Showing posts with label Afghanistan veterans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Afghanistan veterans. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Syria? What about the humanitarian crisis of veterans right here?

Syria? What about the humanitarian crisis of veterans right here?
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
September 4, 2013

When thinking about Syria, think of this. We have a humanitarian crisis right here. We didn't take care of the veterans of Afghanistan, or Iraq, or the Gulf War, or Vietnam or any other war. If they do what they want to in Syria do they really have plans this time? Plans to end it? Plans to pay for it? Plans to take care of the widows? Plans to take care of the wounded?

Too many have said no one knew how long it would take in Afghanistan but that is a lie since the government was involved with getting Russia out of Afghanistan. Too many said they didn't know how long it would take for Iraq to be finished. That is a lie as well since after the Gulf War the warnings about going into Iraq from Kuwait were also known. They knew it would not be over fast.

Too many said there was evidence of this and that back then but just like most wars they got the troops into, it turned out to be wrong. Listening to the heads talk about "what we know" when it comes to Syria causes most of us to remember what we were told before.

As for the wounded and disabled we already have consider the simple fact of the VA being responsible for less than 4 million disabled veterans out of 22,328,000 and this nation of over 300 million can't even take care of them.
U.S. Military Deaths In Afghanistan Reach 2,133, Injuries At 19,200
CBS News
September 3, 2013
Since the start of U.S. military operations in Afghanistan, 19,200 U.S. service members have been wounded in hostile action, according to the Defense Department.

WASHINGTON (AP) – As of Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2013, at least 2,133 members of the U.S. military had died in Afghanistan as a result of the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, according to an Associated Press count.
read more here

At least 2,122 dead? How about the thousands of suicides tied to Afghanistan and even more tied to Iraq? The VA latest "study" found at least 22 veterans a day take their own lives. That is 8,030 a year.

That means during 12 years of war there have been 96,360 suicides.

Secretary Hagel said "The Department of Defense has no more important responsibility than supporting and protecting those who defend our country and that means we must do everything possible to prevent military suicide." but as we have already witnessed, the $100 million he is talking about in new funding is a fraction of what they already spent. If it worked, no amount of money would be too much but considering the results of the Pentagon spending over $4 billion for 2007 to 2012, added to the money spent by other departments, money spent on the suicide prevention hotline and the VA, they have been on the wrong track but fail to notice they have been wrong on this as well.

Charities set up for veterans has become a billion dollar a year industry but we see more and more veterans suffering as the fundraisers make money for themselves.

So exactly when will the leaders of this country talking about what Syria is doing to their own people when they can't notice what they are doing to the people they expected to fight the other wars?

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Medal of Honor Hero Staff Sgt. Ty Carter talks about having PTSD

Staff Sgt. Ty Cater knows what it is like to wake up with PTSD because of combat. He also knows what it is like to be on the road to healing it. He wants to help others because he understands the pain they are in.
Medal of Honor recipient, formerly of Fort Carson, wants to help eliminate PTSD stigma
The Gazzette
By Erin Prater
July 29, 2013
Carter said he struggles with PTSD, though counseling has helped. He spoke about a comrade who died because of PTSD and called the condition "a combat wound."

"It's something that needs time to heal," he said. "The best way to do it is to use the facilities that the Army provides. The stigma is slowly going away, but I'm just worried about the new soldier who's trying to prove themselves by not seeking help."
A former Fort Carson soldier who will be awarded the Medal of Honor next month is hoping to de-stigmatize post-traumatic stress disorder by speaking about his own struggles with it.

Staff Sgt. Ty Carter will receive the medal for heroic actions at Combat Outpost Keating in Afghanistan during an Oct. 3, 2009, battle with hundreds of insurgents who tried to overtake the outpost, the White House said Friday in a press release.

At the time of the battle, Carter was assigned to the 3rd Squadron of the 61st Cavalry Regiment, part of Fort Carson's 4th Brigade Combat Team.

Speaking in a live webcast Monday from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, where he is stationed, Carter, 33, told reporters he was transitioning to a cadre position at the base's Warrior Transition Battalion for soldiers with serious injuries and long-term illnesses when he learned he would receive the medal.
During the Oct. 3, 2009, battle, Carter risked his life repeatedly, running through gunfire to grab ammunition and supplies for comrades and then to rescue Spc. Stephan Mace, who was wounded and pinned down. Others had tried to reach Mace and died in the attempt.

