Showing posts with label Joint Base Lewis McChord. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joint Base Lewis McChord. Show all posts

Friday, February 7, 2014

Army Ranger MOH Petry to retire

MoH recipient Petry ponders future after retirement
Army Times
By Michelle Tan
Staff writer
Feb. 6, 2014
Medal of Honor recipient Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry poses with New York Police Department officials.
(Sgt. 1st Class Michael R. Noggle/Army)

In the almost three years since he was awarded the Medal of Honor, Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry has met three presidents, shared a photo with basketball star LeBron James and rapper Jay-Z, and hitched a ride with former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.

But as he prepares to leave the Army, Petry said he’s still the same Ranger and man he always was.

Earning the nation’s highest award for valor “changed a lot of my activities, but I think, as a person, it hasn’t changed me at all,” Petry said.

“I don’t have to wear that [medal] around my neck 24/7,” he said. “I get to hold on to it, but it doesn’t belong to me. It belongs to every man and woman who has served in the U.S. military, especially those who paid the ultimate sacrifice.”

Petry, who is still assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment and works with wounded soldiers at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., is undergoing a medical evaluation and hopes to be medically retired this summer.
read more here

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier killed saving woman

UPDATE

War veteran died a hero on the home front
KING 5 NEWS
by MEG COYLE
Posted on January 21, 2014

TACOMA - Sgt. First Class Shawn Woods dedicated his career to risking his life for the country. The 34-year-old served in Iraq and Afghanistan with the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, Second Infantry. He is described by a superior as a soldier who "placed the needs of others above his own."

Appearing in Pierce County Superior Court, fellow soldier 29-year-old Chase Devyver, an Army medic, and now charged with Woods' murder.

Early Sunday morning at a home in Puyallup's South Hill neighborhood, Devyver and his girlfriend had been arguing when he allegedly stabbed her in the back. Hearing her screams, Woods tried to intervene. Prosecutors say that's when Devyver turned on Woods and stabbed him in the chest.

Sgt. First Class Woods was a husband, father, and highly decorated soldier. He was set to retire this year from a military career that included the meritorious service medal and four army commendation medals.
read more here

Man dies, woman injured in South Hill stabbing
The News Tribune
BY ALEXIS KRELL
Staff writer
January 19, 2014

A man fatally stabbed a Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier and injured a woman in South Hill on Sunday before leading law enforcement on a high-speed chase on Canyon Road East, the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department said.

Deputies arrived after a 4 a.m. 911 call in the 9800 block of 185th Street East, where the owner of the home at which the stabbing happened called for help, Pierce County sheriff’s spokesman Ed Troyer said.

A group of people went to the house after drinking, Troyer said, and the 29-year-old suspect allegedly stabbed a 36-year-old woman multiple times in the back, then stabbed a 34-year-old man in the chest who tried to intervene.

The man with the chest wound died at the scene. The woman was taken to a hospital and was expected to survive, Troyer said.
read more here

Friday, January 17, 2014

Joint Base Lewis-McChord had one less suicide in 2013

Soldier suicides decline slightly at JBLM, first drop since 2007
The News Tribune
BY ADAM ASHTON
Staff writer
January 17, 2014

Joint Base Lewis-McChord recorded a small decline in soldier suicides in 2013, marking its first drop in self-inflicted deaths since 2007.

As many as 12 soldiers at the base took their own lives last year, down from 13 in each of the two previous years, according to the I Corps. Two of the deaths are confirmed as suicides and 10 remain under investigation.

While the numbers appear to have held fairly steady, Lewis-McChord’s stateside population grew by a lot between 2012 and 2013.

In 2012, all three of the base’s Stryker brigades deployed to Afghanistan at different times. Each took between 3,500 soldiers and 4,500 soldiers. By contrast, the base was full for most of 2013 with about 34,000 active-duty troops at home.

“We had one fewer (suicide) this year. You might say that’s not much progress,” I Corps Commander and Lewis-McChord senior Army officer Lt. Gen. Robert Brown said. “But we had 15,000 more people here.”

