Friday, May 31, 2013

Army admits Staff Sgt. Robert Bales given steroids and alcohol

Lawyer: Army plied JBLM soldier behind Afghan massacre with booze, steroids
MyNorthwest.com
BY JOSH KERNS
May 30, 2013

The lawyer for the JBLM soldier accused of massacring 16 villagers during a bloody rampage in Afghanistan says his client suffered post traumatic stress disorder and was on steroids at the time. Seattle attorney John Henry Browne told CNN Thursday special forces troops "pumped" Sgt. Robert Bales with steroids and alcohol regularly before the March, 2012 rampage.

"Of course nobody forces him to take it but that's how he got it. The Army admits that," Browne said.
read more here

After Staff Sgt. Bales' arrest, military tried to delete him from the Web

Dr. Frank Ochberg talks about Sgt. Robert Bales and the nature of PTSD

Military Scrambles To Limit Malaria Drug Just After Afghanistan Massacre

A Military Spouse’s Tale: Criminalizing PTSD

A Military Spouse’s Tale: Criminalizing PTSD
TIME
By Virginia Lloyd
May 31, 2013

AURORA, Colo. — After fighting for his country in Iraq in 2004 as a member of the U.S. Air Force, and as a civilian contractor for nearly three years from 2007 to 2010, Maurice Lloyd — my husband — is now fighting the same government that sent him to war.

After being honorably discharged from the military in 2007, the Department of Veterans Affairs saw signs that Maurice had Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Major Depressive Disorder.

But, like many vets, Maurice was in denial. He accepted a contracting job in Iraq a few months after exiting the military. He worked there for nearly three years. Upon returning to U.S. soil in August 2010, his PTSD worsened rapidly. He ended up chosing alcohol over continued visits to the VA.

The liquor fueled his increasing vivid nightmares, high anxiety, and paranoia. His inability to sleep soundlessly through the night, and the recurring nightmares, kept him up until all hours of the night.

Many mornings, I would wake up for work around 6 a.m. and find him either asleep on the couch downstairs, with all of the lights on, or still awake, sometimes drinking alcohol. This put a huge strain on our marriage. We began arguing more frequently.

In October 2011, Maurice left the house late one night. He would often drive around and listen to music to help clear his mind and relax. However, that night ended differently than his usual late-night drives. I received a call during the early morning hours informing me that my husband was in jail.
I was stunned and scared.
read more here

Soldier Killed Days Before Daughter’s Birth Honored

Local Soldier Killed Days Before Daughter’s Birth Honored
KTLA News
by Anthony Kurzweil
May 29, 2013

SOUTH PASADENA, Calif. (KTLA) – More than 1,000 people gathered in South Pasadena Wednesday to honor a fallen soldier who never had the chance to hold his newborn daughter.

Spc. William J. Gilbert, 24, was killed on his first tour of duty in Afghanistan May 14, just a week before his baby girl, Michaela, was born.

“There are tears for Michaela when we think to the future,” Monsignor Clement Connolly said during Gilbert’s funeral.
read more here

Thursday, May 30, 2013

New VA Controversy over Sleep Apnea

Attorney urges Congress to end sleep apnea claims 'abuse'
By Tom Philpott
Stars and Stripes
Published: May 30, 2013

In 2001, the year U.S. forces invaded Afghanistan, 983 veterans began to draw disability compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs for sleep apnea, a disorder linked to obesity and characterized by pauses in breathing during sleep that can cause chronic drowsiness.

Last year, 25 times that number of veterans and military retirees (24,791) were added to VA compensation rolls for service-connected sleep apnea, raising the number of vets and retirees drawing apnea payments to 114,103, double the number VA reported just three years earlier.

VA compensation for sleep apnea now exceeds $1.2 billion annually under the most conservative of calculations. Michael T. Webster, a former naval aviator and family law attorney in Shalimar, Fla., calls this boom a scam and an offense to veterans who suffer from “real disabilities.”

Webster seeks to shine a spotlight on what he sees as “widespread abuse” of the VA claims system, mostly by recent retirees. He began with a May 6 letter to his congressman, Rep. Jeff Miller (R-Fla.), who is chairman of the House Armed Services Committee.

“Virtually every single family law case which I have handled involving military members during the past three years has had the military retiree receiving a VA ‘disability’ based upon sleep apnea,” Webster wrote. “A recently retired colonel told me that military members approaching retirement are actually briefed that if they claim VA disability based on sleep apnea, then they receive an automatic 50 percent disability rating thereby qualifying for ‘concurrent’ payment status.”
read more here

Why does society have to deal with what military created?

Why does society have to deal with what military created?
by Kathie Costos
Wounded Times Blog
May 20,2013

There should have been a rule that any member of the military suffering because of their service be the responsibility of the military since they created the problems veterans face.

Physical wounds are part of it and we take care of them, rightly so, but what about the troops suffering because of chemicals the DOD uses and drugs they issue? Should that become a military problem and then hold the contractors responsible? After all, the contractors have to supply all the chemicals and drugs. Why is it the responsibility of the VA to pay for what contractors did? Tax payers are paying for what they did and then paying to care for the troops they did it to. So why haven't members of Congress thought about this when they are always screaming about the deficit?

If Congress really cared about money then they would be true caretakers and make sure companies were held accountable, but they are not really serious.

They haven't been serious on PTSD or suicides either. They find billions a year to fund the programs behind most of the problems we see when war fighters come home after the umpteenth deployment. We are always told that the DOD has been paying attention to it but then we are reminded of what they are not doing when the number of suicides rises as well as veterans getting into trouble. All of this shows that the military has not taken the responsibility for any of it. They just pass the damage done off for someone else to take care of. After all, when they are discharged, they are no longer the military's problem. They don't have to account for them committing suicide or getting into trouble or ending up homeless. They just pass it off as behavioral issues even though they do not seem to have the ability to prove any of them had any issues before we sent them off to fight where congress sent them.

Woodside veteran with PTSD committed to hospital
Daily Journal Staff Report
Milo Imrie
May 30, 2013

A 24-year-old military veteran from Woodside accused of assaulting his cousin with a shovel and grabbing for a responding sheriff deputy’s gun was formally committed yesterday to a state mental hospital.

Milo McIntosh Imrie had already pleaded not guilty to the charges of assault and trying to remove an officer’s firearm but in April was found mentally unfit for trial. He will now be treated at Napa State Hospital rather than potentially incarcerated. If doctors ever find him restored to competency, Imrie will return to San Mateo County for prosecution. If instead he reaches the three-year mark without change, the county can seek a conservatorship. Imrie agreed to be involuntarily medicated if necessary while hospitalized.

Prosecutors say Imrie is thought to have post-traumatic stress disorder.
read more here


The Congress has been very good at writing checks but not holding anyone accountable for the results. No one has been held accountable for the rise in suicides and attempted suicides. No one has been able to explain to families why they didn't have a clue what to do to help them stay alive so they wouldn't blame themselves when they had to visit the grave of a serviceman or woman home from combat but couldn't survive here. Is anyone paying attention to any of this?