Showing posts with label Kansas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kansas. Show all posts

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Combat Wounded Kansas National Guardsman Faces Foreclosure

Iraq vet: Losing home ‘worse than getting blown up’
The Wichita Eagle
By Tim Potter
October 27, 2013

WELLINGTON — In 2007, Staff Sgt. Jerrod Hays lost nearly half of his face to a roadside bomb in Iraq.
Jerrod Hays of Wellington had nearly one half of his face blown away in Iraq when the armored Humvee he was riding in with three fellow soldiers got hit by explosions in an attack by the enemy, killing one and critically injuring the others in 2009. (Oct. 23, 2013) Mike Hutmacher/ The Wichita Eagle

Now, the 44-year-old Wellington man could lose his home to foreclosure.

“This,” Hays said of the prospect of losing his home, “is worse than getting blown up.”

In the attack south of Baghdad, he lost much of his lower jawbone, 22 teeth, a third of his tongue and one and a half fingers. He nearly lost his right arm and lost movement in a wrist. He lost the ability to see normally: He has to wear sunglasses outside and he has trouble seeing at night. Shrapnel remains peppered into his body. He suffers chronic pain.

Some of the damage is painful in a different way: He feels self-conscious about his facial scars.

“I still feel the stares,” he said.

He has grown a goatee over skin that the emergency room team saved after his jawbone was blown away. The goatee helps to hide the scars.

Because of his appearance, he is reluctant to venture from Wellington or Anthony, the towns where people know him best and he feels most comfortable.

In his kitchen the other day, he looked at a picture of himself in uniform before the blast changed his face. He had a handsome jawline.

“That ol’ boy is dead,” he said, peering at his pre-blast face. “He’s dead as a hammer.”
He had been a supervisor. He served in the Kansas National Guard for 26 years before retiring in August at the rank of sergeant first class. He led soldiers.

He said he and his wife, Nancy, take most of the blame for their mortgage trouble. They began missing mortgage payments a couple years ago. He said they always wanted to pay their bills, that they tried to catch up, make things right with the lender, but couldn’t.

The couple says his wounds have left him unable to work. She spends so much time helping him – “Nancy’s a better soldier than I am,” he says – she is unemployed.

Now, they are doggedly trying to modify their loan so they can hold onto the home where Cocoa, their pet Chihuahua, is buried in the back yard. Hays said the dog saved him and his family by boosting their spirits as he tried to recover. Cocoa would gently lick his scars. To Hays, the little dog also deserved a Purple Heart.

They said it could be too late to save the house, that they could lose their home any day. To their knowledge, no foreclosure day has been set. They don’t know how soon it could happen.

They didn’t talk publicly about their predicament until an Eagle reporter approached them, after indirectly hearing of their trouble. The reporter asked them to share their story.
read more here

Monday, October 14, 2013

Uncoiling a tormented memory to heal Sgt. Warren

Uncoiling a tormented memory to heal Sgt. Warren
Los Angeles Times
by Christopher Goffard
Published: October 14, 2013

Jonathan Warren walks through the maze of corridors until he finds the little room. Anxiously, he puts on the earphones and adjusts the wraparound visor. The image before him is crude: Road, desert, truck.

Describe that day, his therapist says.

We drove up in a Humvee …

No. Tell it as if it’s happening now.

We are on a black route. The worst kind.

He isn’t sure he can trust his memory. He knows he was in the commander’s seat, right front. Scott Stephenson, his best friend, was sitting behind him. They had been inseparable since they enlisted two years earlier, the God-fearing California surf punk and the half-crazy Kansas street kid. They bunked together, drank together, learned to shoot together. They were lost boys reborn as hard Army muscle, shaved heads in Kevlar helmets, feeling as bulletproof as their steel-plated, 12,000-pound truck.

Staring into the visor, Warren studies the computer simulation of gray pavement stretching before him. He knows what lies down that road, amid the flames and churning black smoke: the test his whole life was supposed to prepare him for. For years, he’s fled the memory, drinking until he can’t recognize himself, smoking pot until he’s numb, swallowing pills until he can sleep.

Now, the therapist insists that he slow the memory to a crawl, uncoil it, examine it inch by inch.
read more here

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Wounded Afghanistan veteran gets new home and hope

Wounded veteran given new home in Kansas
KSN.com
By Justin Kraemer
Updated: Sunday, September 29, 2013

ANDALE, Kansas — Sgt. James “Matt” Amos used prosthetic legs and a cane to walk awestruck through his new home in Andale, built by local volunteers and a charity based out of Massachusetts for the wounded veteran.

“I really don’t think you can put into words,” said Amos. “It’s just amazing, the support of the community.”