The slight decline is in keeping with an Armywide trend. In November, the Defense Department released a report indicating suicides declined by 22 percent compared to the same period in 2012, when a record 349 soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines took their own lives.

The Defense Department has not updated its November report to include the entire year.

Some Army posts have reported steeper declines in suicides. The Austin American-Statesman this month reported that Fort Hood in Texas recorded up to seven suicides in 2013, down from 20 in 2012.
Self-inflicted deaths among active-duty soldiers began climbing steadily about 2005 and continued to rise despite an intense prevention campaign that steered tens of millions of dollars to research, outreach and training programs.
read more here

Monday, January 13, 2014

Ex-Fort Lewis soldier accused of deserting

Ex-Fort Lewis soldier accused of deserting, lying about combat tours
The News Tribune
BY ADAM ASHTON
Staff writer
January 13, 2014
Veterans found Shakely’s story suspicious as soon as it aired. Skeptics posted the KTXL piece to the blog This Ain’t Hell, which identifies people who publicly tout false military experience.

A one-time Fort Lewis soldier who trumped up his military experience in a TV interview last year is facing time in prison on charges that he deserted his unit and falsely claimed to be a combat veteran.

Kevin Shakely of Sacramento, Calif., allegedly evaded law enforcement agencies for seven years, once reportedly slipping through their grasp at SeaTac Airport.

When Army police started raising pressure on him in August, Shakely, 28, contacted Sacramento’s KTXL Fox 40 News and claimed he was an honorably discharged Iraq and Afghanistan veteran being harassed by the Army.

“This is not how you treat somebody that went through what I had to go through and made the sacrifices I had to make,” he told KTXL.
Shakely in fact spent less than six months in uniform before deserting. Army records show he completed his initial training and spent just six days at his first duty station – Fort Lewis, before its reorganization as Joint Base Lewis-McChord.
read more here

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Soldier honored for aiding victims of Boston Marathon bombings

JBLM soldier honored for aiding victims of Boston Marathon bombings
The Olympian
BY KARI PLOG
Staff writer
December 20, 2013

Paul Cusack had certain expectations about running his first Boston Marathon just a short drive from his hometown of Westwood, Mass.

Then the unexpected happened.

Cusack, a 42-year-old Army sergeant, was part of a group representing the 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment from Joint Base Lewis-McChord. He finished the 26-mile race under sunny skies just as the Red Sox sealed a victory at nearby Fenway Park, culminating in what appeared to be a perfect spring day.

The euphoria was shattered by two explosions near the finish line on Boylston Street. The blasts, 13 seconds and 200 yards apart, created an atmosphere of chaos. Brothers Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev were responsible for the attack, which killed three people and injured more than 200.

“You take certain expectations with you overseas, and you take other ones when you’re in your hometown,” Cusack told The News Tribune shortly before a ceremony Friday to honor his swift actions to help victims in the April 15 attack. “The wounds suffered by the people were definitely like what you see overseas, unfortunately.”

Cusack, who was given the Soldier’s Medal, was one of 14 medal recipients at the ceremony at Lewis-McChord. The Soldier’s Medal is awarded for acts of heroism not involving conflict with an enemy.
read more here

Friday, November 8, 2013

Army identifies Iraq veteran killed in JBLM traffic accident

Army identifies Iraq veteran killed in JBLM traffic accident
The News Tribune
By ADAM ASHTON — Staff writer
Published: November 8, 2013

The Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier killed in a traffic accident Wednesday night on base was a two-time veteran of combat tours in Iraq, the Army said today.

Sgt. Bradley Scott Melvin was assigned to the headquarters of the 593rd Special Troops Battalion of the 593rd Expeditionary Sustainment Command, a unit charged with managing Army logistics.

