Showing posts with label SWAT Team. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SWAT Team. Show all posts

Sunday, August 21, 2016

SWAT Standoff Ended After 11 Hours

Scottsbluff man arrested after 11-hour standoff
Star Herald
MAUNETTE LOEKS and DEAN TORSKE
Star-Herald Staff
August 20, 2016

UPDATE, 11:15 A.M.: Sheriff Mark Overman has confirmed reports that the man involved in the stand-off is a Vietnam veteran who has been suffering some recent emotional issues. Family members called in the report, but the man has mostly made threats to himself. 
Standoff nearing its sixth hour SHANA EMERICK/Courtesy Photo
Neighbor Shana Emrick provided photos of SWAT team and bomb robot teams readying at the site of a standoff Saturday.

After more than 11 hours, a standoff at a rural residence ended with officers taking the man into custody.

Scotts Bluff County Sheriff’s deputies and the Scottsbluff SWAT Team took Daniel Converse, 65, of Scottsbluff, into custody at about 6:45 p.m. Sheriff Mark Overman reported authorities had obtained a warrant for the man, charging him with two felony counts of terroristic threats.

“I am just proud of all of the efforts of all of the officers that we were able to get this resolved. It took quite a while, but we got it resolved peacefully,” Overman said.

The standoff began at about 7:30 a.m. when Scotts Bluff County Sheriff’s deputies were called to a residence at County Road H and County Road 19, about six miles west of Scottsbluff. A woman reported to deputies that a man at the residence was armed with a hand grenade. He was outside of the residence when deputies initially arrived, but went back into the residence.

“They (deputies) challenged him and tried to get him to stop, but he retreated into his house,” Overman said. “He was holding something in his hands that deputies said was the size and shape of a grenade.”
read more here

Friday, August 5, 2016

SWAT Standoff Man Killed In Coltart Was Former Marine

Cove police ID man shot in SWAT standoff; Coltart was former Marine
Killeen Daily Herald
Clay Thorp
August 4, 2016

COPPERAS COVE — Cove police identified the 41-year-old man who pointed a rifle at police in Copperas Cove Wednesday, and was subsequently shot by police officers.

The man was identified by police as Alexander Scott Coltart, a former Marine.

Donald Byers, who lives in the North 17th Street neighborhood where Coltart was shot following a standoff with Cove police, said the neighborhood is usually “nice and quiet.” It’s a middle-class neighborhood of brick homes and hilly streets.

But the peace and quiet Byers has come to enjoy over some 30 years was broken Wednesday when a man was shot on the sidewalk across the street from Byers’ home after Copperas Cove police said they tried to arrest the man on a felony warrant.
read more here

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Defense Contractor in Court After Standoff With SWAT

Man who barricaded himself in home appears in court
Cyrus Ahyoung faces aggravated assault charges
WPBF News
Terri Parker
Sep 22, 2015
For 18 hours, the chief and SWAT team members negotiated with Ahyoung, whose attorney said had been a civilian military contractor and whose daughter said may be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. —The man who barricaded himself inside a Cat Rock Lane home for 18 hours Sunday appeared in court Tuesday, facing charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and false imprisonment.

Jupiter police said Cyrus Ahyoung, 50, first imprisoned his girlfriend, her daughter, and his own daughter for several hours Saturday night, threatening to kill them all,and hitting them with his hand and pistols. The girlfriend’s daughter said Ahyoung said they were all disrespecting him, and he didn’t know why so many bad things were happening to him.

The girlfriend told police she finally calmed him down, and she and the girls escaped the next morning, when she drove to the police station.

Police said the girlfriend advised them he had a gun safe full of guns and ammunition and was an expert marksman.

Chief Frank Kitzerow said Ahyoung refused to exit the home and continued making threats. Kitzerow said he had 40 officers and SWAT team members on scene -– over a third of his entire force.
read more here

Friday, September 18, 2015

After Standoff Iraq Veteran Faces Charges

First question is, "Did he get diagnosed or was PTSD an assumption?" Next, it would be great to know if he was in treatment, on medication or plus using substances that have been known to cause "outbursts" like this. It is very rare for them to get this out of control, but it does happen.
Police: Wife in Ormond standoff recounts 'PTSD rage'
Man now faces additional charge of attempted murder
Daytona Beach News Journal
By Lyda Longa
Published: Thursday, September 17, 2015

An Ormond Beach father and husband was additionally charged Thursday with attempted second-degree murder after his wife described to police a horrific night of "PTSD rage."

