Showing posts with label murder trial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label murder trial. Show all posts

Saturday, May 31, 2014

Marine gets death penalty for murder of 2nd Class Petty Officer Amanda Snell

Former Marine sentenced to death in murder of Navy woman
Chicago Tribune
By Katherine Skiba
Published: May 31, 2014

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Saying Jorge Torrez had committed “unconscionable crimes,” a federal judge Friday sentenced him to death for strangling a female sailor near the Pentagon in 2009.

Torrez, a Marine at the time of the murder, also stands accused of killing two young girls in Zion, Ill., on Mother’s Day 2005, and prosecutors in Illinois plan to try him for those crimes.

The death sentence, handed down by federal Judge Liam O’Grady in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, was expected after a federal jury voted unanimously April 24 that Torrez should be put to death for killing Amanda Jean Snell, 20.

Torrez, wearing handcuffs shackled to his waist, said little during Friday’s brief court proceeding, but his lawyers said they would file an appeal in the case.

When Torrez was asked by the judge if he wished to make remarks before the sentencing, he said: “There’s nothing I want to say, your honor.”

The defendant, in forest green jail-issued clothing, was led into the courtroom at 1:32 p.m. EDT.

Seven minutes later, Judge Liam O’Grady said Torrez’s crimes supported the jury’s death penalty recommendation.

“I sentence you to death at this time,” O’Grady stated.
read more here

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Wife's Murder Conviction Gives Colonel Sense of Relief

Mom Guilty of Killing Kids While Husband Deployed
Tampa Tribune
by Elaine Silvestrini
May 16, 2014

TAMPA -- Apologizing profusely, Julie Schenecker wept Thursday night as she told a judge she believes the two children she shot to death "are in no pain and they are alive and enjoying everything and anything heaven has to offer, Jesus protecting them and keeping them safe until we get there."

Schenecker had just been convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in the Jan. 27, 2011, slayings of her children, Calyx, 16, and Beau, 13. Jurors took less than three hours to reach their verdict, rejecting defense arguments that Schenecker was insane at the time she shot her children.

Following Schenecker's emotional statement, Circuit Judge Emmet Lamar Battles, saying the case was "almost too much for most to comprehend," sentenced her to the mandatory sentence of two life terms without parole.

Schenecker's former husband, Parker Schenecker, told reporters afterward that the verdict "gives my family a sense of relief."

The retired Army colonel, who was on deployment in the Middle East when his children were murdered, thanked the Tampa community for its support in the past three years.

"While this decision doesn't bring my children back," he said, "it does give my family an opportunity to move forward and honor their memory with the important work that we've been doing with Calyx and Beau Schenecker Memorial Fund, and remembering how they lived."
read more here

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Veteran accused in shooting at Washington grocery

The jury will decide if it is self-defense or not but the press has already begun the conviction. When it is a veteran, they make sure the public knows but when the person charged belongs to another group does something, they don't see fit to mention they belong to a bowling league or whatever group they are involved with. Imagine the headline of "sports fan accused of robbery."
Veteran accused in shooting at Washington grocery acted in self-defense, attorney says
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
About Bobby Kerlik
Staff Reporter
Published: Monday, May 12, 2014

There's no question an Army veteran of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq fatally shot a man in a Washington County parking lot, his attorney told a jury on Monday, but jurors should acquit him because he did it in self-defense.

The trial of Brandon Thomas, 32, of Upper St. Clair began in Washington County before a crowded courtroom. A jury of six men and six women must decide whether the former staff sergeant was justified in killing Vaughn Simonelli, 55, of Chartiers after a driving incident on Oct. 18, 2012, outside the Shop 'n Save in Washington.

Thomas is charged with homicide and three counts of possessing drug paraphernalia.

Calling Simonelli an “angry, deranged person,” Thomas' attorney, Frank Walker, said his client was defending himself following an argument that Simonelli started.

“As a self-defense-trained veteran, he pulls out a lawfully concealed firearm to defend himself,” Walker said of Thomas.