Amos was wounded in action in Afghanistan in June 2011. The Marine lost both of his legs and shattered his pelvis.

He’s spent the last two years in California recovering through a dozen surgeries. Both Matt and his wife, Audrie are 1999 graduates of Andale High School and decided to return to Kansas when Homes for Our Troops contacted the family about building them a home.

Dozens of volunteers who hadn’t seen the Amos’ in a decade helped build the home. Cargill Beef donated $100,000.

“Folks in these communities genuinely love these men and women who have been wounded and they want to take care of them,” said Larry Gill with Homes for Our Troops.
read more here

Monday, September 23, 2013

Kansas National Guardsman told to give up dog or leave town

Veteran faces giving up pit bull therapy dog or leaving town
KLTV News
By DeAnn Smith, Digital Content Manager
Posted: Sep 19, 2013

BELLEVILLE, KS (KCTV)
A veteran suffered from post-traumatic stress after his tour overseas could either be forced to move or give up his therapy dog because Diesel is a Pit Bull Terrier.

Bo Ready has an attorney and is hoping to get the city ordinance changed.

"This dog is more than a companion. It provides a service to him. It comforts him when he's having an anxiety attack," said Katie Barnett, who is co-counsel for Ready.

Belleville is a small town just south of the Nebraska border. The ban on pit bulls, boxers and Rottweilers dates back years.

Belleville City Attorney Rachel Zenger said the ordinance is clear and only registered service dogs are allowed an exception. Diesel provides comfort to Ready.

Ready would like to get Diesel trained as a service dog once he can afford it. In the meantime, more than 500 supporters as well as psychiatrists and other medical professionals have written city leaders in support of Diesel and lifting the ban.

But Zenger said the council isn't budging.

"It was taken into consideration by the council, and they felt it was the best decision for Belleville to continue to ban certain breeds," she said.

Bo Ready joined the Kansas Army National Guard in 2005, and he is still a mechanic.

In 2009, Bo Ready was sent to Egypt and did a tour of a year. When he returned to Kansas, he faced serious emotional and mental issues. He was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress and severe depression.

"I would blow up and break things, and sometimes it would be the smallest thing that I would blow up on," he said.

He sought help from psychologists, and was admitted to mental health facilities multiple times. During a 7-week stay at the Veterans Hospital last Christmas, he found some relief. A dog trainer brought two Pit Bull Terriers to the hospital for canine therapy.
read more here

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Her husband came home, and the war came with him

UPDATE
'A Soldier's Wife': Readers are moved by family's struggles
LA Times
By Deirdre Edgar
September 10, 2013

“A Soldier’s Wife” in Sunday’s Times, the story of an Iraq war veteran’s struggles, moved readers with its stark narrative by Christopher Goffard and photography by Rick Loomis.

The story, which Goffard and Loomis spent a year and a half chronicling, followed the plight of Candace Desmond-Woods, an Irvine woman fighting to hold her family together as her husband, Tom, battles post-traumatic stress disorder and alcoholism.

Dozens of readers took the time to email The Times in response to the story.

Some of them said the intensely personal story gave them new insight into the challenges faced by veterans
read more here

If the government agencies are doing something and charities are doing something and colleges are doing something, then why the hell is this still happening? This was what my family life was like 30 years ago when nothing was being done!
A SOLDIER'S WIFE
Her husband came home, and the war came with him
BY CHRISTOPHER GOFFARD
PHOTOGRAPHY AND VIDEO BY RICK LOOMIS
September 8, 2013

Candace Desmond-Woods tries to comfort her husband, Tom, an Iraq war veteran who suffers from PTSD and alcoholism. (Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times)

One night her husband thought he was back in Iraq and tried to kick down the door of their home on Garden Gate Lane. He shouted something in Arabic she didn't understand. As a cavalry scout in Baghdad, he had crashed through countless doors on nighttime raids. The "hard knock," he called it.

She clutched their infant son, afraid of her husband for the first time. She wouldn't let him in. He stared at her through the glass panes. Didn't he recognize her? He shoved, elbowed, punched. The lock began to buckle. The glass shattered.

It was February 2012. The war, her own small piece of it, had come rolling down the block the month before, in the form of a 22-foot Penske moving truck. Her newlywed husband was at the wheel, having crossed the country from Ft. Riley, Kan.

Candace Desmond-Woods told herself everything would be fine, now that he was out of the Army. Their lives as husband and wife would really begin in this white-fenced rental home in Irvine, a master-planned city where every manicured block was an argument against uncertainty.