Before barricading himself in his house for seven hours on Wednesday, Kevin Hamilton attacked his wife, threatened to kill his family and shoot himself in front of his crying 4-year-old son, police reports state.

Julie Hamilton recounted a night of violence and fear with Kevin Hamilton telling Ormond Beach police investigators that her spouse snapped after drinking rum and Fireball whiskey. The couple had been discussing a possible divorce or separation, but then began talking about salvaging their marriage, reports show.

The suspect, 36, suffers not only from post traumatic stress disorder from serving in the militiary in Iraq, but a neighbor who knows him well said Hamilton also suffered a brain injury in combat. Officials did not say in what branch of the military Kevin Hamilton served.
read more here

Monday, September 7, 2015

Iraq Veteran Getting Help After False Report Led to SWAT Standoff

Man in custody after West Toledo standoff 
Toledo Blade
BY MIKE SIGOV BLADE STAFF WRITER
September 7, 2015
Mr. McGranahan had served two tours of duty in Iraq, been wounded in the back, and awarded a Purple Heart. The woman, Shirley Mowery, said her grandson suffered post-traumatic stress disorder, but was not capable of hurting anyone.
Toledo police have identified Donald McGranahan II as the main taken in custody after a standoff with police in West Toledo today.

Shortly after 1 p.m. a police SWAT team led him away from the house in the 1400 block of Gage Road where he’d been holding them at bay for about two hours. He was wearing body armor, police said. Mr. McGranahan, 32, called 911 just after 11 a.m. and said he had just shot his girlfriend at the home and that he had her children tied up in the bathroom, police said.

The caller also allegedly threatened to shoot police, they said.

Police negotiators went to the home, where they later learned the caller’s claims about hurting a woman and children were false.


The woman he mentioned was safe and in another location and no children were at the house or harmed, Toledo Police Lt. Joe Heffernan said.

Toledo Police Chief George Kral said Mr. McGranahan surrendered after negotiators had him speak with his relatives.

After searching the home, police determined no one else was inside and though several loaded firearms were later found in the house, the man had not wielded one during the standoff.
read more here



UPDATE 9/8/2015
Man taken into custody after standoff pleads not guilty

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Georgia SWAT Team Veteran Killed in Afghanistan

Former sheriff's deputy killed in Afghanistan
WTCO News
By La-Keya Stinchcomb, Digital Producer
Posted: Aug 22, 2015
FLOYD COUNTY, GA (CBS46)
A former Floyd County law enforcement officer was killed in Afghanistan Saturday.

Barry Sutton was a civilian contractor, working with DynCorp International. He was helping to train police officers in Afghanistan as part of NATO's resolute Support Mission, according to the Floyd County Sheriff's Office.

Sutton was one of 12 people who died after a suicide bomber attacked a NATO convoy traveling through a crowded neighborhood.

"Barry was a solid career officer, Floyd County Police Department SWAT veteran and deputy," said Floyd County Sheriff Burkhalter. "I am proud to have associated with him and I mourn with his family and extended law enforcement family."
read more here

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Iraq Veteran Claims Fairfax County Police Heavy Handed Tactics Need To Change

An Iraq war veteran is accusing Fairfax County Police of using heavy handed tactics
ABC 7 News
Roz Plater
July 25, 2015
"They will say this is according to the book, but they will not look to see if the book itself is wrong." Alex Horton
FAIRFAX, V.a. (WJLA ) - Alex Horton says it started Sunday morning June 14th. He was sound asleep in a model unit of his Alexandria apartment building while his unit was being repaired.

A neighbor thought he was a squatter and called police.

Horton says he woke to find three Fairfax County Police officers with their guns drawn.

"They came in and swept from either side with their guns drawn," Horton said. "Then one leapt on the bed and handcuffed me; my face was down."

Horton continued saying, "My risk of violent death went up a hundred percent that morning and I was doing nothing wrong."

He wrote about his experience on social media and in an Op-Ed for the Washington Post.

Then in a surprising move Fairfax County Police Chief Edwin Roessler issued a statement on Twitter saying in part:
"I can assure you no SWAT response was utilized in the response to this call for service. However, the Fairfax County Police Department takes seriously the writer’s remarks and as such, an inquiry by the Department’s Internal Affairs Bureau is being conducted at my direction."

