle and wearing body armor was shot and killed by a rookie police officer in an early-morning shootout on this city's east side.
The shooting came after an attack that left two other men wounded and spurred Austin school district officials to call off classes at seven campuses in that area for the day.
Police Chief Art Acevedo praised the young officer as a hero. The dead suspect is believed to have been involved in the earlier shooting that left two people wounded at a nearby residence.
The fatal shooting occurred after a chase in which a pickup truck that was seen leaving the residence crashed into a closed hamburger stand while fleeing police.
Five men ran away from the truck, one of them firing an AK-47 at police, Acevedo said.
go here for more
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6098264.html
By JANET ELLIOTT Austin Bureau
Nov. 6, 2008, 5:22PM
AUSTIN — A man armed with an assault rifle and wearing body armor was shot and killed by a rookie police officer in an early-morning shootout on this city's east side.
The shooting came after an attack that left two other men wounded and spurred Austin school district officials to call off classes at seven campuses in that area for the day.
Police Chief Art Acevedo praised the young officer as a hero. The dead suspect is believed to have been involved in the earlier shooting that left two people wounded at a nearby residence.
The fatal shooting occurred after a chase in which a pickup truck that was seen leaving the residence crashed into a closed hamburger stand while fleeing police.
Five men ran away from the truck, one of them firing an AK-47 at police, Acevedo said.
go here for more
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6098264.html
Barack Obama makes inroads with religious voters
64,519,950 people paid attention. While most love Obama and were happy to vote for him, some voted because they were terrified of McCain as President to be followed up by Sarah Palin, who didn't know what countries are part of the North American Free Trade Agreement (hint, there are only three in North America and we're one of them) or that Africa was a continent and not a nation among a lot of other things. The question is; How could 56,785,572 people be so stupid? That's how many votes McCain received and to think we owe most of those votes to the fine people over at FOX and the McCain campaign supporters lying online.
Well here goes yet another rumor some never got the message of. Obama is a Christian. They will just have to deal with it.
The we have this "hockey mom" trying to be one of the regular people pulling stunts that caused McCain's staff to say she was out of control, adding in that she wanted to give a
concession speech along with McCain until his staffer stopped her. Read the rest of this here. All in all the Good Lord found some mercy on this nation and opened up the eyes of most of us that McCain/Palin were not telling the truth and were not putting the country first. If they had, McCain would have never picked Palin and would have never sold out his principles to make the speeches and commercials he did.
Ticker: McCain sources gripe about Palin
Well here goes yet another rumor some never got the message of. Obama is a Christian. They will just have to deal with it.
Barack Obama makes inroads with religious voters
Democrat does better with Catholics and white evangelicals than John Kerry in 2004
By Margaret Ramirez and Manya A. Brachear Tribune reporters
November 6, 2008
With his Christian faith playing a key part in his personal life and campaign, President-elect Barack Obama emerged victorious by winning the Catholic vote and making slight gains among white evangelicals.
Early exit polls found that Obama took 54 percent of the Catholic vote, while Republican John McCain captured 45 percent. That outcome was a reversal from the 2004 election, when George W. Bush won the Catholic vote with 52 percent compared to John Kerry's 46 percent.
Obama's win among Catholics came despite an aggressive push by some of the nation's bishops to encourage the faithful to make abortion their main issue. The abortion debate intensified when Catholic legal scholars Douglas Kmiec and Nicholas Cafardi announced their support of Obama, who supports keeping abortion legal, and urged Catholics to consider the full agenda of Catholic social teaching.
go here for more
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-religion-vote-06-nov06,0,2817080.story
The we have this "hockey mom" trying to be one of the regular people pulling stunts that caused McCain's staff to say she was out of control, adding in that she wanted to give a
concession speech along with McCain until his staffer stopped her. Read the rest of this here. All in all the Good Lord found some mercy on this nation and opened up the eyes of most of us that McCain/Palin were not telling the truth and were not putting the country first. If they had, McCain would have never picked Palin and would have never sold out his principles to make the speeches and commercials he did.
Ticker: McCain sources gripe about Palin
"Chicago is on top of the world"
Chicago is on top of the world
Nov 06, 2008
City walks on air after historic win
Feeling pride and seeing opportunity
By Bob Secter and Rick Pearson | Tribune reporters
November 6, 2008
The city walks on air after President-elect Barack Obama's historic win, feeling pride and seeing opportunity as officials consider what Obama's presidency may mean to Chicago now and for years to come.