Prosecutors don't see it that way. First Assistant District Attorney Chad Schneider is seeking a conviction of first- or third-degree murder or manslaughter. He said Simonelli was shot once in the shoulder and once in the back.
read more here

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Convicted of murder, soldier says Chantix made him do it

Convicted of recruit's murder, soldier blames anti-smoking drug
McClatchy Washington Bureau
By Michael Doyle
Published: May 4, 2014

WASHINGTON — Early one Sunday evening six years ago, Army Pfc. George D.B. MacDonald made his way through his Fort Benning barracks to the bunk where a 23-year-old recruit named Rick Bulmer lay sleeping.

They were strangers.

Wielding a 3-inch, double-edged knife, MacDonald stabbed and slashed Bulmer more than 50 times. He started with the throat, but didn’t stop there. Bulmer awoke and fought back, but he never had a chance.

With the May 18, 2008, homicide, MacDonald ended one life and tore apart many others. The 19-year-old onetime Eagle Scout created a widow and a fatherless child. He stole a son and took a beloved brother.

“I snapped and didn’t like it,” MacDonald wrote, about nine hours after the killing. “I was stretched and it made me crazy.”

What triggered the promising young paratrooper’s homicidal outburst?

MacDonald blames Chantix, a smoking-cessation drug used to wean people from their addiction to nicotine. A military jury didn’t buy his story, and in December 2009 he was convicted of premeditated murder and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
On Sunday, May 18, during drills, his leg apparently hurt and he returned to the barracks. It was just past 6 p.m.

Bulmer fell asleep on his bunk. Elsewhere in the same barracks, MacDonald was reading “Lord of the Rings.”

MacDonald got up to do laundry and without knowing why, he said later, slipped a 3-inch knife into his pocket. He left his room, and came to Bulmer’s bunk. He said later that he thought for about 30 seconds. Then he attacked.
read more here

Monday, April 28, 2014

Colonel's wife on trial for 2011 murder of teenagers

Florida military mom on trial for killing her teenagers
Associated Press
Published April 28, 2014

TAMPA, Fla. – A military wife whose husband was deployed to the Middle East shot her 13-year-old son twice in the head for talking back, authorities said, then returned home and shot her 16-year-old daughter in the face as she studied.

Now she's on trial, and whether she spends life in prison hinges on a key question for jurors: After years of profound mental illness, was she unable to realize what she did was wrong, as her defense attorneys say? Or did she plan the January 2011 killings over at least several days, as prosecutors say, complaining at one point that the three-day wait to buy a gun would "delay the massacre"?

Jury selection began Monday morning in Julie Scheneker's case. She is charged with two counts of first-degree murder.

Those on the jury will see many disturbing images and hear hours of troubling evidence. They will see several sides to Schenecker, a former military linguist and wife of a colonel.
read more here

Deployed Colonel’s wife killed son and daughter in Tampa FL

Slain Tampa Palms children remembered fondly

Westboro Group ready to protest funeral for murdered children

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Army soldier pleads guilty to killing wife, unborn child in Ga.

Army soldier pleads guilty to killing wife, unborn child in Ga.
CBS News
Crimesider Staff
March 24, 2014

FORT STEWART, Ga. - An Army soldier confessed that he killed his pregnant wife by persuading her to wear handcuffs during sex and then suffocating her with a plastic bag over her head, a former Army buddy testified before a court-martial Monday.

Prosecutors at Fort Stewart used testimony alleging the confession to open their case against 22-year-old Pvt. Isaac Aguigui, who is charged with murder as well as killing an unborn child. He faces an automatic life sentence if a military judge convicts him of murder in the July 17, 2011, death of Sgt. Deirdre Aguigui.

Capt. Janae Lapir, an Army prosecutor, said in her opening statement Monday that Isaac Aguigui wanted to be free from a rocky marriage and coveted the $500,000 in life insurance and benefit payments he received from the Army after his wife was found dead in their apartment on the southeast Georgia Army post. She called him "a schemer" who tricked his wife into letting him handcuff her.

"Sgt. Aguigui never had a chance to fight back because she never saw it coming," Lapir said.
Civilian prosecutors say Aguigui used the insurance money to buy guns and bomb components for an anti-government militia group he started by recruiting other disgruntled soldiers. Aguigui pleaded guilty in a civilian court last summer to murder charges in the slayings of a former soldier and his girlfriend eight months after his wife died. Civilian prosecutors say he ordered their slayings to protect the group.

