Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Oregon National Guardsmen still fighting for justice after Iraq



While they were sure they were willing to face the risks of combat in Iraq, they had no clue they had to fear something else happening to them by a company paid by their own country.

National Guardsmen’s suit accusing Iraq War contractor KBR of concealing toxic danger begins
By Associated Press
Published: October 10

PORTLAND, Ore. — A war contractor knew a critical southern Iraq oilfield plant was riddled with a well-known toxin but ignored the risk to soldiers while hurrying the project along, firing a whistleblower and covering up the presence of the chemical when faced with exposure, the soldiers’ attorney said in opening arguments Wednesday in a federal civil suit.

An attorney for the contractor, Kellogg, Brown and Root, fired back in his opening salvo of a trial expected to last weeks that the soldiers’ injuries weren’t a result of their exposure to the toxin, called sodium dichromate. Geoffrey L. Harrison argued that the company had no knowledge of the chemical’s presence at the plant and when they found it, they promptly and repeatedly warned the military of the danger.

A jury of six men and six women will decide whether the company is culpable for 12 Oregon National Guardsmen’s exposure to the toxin, a known carcinogen, and whether that exposure led to their ongoing respiratory illnesses. The soldiers will also try to show that the fear of future illnesses is causing them to suffer emotional distress.
read more here

Iraq contractor seeks appeal from law suit

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Oregon Vietnam Veteran believed to have been eaten by pigs

Dentures and body parts of Terry Vance Garner were discovered by a relative in his farm's pigsty
LAST UPDATED AT 12:46 ON Tue 2 Oct 2012
IN
A scene reminiscent of Thomas Harris's serial killer film Hannibal, a 69-year-old farmer in Oregon, US, is thought to have been eaten by his own pigs.

Terry Vance Garner, a former serviceman who served in the Vietnam war and suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), was last seen when he left his farm in Riverton to go out to feed his swine, some of which weighed in excess of 700lb, the Associated Press reports.

An unidentified member of Garner's family went to look for his relative several hours later, concerned at his disappearance, and discovered the farmer's dentures and parts of his body in the pigsty at his small farm.
read more here

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Combat Vet With PTSD Booted From Army, Barred From Healthcare

Combat Vet With PTSD Booted From Army, Barred From Healthcare
OPB News
Austin Jenkins
Aug. 11, 2012

SALEM, Ore. – In Salem , a former Army staff sergeant named Jarrid Starks has run out of the medications that keep him stable. He has severe Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and other mental and physical wounds of war. But he’s currently not eligible for veterans’ health benefits that would include prescription refills. That’s because Starks was kicked out of the Army for bad behavior. He’s far from alone.

Jarrid Starks joined the Army right out of high school with dreams of a 20-year career.

He left the Army earlier this year in disgrace. Starks recalls being escorted from the psychiatric ward at Madigan Army Hospital to an out-processing center and then to the front gate of Washington’s Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

“I had a 90-day supply of medication that I received from Madigan in a paper lunch sack,“ he says.

That sack of pills was Stark’s lifeline: a combination of antidepressants, beta-blockers, anti-psychotics, muscle-relaxants and sleep aides. A daily cocktail that allowed Starks to keep his anger and anxiety in check.

He sports a baseball cap that reads, “Warning this vet is medicated for your protection.”

It’s a joke, but not really.

“Ya, in every joke lay a bit of truth," Starks quips.
read more here

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Remains of Vietnam MIA Arden Hassenger going home

Remains of Vietnam veteran come home after nearly 50 years
By KATU News
Published: Jun 6, 2012

PORTLAND, Ore. – It was a bittersweet homecoming Wednesday for the family of an Oregon veteran lost in the Vietnam War.

Arden Hassenger's plane was shot down in 1965. He was declared dead even though his body was never found.
read more here

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Mental Health Worker Fatally Stabbed While Delivering Medication

Mental Health Worker Fatally Stabbed While Delivering Medication
ABC News

(ST. HELENS, Ore.) The stabbing death of a mental health worker has put the spotlight on the safety of home visits.

Jennifer Warren, 38, was killed Sunday while delivering medication to a patient in St. Helens, Ore., ABC affiliate KATU reported. Warren worked for Columbia Community Mental Health, which provides in-home counseling and medication management for people with mental illness.