The Chief also seemed to take issue with Horton calling it a "raid". But the Iraq Veteran sees it differently.
read more here

Friday, May 1, 2015

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

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Air Force Veteran Killed by SWAT was Retired Master Sgt

Airman killed in standoff with police was father, decorated veteran 
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
By KIMBERLY DE LA CRUZ
March 10, 2015
The retired airman shot and killed by Las Vegas police during a standoff in late February was a father and decorated veteran who specialized in warplane bombs and missiles.

Francis “Frank” Lamantia Spivey, 43, served in the U.S. Air Force from August 1990 to July 2014, when he retired as a master sergeant, according to Air Force spokesman Michael Dickerson.

Spivey’s job was as a munitions systems specialist; he tested, assembled and transported ammunition. He was a recipient of the Air Force Achievement Medal, Outstanding Unit Award with Valor Device and the Air Force Good Conduct Medal, Dickerson said.

Spivey donned his Air Force uniform one last time Feb. 25, and went to the open stairwell of his apartment building armed with an AR 15.

He called police to say he may kill himself, then stood outside his unit at Eagle Trace apartments, 5370 E. Craig Road, with a gun pointed to his chin.
read more here



Air Force Veteran Fired 23 Shots Before Being Killed By SWAT

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Air Force Veteran Fired 23 Shots Before Being Killed By SWAT

Think about this for a second. 23 shots in the air. In other words, he wasn't aiming at anyone. Next time you hear someone say something about how dangerous veterans are, remember that. He was only a danger to himself.

Don't blame SWAT officers because this happens all the time across the country and they have to decide what to do because no one knows for sure if it will end differently.

Sometimes it does end with the veteran turning himself in or just being wounded and usually they are taken to get the help they desperately need. For other times, actually most of the time, they really don't have another choice because too many veterans are still suffering instead of healing.

Someone please remind me again how repeating the same "efforts" over and over again is helping? From what I've seen, what works has been forgotten about and Congress just keeps passing the same old bullshit that failed too many for too long.

Air Force veteran fired 23 shots before he was killed by police
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
By KIMBERLY DE LA CRUZ
March 3, 3015
Metropolitan Police Department Undersheriff Kevin McMahill speaks about the officer involved shooting that occurred on Feb. 25, 2015, in the 5300 block of East Craig Road, at Metro headquarters on Tuesday, March 3, 2015. Francis Spivey, 43, was suicidal and armed with an AR-15 rifle when he was fatally shot after a two-hour confrontation with police.
(Chase Stevens/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
On the balcony of his second-story apartment in 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.

Over the course of two hours, the retired serviceman fired 23 rounds from his rifle into the air and nearby buildings at the Eagle Trace apartment complex, 5370 E. Craig Road, threatening Las Vegas police officers during a standoff before being fatally shot, police said at a press conference Tuesday.

Spivey, who served 23 years in the U.S. Air Force, told negotiators he would “shoot every single officer that he sees,” McMahill said.

A single shot to the chest from SWAT Officer Bradley Cupp’s rifle at 1:48 a.m. ended negotiations that night in Metro’s second officer-involved shooting of 2015.

“Our officers exercised incredible restraint,” Metro Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said, citing the scrutiny Metro has faced in past officer-involved shootings.

Armed with six magazines holding 124 rounds of ammunition for his AR 15, Spivey, 43, demanded to talk to his estranged girlfriend. His exchange with police was captured by a camera worn by one of the officers and shown during Tuesday’s news conference.

“You put that (expletive) on the (expletive) phone,” Spivey shouted from his balcony.

Officers taking shelter behind a car in the complex parking lot are heard pleading with him to put his rifle down.

“There’s no way I can bring the phone to you, Frank,” an officer says, trying to negotiate. “She’s scared too, Frank.”
read more here

Sunday, February 8, 2015

SWAT Medic Wounded During Suicide By Cop Standoff

Polk gunman dead after SWAT standoff 
10 News
Emerald Morrow
February 7, 2015
Deputies say Phillips started shooting at them and he hit a SWAT medic in the shoulder. When the SWAT team shot back, the building went up in flames.
Sheriff Judd credit his military vehicles for protecting deputies in the standoff.
(Photo: WTSP)

Winter Haven, Florida -- Authorities confirmed on Saturday that the gunman in a standoff -- that involved more than 200 rounds -- at a plumbing company is dead.