Melvin served for the last four years at Lewis-McChord. In addition to his Iraq tours, Melvin also served abroad in Germany and in Kuwait.
read more here

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Medal of Honor Army Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry works with wounded

Medal of Honor recipient Petry visits Citadel
Associated Press
Bruce Smith
October 22, 2013

Medal of Honor recipient Army Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry answers a question
during an Associated Press interview at The Citadel in
Charleston, S.C., on Tuesday, Oct. 22. (Bruce Smith / AP)
CHARLESTON, S.C. — A Medal of Honor recipient who was given the nation’s highest military award for protecting comrades during a fight with the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2008, said Tuesday that leadership requires working together, resiliency and responsibility.

“Being a leader entails teamwork and all that goes along with teamwork. And it means resiliency and being prepared for anything you may have to face,” Army Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry told The Associated Press in an interview during a visit to The Citadel.

Petry came to the state military college to discuss leadership with cadets. On Wednesday he will participate in the college’s third annual Leadership Day and will visit patients at the Charleston VA Hospital along with cadets.

Petry, 34 and from New Mexico, lost his right hand in the action for which he was awarded the medal. He now works out of Joint Base Lewis McChord, Wash., with wounded warriors and ill and injured members of their families.

In May of 2008, fighting members of the Taliban in a house courtyard, Petry picked up a live grenade that had fallen near other Army Rangers in his unit. As he picked it up to throw it back, it exploded in his hand.
read more here

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Madigan Army Medical Center nurse killed in Afghanistan

Madigan Army Medical Center nurse killed in Afghanistan
Seattle Times
Posted by Nick Provenza
October 8, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD (AP) — A nurse from Madigan Army Medical Center and three of her fellow soldiers in a special operations force were killed by an improvised bomb blast Sunday in Afghanistan, the Defense Department said.

Lt. Jennifer M. Moreno, 25, of San Diego, was based at the hospital at Joint Base Lewis-McChord and volunteered as a member of a cultural support team with a special operations task force that deployed in June.

Also killed in Sunday’s blast in the Zhari District of Kandahar Province were Sgt. Patrick C. Hawkins, 25 of Carlisle, Pa.; Sgt. Joseph M. Peters, 24, of Springfield, Mo.; and Pfc. Cody J. Patterson, 24, of Philomath, Ore.

Hawkins and Patterson served out of Fort Benning, Ga., with the 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment. Peters belonged to the 5th Military Police Battalion out of Vicenza, Italy.

Serving with a special operations cultural support team is one of the few ways for female soldiers to go outside the wire on combat missions with all-male Army Ranger or Green Beret teams, The News Tribune reported.

“We’ve lost a superb officer and a caring nurse who served with marked distinction and honor throughout her career.” said Madigan Command Col. Ramona Fiorey. “We are all deeply saddened by the tragic loss of this great American solider.”
read more here

Monday, October 7, 2013

Queen Latifah reunites soldier with her dog

Soldier and her doggy 'daughter' reunite on national TV
Army
By Somer Breeze-Hanson
October 4, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS-McCHORD, Wash. (Oct. 4, 2013) -- When Capt. Jessamyn Jempson returned to Joint Base Lewis-McChord this summer after a year-long deployment to Afghanistan, her best friend wasn't there to greet her.

That's because a special reunion between the Soldier with the 3rd Explosive Ordnance Battalion, and Emma, a 4-year-old Rhodesian Ridgeback, was planned to take place in Los Angeles three days later.

"It was hard to wait," Jempson said.

Jempson arrived home Aug. 5, and flew to California with her mother with an invitation from Queen Latifah, host of the daytime talk show "The Queen Latifah Show."
read more here

Hate crime leaves 20 year old Fort Lewis soldier dead

Fort Lewis soldier fatally stabbed on Lakewood street
Associated Press
By Mike Baker
October 5, 2013

SEATTLE -- A soldier out with his friends was fatally stabbed alongside a Lakewood street early Saturday, and investigators were examining whether the attack was a racially motivated hate crime.

