Showing posts with label Sgt. Adam Boyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sgt. Adam Boyle. Show all posts

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Real people, real families, real burdens come with PTSD

Sgt. Boyle's mom sent the following email out today. She is like too many other family members fighting a battle they should never have to fight so that the service given in honor is actually honored.

What the Boyle family has been going through is being repeated across the nation but we hardly ever hear their stories in newspapers, even less from the 24-7 cable news stations. We hear numbers but numbers never include the families. We hear body counts, but never hear about the actual counts of the casualties of war fallen by their own hand. We never hear about the families after left alone to carry on with their lives paying a price for the war no one ever seems to notice.

We will hear about them when they get into trouble because of PTSD, in other words, because of what they came home with embedded in their soul. We don't hear about how hard they tried to get help, tried to get someone to understand, give them hope, show them the way, open the door or even tell them how to pay their bills when they can no longer work. We don't hear about how many families have fallen apart because no one told them what PTSD is, what to do about it, how to fight this battle laid at their feet because someone they love was willing to lay down his/her life for the sake of this nation doing what few have been willing to do.

Sgt. Boyle is talking about what happened to him for one simple reason. He doesn't want anyone else to go thru what happened to him. The courage he had and still has is fed by compassion. If veterans like him did not put others first, they would not be willing to speak, to share, so that things can change. If they simply suffer in silence, nothing would change for anyone.

Read some of what they have been going thru so the next time you hear another number being released, you are fully aware behind that number, there is a soldier suffering along with an entire family. None of this should happen to any of them.

Below is a Washington Times story on my son and others suffering from combat related PTSD, traumatic brain and other injuries. Fortunately due to the Army's own military records my son was able to easily prove these injuries to the Veterans Affairs Administration and is now collecting combat related disability. However, due to how he was discharged it took several months to get the high rating he did, causing huge stress and added depression, mentally and financially. It's no wonder we have so staggering numbers of suicides and homelessness amongst fomer military service members.

It is still a struggle every day, both mentally and financially but we are all getting through one day at a time. Learning how to be a civilian has been difficult enough for someone like Adam whose whole life and dreams have been the military since his freshman year in high school JROTC. Adam will eventually receive his deserved honorable medical discharge, and all that entails, retroactively with the help of his wonderful attorney who is working pro-bono out of outrage at how our combat veterans are being treated after all thier sacrifices.

PS Ironically Adam was not aware this WT story came out until last night as he did the interview months ago. He thought the story went away; I'm grateful for others like him that it did not.
More sad stories of mistreatment of our service members and veterans, including Chuck Luther who played a valuable role in helping Adam after he was disposed of after combat, including help in connecting him with Jason Perry, along with Carissa Picard.
(THANK YOU CHUCK AND CARISSA!!!):
http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/424/index.html



Military misconduct may be sign of PTSD


Navy doctor gives warning

By Amanda Carpenter



What's being done

One of the soldiers is Special Operations Command Sgt. Adam Boyle.

Sgt. Boyle was thrown out of the Army because of a "pattern of misconduct," even though he had been diagnosed with PTSD. As a combat veteran who served two tours in Iraq, Sgt. Boyle began experiencing intense pangs of guilt and anger and was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder at a stress clinic in Iraq.



"I was always in the field before then," he recalled. "I did everything you can imagine from patrols to raids to capturing enemy POWs, interrogations, reconnaissance by fire. Everything you can imagine that put me in harm's way, and I was OK with it."

The bad feelings began to set in after two of his buddies were killed, one of them newly married with a child. "Those deaths haunted me, the idea of their families back home without them," he said.

After his diagnosis, Sgt. Boyle was sent to North Carolina's Fort Bragg, an assignment he resented because he thought he should be fighting the war. At Fort Bragg, he was given heavy antidepressants and sleeping aids that he said caused him to oversleep and miss formation on several occasions, a major transgression in the military.

He wanted to return to Iraq to fight, but the medications barred him from more deployments and he became miserable and agitated. Sgt. Boyle went on to spar with commanding officers who, he said, were unaware of his combat experience. He drank heavily, couldn't control his rage and ended up in trouble with the law.