The Polk County Sheriff's Office said that during the standoff, Michael Phillips, 39, made it clear he wanted to commit suicide by cop and continually threatened the law enforcement presence.

His mother apparently notified police that he suffered from mental illness. Soon after police got to the scene, a shootout began. More than 200 shots were exchanged between deputies and the suspect.
read more here

Saturday, February 7, 2015

Prank on Air Force Veteran Sends SWAT Team

Air Force veteran reduced to tears after SWAT team raids his home over alleged 'swatting' prank 
The heartless prank was live streamed to nearly 60,000 people, showing 27-year-old Joshua Peters going to answer his door before returning visibly shaken.

Peters, speaking in tears, said his 10-year-old brother opened the door to the armed officers who were told a shooter was inside their St. Cloud, Minn., home.

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
BY NINA GOLGOWSKI
Friday, February 6, 2015
Instead they opened the door to a 10-year-old boy and a frightened family who risked being mistakenly killed, Peters said.
Nearly 60,000 online viewers watched as an Air Force veteran was reduced to tears after a SWAT team allegedly raided his family's Minnesota home over a prank call known as "swatting."

The heartless moment was live streamed on Twitch.TV as 27-year-old Joshua Peters cheerfully talked to his viewers while playing video games inside his St. Cloud home Thursday.

As he jovially toyed around while playing the game RuneScape, he paused to answer a knock at the door.

When he returned approximately 12 minutes later, the veteran, who said he was medically evacuated back to the U.S. after serving in Kuwait, appeared struggling to compose himself.
read more here


SWATTED CLASH OF CLANS RUNESCAPE STREAMER'S REACTION Published on Feb 5, 2015 This was the live footage after 10 police officers equipped with ARs held my family at gun point due to a prank call; including my little brother.

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Veterans Court Saving Lives One At A Time

Ex-Marine's path to sobriety began with Veterans Court
Green Bay Press Gazette
Paul Srubas, Press-Gazette Media
January 31, 2015
"Veterans Court attempts to use the power of the court to enforce treatment plans, training, sobriety and whatever else qualified participants need. It's like probation on steroids"

Jeff Vanstraten distinctly remembers the feel of the gun in his hands, the process of filling the clip, the sound of chambering a round, and looking at the police outside his home and thinking how easily he could pick one of them off.

It was about 9:30 p.m., Jan. 15, 2012. Vanstraten, then 40, had consumed his usual 30-pack of beer and was well into another. It must've reacted badly with the pain medication he had been taking for his bad back, because he can't remember many other details of what went on that day in his west-side Green Bay rental home.

He learned later that a buddy, concerned he was suicidal, called the police, who dispatched a SWAT team that surrounded his house. Vanstraten kept drinking and loaded his gun.

"I don't know if I wanted to die that day ...or what," he said. "When I picked up the gun, I don't know if I felt invincible or what, but I remember every detail of handling that gun. I don't know if that's a military thing or not."
"You're in the Army 3½ years and in your mind, time stands still," said Tom Hinz, former Brown County Executive, who mentors in the Veterans Court. "You come back, find all your friends are married, have jobs, kids and mortgages. You're different, too, but sometimes you don't understand that. Or while you were away, your significant other learned to take care of everything, pay the bills, take the kids to school, and when you come back, where do you fit in?"
read more here

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Marines facing charges after shooting up a New Jersey Church

Marine, ex-Marine arrested for shooting up historic Ridgewood church, police say
NJ.com
By James Kleimann
NJ Advance Media
January 13, 2015
SWAT teams executed a search warrant on the Ridgewood home of Alex Norrell, who is accused of shooting up a historic church with another man on December, 26, 2014.
(Myles Ma | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com)

RIDGEWOOD — Ridgewood police say they've captured the two men responsible for shooting up Old Paramus Reformed Church in late December.

Active duty Marine Joseph Galli, 21, of Somerville, and former Marine Alexander Norrell, 22, of Ridgewood, are facing weapons and criminal mischief charges for allegedly carrying out the shooting, which left more than 30 bullets throughout the 200-year-old church. The damage toll was estimated at more than $50,000.