Aguigui is already serving a sentence of life without parole at a Georgia prison.
read more here

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Veteran killed in bar loved family

Daniel Ramirez: Veteran killed in bar loved family
The News Messenger
Mar. 11, 2014

FREMONT — Daniel Ramirez, 25, was known for being a dedicated family man and a go-getter.

“By the age of 25, he accomplished more than anyone I know,” said his sister, Belinda Cordi.

Daniel, a U.S. Army veteran and Fremont Ross graduate, was one of three people killed in a Sunday morning shooting at Last Call Bar on West State Street.

He left behind one daughter and two sons — Annalicia, 7, Gabriel, 6, and Isaiah, 2, and a wife, Veronica Ramirez.

Daniel and Veronica met in junior high and started dating when they were 15 years old. They married in August 2009.
read more here

Triple murder suspect held without bond Ramiro Arreola, 27, sat among the crowd. Arreola was shot in right shoulder during the incident. He was flown to Promedica Toledo hospital, where he was treated then released.

He survived, unlike 25-year-old Daniel Ramirez, 28-year-old Ramiro Sanchez and 26-year-old Elmore police officer Jose Chavez.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Army Spc. John Joseph Beans Eubank killed for insurance payout?

Wife killed Ga. soldier for insurance, feds say
Morris News Service
By Jan Skutch
Wednesday, March 5, 2014

SAVANNAH, Ga. -- The wife of a slain Fort Stewart soldier schemed with her brother to kill her husband in exchange for a $160,000 insurance policy payout, a federal prosecutor said Tuesday.

Lillie Eubank, 39, told investigators she arranged to have her brother, Carl Evan “Cowboy” Swain, travel from Alabama to Savannah, bought a T-ball bat and selected the site for the attack at a recreation park on Fort Stewart, Assistant U.S. Attorney Cameron Heaps Ippolito said.

The victim, Army Spc. John Joseph Beans Eubank, 29, was found badly injured Nov. 30 by another solider. He was taken to Winn Army Community Hospital, where he died from blunt force trauma.
read more here

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Steven Green committed suicide in jail

Former soldier at center of murder of Iraqi family dies after suicide attempt
CNN
By Steve Almasy
February 18, 2014

Former Army soldier Steven D. Green was convicted five years ago of raping a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and murdering her and her family.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Steven Green was found in his cell on Thursday and died two days later
A medical examiner ruled his death suicide by hanging
In 2006, Green and four others raped a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and killed some of her family
He was sentenced to multiple life terms in federal court because he had left the Army

(CNN) -- A former U.S. soldier convicted five years ago of murdering an Iraqi family died Saturday, two days after an apparent suicide attempt in his Arizona prison cell, authorities said.

Steven Green was found unresponsive last Thursday, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

The deputy chief medical examiner with Pima County, Dr. Eric Peters, said the cause of death was suicide by hanging.

In 2009, Green was found guilty in U.S. District Court in Kentucky of raping a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and murdering her, her parents and her 6-year-old sister in the town of Yusufiya, about 20 miles south of Baghdad. The crimes occurred three years before the conviction.

Prosecutors sought the death penalty but a jury couldn't reach a unanimous decision.

He issued a public apology for his crimes, one the relatives of the victims didn't accept.
read more here

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Army vet and charged him with first-degree murder

Man shot dead ‘execution style’ by Iraq war veteran friend who 'he was trying to help through struggles with PTSD'
Army vet Paul Vermillion admitted to police he shot Genghis Muskox dead
He said the killing was in self-defense during a fight
Multiple people have refuted that claim, with one friend of Mr Muskox's claiming Mr Vermillion had pointed a gun at the man on more than once
Daily Mail
By RYAN GORMAN
PUBLISHED: 09:49 EST, 12 January 2014

An Iraq war veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder told police he killed his friend execution-style. Paul Vermillion, 30, of Anchorage, Alaska, admitted Dec 5 to Alaska State Troopers that he shot Genghis Muskox, 27, dead – but he said the killing was in self defense.