"She was a real good worker," Columbia Community Mental Health's director Roland Migchielsen told KATU.

"We had her for 10 years, and this is a devastating loss."

The suspect, 30-year-old Brent Redd, was taken to a hospital and treated for injuries, KATU reported. Police would not say whether Redd's injuries were self-inflicted or the result of a struggle with Warren, but did say he called 911 to report what he'd done.

In 2007, Redd was found not guilty by reason of insanity for the attempted murder of his mother. He was sentenced to 20 years under the jurisdiction of the Oregon Psychiatric Security Review Board, a sentence he started serving in Oregon State Hospital. But in 2010, the board granted Redd conditional release into community care.

"Public safety is the first concern of the Psychiatric Security Review Board," Mary Claire Buckley, executive director of the board, said in a statement Sunday. "Today's tragic incident is the first time in 34 years when any client under the board's jurisdiction has been alleged to have committed a violent act of this nature."

Because of patient confidentiality laws, the nature of Redd's mental illness is not known. His family told KATU he had been taking antipsychotic and antidepressant medications, but that the doses had been scaled back for an upcoming surgery.
read more here

Oregon man accused of slaying mental health caseworker suffers neck wound, remains in ICU

Suspect's family blames system for death of mental health care worker

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Oregon National Guard reaches out to faith-based organizations

Oregon National Guard reaches out to faith-based organizations
Capi Lynn

Faith-based organizations are invited by the Oregon National Guard to become a “Partner in Care” to support service members, veterans and their families in communities throughout the state.

A one-day summit, in partnership with the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention, will be held Tuesday, May 8 at the Armed Forces Reserve Center at Camp Withycombe, 15300 SE Industrial Way, Clackamas.

Participants will learn about military/veteran culture, the Guard’s Partners in Care program, and suicide prevention. They will have opportunities to network with leaders and get involved on a personal, congregational and community level.

The hope, according to an email sent to me by Special Projects Officer Elan Lambert of the Oregon National Guard’s Joint Transition Assistance Program, is that a faith-based network will become a vital part of a larger effort to provide community based care to military families and veterans since this state does not have an active duty installation.
go here to get involved

Saturday, March 10, 2012

After combat, many Oregon vets continue to battle with unseen wounds

After combat, many Oregon vets continue to battle with unseen wounds
Published: Saturday, March 10, 2012
By Mike Francis, The Oregonian

BEND -- Oregon National Guard veteran Trevor Hutchison is a slow-walking casebook of post-deployment medical issues: bulging discs, pinched nerve, reconstructed ankle, traumatic brain injury and severe post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms including bursts of anger, memory loss, erratic sleep and anxiety attacks.

Yet none of this is obvious from looking at him or talking to him.


Randy L. Rasmussen / The Oregonian
Hutchison spends several days a week in his Bend-area home caring for Colleen, the 20-month-old daughter of he and his wife Sely.

At 36, he is enduring a protracted and bungled medical retirement from the military. The Department of Veterans Affairs has given him a 90 percent disability rating and declared him unemployable. He is as much as 70 pounds heavier and 2 inches shorter than he was when he went to Iraq in 2004 as a member of Oregon's 2nd Battalion, 162nd Infantry.

Oregon is full of young veterans like Hutchison, suffering aftereffects that are largely unseen.

They are scattered in cities, towns and farms around the state, where their difficulties are often invisible to those outside their immediate families. The Oregon Department of Veterans' Affairs said that 21,731 veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan campaigns lived in the state in 2010.

Even with his demonstrable medical problems, his retirement from the military has been marked by delay and mistakes. After he complained to a staffer with Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., the Army admitted misplacing his file. Today, Hutchison's medical retirement seems to be moving again, but he cites a history of mixed messages and unresponsiveness from the Army's Madigan Army Medical Center at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

Madigan is in the news this month as the Army investigates whether it improperly resisted diagnosing troops with PTSD even when they suffered from it.