The church was unoccupied when the shots rang out on the day after Christmas, but the event disturbed congregants, neighbors and parents of children at a nearby daycare facility.

"While this matter is still under investigation, we wanted to provide information of these arrests to hopefully provide some level of comfort for our community which has been understandably shaken by this event," Ridgewood Police Chief John Ward said. "To help further alleviate any further concerns it should be said that there are no other suspects believed to be involved in this incident."
read more here

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Donald "Donnie" Wendt First Responder's Life Remembered

Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
November 30, 2014

Donald Wendt was a firefigher in Bradenton Florida. Yesterday his life was memorialized by an overflow of family, friends and firefighters.

Bradenton Herald Obituary
Donald "Donnie" Wendt
Has left this world to move on to a better world. He is survived by his father, Robert Wendt and his wife, Carol; mother, Mary Maloney and her husband, Dennis; daughter, Ashley Wendt Steele, her husband, Robbie, their daughter, Abbie and baby Steele tbd; sisters, Deborah Wendt, Carolyn Sherry and her husband, Ken. A; nephew, Eric Wendt and his wife, Allison. His second family, the Bradenton Fire Department and a multitude of friends. He will be remembered for his sense of humor, his passion for his job, his example to others, his love for his daughter, his bravery, his willingness to risk his life for others and his loyalty to others. He was a wonderful son, father, brother, "Happy" and friend. This world will never be the same but Heaven has gained a Valiant Angel. We love him. A Celebration of his Life will be 2:00PM, Saturday, November 29, 2014 at Brown and Sons Funeral Homes and Crematory 43rd Street Chapel, 604 43rd Street West, Bradenton, FL 34209. Memorial donations to Paws for Vets.

This was the headline of his life coming to an end
Officer fatally shoots firefighter brandishing guns

It is how most people will remember when they hear his name.
MANATEE COUNTY - A Bradenton firefighter who had been honored for his service in Operation Iraqi Freedom was shot and killed by a city police officer Sunday night after the firefighter reportedly approached officers brandishing two handguns.

At 9:30 p.m. Sunday, neighbors called police to report that Donald Wendt, 50, was outside his home in the 3300 block of Oxford Drive waving a weapon and threatening to kill himself and his sister.

A SWAT team and hostage negotiators were summoned. Wendt was inside when police arrived, so officers set up a perimeter and evacuated people from nearby homes.

Team members were trying to contact Wendt by phone when he re-emerged from the home and pointed a gun at police.

Bradenton Police SWAT Officer Jason Nuttall — a 15-year veteran — fired one shot at Wendt, a firefighter/engineer for the Bradenton Fire Department. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is investigating the shooting.

Bradenton Police Chief Michael Radzilowski said Wendt served two tours of military duty in Operation Iraqi Freedom and may have been suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

“It's a terribly tragic situation,” Radzilowski said. “Police officers are upset, firefighters are upset. It's just something you never want to see happen.”

But as with everything else, there was so much more to the story that was not reflected in the headline.
Wendt joined the Bradenton Fire Department in December 2003 after volunteering with Cedar Hammock-Southern Manatee while working at Ten-8 Fire Equipment.

A year later, he spent 13 months in Iraq with the United States Army Reserve. Wendt received a Bronze Star Medal for his efforts.

On May 13, 2005, as a recovery section sergeant with HHC Platoon, 1st Battalion, 103rd Armor and Task Force Liberty, Wendt “went to the aid of a fellow soldier who was injured and trapped under a burning vehicle during a Vehicle Born Improvised Explosives Device attack,” according to the U.S. War Office. He used tow chains to move the burning vehicle away from the injured soldier.

Don's life meant so much more to those who knew him. I listened to family members and another firefighter along with a Chaplain talk about the man behind the headline.

They said he was always there when they needed him. He always wanted people to be happy and did whatever he could to make them laugh. He was also there to listen. The problem was he didn't want to talk much about himself. They saw him troubled but as he would start to open up, he would soon change the subject.

Don was rare. He risked his life as a firefighter as well as a soldier because that was what he was put on this earth do to. Yet it was that very quality within him that caused the pain and made him feel as if he didn't want to burden anyone with his own troubles.
Bradenton resident Jeremy Hillengas, who said he's known Wendt for about eight years, reconnected with him Sunday at a local bar, and last saw him around 7 p.m.