Mace died after he was pulled to an aid station by Carter and others.
read more here


Ty M. Carter to receive Medal of Honor for actions in Afghanistan

Monday, July 22, 2013

Another family searching for missing soldier with PTSD

Sad Update
Family's search for Erik Jorgensen comes to an end
California mom concerned about missing Boise soldier's whereabouts
ABC News
By Nicole Pineda
CREATED JUL. 21, 2013
Nicole Pineda reports on the missing Erik Jorgenson
Video by IdahoOnYourSide.com

The family and friends of a 26-year old Boise man wait for word tonight. Searchers have been combing the Boise mountains for the past few days; and still no sign of Erik Jorgenson.

"On Thursday night he sent out a mass text message basically saying he was a waste of oxygen on this earth," said Cindy Crow, Erik’s mother. A message to make a mother's heart stop.

The moment Cindy Crow received that text message from her son; she left her home in California and headed to Idaho. She called police to check on him but they only confirmed what she already knew Erik was missing.

The only clues he left behind a text message and his beloved dog. Friends and Family all agree Erik would never leave his best friend.

Erik suffers from severe post traumatic stress disorder after serving for a year in Afghanistan. His mother says this month is a particularly bad one.
read more here

Saturday, July 20, 2013

Marine double amputee Afghanistan veteran to compete in sled dog race

Two Grand Rapids Sled Dogs aim for Paralympic team
By Special to The Sentinel
The Holland Sentinel
Posted Jul 19, 2013

Grand Rapids
Two members of the Grand Rapids Sled Wings sled hockey team are among 61 select athletes from across the country who have been invited to try out this weekend for the U.S. Paralympic Sled Hockey Team that will compete at the 2014 Paralympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia.

Defenseman Tyler Anderson of Jenison (left) and forward Robert Thrailkill Jr. of Grand Haven will participate in tryouts today and Saturday at the Northtown Center at Amherst in suburban Buffalo, N.Y.
Formerly a lance corporal and combat engineer in the U.S. Marine Corps, Thrailkill only began playing for the Sled Wings’ adult team in December 2012. After losing both legs in an explosion in Afghanistan on October 26, 2010, the Pentwater native spent the next 25 months recovering at Walter Reed Hospital in Bethesda, Md.
read more here

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

IAVA to honor Daily Show's Jon Stewart

Jon Stewart to be honored by Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans group
The Washington Times
By David Sherfinski
July 16, 2013,

Comedian Jon Stewart will be awarded the the 2013 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) Civilian Service Award in November at the IAVA Heroes Gala in New York.

“Stewart has been a great friend to the veteran community,” reads a release about the event. “In recent months, ‘The Daily Show’ has extensively covered the VA disability claims backlog, shining a spotlight on veterans and their struggles waiting for decisions on their claims.”

IAVA will also honor former U.S. Army Staff Sgt. and Medal of Honor recipient Salvatore Giunta with the 2013 IAVA Veterans Leadership Award.
read more here

Wounded veteran to get new Brooksville home

Wounded veteran to get new Brooksville home
Hernando Today
By MATT REINIG
Published: July 15, 2013

BROOKSVILLE - Staff Sgt. Ken Patterson thought he would never walk again after losing much of his right leg along with his left foot four years ago in the war in Afghanistan.

But Monday at the Trillium community in Brooksville, Patterson rose from his seat to shake hands with U.S. Rep. Rich Nugent and state Sen. Wilton Simpson, who were just a few of the dignitaries on hand welcoming Patterson and his family to the site of their new home.

Thanks to HelpingaHero.org, who partnered with Pulte Homes to fund the 2,600 square foot home's construction, Patterson and his family will be living in their new four-bedroom house by Thanksgiving.

"In Houston, every severely injured veteran who applied received a home," said Meredith Iler, national chairman and founder of the HelpingaHero.org Home Program: a Houston-based non profit, non-partisan organization that provides support for military personnel severely injured in the war on terror.
read more here

Monday, July 15, 2013

Afghanistan Double Amputee Veteran Gets New Home

Afghanistan Veteran Gets New Home
WKRG News
By Chad Petri
Posted: Jul 14, 2013

Mobile, AL
With hero's welcome, the raising of the flag and, of course, a ribbon cutting Corporal Christopher Montgomery gets a look at his new house donated by Homes for our Troops after a spirited ceremony in Mobile.