The war would crash through her careful plans in a hundred ways, large and small. She watched it empty her refrigerator and shut off her gas. She came to feel like one of its strangest casualties, a widow with a living husband.
read more here


If you think I'm kidding on this, read For the Love of Jack, His War/My Battle and know, how terrible it is to watch a story like this and remember all of it.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

PFC. Bradley Manning Sentenced to 35 Years for Leaking Secrets

Bradley Manning Sentenced to 35 Years for Leaking Secrets
ABC News
By LUIS MARTINEZ
Producer
via WORLD NEWS
Aug. 21, 2013

FT. MEADE, Md. -- Bradley Manning, the Army private convicted of leaking hundreds of thousands of classified documents to the website WikiLeaks, was sentenced to 35 years in a military prison today.

Pfc. Manning will also be reduced in rank to private, forfeit all pay and allowances and receive a dishonorable discharge.

Manning expressed no emotion as a military judge announced the sentence. He was then quickly escorted out of the courtroom.

He will serve his prison sentence at the military's detention facility at Fort Leavenworth, Kan.
read more here

Remains of Father Emil Kapaun, MOH recipient, could be found

Analyst: Remains of Father Emil Kapaun, MOH recipient, could be found
The Wichita Eagle (MCT)
By Roy Wenzl
Published: August 20, 2013

The senior Pentagon analyst in charge of finding Korean War troops missing in action says there is a “better than even” chance that the body of Medal of Honor soldier Father Emil Kapaun will eventually be found buried in a national cemetery in Hawaii.

Finding Kapaun’s remains would be big news, not only to the U.S. military – which awarded him the Medal of Honor in April – but to the Catholic Church, which is deciding whether the Kansas native and Army chaplain will become a saint.

“It would be wonderful,” said Maj. Gen. Donald Rutherford, a Catholic priest who is the chief of chaplains for the U.S. Army. “It would be great, especially as the church is moving toward canonization.”

Friends of Kapaun’s who were prisoners of war say Chinese Army guards buried Kapaun in a shallow unmarked grave after he died of starvation and disease in a North Korean prison camp in May 1951. The assumption since then by the Army has always been that Kapaun’s remains are still there.
read more here

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Friends take to ice to honor Marine killed in accident

In memory of Devan Krausch
Friends take to ice to honor Marine
By Amy Renee Leiker
The Wichita Eagle

Dressed in her late fiance’s blue and black hockey jersey, Andi Valcoure caressed her rounded belly and smiled.

The baby she carries — a boy due in May to be named Bentley Michael — had just kicked.

Bentley’s been active for the past several days, Valcoure, 21, explained. She felt the first movements an hour after the phone call came that Devan Krausch had died.

“It’s a sign from Devan,” she said, tears welling in her eyes.

“He would’ve been a really good dad.”

In a show of support for the young fiancee and unborn child of Marine Lance Cpl. Devan Krausch, 22, hundreds of hockey players and spectators gathered Saturday at Wichita Ice Center for a memorial and drop-in hockey game.

Devan’s mother, Kim Krausch, said the event started as a small gathering between a few of her son’s buddies, who planned to “knock the puck around” in honor of their hockey teammate, one of two military servicemen who died Dec. 27 after a single-car accident in west Wichita.
read more here

Marine and Soldier killed in car crash

Monday, December 17, 2012

Manhunt on for gunman that killed 2 Kansas Police Officers

2 officers shot, killed outside Kansas grocery store
By Maggie Schneider
CNN
December 17, 2012

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
A third officer is not hurt
The shooter escapes
120 officers have been killed in the line of duty this year

(CNN) -- Two Kansas police officers responding to a report of a suspicious vehicle were fatally shot in the head outside a grocery store Sunday night.

A third officer who fired back at the shooter was not injured, said Topeka Police Chief Ron Miller.

Police identified the shooter as David Edward Tiscareno, 22. He managed to escape. "The community will help us give this guy up," Miller said, adding that 75 state and local law enforcement officials were working on the case.
read more here

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Kansas Soldier's Family Seeks Answers In Unsolved Murder

Soldier's Family Seeks Answers In Unsolved Murder
WIBW.com
Oct 12, 2012

OGDEN, Kan. (WIBW) -- The family of Sgt. Ronald Evans Taylor is still trying to come to terms with his death.

Taylor, an Army X-ray technician and medic, was shot a year ago on the night of October 14, 2011 as he was driving just a few blocks away from where he lived off post in Ogden.

Wounded behind the wheel, Taylor’s ended up crashing his car into a nearby home on Walnut Street. When officers arrived, they found neighbors trying to help Taylor and giving him CPR. He was rushed to Irwin Army Community Hospital on Fort Riley where he was pronounced dead. Taylor's family believes he was trying to get away from his killer after he'd been shot and ended up losing control of his car due to his injuries.