Last month the Army reinstated PTSD diagnoses for six soldiers. Hutchison says he has been through a similar wringer with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs in Portland. He says providers there accused him of faking his symptoms in order to get narcotics. He says two of the three surgeries VA doctors performed caused his problems to worsen, which is why he says he won't allow them to perform surgery on his spine.

read more here

Friday, January 27, 2012

Iraq veteran accused of posing as policeman

Iraq veteran accused of posing as policeman
By Nigel Duara - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Jan 27, 2012 18:34:22 EST
PORTLAND, Ore. — Police anticipate more charges against a guardsman who allegedly posed as a Eugene police officer for at least a year, making traffic stops and volunteering at a youth center.
read more here

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Increased calls to Oregon Partnership’s military helpline

Increased calls to Oregon Partnership’s military helpline
Posted: Jan 03, 2012
By Natalie Brand

PORTLAND, OR (KPTV) -
With more troops returning home from war, the need for help and resources continues to rise, according to experts.

Crisis workers at Oregon Partnership, a statewide non-profit for people in crisis, say their Military HelpLine experienced an increase in calls during December as service members returned from Iraq.

"We have many callers who are dealing with relationship conflicts with their spouses, with their family," said Josh Groesz, the director of Military Crisis Lines. He said they're also dealing with financial issues, unemployment and reintegration challenges.

Groesz, a veteran himself who served in Iraq with the Oregon Army National Guard, admits the transition back to civilian life can be a struggle.

"For me, I experienced loss," said Groesz. "I went from being a part of something that was bigger than myself, to coming home and losing that, almost like a loss of identity."

Groesz said educating himself through classes on PTSD offered by the V.A. as well as counseling helped him through the transition.

"These guys, when they come back, they want to talk to someone who understands," said David Dedrickson, an outreach manager at Oregon Partnership and army veteran himself.

"There's a lot of things that change when you come home," said Dedrickson, who said returning veterans may miss the structure, camaraderie and friends they've left behind.

Symptoms of post traumatic stress can range from quick anger to frustration or a desire to withdraw or isolate oneself, according to experts. The timeline of PTSD can vary as well.

Dedrickson said a number of calls received last month as troops returned from Iraq came from Vietnam veterans.

"They were experiencing flashbacks, PTS from when they were coming home," said Dedrickson. "It's not just a couple of months, couple of years; it can be as long as 40 or 50 years."
read more here

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Two tour Iraq Veteran, in coma after road rage attack in Oregon

Iraq War vet in coma after apparent road rage assault at Pendleton, Ore., rail crossing
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
November 29, 2011

PENDLETON, Ore. — A 24-year-old Iraq War veteran is reportedly in a coma following an assault at a Pendleton, Ore., railroad crossing that so traumatized a witness he has trouble recalling it.

A Kadlec Regional Medical Center spokesman in Richland, Wash., said Monday that Kenneth Pittman was in serious condition in intensive care.

Pittman's ex-wife, Rhiannon Smith of Pendleton, tells the East Oregonian that Pittman escaped injury during two Iraq tours with the Oregon National Guard.
read more here

Monday, October 24, 2011

Marine mistaken for a bear, killed by hunter

Marine mistaken for a bear, killed by OR hunter
By CBS Newspath
Story Created: Oct 23, 2011 MDT

SALEM, Oregon (CBS Newspath) A hunter near Portland, Oregon has admitted killing a 20 year old Marine he mistook for a bear on his property.

The accident occurred after a man hunting with his 12-year-old grandson, mistook a hiker for a bear and shot him.

20-year-old Marine reservist Christopher Ochoa was visiting the Salem-area from California.
read more here

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Deployed soldier learns of In-laws deaths in Oregon

Daughter says elderly Troutdale couple in apparent murder-suicide died in bed, side-by-side
Published: Friday, October 07, 2011

By Sally Ho, The Oregonian

TROUTDALE -- On Friday, the only child of Ed and Frances Lopes called their deaths "an act of desperation."

"It's a statement to society about people who fall through the cracks," Louise Lopes, 51, said.

The lives of her parents, ended Thursday with gunshot wounds to their heads in what authorities believe was a murder-suicide. They would have been married 64 years this month.

Police say that at about 11 a.m. Thursday, Ed Lopes, 87, called Troutdale police to say he had shot his wife, 92-year-old Frances. When police arrived at their home and there was no response, the Gresham-East Multnomah County SWAT Team was called to the home on Southwest Larsson Avenue. Neighbors said their homes were evacuated until about 3 p.m.