‘I executed the threat,’ Mr Vermillion said to investigators, a source told the Peninsula Clarion.

Troopers arrived at Mr Vermillion’s vacation home in Cooper Landing, a town about 100 miles south of Anchorage, after he called 911 to report the killing and discovered Mr Muskox’s bullet-riddled body.

The slain man had been shot twice in the head and multiple times in the chest, authorities told the Clarion.

When asked by cops if he killed the man, Mr Vermillion replied ‘yes.’

They immediately arrested the Army vet and charged him with first-degree murder.

Mr Vermillion told police he shot the man while defending himself after the two men got into a fight and Mr Muskox choked him, his family told the Clarion.

‘He might have shot off his mouth, and he might have gotten himself into trouble,’ Susan Muskat, Mr Muskox’s mother, told the Alaska Dispatch, but she vehemently denied her soon was violent.
read more here

Friday, December 27, 2013

PTSD On Trial:Considering the Toll of War in a Death Penalty Debate

Considering the Toll of War in a Death Penalty Debate
Texas Tribune
by Brandi Grissom
Dec. 27, 2013

The car would not stop. Flares did not stop it. Shots fired into the engine didn't stop it. Exaggerated hand gestures and hollering surely didn't. As far as the four Marines stationed at a roadside checkpoint in Iraq knew, the sedan hurtling toward them was a bomb on wheels.

Tim Rojas flashed a thumbs-up at his fellow lance corporal, John Thuesen, 21, the quiet Texan manning the machine gun on the Humvee’s turret. Bullets ripped through the car. The driver slumped over the steering wheel as the sedan crawled to a stop.

There was no explosion. The Marines were alive, and in that moment, Rojas recalled, the four men felt like heroes.

Then, the car’s rear door opened, and a boy, covered in his family’s blood, terror all over his face, ran screaming toward them.

“It was a terrible feeling,” Rojas said, his eyes glassy with tears, recalling the day that he said forever changed their lives.
read more here

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Combat PTSD on trial and so are we

Iraq war veteran sentenced in stabbing death of girlfriend, 22
LA Times
By Paresh Dave
December 19, 2013

An Iraq war veteran who blamed post-traumatic stress disorder for choking and stabbing his 22-year-old girlfriend to death was sentenced Thursday to 26 years to life in prison.

Allowed by his attorney to apologize for the first time since the January 2011 fight that led to the death of Eileen Garnreiter, the 25-year-old veteran, Tymarc Warren, told the court that he lost control.

“I am sorry,” Warren said over the audible cries of his father. “This one incident got out of control really fast.”

Warren served two tours of duty in Iraq with the U.S. Army. He testified in his own defense, saying Garnreiter had grabbed a knife in the kitchen of their Lawndale home during a dispute. She wanted to break up with him because of worries that Warren couldn’t provide for their 5-week-old daughter, Layla.
read more here

Iraq War Vet Charged With Murder In Shooting Death Of Neighbor In Dispute Over Dog
CBS Detroit
December 19, 2013

NOVI (WWJ) - A 28-year-old Walled Lake man was arraigned Thursday on a charge of open murder and possession of a firearm in the commission of a felony in the death of his neighbor.

Charles Jacob Simkins — a U.S. Marine Corps veteran who served in Iraq — is accused of shooting 45-year-old Edwin Criswell in a dispute over a dog.

It happened Wednesday on the 1100-block of Sigma near Maple and Pontiac trail.

According to testimony in Novi District Court, Simkins had been looking for his dog when he was confronted by Criswell, who was upset that the dog was in his yard. An argument broke out, and — armed with a loaded handgun — Simkins allegedly punched his neighbor and then shot him.
read more here

Fredericksburg standoff ends in gunfire
by KVUE News
Posted on December 19, 2013

FREDERICKSBURG, Texas -- A three-hour standoff in Fredericksburg ended in a shootout.

It started around 7 p.m. on Wednesday at the Valero Gas Station off South Adams Street.

Chief Steven Wetz with the Fredericksburg Police Department says Victor Antonio Valdez, 24, came in and brandished a weapon, telling two clerks to leave the store. The clerks called 911.