The 20-year-old was walking with two of his friends from Joint Base Lewis-McChord when a car drove by and someone inside shouted a racial comment toward the white soldiers, the Lakewood Police Department said. The soldiers shouted something back, and a group of five black men from the car stopped and surrounded the soldiers, authorities said.

Police said the men in the car began to leave when one of them realized the soldiers were combat veterans, but one of the suspects appeared to bump into the victim as he walked past. As the car left, the soldier fell to the ground, and his friends discovered he had been stabbed.

The soldier died at the scene. Authorities declined to release his name until family members could be notified.
read more here

UPDATE

3 soldiers arrested in fellow soldier's stabbing death
CNN
By Chuck Johnston and Jason Hanna
updated 4:13 PM EDT, Mon October 7, 2013

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
It now appears the stabbing was not racially motivated, police say
The suspects, like the victim, were soldiers assigned to Joint Base Lewis-McChord
Friends say they were on the way to celebrate Tevin Geike's pending discharge
Witnesses initially said Geike was attacked after an assailant yelled about soldiers being white

(CNN) -- Three soldiers have been arrested in connection with the stabbing death of a fellow soldier who was celebrating his pending departure from the Army -- an attack that police in Washington state now say doesn't appear to be racially motivated.

Jeremiah Hill, 23; Cedarium Johnson, 21; and Ajoni Runnion-Bareford, 21, were arrested on charges of murder in the death Saturday of Army Spc. Tevin Geike, police said Monday.

All four were assigned to Joint Base Lewis-McChord, not far from the Lakewood sidewalk where police say Geike was accosted as he walked with two friends and fellow soldiers early Saturday.

Police initially said they were investigating the death as a possible hate crime after witnesses said a black assailant directed a racial comment toward Geike, who was white, and his white friends shortly before the stabbings.
read more here


UPDATE

Slain soldier’s friend: no reason for killing

A soldier who was present when another soldier was fatally stabbed in Lakewood on Saturday said he doesn’t know why his friend was attacked: “It’s a pity someone had to stoop that low.”

By Jack Broom
Seattle Times staff reporter
October 7, 2013

A soldier who was present when another soldier was fatally stabbed in Lakewood Saturday said he doesn’t know why his friend was attacked — and said there can be no good reason.

“I pity them for whatever forced them to want to kill someone for nothing,” Spc. Brian Johnson said Monday, “It’s a pity someone had to stoop that low.”

The three men jailed in the case, and the victim, Spc. Tevin Geike, 20, of Summerville, S.C, are all soldiers from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, according to Lakewood police.

The suspects are expected to make initial appearances in Pierce County Superior Court on Tuesday.
read more here

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

DOD releases names of soldier killed in Afghanistan

DoD Identifies Army Casualties
No. 679-13
September 24, 2013

The Department of Defense announced today the death of three soldiers who were supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

They died Sept. 21, at Forward Operating Base Shank, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their unit with small arms fire while conducting range training in Gardez, Paktia Province, Afghanistan.

Killed were:
Staff Sgt. Liam J. Nevins, 32, of Denver, Colo., assigned to 5th Battalion, 19th Special Forces Group, Watkins, Colo.

Staff Sgt. Timothy R. McGill, 30, of Ramsey, N.J., assigned to 2nd Battalion, 19th Special Forces Group, Middletown, R.I.

Spc. Joshua J. Strickland, 23, of Woodstock, Ga., assigned to Group Support Battalion, 1st Special Forces Group, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Soldier and family evicted from Lewis-McChord housing

First read this
Nicole Gardner’s husband has deployed to Iraq three times and was compassionately reassigned to JBLM in 2011 after Nicole was diagnosed with thyroid cancer, Gardner said. Sgt. Gardner is with 657th Forward Support Company, 5th Battalion, 3rd Field Artillery Regiment, 17th Fires Brigade. The family moved to the post in September 2012.
Now read the rest
Family evicted from post housing claims injustice
By Antonieta Rico
Staff writer
September 9, 2013

A Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., military family is living at a campground after the post housing company evicted them from their home on post Sunday.