“He didn't talk crazy or seem to have any issues,” Hillengas said. “It was a total shock. I was with him literally hours before it happened, and I've been thinking 'Did I miss something,' but there were no signs.”

There were signs but no one knew what those signs meant. While PTSD has made national news long enough for people to know the term, few know what it means.

Wendt joined the Bradenton Fire Department in December 2003 after volunteering with Cedar Hammock-Southern Manatee while working at Ten-8 Fire Equipment.

A year later, he spent 13 months in Iraq with the United States Army Reserve. Wendt received a Bronze Star Medal for his efforts.

On May 13, 2005, as a recovery section sergeant with HHC Platoon, 1st Battalion, 103rd Armor and Task Force Liberty, Wendt “went to the aid of a fellow soldier who was injured and trapped under a burning vehicle during a Vehicle Born Improvised Explosives Device attack,” according to the U.S. War Office. He used tow chains to move the burning vehicle away from the injured soldier.

Wendt volunteers with the Bradenton Fire Fighters Association at the annual Community Haven holiday event, received the BFFA Above and Beyond Award in 2005 and was awarded the BFD Distinguished Service Medal in 2008.

Bradenton city councilman Gene Gallo summed it up in the interview with the Herald Tribune.
Gallo said he knew Wendt, who volunteered for a second tour overseas. Gallo has not had a chance to talk to Wendt's family or his fellow firefighters.

“It seems like every day you read about this, but when it hits home, it's different,” Gallo said.

It is different because you know the person far beyond what the headline says about them.

Family members are devastated and so are firefighters. We can only imagine what the SWAT Team is going through. When I got the news from his Mom Mary in an email, my heart grieved. I knew Mary from Facebook but we hadn't met until yesterday. I only knew about Don through what she was willing to share, or should I say, what she was able to share.

It is hard to grasp the complexity of symptoms to distinguish the difference between what life does and what PTSD does. We may interact with someone wondering when they turned into a jerk because we don't know how to wonder what happened to them that turned them into one.

With PTSD, if they don't tell you they are in turmoil, there is no way for you to know why they act the way they do.

When they don't have the professional help they need, they usually find they have no outlet to open up, so they shut down. These folks are not like the rest of us. They are the people who get things done, show up ready to sacrifice their lives if need be and they are actually first responders in every part of their lives.

When you read about them, remember Don's story and then know we have to try harder to help them understand that asking for help is the right thing to do so they can stay here and help more of us afterwards.

The military makes it harder for them to seek help especially when a General came out and said,
Some of it is just personal make-up. Intestinal fortitude. Mental toughness that ensures that people are able to deal with stressful situations.

And then went on to say it had to do with not having a supportive family. I saw his supportive family yesterday and they included about 100 firefighters. I heard how much intestinal fortitude he had and he showed it in Bradenton as well as Iraq.

It is not the fault of the family, or his firefighter family or those who served with him unable to attend the memorial because of weather. It is the fault of military leaders not understanding those who serve under their command.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Veteran in Miami Survived Standoff with SWAT Team

Army veteran barricades himself inside Miami Beach condo, threatens to commit suicide
Local 10 News
Published On: Nov 18 2014
Miami Beach police and its SWAT team were called to a condominium unit at the Cosmopolitan on Washington Avenue near First Street Tuesday morning, after reports of a disturbance between a man and his grandmother.

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Man taken into custody after barricading himself inside Miami Beach condo
Police, SWAT team called to Cosmopolitan building after Army veteran threatens to commit suicide
Author: Amanda Batchelor, Senior Digital Editor
Michael Seiden, Reporter
Published On: Nov 18 2014
MIAMI BEACH, Fla.
A man was taken into custody without incident Tuesday morning after barricading himself inside his home, police said.

Miami Beach police and its SWAT team were called to a condominium unit at the Cosmopolitan on Washington Avenue near First Street on Tuesday morning after reports of a disturbance between a man and his grandmother.

According to police, the grandmother left while her grandson barricaded himself inside the home.
read more here

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Iowa VA let SWAT Team train where PTSD are trying to heal!

SWAT Training Conducted Near Veterans With PTSD
13 WHO NBC News
BY AARON BRILBECK
SEPTEMBER 23, 2014

MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa — Masked Marshalltown police officers, decked out in SWAT gear and carrying realistic looking guns, conducted training last Friday at the Iowa Veterans Home where quite a few residents suffer with post traumatic stress disorder.