He reached the tipping point when he experienced a flashback while supervising a session at the firing range at Fort Bragg.

"I was supposed to be keeping an eye on [the soldiers], keep them safe and doing the right thing," Sgt. Boyle recalled. "At one point, I went into a flashback into a firefight, and I was in Iraq. And during that flashback, I zoned out and forgot what I was doing.

"I snapped out of it and realized I missed the whole firing sequence, and it scared the hell out of me. I can't operate as a soldier if I can't concentrate on a firing range like that. That helped me realize I had to get out."

At that point, in consultation with his psychiatrist, Sgt. Boyle began seeking a medical discharge based on his PTSD. But the process was slow; he was allotted only one hour per month with his psychiatrist to plan proceedings and receive counseling for his existing problems.

Some of those problems were documented in a domestic violence complaint filed by a former girlfriend who said Sgt. Boyle assaulted her, although she never brought charges.

"His command has been contacted numerous times by myself and friends trying to get Adam's behavior under control," she said in the complaint. "I would like to see him get serious help and be removed from anyone else he could cause harm to."
read more here
Military misconduct may be sign of PTSD

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Will Sgt. Adam Boyle receive justice for PTSD case?

Lt. Gen. John Mulholland must not have thought about doing the right thing when it came to Sgt. Boyle. I bet he didn't think that anything he did would become a national story as well as a national disgrace. He didn't count on Adam's mother either. Laura has a deep commitment to her son but also to the wounded by PTSD. She's seen it first hand. She knows what this wound does to the warriors as well as their families. While military brass like Mulholland may think these men and women are worthy of not only tossing away but penalizing as well, there is a nation willing to step up and tell them, no way in hell will we allow this to happen.

Sgt. Boyle's life is not over, his worthiness is not gone nor is his ability to make a contribution to the nation, no matter what Mulholland thinks. Sgt. Boyle can be healed to the point where he's able to serve, if that's what he wants and this has been proven by three other generals that publicly came out with their own struggles to heal. While there is a vast difference between healing and cure, the healing is enough to restore a life while curing the wound is not possible. Sgt. Boyle, like hundreds of thousands of other veterans, did not return to the way they were before. The damage had been done but the human spirit they carry within them ended up seeing a better person after they come out on the other side.

The men and women willing to lay down there lives in this nation are a small minority. With over 300 million people there are only 24 million veterans and even less combat veterans, yet Mulholland finds no value in Sgt. Boyle? Maybe Mulholland believes the generals that sought help should have been tossed out as well? After all, he's apparently immune to feeling lost, alone, seeing his own life fall apart as PTSD walls all that is hopeful, possible, joyous and wonderful. He's never had to feel so hopeless that he was forced to reach for alcohol or a drug to kill off the feelings he could no longer tolerate. He's never had to face deciding to seek help, face being belittled, ostracized and having his career threatened. He's never had to worry about being turned away from having his own wound treated by the DOD or faced the possibility of being denied help from the VA because some lunk head decided that he was suddenly unworthy to wear the uniform or be treated honorably. To him the fact he lacks any and all ability to learn about this wound, documented since the beginning of time, what it causes and what comes with it, is not seen as anything for him to feel ashamed of, but something the wounded warriors should be brought to suffer for. All generations of PTSD veterans, wounded because they served this nation, should be outraged in this day and age, people like Mulholland live in the dark ages of bleeding the patient to cure them and putting leaches on wounds.

Laura sent me this about her son's case and wants it to be made public. His story, unfortunately, is being repeated far too often but no one knows about them. Now, you'll know exactly how some commanders betray the men and women serving under them. It's up to us to make sure he receives justice, not just for his own sake but for all the other veterans faced with the same treatment.


ISSUES IN ADMINISTRATIVE DISHARGE CASE OF SGT ADAM BOYLE
SGT Boyle’s administrative separation violated his Constitutional Due Process rights, Army Regulations, and was patently illegal.