Louise Lopes was at home in Mulino when officials arrived around 8:45 p.m. to say her parents were dead, side-by-side in their bed. Louise said her father did not own a gun but may have come to her house for one while she was away at work because her husband's pistol is missing. Her husband, Gary Evans, is in the military and was headed home to Oregon from Afghanistan because of the deaths.
read more here

Thursday, August 4, 2011

National Guards promised $34M in Bonuses Under Question

Guard: $34M in Bonuses Under Question
August 03, 2011
Associated Press|by Tim Fought

PORTLAND, Ore. - The National Guard will allow an Oregon recruit the $20,000 bonus it promised her in 2007, even though it believes the money was among $34 million worth of incentives improperly granted in recent years.

A month ago, the Guard had asked Pfc. Chelsea Wells to return the first half of the bonus, which she got in 2008, and refused to pay the second half - even though it didn't suggest she had done anything wrong. But facing congressional pressure to honor Wells' contract, the Guard confirmed Tuesday that it changed its position in the case, which has opened a window into recruitment practices that involve a variety of incentives.

Since Wells' case came to light in mid-July, the Guard has revealed that a new verification system has found that more than 4,000 bonuses nationwide were "improperly offered to the applicant" in 2007-2009. Those incentives had been offered by recruiters and enlistment officers.
read more here
$34M in Bonuses Under Question

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Oregon National Guardsmen denied promised sign-up bonuses

Soldier’s bonus denied by Ore. National Guard
By Jonathan J. Cooper - The Associated Press
Posted : Saturday Jul 16, 2011 11:29:36 EDT
SALEM, Ore. — Pfc. Chelsea Wells says the National Guard told her it was short on intelligence analysts when she agreed to be one in 2007. She signed a contract calling for a $20,000 signing bonus — half after she completed training, half after three years.

The military, though, turned down her request for the second half. Also, it wants the first half back. The Guard now says the position didn’t qualify for a bonus on the date she signed her contract.

“I submitted for it three times,” she told The Associated Press in a phone interview Friday. “Each time they’ve denied it.”

An aide to U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, an Oregon Republican who got involved in Wells’ case when she contacted him, said there are at least five other Oregon soldiers in a similar situation.

Walden called it “shameful,” and “a horrible way to treat these young people who signed up to serve their country.”
read more here
Soldier’s bonus denied by Ore. National Guard

Monday, June 27, 2011

U.S. Marine injured in hit-and-run crash

U.S. Marine injured in hit-and-run crash

MILWAUKIE, Ore. -
A U.S. Marine home on leave was injured in a hit-and-run crash Friday night.

Thai Huu Lam, 19, was walking on Southeast Oatfield Street when a truck hit him from behind, throwing Lam 30 feet. The driver left the scene without stopping.

Despite hitting his head on a tree, Lam is doing fine, said his cousin Kimberly Dang.

"He's talking. He remembers stuff," said Dang. "He's doing good. He's sore."

Dang said Lam has a fractured eye socket and cuts and scratches on his face, but that he is conscious and eager to be released from Oregon Health and Science University.
read more here
U.S. Marine injured in hit-and-run crash

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Vietnam Veteran with PTSD finds peace in Oregon's coast

Ron Cronin: A photographer with an obsession for the Oregon coast
Published: Saturday, June 25, 2011
By David Stabler, The Oregonian
Ron Cronin
You can look at Ron Cronin's photographs and not know humans exist. "What I want is comfort, being in the moment, something that goes directly into the soul of the viewer."

Ron Cronin hoists a 70-pound pack onto his surly back and scrambles over rocks the size of filing cabinets to a spot 25 feet from the heaving surf. One big one and he'd be sucked into the cold churn, but after decades of visits, he knows the waves here, as well as the tides, temperatures, wind and light.

This rock shelf at Boiler Bay is Cronin's favorite spot on the coast, where power and fury drown out his demons for a few hours.

Out of his backpack come his tools: a tripod, a large-format camera, a lens, glass slides, a light meter and a black cloth. Cronin assembles his gear and ducks under the cloth, waiting for the perfect wave.

Maybe this one. Or this one. He watches the waves like a surfer, looking for signs of chaos and harm.

"I'm a power junkie. I absolutely love storms," he says. "It's hypnotic and mesmerizing. It may be because I'm a Vietnam veteran."