We split the atom, invented the skyscraper, reversed a river, linked a sprawling continent by rail and air, butchered the world's hogs, rose from the ashes of a historic blaze, rigged a World Series, raised graft to an art form and all but trademarked the political machine.
Yet Chicago, a city defined by superlatives and cunning, had never in its 175 years produced the ultimate American leader. Until now.
Wednesday was nothing short of a "pinch-me" moment in Barack Obama's adoptive hometown, the weather remarkably warm for November and the civic mood even warmer.
"Chicago is alive and refreshed," Charlie Hill, 34, said as he strolled through Grant Park, the site of Obama's victory rally just hours before. "I feel [his] presence in the city. Chicago is a winner as well."
click link for more
Nov 06, 2008
City walks on air after historic win
Feeling pride and seeing opportunity
By Bob Secter and Rick Pearson | Tribune reporters
November 6, 2008
The city walks on air after President-elect Barack Obama's historic win, feeling pride and seeing opportunity as officials consider what Obama's presidency may mean to Chicago now and for years to come.
Paid for by Mayor Richard Daley's campaign committee, new banners hang outside City Hall on Wednesday. (Jose M. Osorio/Tribune / November 5, 2008)
We split the atom, invented the skyscraper, reversed a river, linked a sprawling continent by rail and air, butchered the world's hogs, rose from the ashes of a historic blaze, rigged a World Series, raised graft to an art form and all but trademarked the political machine.
Yet Chicago, a city defined by superlatives and cunning, had never in its 175 years produced the ultimate American leader. Until now.
Wednesday was nothing short of a "pinch-me" moment in Barack Obama's adoptive hometown, the weather remarkably warm for November and the civic mood even warmer.
"Chicago is alive and refreshed," Charlie Hill, 34, said as he strolled through Grant Park, the site of Obama's victory rally just hours before. "I feel [his] presence in the city. Chicago is a winner as well."
click link for more
Chicago:Five firefighters, woman and child hurt in crash
Five firefighters, woman and child hurt in crash
November 6, 2008 at 5:01 PM
Five firefighters, a woman and a young girl were injured today on the Near North Side when a car and a fire truck collided at the intersection of Division and Wells Streets and the fire truck caught fire, fire officials said.
Two firefighters and the woman were taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, the child was taken to Children's Memorial Hospital, and the other three firefighters were taken to Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center, fire officials said.
The injured were in serious to critical condition but none of the injuries was life-threatening, fire officials said.
The fire truck was traveling east on Division Street responding to a call with its lights flashing when it collided with a tan Toyota Corolla traveling south on Wells Street at about 3:10 p.m., said Eve Rodriquez, a Fire Department spokeswoman. The injured woman and child were in the Corolla.
click post title for more
November 6, 2008 at 5:01 PM
Five firefighters, a woman and a young girl were injured today on the Near North Side when a car and a fire truck collided at the intersection of Division and Wells Streets and the fire truck caught fire, fire officials said.
Two firefighters and the woman were taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, the child was taken to Children's Memorial Hospital, and the other three firefighters were taken to Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center, fire officials said.
The injured were in serious to critical condition but none of the injuries was life-threatening, fire officials said.
The fire truck was traveling east on Division Street responding to a call with its lights flashing when it collided with a tan Toyota Corolla traveling south on Wells Street at about 3:10 p.m., said Eve Rodriquez, a Fire Department spokeswoman. The injured woman and child were in the Corolla.
click post title for more
Feds pay suicidal Air Force vet’s family
Feds pay suicidal Air Force vet’s family
The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Nov 6, 2008 16:14:02 EST
HONOLULU — The federal government has paid $800,000 to the family of a suicidal Air Force veteran who jumped to his death from Tripler Army Medical Center after his pleas to be admitted went unheeded.
Robert Roth died in January 2007 after he jumped from a 10th-floor balcony at Tripler. Roth suffered from a bipolar mood disorder and had a long history of depression.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/11/ap_suicidepayment_110608/
The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Nov 6, 2008 16:14:02 EST
HONOLULU — The federal government has paid $800,000 to the family of a suicidal Air Force veteran who jumped to his death from Tripler Army Medical Center after his pleas to be admitted went unheeded.
Robert Roth died in January 2007 after he jumped from a 10th-floor balcony at Tripler. Roth suffered from a bipolar mood disorder and had a long history of depression.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/11/ap_suicidepayment_110608/
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