Legal Errors
1. The Army failed to refer SGT Boyle’s case to the Physical Evaluation Board
SGT Boyle’s administrative separation is prohibited by AR 635-200, Paragraph 14–17, g., which states that in cases where a separation for misconduct is recommended by an administrative board, disposition through medical channels is required if the “Soldier has an incapacitating physical or mental illness that was the direct or substantial contributing cause of the conduct, and action under the UCMJ is not initiated. A copy of the signed decision by the GCMCA will be included with the records.” (Emphasis added). The Administrative Separation Board did not address this issue and the General Court-Martial Convening Authority (GCMCA) failed to make findings about the impact of SGT Boyle’s condition on his conduct. No signed decision by the GCMCA was included with the records.

2. The findings of the Administrative Separation Board were based on an incomplete record
The Administrative Separation Board denied SGT Boyle’s assigned military counsel’s request for a delay until records from his Medical Evaluation Board (MEB) could be submitted. The separation board convened on October 29, 2008, and the MEB was approved on the same day. The Narrative Summary, which contains the detailed findings of the MEB physician, was completed on October 23, 2008, well before the hearing. The Narrative Summary stated that SGT Boyle has Chronic PTSD, “a severe psychiatric condition,” and that his condition fails retention standards under AR 40-501. The MEB further recommended that the “Service member should be referred to the Physical Evaluation Board for further adjudication and requires the duty limitations specified on the attached DA Form 3349.” This information should have been considered by the Administrative Separation Board. It was required to have been considered by the GCMCA.

In addition, SGT Boyle’s Enlisted Record Brief (ERB) considered by the board was more than 6 months old and was incomplete. Specifically, his latest Army Achievement Medal was not listed on his brief. An updated ERB was requested by military defense counsel. This was not provided, even though this record is readily available to the command via a Department of the Army web based computer application. This failure meant that the Administrative Separation Board and the GCMCA did not have an accurate basis to make findings regarding the proper discharge characterization.


3. The Army failed to give SGT Boyle the required rehabilitative transfer
Army Regulation 635-200, Paragraph 1-16,c. requires that prior to initiating an administrative separation for a pattern of misconduct, the Soldier must be transferred to a new unit for at least 3 months to provide him an opportunity to rehabilitate.
The GCMCA may waive the rehabilitation requirements “where common sense and sound judgment indicate that such transfer will serve no useful purpose or produce a quality soldier.” Id. However, in SGT Boyle’s case, no such rehabilitation or waiver was made. Furthermore, Dr. George Krolick, Ph.D.,Clinical Psychologist, stated in his May 8, 2008 evaluation that “it is likely that efforts to rehabilitate or develop this individual into a satisfactory member of the military will be successful.” Note that SGT Boyle was not alleged to have engaged in misconduct after this date and in the 9 months preceding his discharge. This shows that not only was rehabilitation likely to succeed, but that even in the absence of a rehabilitative transfer, he was actually rehabilitated.

Compounding the failure to transfer SGT Boyle prior to initiating a separation, the Administrative Separation Board found that his chain of command failed to properly address the pattern of misconduct (“what helped mitigate this was the testimony from your chain of command. We felt they could have done a better job of putting a plan of action into effect that might have prevented a pattern.” (Page 28).


4. The Administrative Separation was illegal punishment
SGT Boyle’s Commander, who initiated the separation action, testified at the separation hearing that, “The Chapter was paperwork was started because of an incident in Georgia…The Chapter is his punishment for the incident.” (Page 11, Administrative Separation Board). Since the separation action was administrative in nature and non-judicial, the procedures used to punish SGT Boyle violated the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), Article 15 (Non-Judicial Punishment). Furthermore, the punishment imposed, separation, exceeded the authorized punishment under UCMJ, Article 15.


5. The Army failed to consider military defense counsel's appeal
AR 635-200,
Paragraph 2-6., requires that any legal errors identified by the respondent must be reviewed by an officer of the Judge Advocate General’s Corps prior to approval of the case by the GCMCA. The Administrative Separation Board hearing occurred on October 29, 2008. On November 6, 2008, SGT Boyle’s military defense counsel submitted an appeal requesting retention and referral to a Physical Evaluation Board. The appeal raised the legal error in not referring SGT Boyle to a Physical Evaluation Board. It detailed his honorable service, combat service, the findings of the Medical Evaluation Board, and pointed out that all of the alleged misconduct found by the Separation Board occurred after his return from Iraq. It also detailed the proactive treatment and intervention that SGT Boyle sought to address his conditions. The defense counsel states that she was told that the case had already been approved by the GCMCA and that the appeal could not be considered. This is in spite of the fact that the GCMCA did not approve the case until December 16, approximately 5 weeks later.