"Without these friends, family, I wouldn't be half the man I am today, no pun intended," says Corporal Christopher Montgomery. Montgomery lost both his legs to a roadside bomb in December of 2010--he says he couldn't believe his it when he was told he was getting a home.
read more here

Double amputee Afghanistan veteran MVP All Star

Wounded Veteran earns MVP at All-Star Week celebrity softball game
Olympian Jennie Finch wins game for National League squad
USA Today
By TED BERG
July 14, 2013

NEW YORK — Though it featured a decided lack of true Taco Bell All-Star legends and celebrities — no “Yo Quiero Taco Bell” Chihuahua, no Club Chalupa, not even the woman who sang the Steak Burrito BellGrande song — the Taco Bell All-Star Legends and Celebrity softball game did not lack for thrills. The National League team took home an 8-5 win on the strength of a strong pitching performance from Team USA softball pitcher Jennie Finch and home runs from Mike Piazza, Andre Dawson, and Josh Wege.

But the real, actual hero of the game was Wege, a Marine Corps Veteran who lost the lower halves of both his legs in an explosion in Afghanistan. A member of the Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team, Wege ripped an inside pitch from Thomas over the wall in left field to earn co-MVP honors with comedian Kevin James.
read more here

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Army Ranger killed in parachute accident only back a month from Afghanistan

Christopher P. Dona Dead: Army Identifies Massachusetts Ranger Killed During Parachute Training
Huffington Post
AP
06/15/13

ATLANTA — The U.S. Army Ranger killed in an apparent parachuting mishap was a 21-year-old veteran from Massachusetts who recently returned from Afghanistan, officials said Saturday.

Pfc. Christopher P. Dona was found dead Thursday with parachute cords and canvas straps from a harness wrapped around his neck after a routine training jump at Fort Stewart in southeast Georgia. It was not immediately clear what caused the fatality. Army authorities are investigating the incident.

An Army spokesman earlier said Dona's parachute seemed to work normally during the jump. When he landed, wind filled the parachute's canopy, dragging Dona about 350 feet along the ground. Dona was unconscious by the time fellow soldiers reached him.

Dona served in the 1st Battalion of the 75th Ranger Regiment based at Hunter Army Airfield in Savannah. He was a combat veteran who returned last month from his first deployment to Afghanistan.
read more here

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

PTSD on Trial: Witnesses call Sutton kind man before war

Witnesses call Sutton kind man before war
Prosecutors, however, point to recent arrests
The Facts
By ADRIANA ACOSTA
Posted: Tuesday, June 11, 2013

ANGLETON — A forensic psychologist who evaluated him after he killed his father determined Clinton Sutton Jr. suffered from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, but prosecutors argued Sutton had attempted to get doctors to make that diagnosis before.

Sutton, convicted last week of murder in the death of his father, Clinton Sutton Sr., had served eight months on patrol in Afghanistan.
read more here

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Wounded and Waiting PTSD and the wounds of war

Wounded and Waiting PTSD and the wounds of war.
The only difference between now and when I made this video is there are more of them waiting longer.
The troops are wounded and waiting for the care we promised them. Back lof of claims also means for them. Would you put up with it if it was workman's comp and your life? Think about them and help get their claims honored.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Soldier butchered in London, Afghanistan veteran

UPDATE
Drummer Lee Rigby's murder prompted rush in donations
Slain London soldier was 'loving father' who served in Afghanistan
By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer
NBC News
May 23, 2013


Ministry of Defence
Drummer Lee Rigby was identified Thursday as the soldier killed in London in a suspected terror attack on Wednesday.
The British soldier brutally killed in London in a suspected terror attack was a drummer in a military band who had served in Afghanistan, officials said on Thursday. Lee Rigby, 25, known as “Riggers” to his friends, was killed in broad daylight on Wednesday as he walked in Woolwich, South London, near an army barracks.

It said he had been deployed on operation in Helmand province, Afghanistan, in April 2009, “where he served as a member of the Fire Support Group in Patrol Base Woqab.” Rigby had previously helped guard the U.K.’s royal palaces. “He was an integral member of the Corps of Drums throughout the Battalion’s time on public duties, the highlight of which was being a part of the Household Division’s Beating the Retreat - a real honour for a line infantry Corps of Drums,” the statement said.
read more here

British soldier hacked to death returning to barracks in London

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Amid shock at Boston Marathon, a rush to help strangers

Amid shock at Marathon, a rush to help strangers
By David Abel
GLOBE STAFF
APRIL 16, 2013

The woman’s eyes stared vacantly into the sky.