“You get somebody with pistols out there violently trying to break into a building, even if it’s an empty building, and if they see it and they’ve been in Fallujah or some of the other places where there has been that kind of combat, you’re gonna have problems,” says Bob Krause with the Veterans National Recovery Center.

The training was conducted at an auditorium and cottages where family members can stay. Commandant Jodi Tymeson says it’s not uncommon for police and firefighters to train on the grounds of the Iowa Veterans Home. She says, staff who need to know are given ample warning, but warning everyone is difficult. “We are a large campus with a lot of staff and a large number of residents so we do our best to notify everyone.”
read more here

Monday, September 15, 2014

PTSD Iraq Veteran Killed By Police After Wife Called For Help

Jeffrey Johnson ran out of medication moving from one place to another so he self-medicated with alcohol. His wife blames herself. When do we get that? When do we understand that the families left behind don't just suffer while their veterans struggle, but suffer more after the battle for life is lost?
Wife of Suspect Killed in Officer-Involved Shooting Says He Had PTSD
Big Country
Matthew Torres
09/14/2014


The wife of Jeffrey Johnson, the 33-year-old father and veteran killed during an officer-involved shooting last Friday, says he was dealing with post traumatic stress disorder.

Police first contacted Jeffrey at Best Western in north Abilene after receiving a welfare call indicating he may have been suicidal. Upon arrival, Johnson slammed and barricaded the door, and fired two shots from inside which nearly hit an officer, according to police.

The SWAT team arrived trying to make contact, but Jeffrey jumped out of the window and drove away. He was later found and followed until he entered Texas State Veteran's Cemetery on FM 600. That's when police say he drove and crashed into an officer's car.

The Abilene Police Department said the officer shot Jeffrey after he was seen pulling out a handgun.

The call was first made by Jeffrey's wife, Barbie Johnson, after receiving concerning messages from him. Prior to that, the couple got into a fight and Jeff stayed somewhere else. With suspicion that he was staying at a motel in Abilene, Barbie asked police to search for him.
read more here

Friday, August 29, 2014

No charges for Vietnam Veteran after SWAT Standoff

No charges for Vietnam vet in DeKalb SWAT standoff
Atlantic Journal Constitution
Mike Morris and John Spink
August 28, 2014
A DeKalb SWAT standoff ended peacefully just before 7 a.m. JOHN SPINK

A Vietnam veteran will not face charges stemming from a predawn SWAT standoff in a DeKalb County neighborhood, police said.

Officers were called to a home on Black Oak Drive off Bouldercrest Road before daybreak Thursday on reports of shots being fired.

“They found a gentleman in the backyard, randomly taking shots into the wood line,” DeKalb police Capt. A.J. Andrzejewski said. “He claimed he saw some people back there.”

After officers arrived, the man ran back inside the house, firing additional shots.
read more here

Monday, August 25, 2014

Why do police departments get military equipment?

How and why local police departments get military surplus equipment
Stars and Stripes
By Jon Harper
Published: August 24, 2014

WASHINGTON — After seeing TV footage of the police in Ferguson, Mo., deploying Humvees and brandishing assault rifles in the face of protesters, some Americans are questioning whether local law enforcement agencies should be allowed to acquire military equipment from the Pentagon. A congressional review has been scheduled, with the president’s backing.

But few understand how the Defense Department’s 1033 Program actually works. Even Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel had to ask his staffers this week to explain it to him.

The ongoing controversy raises important questions: Why does the program exist? Why do many police officers believe they need military-grade equipment? And what safeguards are in place to ensure that weapons and vehicles designed for combat zones are used responsibly in towns like Ferguson?

How it came to be

The 1033 Program was an invention of Congress, not the Pentagon. It came into being through the 1990-1991 National Defense Authorization Act, and the program’s original scope was much narrower than it is today. As the federal government’s “war on drugs” escalated, the 1990-1991 NDAA authorized the transfer of excess DOD property to federal and state agencies for use in counterdrug activities. A few years later, the program was broadened considerably to include materiel that could be used for “the execution of law enforcement activities,” to include counterdrug and counterterrorism missions, according to DOD.

The theory behind the initiative was that the military’s unneeded equipment might as well be put to good use, rather than be destroyed or warehoused.
read more here