After his Ecola days, he came back to Portland, married an opera singer, Maria Novak Cronin, had a son and found ways to cope. Years later, he was diagnosed as 50 percent disabled with PTSD, he says.

"I knew I could never work with people or in a corporate office. I was unemployable, so I created my own occupation.
read more here
A photographer with an obsession for the Oregon coast

Thursday, April 14, 2011

National Guard soldiers given "bum's rush in favor of regular Army troops"

There are so many secrets this country has, it is hard to know where to begin. It isn't that no one is talking about these things, but too many are dismissing them as just rumors. Nothing new really. Considering when veterans of wars going back to the Revolution, came home with what we call Post Traumatic Stress Disorder today, up until 40 years ago, no one was doing anything about it other than looking for excuses to ignore their pain.


They used to shoot the wounded for being cowards. Reports have come out going all the way up to WWII.

It is not a unique problem to the USA. The UK dealt with soldiers in pain by shooting them as well.


Pardons Granted for Shell-Shocked WWI Soldiers
Shot for Cowardice or Desertion
Friday August 25, 2006
By Angela Morrow, RN,
Soldier’s Heart=Shell Shock=Combat Fatigue=War Neurosis=PTSD

Nearly 90 years after their deaths, 306 soldiers who were shot for military offences during World War I have been granted posthumous pardons from the British Ministry of Defense. These soldiers were executed between 1914 and 1918 for breaches of military discipline that included desertion, cowardice, quitting their posts and casting away their arms.

Many men of the men executed for cowardice or desertion were suffering from "Shell Shock" after enduring months of military combat and horrors during WWI. British Defense Secretary Des Browne said these men were "as much victims of World War One as those who died in the battlefield." The group pardon recognizes that the men were not "cowards" or "deserters" and should not have been executed for military offences. This group of soldiers has been upgraded to being "Victims of War." Not one of the executed soldiers would have been executed today, since the British military death penalty was outlawed in 1930.

Many family members are glad that their ancestors are finally receiving these pardons and official vindication after all this time.

Recognizing Soldier’s Heart, Shell Shock or Combat Fatigue as PTSD
Shell Shock is the terms used during World War I for what is has been termed Post Traumatic Stress Disorder since the 1980’s. During the Civil War, the condition was referred to as "Soldier’s Heart." During World War II Shell Shock went by several names including "Combat Fatigue," "Traumatic War Neurosis," "Combat Exhaustion" and "Operational Fatigue." However, it wasn’t until after World War II that psychiatrists started to recognize that the symptoms of Shell Shock were not due to an inborn mental illness, such as depression or schizophrenia. Instead they determined that this form of psychological dis-ease was caused by too much exposure to war trauma.

According to the National Center for PTSD, studies have shown that the more prolonged, extensive, and horrifying a soldier's or sailor's exposure to war trauma, the more likely it is that she or he will become emotionally worn down and exhausted. This happens to even the strongest and healthiest of individuals, and often it is precisely these soldiers who are the most psychologically disturbed by war because they endure so much of the trauma.

When they came home, they were still haunted by what they saw with their own eyes as their minds tried to come to terms with horror movies playing with their nerves. Wives would hear their screams in the middle of the night. Kids would learn quickly they couldn't make any sudden moves and they were terrified of Dad lashing out because something they did surprised him in a bad way. Families were reluctant to let anyone outside the family know the war came home long after peace was declared by the governments and the powers ordering them to kill.

How does one declare peace of mind? How does a family explain to the rest of the population the war is still going on? There is a story being told all across this country from Vietnam Veterans when they are asked "When were you there?" and they respond with "Last night." More and more are talking about it but it was no less real when no one else was.

Now we have a new secret tied to war. As bad as it has been for regular military folks coming home, it's been even worse for the National Guards and Reservists. First, we need to begin when they arrived in Iraq as reports came out about how they were belittled by the active military. No one wanted these "weekenders" there. They were regarded as more trouble than they were worth. That attitude held. The National Guards and Reservists families knew about it, but they wouldn't talk about it. They just sucked it up. That was not the last insult to their service. That came after they were back and needing help to heal, just like the regular military folks but as we focused on the trouble they had getting help, we ignored the worst of their problems. The "weekenders" were getting even less help.