The runners had been bounding in, beaming with relief. On both sides of Boylston Street, hundreds of spectators still had packed the area, many cheering with hoarse voices for the late finishers surging in, scores of them every minute. An elderly volunteer greeting runners kept repeating this mantra: “You’re all winners.”

When the first boom shattered the bliss and the haze of white smoke washed over the finish line, I could see in the eyes of the woman what had happened. She wasn’t breathing. She wasn’t moving. Her eyes appeared lifeless as she lay beside the metal barriers on the sidewalk, where dozens of people were sprawled on the concrete, their limbs mangled, blood and broken glass everywhere.

I had been in a crouch shooting video of runners taking their final steps of the race, maybe 10 feet from the blast. I saw runners in front of me fall, at least one of whom appeared wounded. Those beside me at the center of the finish line — Marathon volunteers, security, fellow journalists — fell back as the ground trembled.
read more here
Bostonians and others rush to support stranded visitors
By Lateef Mungin
CNN
April 16, 2013

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
The blasts left many without shelter as hotels were evacuated
Some people posted on websites that they were stranded
More than 100 people offered help on one website

(CNN) -- They're offering their spare rooms, their couches, their food, their cars -- even their own beds.

A huge wave of strangers is greeting the many visitors stranded by the Boston Marathon bombings with a massive outpouring of support.

"We figure this is the least we can do," said Heather Carey, who offered a couch at the home near Boston University she shares with roommates. "I saw a website with many others offering their spaces like we did. It is awesome to see so many people helping."

The twin blasts Monday that left three dead and more than 140 wounded also left countless people without shelter. Investigators turned the heart of Boston into a crime scene, evacuating several hotels. This left dozens of visitors, some of them international runners unfamiliar with the area, stranded.
read more here


When someone does something evil, everyone always asks "Where is God?" but when people rush to help, thinking of others, God is right there.

Police officers, firefighters, Boston National Guardsmen and average citizens rushed to help the wounded and comfort the shocked people after these two bombs exploded.

April 15th, 2013
10:10 PM ET
Runner: Bombs sounded like Afghanistan
Capt. Thom Kenney is an Afghan war veteran who ran the Boston Marathon and finished the race minutes before the bomb attack. He describes what he witnessed to Anderson Cooper.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

PTSD-Amputee-Combat Medic Afghanistan veteran helps troops train

All I can say about this story is WOW, he's amazing!
Amputee veteran helps train troops for war
By JULIE WATSON
The Associated Press
Published: March 24, 2013

SAN DIEGO — The sailor had been back from war for just over a year when friends invited him to watch an unusually emotional training exercise for troops preparing to deploy.

The drill happened not on a military base but at a film studio, where Marine and Navy medics role-played wartime rescue missions with actors who had, in real-life, lost limbs in motorcycle or car accidents or to ailments such as cancer.

Those on hand weren't sure how Joel Booth would react. The 24-year-old had been attached to a Marine battalion in Afghanistan as a naval combat medic - until he stepped on an explosive and doctors, two years ago, amputated his right leg below the knee. Since returning home he'd had to learn to adapt while also coping with the post-traumatic stress.

But Booth was transfixed as fake bombs exploded and medics practiced the type of rescue missions he'd once been on, saving the amputee actors - as he, in the end, had to be saved.

Then the young veteran did something unexpected: He asked for an audition.

Perhaps, he thought, this injury that had forever altered his life could help save someone else's. What he didn't know was how much reliving the horrors of war would help him, too.

"In society, amputees are seen by people on a large scale as having a disability, being weaker. But ... even someone who doesn't have a hand can still operate a weapon to be able to defend themselves," he said.
read more here

David Ganz lost his son after Afghanistan

David Ganz lost his son after Afghanistan
by Kathie Costos
Wounded Times Blog
March 24, 2013

A news report out of New Jersey connected to Orlando is a great example of why I am writing THE WARRIOR SAW, SUICIDES AFTER WAR. Too many families have no idea what is going on or why they are losing their sons and daughters after combat.