When officers arrived on the scene, they set up a perimeter around the store and tried to negotiate with Valdez.

"Over the store phone, we kept losing negotiations, and then he'd hang up the phone," Wetz said.
read more here

Premature deaths of California and Texas veterans
Statesman
By Jeremy Schwartz
December 19, 2013

The Los Angeles Times this week investigated deaths of young veterans in that state, and found that as in Texas, recent vets have elevated risks of suicide compared to their civilian counterparts.

The Times investigation found veterans under 35 there are dying of suicide at a rate double their civilian counterparts. An American-Statesman investigation last year found similar results among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans from Texas who were receiving VA benefits when they died. The percentage of suicides was nearly five times higher than the overall state population, and among males under 35 the percentage of veterans who died from suicides was 1.6 times higher. Both investigations also found high numbers of deaths from motor vehicle crashes; in Texas single vehicle crashes killed an outsized number of young vets, and two-thirds of such crashes involved speeding or alcohol.

Such state-by-state examinations of veteran deaths are important because of the lack of national death information tracked or released by the Department of Veterans Affairs since the wars began.

After the Statesman published its investigation last year, VA officials said they planned to conduct a national cause-of-death study for Iraq/Afghanistan veterans. The massive effort began last year, but so far nothing has been released. That's largely left the job to journalists to investigate how veterans are dying after they come home.

There was one significant difference in what the California and Texas investigations found: While the Times found that the number of veterans who died of drug overdoses was about one-half of those who died of suicide, in Texas just as many veterans died of overdoses as of suicide.
read more here

Those are the headlines from one day. Just one day and there were many, many more.

These stories are being repeated all over the country and they don't seem to matter enough that the national news covers them. They used to but that was a long time ago.

The article from the Statesman is very good but they forgot about a couple of other states with the same results.

"Oklahoma veterans and active-duty military personnel are killing themselves at twice the rate of civilians, despite increased efforts to address the problem."

"The rate of suicide among military veterans in Arizona is more than double the civilian rate. Advocates say veterans need more than benefits when returning from war. The average veteran suicide rate in Arizona from 2005 through 2011 is almost 43 deaths per 100,000 people. That’s according to data compiled by News21, a national reporting project based out of Arizona State University. And the rate should increase as more veterans return home." 

So what do we do about any of this? What do we owe them? How do they go from doing everything possible to survive combat but not being able to find anything to survive being home? How do they go from being willing to die for the sake of someone else to being charged with killing someone back home?

UPDATE out of New York
A Iraq War veteran charged with executing his girlfriend on Halloween will use the insanity defense.

Damien Zervos, 32, of Albany, who served as an Army National Guard infantryman from 2004 to 2005, said he used a rifle to kill 33-year-old Charee Akins-Maddox, a mother of four children, on Oct. 31 in a home at 156 Lark St., his attorney, Terence L. Kindlon, said.

Zervos shot the woman in the back of the head because of a psychiatric condition, Kindlon said.

He will use the defense that Zervos is not guilty by mental disease or defect, the technical term for the insanity defense, Kindlon said.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

New Orleans Officer convicted of burning body seeks new trial

Officer convicted of burning Henry Glover's body asks judge for new trial
The Times-Picayune
By Juliet Linderman, NOLA.com
December 16, 2013

As one officer has walked free following a retrial in the post-Hurricane Katrina shooting of Henry Glover, another is making new arguments in an effort to get his case before a new jury.

Former New Orleans Police officer Gregory McRae, who is serving a prison term after his 2010 conviction for burning Glover's lifeless body in a car left on the Algiers levee, has asked a judge for a new trial, saying he has newly discovered information -- both about McRae's own psychological state and conduct of federal prosecutors -- that warrants a redo.

McRae made his latest bid while David Warren, the ex-NOPD officer who shot Glover on Sept. 2, 2005 outside an Algiers strip mall, was on trial for the second time this month. A jury acquitted Warren of all charges last Wednesday.

