Friday, January 6, 2012

Navy SEAL is on life support after accidentally shooting himself in the head

UPDATE Sad News

Navy SEAL Dies After Accidentally Shooting Himself

January 09, 2012
UPI
A U.S. Navy SEAL died of an accidental self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head at a hospital Saturday in Southern California, Navy officials said.
Petty Officer 3rd Class Gene "Geno" Clayton Jr., 22, of Poland, Ohio, was mortally wounded about 2 a.m. Thursday, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported.
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Police: Navy SEAL Accidentally Shoots Self in Head

January 06, 2012
Associated Press
SAN DIEGO -- San Diego police say a Navy SEAL is on life support after accidentally shooting himself in the head.

Officer Frank Cali tells U-T San Diego that officers were called to a home in Pacific Beach early Thursday morning on a report that a man had been playing with a gun and accidentally shot himself.
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Veterans more likely to attempt suicide than harm anyone else

Benjamin Colton Barnes died after shooting people and killing a Park Ranger. In Ogden Utah, Matthew Stewart was arrested after six officers were shot and one of them died. 7th Fort Carson Soldier charged in child abuse death for 2011 and Navy pilot killed self in San Diego murder-suicide What makes these reports more shocking is they all happened this week.

Reading postings across the nation, there seems to be a vast majority of people wanting to defend military leaders while inadvertently blaming the servicemen and women. It is time to clear some things up.

Keep in mind that when we read about crimes committed by service members or veterans, the numbers are very low compared to the fact we have about 24 million veterans with over 2 million having served in Iraq and Afghanistan. These are not the "criminal" type of individuals. They don't suddenly go from being willing to die in combat to not being willing to let someone else live without a reason. They don't suddenly decide that doing drugs and getting drunk is how they want to spend their days.

Here are some more numbers to consider.

We are not reading reports in the hundreds every week even though the "official" number of PTSD veterans is in the hundreds of thousands. While we are probably looking at a million OEF OIF veterans with PTSD, very few are being treated for it with half unwilling to go to the VA. There is also the factor of mild PTSD preventing them from seeking help. They believe they can just "get over it" with time.

Considering the training they have received to "prevent" PTSD by making them "resilient" and "toughening" their minds, this left them with the impression they are responsible for it and just not tough enough. Some of them actually believe it is their fault for not training properly.

With mild PTSD, most of what they are going through can be reversed if they are given the proper treatment with counseling and medications when necessary. They will seek help if they understand what PTSD is, why it happened to them and if they have support. They won't seek help if they don't trust anyone or blame themselves for needing it.

While it is never too late to get help to heal, as we've seen in Vietnam veterans, the longer it goes on unaddressed, the worse it gets.

Mild PTSD veterans will seek employment and attend college classes because they still have hope of a better life and still have the ability to do the work. Veterans with a stronger rating of PTSD will not seek employment because they cannot work, yet once they are provided with what they need, they have hope again and usually end up doing volunteer work and helping their communities.

They are also more likely to attempt suicide than harm anyone else. It is not in their nature. While some do in fact commit crimes, again, the number of them involved with criminal activity is very low. All of us need to face reality and what these men and women are up against when they come home. Then we can make sure what they need is provided for them and people are held accountable for what has not been working.

World Report Untreated Casualties The Military's Suicide Epidemic

1 Dead in Truck Collision Near Fort Carson

Update: 1 Dead in Truck Collision
KKTV 11 News has confirmed one man has died after a pick-up truck hit a tree.
Posted: 8:07 PM Jan 5, 2012
Reporter: KKTV

11 News has confirmed one man has died after a pick-up truck hit a tree.

It happened near Westmeadow and London Green Way, near Fort Carson.

Before the driver hit the tree, he reportedly hit a tree and a light pole.

Officers would not confirm the man was a soldier, but he said that all indications point to him being a part of the military community.

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Iraq War vet hit by car dies from injuries

Iraq War vet hit by car dies from injuries
Originally published: January 5, 2012
By CHAU LAM
Photo credit: Handout | An undated handout photo of Sean Lapersonerie who was struck by a motorist while crossing East Main Street in Babylon Village on New Year's Eve.

He served two years in Iraq as a heavy field artillery operator in the Army. While there, he saw a good friend cut down by a sniper just a few feet away and later came home with post-traumatic stress disorder.

But Sean Lapersonerie survived it all.

Then on New Year's Eve, the 24-year-old Copiague man was hit by a car while crossing East Main Street in Babylon Village with his girlfriend. And Thursday he was declared brain-dead, said his mother, Marie Lapersonerie, 49, also of Copiague.

"He had a heart of gold," said his mother. "He was the type of guy who would give the shirt off his back for anyone. He was so selfless."

While he was in Iraq, between 2008 and 2010, Lapersonerie had his family purchase and send children's clothes to him, which he gave to Iraqi children, his family said.
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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Police suspect Iraq vet in shooting of six officers in Utah

Police suspect Army vet in shooting of six officers

By James Nelson
OGDEN, Utah
Thu Jan 5, 2012 5:10pm EST

(Reuters) - Six police officers were shot, one of them fatally, when a gunman said to be a U.S. Army veteran opened fire on them as they served a drug-related search warrant in Utah, authorities said on Thursday.

The gunman fired on the officers late on Wednesday as they approached a home in a quiet residential neighborhood of Ogden, north of Salt Lake City, Ogden police Lieutenant Danielle Croyle said.

"We have lost a brother. We will grieve this loss, he will be sorely missed," Weber County Sheriff Terry Thompson said of local drug task force agent Jared Francom, who was pronounced dead on Thursday.

Three Ogden police officers remained in critical condition at McKay-Dee Hospital, spokesman Chris Dallin said, while a Weber County Sheriff's sergeant was in stable condition.

An agent with the Roy Police Department was treated at Ogden Regional Medical Center and released, the hospital said.

Police identified the suspected gunman as 37-year-old Matthew Stewart, and said he was under guard at a hospital where he was being treated for non-life-threatening injuries suffered when officers returned fire.
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Does PTSD give anyone an excuse to commit crimes? No, considering how few reports come out of the over 2 millions sent into Iraq and Afghanistan most live peaceful lives. Are they our fault? Yes, somewhat when you consider that a lot of these standoffs with police officers could be avoided if all the help they needed was available no matter where they live. No one can stop all of this and we have to face the facts that some veterans don't want help for whatever reason. We still need to try to save the ones we can. In all of this, members of law enforcement have to face off with combat veterans that usually end badly.

Father: Suspect in deadly Utah shootout had PTSD
By PAUL FOY
The Associated Press

OGDEN, Utah — Search warrant in hand, a team of bulletproof vest-wearing officers rapped on the door of a small, red-brick Utah house, identifying themselves as police. When no one responded, authorities say, the officers burst inside. That's when the gunfire erupted.

When it was over Wednesday night, a 7-year veteran officer was dead and five of his colleagues were wounded, some critically. The suspect, an Army veteran whose estranged father said suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and may have been self-medicating with marijuana, was injured.

Now, as the city tries to grapple with the outburst of violence and the loss of one of its officers, investigators are trying to determine how the raid as part of a drug investigation could have gone so terribly wrong.

"It's a very, very sad day," an emotional Ogden Police Chief Wayne Tarwater said Thursday.

Police declined to reveal details of the shooting besides a general timeline, citing the ongoing investigation.

They would not say, for instance, whether the shootout took place entirely inside the home or spilled out into the yard, how many shots were fired and how many guns were recovered.
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