6. The Administrative Separation Board and the General Court-Martial Convening Authority failed to consider SGT Boyle’s complete service record in determining his discharge characterization

AR 635-200, Paragraph 3-5 e., requires that the characterization of service “must accurately reflect the nature of service performed…The Soldier’s performance of duty and conduct must be accurately evaluated.” Paragraph 3-7 a.(2)(d), states, “Unless otherwise ineligible, a soldier may receive an honorable discharge if he/she has, during his/her current enlistment, period of obligated service, or any extensions thereof, received a personal decoration.” The ERB that was considered by the Administrative Separation Board was more than 6 months old and did not list his third award of the Army Achievement Medal, earned for his meritorious service in Iraq and during his current enlistment. To have an accurate picture of his military service, SGT Boyle earned two Army Commendation Medals, three Army Achievement Medals, and two Army Good Conduct Medals.

The dated and inaccurate ERB deprived the Administrative Separation Board and the GCMCA of the whole picture of SGT Boyle’s honorable military service. This error was a violation of his Constitutional Due Process rights and Army Regulations.

The Illegal Separation Violated SGT Boyle’s Constitutional Due Process Rights and Army Regulations

The illegal discharge was stigmatizing and therefore requires the Army to respect SGT Boyle’s Constitutional Due Process rights. Federal case law states that these rights include notice of the action and an opportunity for a hearing. Casey v. United States, 8 Cl. Ct. 234 (1985). Without going into the details, the notice given SGT Boyle was defective because the findings by the Administrative Separation Board and the GCMCA included allegations of misconduct that he was not notified of prior to his hearing. This issue aside, the hearing was defective because it did not consider the available findings of the Medical Evaluation Board, violated Army Regulations, was based on incomplete information, and failed to offer SGT Boyle an opportunity to submit matters in his defense after the findings were announced.

As discussed previously, the hearing also, separately, violated Army Regulations.

Consequences of the Illegal Discharge

As a result of his illegal discharge with a General Discharge certificate, SGT Boyle was required to repay his re-enlistment bonus of $18,500. Because he outprocessed with a debt to the Army, SGT Boyle’s last paycheck was withheld. He was stripped of his accrued leave, which he could have otherwise taken or sold back to the Army. Without an honorable discharge characterization, he is ineligible for remission of indebtedness (which would cancel his debt), and is disqualified from the federal Unemployment Compensation for Ex-Servicemembers program. His rights to healthcare, compensation, and educational benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs are now in doubt. He was denied his rights to a Physical Evaluation Board, which could have resulted in military retirement, health care benefits, and other retiree benefits due to his PTSD and migraine-like headaches.

SGT Boyle is a decorated twice deployed veteran of the Iraq war. As a result of his combat service he was injured and developed PTSD. Instead of giving him the benefits due to him under the law, the Army illegally separated him with a stigmatizing misconduct discharge. Instead of focusing on recovering from his injuries, he now must figure out where he is going to live, what he is going to do for work, and where he is going to get the treatment he deserves. The United States Army should have helped him. It should have given him the rights due under the Constitution and Army Regulations. Unfortunately, the Army has instead pushed him out without resources and he is left to fend for himself. This is not how we are supposed to treat our Wounded Warriors.

for more on Sgt. Boyle go here

http://woundedtimes.blogspot.com/search?q=adam+boyle



Welcome to the Law Office of Jason Perry

My law practice is devoted to military disability law and I provide professional legal representation before all Physical Evaluation Boards.

The practice of law at the PEB is complex. There are many laws and regulations that the military uses to determine your benefits. My experience can maximize your chances for a correct award and protect your rights. When I take a case, I seek to do three things. First, I will help you identify the evidence needed to get the result you want. Next, I present your case in the strongest way possible, arguing the facts and the law. Finally, I identify legal errors made in your case that may mean a higher award on appeal. This three pronged approach is designed to get you the best result as early as possible. If you want to discuss how to get the best results possible, call me at 800-576-5648. I look forward to helping you get the benefits you and your family deserve.