They were told to just go back to their lives, back to their families and jobs. Too many ended up risking their lives back home after risking them over there. Not just on jobs with law enforcement or in fire departments as many think, but risking them while carrying their own secret war just as every other generation had waged.

They were easy to ignore. Less than one percent of the population of this nation has served in Afghanistan or Iraq. Even less were "weekenders" expected to take off their boots and put on work shoes or college sandals. The regular military folks, well they suffered too, but they had the rest of their unit to lean on. Guardsmen came back to a nation filled with more people knowing who was winning American Idol more than they knew troops were still dying in Iraq and Afghanistan. While the media spent more time making celebrity "heroes" out of people like Sarah Palin and her every tweet along with other famous idiots last scandal, they just didn't have time to cover anything about any of this.

As 18 veterans committed suicide on a daily basis families knew what was going on. More and more of them began to talk about it openly but the media had other things to report on cable TV for.

Now we have this fantastic look inside one National Guard unit painting the picture crystal clear so that the whole nation can see it, feel it and understand how real all of this is but I doubt you'll see it on CNN, FOX or MSNBC. The less than one percent serving can't compete with the budget battle, or if the Idol judges are "too nice."

These are our neighbors coming home. These are our coworkers. They go to our churches. They shop in our stores. They are suffering and they have been screaming for help but this is one more case of ignorance. Instead of shooting them for being cowards, we let them suffer to the point where they regret surviving.


Brandon Barrett's War
The Army didn't tell anyone about a disturbed AWOL soldier until it was too late.
By Rick Anderson Wednesday, Apr 13 2011

Two of Spc. Brandon Barrett's fellow Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldiers were killed and more than 20 wounded in three major firefights and suicide bombings the 5th Stryker brigade endured during its year in Afghanistan. Between the summers of 2009 and 2010, Barrett and his colleagues came under fire from snipers, mortars, and roadside bombs in sparsely-settled Zabul province, bordering Pakistan, and, to the south, in the Taliban-controlled Helmand province.

One particular firefight between the Taliban and Barrett's 5th Stryker detail lasted five hours. "His unit saw some of the worst combat in Afghanistan," says Barrett's brother, Shane, a Tucson, Ariz., police detective. Firefights were so intense the Lewis-McChord soldiers were sometimes known as the Shit Magnets. "If it was bad and it happened," a grunt told a reporter last year, "it happened to us."

Brandon Barrett, who killed at least two enemy fighters during his year-long tour, didn't seem to fare badly, however. During a post-deployment health screening last summer, he told doctors only that he was a bit nervous, could be startled from time to time, and had seen lots of dead people. Otherwise, he was fine, he added, and certainly not suicidal. But doctors, according to a 200-page Army report on Barrett's case obtained exclusively by Seattle Weekly, worried he was keeping his real feelings to himself. He denied having any medical or mental-health issues, doctors noted, although they did refer him to the service's substance-abuse program.

The base also was in turmoil over claims that it mistreated members of an Oregon National Guard team that was demobilized at Lewis-McChord after returning from Iraq last year. Madigan Army Medical Center officials handled them as second-class soldiers, Guard members told reporters, citing a briefing held by Madigan staff to prepare for the unit's arrival. It included a PowerPoint presentation that showed a ball cap emblazoned with the words "Weekend Warrior," and a staff advisory that suggested Guard members might try to game the system to extend their active-duty pay. The soldiers say they didn't get necessary treatment, and were given the bum's rush in favor of regular Army troops.

Spc. Nikkolas W. Lookabill, 22, was shot to death by Vancouver (Wash.) police outside his house four months after he was processed at Lewis-McChord. He was killed September 7 after refusing to put down his gun.

Army veteran Robert Quinones, 29, armed with four guns, held three hostages at gunpoint at a Fort Stewart, Ga., hospital, threatening to kill them as well as President Obama and former President Clinton. He pleaded for mental-health treatment, then surrendered. Injured in Iraq and suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, Quinones had recently been medically discharged from Lewis-McChord.