Sgt. Isaac Gardner and his wife, Nicole, along with their three children, said they had no place else to go.

“We are in a trailer,” Nicole Gardner said today. She said friends have pitched in money to pay for their stay at the campgrounds for several days. Prior to friends helping the family, Gardner had thought they would have to live out of their car.

Lewis-McChord Communities, owned by Equity Residential, runs the privatized on-post housing and originally gave them a 60-day notice to move out of their house. The 60-day notice was rescinded 11 days before the final out date.
read more here

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales gets life in prison of two kinds

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales gets life in prison of two kinds. The first one was what was going on inside of himself before he decided to commit murder. That prison has left too many questions in what was behind this act. Was it TBI? PTSD? Medications? Alcohol or a combination of all of them that turned this hero into a mass murderer? Will we ever really know? The second prison is built with bars but like the other trial producing a guilty verdict with the Fort Hood mass murderer Hasan also found guilty yesterday there are many more unanswered questions.
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales sentenced to life in prison without chance of parole for Afghanistan massacre that left 16 dead
Despite apologizing and pleading for a chance to someday be released, Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales gets life.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — Staff Sgt. Robert Bales was sentenced to life without a chance of parole Friday for slaughtering 16 Afghan villagers -- a punishment he and his attorneys tried hard to avoid.

Six military juors decided his fate after prosecutors asked them to send a message that the civilians’ lives mattered.

Describing Bales as a “man of no moral compass,” Lt. Col. Jay Morse asked the jury in his closing argument to ensure he is never released from prison. “In just a few short hours, Sgt.

Bales wiped out generations,” Morse said. “Sgt. Bales dares to ask you for mercy when he has shown none.”
read more here

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales apologizes for killings, disgracing Army

Bales apologizes for killings, disgracing Army
The (Tacoma, Wash.) News Tribune
By Adam Ashton
Published: August 22, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — In his first remarks in court, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales could not apologize enough for the lives he ruined on the night he slipped out of his combat outpost in Kandahar province and slaughtered 16 civilians in their homes.

He said he let his family down. He disgraced the Army, he said. And he robbed innocent people of their families.

"I don’t have the words to tell them how much I wish I could take it back,” he said this morning in an unsworn statement on third day of his sentencing trial at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

Bales, 40, will receive a life sentence for his slaughter in Kandahar’s Panjwai district on March 11, 2012. He spoke to convince a six-member military jury that he deserves a chance for parole one day.
read more here

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Staff Sergeant Robert Bales to withdraw guilty plea

U.S. soldier in Afghan murder trial declines to withdraw guilty plea
By Jonathan Kaminsky
TACOMA, Washington
Tue Aug 20, 2013
Bales' attorneys said they would argue that post-traumatic stress disorder and a brain injury were factors in the killings.

(Reuters) - A U.S. army soldier who in June admitted the slaughter of 16 Afghan civilians declined to withdraw his guilty plea in a military court on Monday.

U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales made his decision in advance of legal arguments set to begin Tuesday that will determine whether his life sentence will come with the possibility of parole.

"I'm just trying to do the right thing," he said in a hearing Monday to establish ground rules for the roughly week-long sentencing proceedings.

The judge, Army Colonel Jeffery Nance, asked Bales whether he wanted to withdraw the guilty plea in light of possible misinformation about the length of time before he could be eligible for parole.

Under a plea agreement that accompanied the plea, Bales will be spared the death penalty and could be eligible for parole after 20 years, less time already served and credit for good behavior.

Bales pleaded guilty in June to walking off his base in Afghanistan's Kandahar province before dawn on March 11, 2012, and killing 16 unarmed civilians, most of them women and children, in attacks on their family compounds.
read more here

Also from April
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales Defense Must Decide Strategy His lawyers have said for the past year that he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and combat-related head injuries, suggesting those ailments overcame him on what was his fourth combat deployment from Lewis-McChord since 2003.