Now think of this. There are psychologists and psychiatrists and mental health professionals, donating their time as part of Give An Hour because the VA and the DOD are not doing what is needed. There are advocates testifying over and over again in Congress plus trying to raise funds and awareness to help the veterans, again because the DOD and the VA are not doing it right. There are lawyers running to help because of cases like Sgt. Boyle's. Would any this be necessary if America actually lived up to the tag line of being "a grateful nation" we claim when a flag is removed from a coffin and neatly folded for the families of the fallen? What do you think would mean more to them, a flag and a piece of paper or actually taking care of the men and women that managed to make it back home?

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Treating PTSD: Are we there yet?


From Carissa Picard
In 2007, the DoD Mental Health Task Force recommended MEB/PEB for soldiers with PTSD/TBI versus disciplinary or other administrative action (when possible) in cases of misconduct as both injuries were known to cause what it identified as "disinhibitory" behavior. If senior leadership isn't going to honor those recommendations, how can we expect that of lower level leadership? And why hasn't Congress done anything about this yet?

Carissa is a good friend of mine and I'm very proud of what she's doing. I'll be joining here site soon to focus on PTSD. Right now I feel like Lisa Simpson on the Disney ride when she and Bart keep repeating "are we there yet" only to have Homer tell them "Yes, we've arrived at this exact spot at this very moment!"

We are not there yet but no one seems to be asking why we are not even close to being able to treat all the wounded with PTSD adequately enough that things like this do not happen any longer. What's it going to take? Three Generals not enough for them to wake up and understand what PTSD does? Think about that. Three Generals came out and said they had PTSD. Did the military try to end their careers too? When will the DOD stop treating them as if they are useless instead of wounded?

I posted yesterday about an Iraq veteran who had a limb amputated. He was treated, went through physical training, fitted with a prosthetic leg and he's right back with his troops. It's the same thing with PTSD. There are different levels of it and depending on the person, they can return to their units after they are treated properly. So why isn't this being done for them when the wound is PTSD? Why are they not given what they need without having to fight for it? Did they have to fight the DOD for a gun to train and deploy under orders? Who can expect them to get on with their lives after without the proper tools to do it with?

How many more years do they need to get any of this right and why aren't we there already?



PTSD victim booted for 'misconduct'
By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Jan 7, 2009 12:55:53 EST
After serving two tours in Iraq — tours filled with killing enemy combatants and watching close friends die — Sgt. Adam Boyle, 27, returned home expecting the Army to take care of him.

Instead, service member advocates and Boyle's mother say his chain of command in the 3rd Psychological Operations Battalion at Fort Bragg, N.C., worked to end his military career at the first sign of weakness.

In October, a medical evaluation board physician at Bragg recommended that Boyle go through the military disability retirement process for chronic post-traumatic stress disorder — which is supposed to automatically earn him at least a 50 percent disability retirement rating — as well as for chronic headaches. The doctor also diagnosed Boyle with alcohol abuse and said he was probably missing formations due to the medications doctors put him on to treat his PTSD.

But in December, Lt. Gen. John Mulholland, commanding general of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command, signed an order forcing Boyle out on an administrative discharge for a "pattern of misconduct," and ordering that the soldier pay back his re-enlistment bonus.

Last year, after a number of troops diagnosed with PTSD were administratively forced out for "personality disorders" following combat deployments, the Defense Department changed its rules: The pertinent service surgeon general now must sign off on any personality-disorder discharge if a service member has been diagnosed with PTSD.

"Not even a year later, they're pushing them out administratively for 'pattern of misconduct,' " said Carissa Picard, an attorney and founder of Military Spouses for Change, a group created in response to the personality-disorder cases. "I'm so angry. We're seeing it all the time. And it's for petty stuff."

In Boyle's case, according to Picard and Boyle's mother, Laura Curtiss, the soldier had gotten in trouble for missing morning formations and for alcohol-related incidents such as fighting and public drunkenness.

"The whole thing is absurd to me," Picard said. "They acknowledge that PTSD causes misconduct, and then they boot them out for misconduct."

FOR THE REST OF THE ARTICLE, click link