David Ganz lost his son after Afghanistan. He lost him in Orlando Florida after Scott Ganz didn't get the help he needed to heal.
"Scott checked himself into a rehabilitation clinic for two brief stays."

It wasn't that he was unwilling to get help. He tried. He just didn't find what he needed to heal. The fact is 57% of military members lost to suicide had sought help. Senator Joe Donnelly says 43 percent of service members who committed suicide never sought help. Pretty shocking when you consider the military has been telling us for years every member of the military received prevention training designed to make them mentally tough. As a matter of fact last week we learned that there are 900 military prevention programs, all based on "resilience" implying they can prevent PTSD. RAND Corp took a look at some of these programs and found: "there is almost no evidence that resilience can be taught or produced" along with these other problems
– lack of leadership support by the military
– problems with logistics
– limited funding to sustain programs
– poor fit within the military culture
– mental health stigma.
But the DOD pushed these programs anyway without being tested or proven and refused to stop them when the numbers of military suicides, attempted suicides, arrests along with all the other problems went up.

He is one of many getting medication even though most sleeping aids warn against taking them if you are suffering from depression or have suicidal thoughts.

"Scott had gotten prescriptions for medication to help him sleep. But he continued taking the pills long past the seven to 10 days’ recommended usage, his father said."

If he was given something along the lines of Ambien, then that could be part of the problem. It is given to a lot of people and they have no problems with it however if you listen to the commercials for sleep aides, you hear the warning about taking it if you are suffering from depression. "Within military medicine, benzodiazepine use must be even more closely scrutinized because chronic benzodiazepine use poses special concerns among active duty military personnel." There was a great report Prozac Platoon from 2008 of articles on this that can explain how long it was known it is dangerous to give these medications to members of the military.



So what happened to Scott and the others like him?

The reports of the 22 veterans a day committing suicide seemed shocking to some but it was limited. "Forty-two states have provided data or agreed to do so; the study is based on information from 21 that has been assembled into a database." The VA is clear on the fact they know the cause of death for veterans in their system but too many are not in their data base. Researchers gathered data from death certificates when there were suicides as cause of death and reference to military service. In other words, if it was not noted, it was not counted. The report of the 22 a day came from that data and just 21 states.

"Recent studies have suggested that those who served in recent conflicts are 30 percent to 200 percent more likely to commit suicide than their ­non-veteran peers."

The DOD stunned many with the news that as they are reviewing cause of death for members of the military for 2012 the suicide numbers would likely go up.

So parents like David Ganz are left wondering what they did wrong, what could have been done differently and what is being done to prevent other parents from having to bury their sons and daughters after they came home from war.

I left this comment because most of the families do not know what is really going on but they are heroes to me none the less.
A couple of problems with this otherwise great report. The widely reported number of military suicides is wrong. They left out National Guards and Reservist. The total is at least 492 because testimony was given last week those numbers may go up when they catalog means of death. There are 900 Suicide Prevention Programs in the DOD and they are part of the problem. The other issue is medication to sleep because most warn against taking them if you have depression. TBI and PTSD are two different wounds but both can be caused by the same event. A bomb blast is in fact pretty traumatic, but the two of them are not the same. Combat and PTSD has been researched for over 40 years but most of it has been forgotten. David Ganz talking about what happened to his son is more important than he knows. Families blame themselves. He just gave them a voice.
Young veteran's suicide shatters air of stability
North Jersey.com
SUNDAY MARCH 24, 2013
BY JOHN C. ENSSLIN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Bergen County Freeholder David Ganz had a habit over the last two years of giving his colleagues brief updates at their public meetings on his son Scott, a soldier serving with the Army Reserve.

Scott Ganz, left, shown with his father, Bergen County Freeholder David Ganz. The younger Ganz killed himself in February after returning from serving in Afghanistan. His updates were at times a welcome respite from some otherwise tense political arguments. After one particularly long and heated debate in August, Ganz announced: “My son Scott is home. He’s back from Afghanistan.”

The room broke into spontaneous cheers and applause.

But in late February, the same room turned somber as Ganz disclosed that his son had committed suicide in his apartment in Orlando, Fla. Scott Ganz was 30 years old.

“The sad fact is that a veteran commits suicide every 65 minutes, 22 veterans a day,” David Ganz told the hushed chamber.

