Showing posts with label Biloxi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biloxi. Show all posts

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Homeless Vietnam veteran found dead, police search for answers

UPDATE
Biloxi police hope calls will help solve homeless veteran's death
Biloxi police trying to solve homeless veteran's death
Published: March 22, 2013
Police searching for leads in murder
By ROBIN FITZGERALD

BILOXI -- A homeless veteran's brother said the family had worried about his safety and health for years, but they never imagined he'd be killed.

Michael Paul Flatz, 65, had served two tours of duty in Vietnam in the U.S. Army and had lived in the Biloxi area about 10 years, said Stephen Flatz of Chesterton, Ind.

Biloxi police believe Michael Flatz was assaulted Wednesday night or early Thursday. A friend found him dead at his campsite, where he lived alone in a clump of trees south of Pass Road near Jim Money Road.
read more here

Monday, November 19, 2012

Death at Keesler campground a suicide

Death at Keesler campground a suicide
Published: November 19, 2012 Updated 40 minutes ago
Sun Herald
By ROBIN FITZGERALD

BILOXI -- A woman's death Sunday in a shooting at a campground for military families has been ruled a suicide.

The woman's name is not being released because of the nature of her death, Harrison County Coroner Gary Hargrove said Monday.

Hargrove said she was 57 years old and had a Louisiana driver's license, but it appeared she may have had a house in Ocean Springs.

Her estranged husband, a 66-year-old retired Army major, was wounded and required hospital treatment, but his injuries were not believed to be life-threatening.

"It is my understanding she did fire shots at her husband and took her own life," Hargrove said.
read more here

Monday, October 1, 2007

When communities rely on each other Post Traumatic Stress is not as strong

During the years of trying to eliminate the stigma of PTSD, one of the suggestions I've been making, especially in the videos, was that veterans reach out to help each other heal. Most experts thought if anyone could understand, lend support, compassion and a listening non-judgmental ear, it would be a combat veteran. Isolation is a big problem with PTSD. They are afraid to talk about what's going on in their minds. They think it is all too "crazy" while they are dealing with it on their own terms in silence. This is one example of how a community can alleviate part of the problem.

It does not matter if the trauma came from combat, which is the number one cause of PTSD, from public service, from natural disasters or from crime, when it comes to the aftermath of trauma. All humans with PTSD will suffer the same, endure flashbacks and nightmares as their characters are attacked. The greatest strength comes from leaning on each other.


Vietnamese community relies on each other
Groups monitor mental health
By JOSHUA NORMAN
jdnorman@sunherald.com

BILOXI --Bien Bo lost track of his love, Tuat Nguyen, about 40 years ago when he joined the South Vietnamese army and war tore his country apart before expelling him from his homeland altogether.
Bo, 71, lost everything again in 2005 to Hurricane Katrina; his Biloxi home, two cars, his shrimp boat that was his livelihood, all of which were uninsured. He wandered in a daze around town following the storm after barely surviving the surge, depressed and mentally adrift, until he decided to visit an old friend.
He walked into the living room and there she was, Nguyen, his love lost so long ago.
Bo's friend was Nguyen's sister, and Nguyen, 63, was visiting from California after Katrina to help.
They cried, hugged, laughed and have been merrily side by side ever since, she a widow and he with a wife severely disabled by stroke.
Bo and Nguyen's story illustrates how South Mississippi's Vietnamese community has survived the sometimes debilitating mental strain of post-Katrina life. The Vietnamese community came together for support and healing. Despite the destruction in the center of their community, Point Cadet, they have shown remarkably few outer signs of strain or mental decay.
The Vietnamese community, already slightly separated from their neighbors by language and cultural barriers, sought refuge within themselves. The post-Vietnam war Vietnamese community service organization, Boat People SOS, set up offices in Biloxi for the first time ever post-Katrina, and many in the Vietnamese community received help and support from it.
go here for the rest
http://www.sunherald.com/living/health/story/154205.html