The News Tribune has this report from yesterday

Army: Bales, wife laughed about killing charges
Published: August 19, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, WASH. — Army prosecutors said Monday they have a recording of a phone call in which Staff Sgt. Robert Bales and his wife laugh as they review the charges filed against him in the killing of 16 Afghan villagers.

Bales, an Ohio native and father of two from Lake Tapps, Wash., pleaded guilty in June in a deal to avoid the death penalty for killing the civilians, mostly women and children, on March 11, 2012.

His sentencing begins on Tuesday with the selection of a military jury. Prosecutors told the judge, Col. Jeffery Nance, on Monday they hope to play the recording, among others, to show a lack of remorse on Bales' part. He faces life in prison either with or without the possibility of release
Bales, on his fourth combat deployment, had been drinking and watching a movie with other soldiers at his remote post at Camp Belambay in Kandahar Province when he slipped away before dawn on March 11, 2012. Bales said he had also been taking steroids and snorting Valium.

Armed with a 9 mm pistol and an M-4 rifle, he attacked a village of mud-walled compounds called Alkozai then returned and woke up a fellow soldier to tell him about it. The soldier didn't believe Bales and went back to sleep. Bales left again to attack a second village known as Najiban.
read more here

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

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Joint Base Lewis McChord soldier had "nothing left to lose" before acid attack on judge

When you read the headline, it doesn't come close enough to telling the rest of the story.
Former soldier charged in acid attack on Thurston County judge
The Olympian
Jeremy Pawloski
Staff Writer
Published: July 26, 2013

Prosecutors have charged a former soldier at Joint Base Lewis-McChord with throwing sulfuric acid at Thurston County District Judge Michael “Brett” Buckley’s face during a Sept. 10 attack at the judge’s Olympia home.

Michael Edward Martin, 33, already is in custody at a federal detention center, awaiting sentencing after he pleaded guilty to threatening to kill a Judge Advocate General military prosecutor in a separate case. On Friday, Thurston County prosecutors charged Martin with first-degree assault and first-degree malicious mischief in connection with the attack on Judge Buckley.

The former soldier apparently blamed the judge’s prior decision to issue a restraining order against him for ending his military career.

“He felt like his life was falling apart, and he was looking for others to blame,” Andrew Toynbee, Thurston County chief criminal deputy prosecuting attorney, said Friday.

Prosecutors believe Martin threw battery acid in Buckley’s face the evening of Sept. 10 after Buckley answered a knock on his door. Buckley was treated at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. He suffered minor injuries in the 9:25 p.m. attack.
In a response to the court ruling, the former girlfriend stated she feared Martin had “nothing left to lose” because of proceedings taking place to remove him from the military. “I do fear that this makes him even more of a threat to me and others,” she wrote in March 2012.
Johnstone also discovered an entry on Martin’s Facebook page on June 29, 2012, that warned Joint Base Lewis-McChord personnel whom he believed had wronged him to “stay lookin over ur shouler cuz if you dont u might find ur damn face melting of ur (expletive) skulls.”

Toynbee said Friday that if Martin is found guilty of the assault and malicious mischief charges related to Buckley’s attack, he could face a 10-year prison sentence. Toynbee added that there are several potential aggravating factors that could add more years to the sentence.
read more here

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

Ty M. Carter to receive Medal of Honor for actions in Afghanistan
Stars and Stripes
By Patrick Dickson
Published: July 26, 2013
Staff Sgt. Ty Carter, part of the White Platoon fire team, 8-1 Cavalry, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, provides overwatch on a road near Dahla Dam, Afghanistan, in July 2012.
U.S. ARMY

WASHINGTON — The White House announced late Friday that Army Staff Sgt. Ty M. Carter will be awarded the Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry for his service at Combat Outpost Keating in Afghanistan.