“This is not something that this board can do something about,” he added. “But it is something that, as a matter of policy, we need to address with our own veterans, and it’s something the U.S. Army and Congress have to address.”

No one knows why Scott Ganz decided to end his life. His family and friends and investigators with the Army are left with more questions than answers. His death, however, comes at a time when the military has reported a record number of suicides among soldiers returning from combat in Iraq and Afghanistan.
read more here

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Double amputee Afghanistan Veteran Derek McConnell passed away

Parsippany soldier, 23, who lost his legs in Afghanistan found dead in his bed
By Brendan Kuty
NJ.com
March 19, 2013

He and Dressler won an online contest that promised them an $80,000 wedding in December.
PARSIPPANY — Derek McConnell, a 23-year-old Army sergeant who lost his legs in Afghanistan, was found dead in his bed Monday morning.

The cause of death hasn't been been determined, his mother, Siobhan McConnell, told NJ.com in a text message.

McConnell enlisted in the military in 2009. He was deployed in 2011, and in July of that year, he lost both his legs, fractured his skull and right arm, and suffered severe blast wounds after getting hit by two improvised explosive devices while on patrol in Kandahar, Afghanistan.
read more here

Monday, March 18, 2013

Afghanistan veteran from combat to the abyss of homelessness

Veterans offer compelling stories at Miami outreach event
BY DAVID OVALLE
Miami Herald

After eight years in the military and a traumatic tour of duty in Afghanistan, Dustin Lewis drifted onto the streets of Fort Lauderdale and into an abyss of cocaine and marijuana.

His wife left him. He hasn’t seen his two children in years. But in recent months, Lewis has gotten clean, moved into a veterans’ transition home and, on Saturday, found himself enjoying a simple pleasure: a haircut.

Lewis, 36, grinning broadly, sat in the chair courtesy of the Florida Barber Academy, which gave free haircuts to a line of veterans at Saturday’s outreach event at the American Legion Hall in Miami’s Upper Eastside.

For dozens of veterans such as Lewis, the event organized by the Veterans Affairs administration offered small tokens of appreciation: a dental check-up, free shoes, some strong coffee and a bagel.

But the event also provided bigger glimmers of hope: leads for jobs and housing placement, mental health counseling and help ironing out government benefits.

“I just want to work. I’ve been destructive for a very long time,” Lewis said. “I want to pay bills. I want to pay taxes. I don’t want to be become rich. I just want to do the right thing.”

Saturday’s Homeless Veteran Stand Down comes against the backdrop of the 10-year anniversary of the war in Iraq. Most of the veterans who attended, however, hail from earlier generations stretching back to the Korea and Vietnam conflicts.
read more here

Friday, March 15, 2013

UK Combat soldiers more likely to commit violent crimes?

Somehow I doubt this study is true. Considering here in the US there are more reports about suicides than crimes, and we have a lot more veterans with a lot more deployments, this study should have all of us scratching our heads.
Combat soldiers more likely to commit violent crimes: study
By Kate Kelland
LONDON
Fri Mar 15, 2013

Men who had multiple traumatic combat experiences had a 70 to 80 percent higher risk of becoming violent criminals.
(Reuters) - British soldiers who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan - particularly young men and those who have seen active combat - are more likely to commit violent crimes than their civilian counterparts, according to research published on Friday.

The study of almost 14,000 British soldiers deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan is the first to examine the link between military service and violent crime by using official criminal records.

Researchers said the findings could help military officials improve their risk assessment of violence among serving and ex-military personnel.

They stressed that although the study points to a serious problem for those affected, it does not mean all ex-soldiers will become violent criminals.

"Just as with post traumatic stress disorder, this is not a common outcome in military populations," said Professor Simon Wessely, co-director of the Centre for Military Health Research at King's College London, who co-led the study.

"Overall you must remember that of those who serve in combat, 94 percent of those who come back will not offend."
read more here

Teen charged in Army veteran's stabbing death in Duluth

Teen charged in Army veteran's stabbing death in Duluth
Mar 14, 2013
DULUTH, Minn. - A 17-year-old Duluth boy is charged with killing a U.S. Army veteran who suffered more than 50 wounds to his head, face, neck and back.
Bryan "Starnes was an Army veteran who served a tour of duty in Afghanistan. The Duluth News Tribune reports his injuries were consistent with the use of a hammer and a knife-like instrument." read more here