Several days after the murder, detectives released a profile of the man they believe shot Sergeant Taylor. He's described as a black man, 5'8"-6', 180 lbs., 25-35 years old with a completely bald head, mustache and beard. Witnesses in the area helped them come up with the description of the suspect. Taylor's family even had the sketch posted on a billboard along Fort Riley Boulevard in Manhattan in an effort to help move the case forward and offered a hefty reward but a year later, an arrest has not been made in the case.
Read more about Sgt. Ronald Evans Taylor here

Sunday, August 19, 2012

1 killed, 1 wounded in shooting at Kansas armory

1 killed, 1 wounded in shooting at Kan. armory
The Associated Press
Posted : Sunday Aug 19, 2012

JUNCTION CITY, Mo. — A Junction City man has been arrested on first-degree murder and aggravated battery charges in connection with an early morning shooting at a National Guard armory.

Police say the 33-year-old suspect was taken into custody at noon Saturday. He is accused of killing 25-year-old Antonio Maxwell and shooting 30-year-old Jamaica Chism, both of Junction City.
read more here

Guard spokesman says the Armory was rented out and this did not involve Guardsmen.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Kan. Army veteran’s service dog found dead

Kan. Army veteran’s service dog found dead
The Associated Press
Posted : Saturday Aug 4, 2012


WICHITA, Kan. — A disabled Army veteran’s service dog is found dead along a Kansas interstate highway about three hours after its owner reported it stolen.

The Wichita Eagle reported Ryan Newell stopped at a car wash in Park City shortly before 7 p.m. Friday to let the dog, a Doberman named Red, stretch its legs.
read more here

Friday, May 25, 2012

Marine back from Afghanistan dies in Grand Canyon

Marine on way home to Kansas after Afghanistan tour dies in sightseeing fall at Grand Canyon
By Associated Press
Published: May 24

DERBY, Kan. — A young Marine returning to civilian life in Kansas died this week after falling from the South Rim of the Grand Canyon, where he had stopped to do some sightseeing on his way home from Camp Pendleton, Calif., his father said.

After two years in the Marines, Jeffery Klingsick had big plans, said his father, Russ Klingsick. The 20-year-old veteran of Afghanistan planned to join a band, become an emergency medical technician and, said his father, watch lots of John Wayne movies.
read more here

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Homeless man upset with VA broke into TV station and stabbed 2 workers

Man upset with Veterans Affairs breaks into Kansas television station, stabs 2 workers
By Associated Press
Published: May 23

TOPEKA, Kan. — A man wielding a knife broke into a Kansas television station Wednesday morning and stabbed two sales employees.

WIBW-TV in Topeka (http://bit.ly/MnNXEV) reported the man eventually was tackled and held down by several employees until police arrived. While restrained, the man threatened to kill the staff and bit at least one worker.

The suspect and two people who were stabbed were taken to a hospital for treatment. None of their injuries were considered serious.

Topeka police Capt. Brian Desch said in a news release that the 48-year-old homeless man was booked into jail on suspicion of six counts, including aggravated battery and burglary.
read more here

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Marine Iraq Veteran died after saving life following plane crash

U.S. Marine dies after rescuing ORU trustee’s daughter from deadly air crash
posted by Rob Kerby, Senior Editor



The daughter of an Oral Roberts University trustee was pulled from the wreckage of a crashed small aircraft by a former U.S. Marine sergeant severely injured in the crash, who then helped her wave down help along a highway.

Three were killed in the crash, and former U.S. Marines Sgt. Austin Anderson, recently returned from two tours in Iraq, died after being airlifted to a Wichita, Kansas, hospital.

The five had been on their way to an Iowa youth crusade.

Hannah Luce, 22, was critically injured and admitted to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kansas. She is the daughter of ORU trustee Ron Luce, the founder of Teen Mania Ministries, which was conducting this weekend’s “Acquire the Fire” rally in Council Bluffs, Iowa.
read more here

Friday, April 13, 2012

Police need help finding missing Iraq Veteran

Authorities Looking for Missing Iraq War Vet
April 12, 2012
by Jason M. Vaughn
DESOTO, Kan. — Authorities in Kansas are asking for the public’s help in locating an Iraq War veteran missing since Monday. According to the Johnson County Sheriff’s Office, Mathew Scott Flowers, 28, has been missing from his DeSoto home for two days.

Authorities say that due to an injury he suffered during his tour of duty, he requires medication and may display erratic or aggressive behavior without it.