On Aug. 26, President Barack Obama will award Carter the Medal of Honor for his courageous actions while serving as a cavalry scout with the 61st Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, during combat operations in Kamdesh district, Nuristan province, Afghanistan on Oct. 3, 2009, according to a White House news release. He fought with Army Staff Sgt. Clinton Romesha, who was awarded the Medal of Honor in January.

Carter will be the fifth living recipient of the Medal of Honor for actions in Afghanistan. He and his family will join the President at the White House to commemorate his example of selfless service.

COP Keating was a company-sized outpost in Nuristan, situated at the bottom of a constricted, bowl-shaped valley at the confluence of the Kushtowz and Landay Sin rivers.
read more here

Friday, July 26, 2013

DOD clueless on what to do about military suicides and PTSD

DOD clueless on what to do about military suicides and PTSD
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
July 26, 2013

Erik Jorgensen, Spc. Brandon David Bertolo, Kenneth Jewel Stafford, who was on leave from his duty station in Fort Lewis and Pfc. Jackson Cole Taylor-Smith and Christopher Kent Heinz drowned in lakes. Fort Campbell 2 murders, 7 suicides in only 31 days.

These are just a few of the reports on Wounded Times for July.

If you want to know why. This is the reason. FUBAR results of Comprehensive Soldier Fitness
Suicides on rise among veterans
Idaho Statesman
JOHN SOWELL
July 26

During the year that U.S. Army Pfc. Erik Jorgensen spent in Afghanistan sweeping roads for makeshift bombs, a U.S. soldier died every 36 hours from injuries suffered in improvised explosive device blasts. More than nine troops were injured each day.

Sweeping for IEDs was dangerous, tedious and tension-filled work, said Army Sgt. Bryan Heidkamp, who served with Jorgensen at Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Wash., and deployed with him to Afghanistan. It could take a terrible toll physically and mentally. Seeing four soldiers they served with die added to it, Heidkamp said.

“It was really rough,” he said.
read more here

We can talk all we want about active duty suicides. We can talk about attempted suicides. When we leave out what is happening to them after they are discharged or leave out the National Guards and Reservists, we only know part of the story.

The truth is this program is about as dangerous as it can get. No matter how much money they shove at it, when you see results like this, it proves the DOD doesn't have a clue what to do and that is the most shocking thing of all. After discharge, the DOD can stop counting them.

If your really want to know then read The Warrior SAW, Suicides After War and if you want to know what we knew before Afghanistan and Iraq read For the Love of Jack His War My Battle

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Anti-malarial drug linked to Afghan massacre a long time ago

What the hell is going on when reports do not research what they report on? Here is one more case of that.
MARCH 26, 2012 CNN reported Military Scrambles To Limit Malaria Drug Just After Afghanistan Massacre
That isn't the problem, even though reports on this drug go way back.

VA issued warning on Lariam in 2004

Spc. Adam Kuligowski's problems began because he couldn't sleep, April 2010

Army curbs prescriptions of anti-malaria drug Mefloquine NOVEMBER 20, 2011 and this one the same month. After four decades of use, the U.S. Army is banning the use of mefloquine (an anti-malaria drug) because of side effects.

Is Mefloquine the new Agent Orange? from August 2012

This report claims that it is "new information" but it isn't.
Anti-malarial drug linked to Afghan massacre
Soldier was taking mefloquine when he killed 16 civilians, report indicates
By Patricia Kime
Staff writer
Jul. 13, 2013

In less than a month, Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales will be sentenced for the massacre of 16 Afghan civilians in March 2012.

His attorney, John Henry Browne, has not publicly disclosed whether he will use a mental health defense to fight for a parole-eligible sentence.

But an argument could be made that Bales, 40, was out of his mind:

■ He was treated for a traumatic brain injury resulting from a rollover accident in 2010 and possibly had post-traumatic stress disorder.

■ He admitted to using steroids, which can cause aggression and violence.

■ And new evidence suggests he was prescribed an anti-malaria drug known to cause hallucinations, aggression and psychotic behavior in some patients.
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