"Who'd miss me anyway?"
Spc. Dustin Knapp, 23, got into a fight with his uncle, stormed out of his Wisconsin home, and was struck and killed by a car as he walked down a two-lane road at 4:30 a.m. His August 16 death, two months after he returned to Lewis-McChord from Afghanistan, was ruled an accident, although there was speculation he'd jumped in front of the car.

read more here
Brandon Barrett's War


Thursday, October 21, 2010

Iraq contractor seeks appeal from Oregon veterans

Iraq contractor seeks appeal from Oregon veterans

PORTLAND, Ore. — A Texas-based military contractor is seeking an appeal before trial begins in a lawsuit filed by Oregon veterans who claim they were exposed to a toxic chemical in Iraq. Attorneys for Kellogg, Brown and Root claim that suing a military contractor raises “unprecedented” legal questions that first should be decided by a higher court. Other federal judges have ruled in KBR’s favor in lawsuits in Indiana and West Virginia, saying their courts lack jurisdiction. But U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul Papak in Portland told attorneys Wednesday to prepare for trial while he considers the KBR request to have the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals review his rulings. Oregon Army National Guard veterans sued KBR last year, claiming the company downplayed or disregarded their exposure to hexavalent chromium in Iraq.

Iraq contractor seeks appeal from Oregon veterans

Thursday, September 9, 2010

22 year old National Guard Soldier, back from Iraq, killed by Vancouver police

It never gets easier to post stories like this. An Iraq veteran is dead at the age of 22. He survived Iraq but couldn't survive back home. Just doesn't make much sense. I'm sure the police officers are having a hard time with his too.

Man killed by Vancouver police was Iraq vet

The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Sep 9, 2010 5:41:45 EDT

VANCOUVER, Wash. — A 22-year-old man fatally shot by Vancouver police was an Oregon Army National Guard soldier who served 12 months in Iraq, a National Guard spokesman confirms.

Spc. Nikkolas W. Lookabill deployed in May 2009 as a member of the 41st Infantry Brigade after joining the guard in 2008, Guard spokesman Capt. Stephen Bomar said. Lookabill returned in May.

Guard officials confirmed Lookabill's military status Wednesday after the man was identified by Vancouver police.

Police said three officers fired at the Vancouver man early Tuesday morning after they responded to a report of a man walking in a neighborhood, armed with a handgun. Police spokeswoman Kim Kapp said the man was "engaging in threatening activity" and refusing police commands to drop the gun when he was shot.
read more here
Man killed by Vancouver police was Iraq vet

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Vietnam Vet, Charles "Larry" Deibert honored by Oregon Army National Guard

This is one incredible story about a hero Vietnam Vet!

Oregon Guard aviator, who saved Marines in Vietnam, honored with Salem building
Friday, August 27, 2010
Julie Sullivan, The Oregonian


For decades, as he aged into a salesman with silver hair and a golden touch, no one knew the story, except the men he served with, and the men he saved.

Today, the two groups will meet in Salem so the rest of Oregon will know how Charles "Larry" Deibert flew a two-seater Cessna into history over South Vietnam.

The Oregon Army National Guard will dedicate its new $14.8 million aviation center to Deibert, the most decorated living Oregon Guard aviator. The center is the hub for the Guard's 12 search-and-rescue Blackhawks, firefighting and the civil support team that responds to chemical, biologic or nuclear attacks. It replaces a double-wide trailer and a hangar.

On hand to celebrate will be 76 of the 3rd Battalion/26th Regiment Marines, who arrived in Portland Wednesday for a reunion hosted by Deibert. Their lives turned on Sept. 10, 1967, at a place called Ambush Valley in South Vietnam. More than 800 Marines were on the ground, outnumbered 6-to-1. Deibert was above, flying the improbably low and slow reconnaissance plane known as a "bird dog."

"I wouldn't be standing here if it wasn't for Larry," says Moe Miller, 63, who lives off the grid in rural Ohio. "And these men wouldn't be here either."

For Deibert, though, Sept. 10 was like Oct. 11, or Nov. 12, "another day." After a year in combat, he had flown 570 missions, including 73 over North Vietnam. He was awarded two Distinguished Flying Crosses, three Vietnam Crosses for Gallantry, a Bronze Star, two Meritorious Service medals, and 25 other awards. He was back in the Oregon Guard and working when he was called to Camp Rilea on the Oregon Coast in 1968 and presented with the Distinguished Service Cross, the second-highest American decoration, second only to the Medal of Honor for his actions on Sept. 10, 1967.
Oregon Guard aviator

Vietnan veteran Larry Deibert