Flowers is described as a white male, 5’10″, 200 lbs., with a shaved head and blue eyes. He also has a tattoo on his left forearm of ‘Madden’ and a Chinese symbol on his right arm. He was last seen wearing brown cowboy boots, blue jeans and an unknown type shirt. If you see him please contact the Johnson County Sheriff`s Office at 913-782-0720.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Family Fighting The Clock To Bring Dying Soldier Home To Kansas

Family Fighting The Clock To Bring Dying Soldier Home To Kansas
UPDATE: Hal Neukirch's family tells us he has taken a turn for the worse.
Reporter: Parrish Alleman
February 17, 2012

We have an update on a Kansas family's efforts to bring a dying soldier home to spend his last few days.

Hal Neukirch was supposed to fly home this Sunday, but a collapsed lung last night put those plans on hold.

Hal's sister tells us he is stable right now, doctors are waiting to put in a chest tube until Saturday morning; she says that's a good sign.

The Neukirchs say this latest health setback is the only thing keeping Hal at Fort Hood.

When we spoke to Hal Neukirch's wife Thursday night, she was already grateful for the donations people had made to bring Hal home.

“I just want to thank every body from the bottom of my heart I don't even know how to express this kind of thanks,” Pamela Neukirch said.

That was just the beginning. All day long people from across the country, have heard the soldier's story and asked how can they help.

“The support and the prayers have been; it's made a huge difference, a huge difference,” Hal's sister Tiffany Neukirch Demo said.

Not only did the Hal Neukirch Jr. Benefit Fund raise all the money needed to pay for the medical flight scheduled for Sunday; EagleMed, a critical care flight service here in Wichita, stepped up and offered to pick up Hal and fly him home, free of charge.

But even though the Nuekirch's have overcome the financial obstacles that stood in the way of their soldier's homecoming; his sudden turn for the worse Thursday night has still put his trip home on standby.

“We've got to hope, we can't do anything else but hope or we wouldn't be standing,” Demo said.
read more here


Hal was diagnosed with Glioblastoma Multiforme.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Iraq veteran with rifle killed by police in Kansas

Veteran with rifle fatally shot by Raytown police
BY DONALD BRADLEY
The Kansas City Star


The man shot to death by Raytown police Thursday while threatening officers with a rifle was a veteran of the Iraq war who had recently learned he was being sent to Afghanistan.

In describing events that led up to the shooting of 26-year-old Robert G. Long, Raytown police Capt. Ted Bowman on Friday said he did not want to suggest that Long’s military service was responsible for what happened. In talking with officers during the ordeal, Long, a reserve medic, said he was proud of serving his country.

Long and a roommate began drinking about 7 a.m. Thursday, first at a residence then moving to a bar. In early afternoon, employees at the bar removed the two men after they became confrontational. When Long and the roommate attempted to re-enter the bar about 2 p.m., the police were, Bowman said.

An officer then drove Long to a residence in the 900 block of East 79th Street. Shortly after that, neighbors called police when they saw Long staggering in the yard with a handgun. He reportedly fired a round into the house.
read more here

Monday, October 31, 2011

Iraq Veteran Killed in Grain Elevator Explosion

Iraq Veteran Killed in Grain Elevator Explosion
Carey Wickersham, FOX 4 News
Christie Walton Web Producer
4:30 p.m. CDT, October 30, 2011

ATCHISON, Kan.— The families of three victims of the grain explosion in Atchison received tragic phone calls in the middle of the night. Gary Keil and his family went to the Bartlett Grain Elevator with hope still in tact.

His youngest son Travis is a grain inspector for the state of Kansas and one of the three people initially reported missing.

Travis Keil's three children looked toward the twisted top of the grain elevator with thoughts of their father who was an Iraqi war Veteran who wasn't afraid of anything.
read more here

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Veteran of three wars, ex POW, will finally see memorials

Veteran of three wars will finally see memorials

By LEE HILL KAVANAUGH

The Kansas City Star

His motorized wheelchair scoots between two posters decorating his room at the nursing home: a tiger representing the University of Missouri football team, and a black flag with a white silhouetted man and the acronym, POW/MIA.

Fitting bookends for the story of Bill Watson’s life.

He’s an 88-year-old great-grandfather who played college football at MU, served in three wars and spent more than two years as a prisoner of war in Korea.

In May 1951 Watson was captured by the Chinese Communist army in Korea. He survived 837 days — in the initial months marching from town to town, eating road kill and grass. He lived through a tale more gruesome than any slasher movie, more sad than any Hallmark drama and more real than any fiction writer could ever imagine.

But there’s one thing Watson wishes he had done: visited the national memorials for all three wars in which he served.

Next week that wish will come true.
red more here