McRae's defense attorney Michael Fawer said in court papers filed this month that his client recently saw for the first time pretrial services report issued in February 2011 for, which says McRae was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder when he threw roadside flares into the car carrying Glover's wounded body and left it to burn on the Algiers levee.
read more here

Friday, November 29, 2013

Homeless slayings suspect died after eating something

UPDATE
Accused O.C. serial killer swallowed Ajax in cell, attorney says

Lawyer: Homeless slayings suspect died after eating something
Orange County Register
By MARY ANN MILBOURN and SALVADOR HERNANDEZ
Nov. 29, 2013

BULLETIN: SANTA ANA — A former Marine who was awaiting a death penalty trial in the deaths of six people, including four homeless men, died after ingesting something while in his jail cell, his defense attorney told The Associated Press on Friday.

Attorney Michael Molfetta would not say what his client ingested but said the death raises serious questions about how much supervision Itzcoatl Ocampo, 25, was getting from Orange County sheriff's deputies.
read more here

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Trial held for man accused in death of Vietnam Veteran

Trial held for man accused in death of Vietnam Veteran
News Channel 3
by Laurie Simmons
October 21, 2013

Chesapeake, Va. – Witnesses have already been called in the case against Kyle Langreder in Chesapeake.

He was the only one who police arrested and charged out of three young men who were there and present at the beating of Charles Silva, a 77-year-old Vietnam veteran who lived and worked in Chesapeake.

Both sides presented their opening statements on Monday. Two witnesses were also called. For the first time, a year after his death, a jury saw pictures of the veteran just hours after police say he was beaten by three young men on ATVs.

He suffered a bruised ear and jaw, an injured rib, and a cut on his head where he fell on the rocky ground.

Now one of the men is facing a first-degree murder charge.

Prosecutors say Langreder was responsible for the final blow to the Vietnam vet after a dispute over trespassing on property surrounding the Chesapeake Executive Airport.
read more here

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Georgia airman escaped murder scene, fought PTSD

Georgia airman escaped murder scene, fought PTSD
Air Force Times
KRISTIN DAVIS
October 16, 2013

ROBINS AIR FORCE BASE, Ga. (AP) — Jason King faced the months leading up to the capital murder trial of a fellow airman with a single-minded purpose.

The man who stabbed to death Senior Airman Andy Schliepsiek and his wife, Jamie, at their home on Robins Air Force Base, Ga., early July 5, 2004, had nearly taken King's life, too. King had to make sure the killer never hurt anyone else.

King went over his testimony so much he nearly grew numb to the harrowing details: Andy scuffling with his attacker. Jamie screaming. The searing pain of the combat knife slicing into his back again and again.

When the Air Force prosecutors set up camp in a house on base, King regularly brought them dinner. He had never seen anyone work so hard. They were dogged and meticulous as they built a death penalty case against one of their own.

But when the monthlong court-martial was over in October 2005 — when a panel of 10 officers unanimously sentenced Senior Airman Andrew Witt to die for his crimes — it was not the closure he had hoped for. His nightmare had only just begun.

Nine years later, he continues to battle post-traumatic stress disorder and the anxiety and depression that comes with it. He has fought alcoholism and drug addiction. Along the way, his marriage and his Air Force career ended.
read more here

Thursday, September 26, 2013

PTSD On Trial: Ark. court asked to throw out veteran's conviction

Ark. court asked to throw out veteran's conviction
Associated Press
By JEANNIE NUSS
September 26, 2013

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Lawyers for an Iraq War veteran convicted of killing his girlfriend told Arkansas' highest court on Thursday that his case never should have gone to trial.

Steven Russell's attorneys told the state Supreme Court that their client suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and should have been found not guilty because of a mental disease or defect.

Russell, 34, was convicted of capital murder in the 2009 death of Joy Owens and was sentenced last year to life in prison without parole.
read more here

Friday, September 20, 2013

Men Accused Of Killing Ft. Campbell Specialist Taylor Hotzoglou

Men Accused Of Killing Ft. Campbell Soldier Found Guilty
News Channel 5
September 20, 2013

CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – Two men accused of killing a Fort Campbell soldier have been found guilty.

Giovanne Treymane Johnson, 19, and Rakeem Rashan Jones, 18, were convicted of second degree murder and especially aggravated robbery in the death of 22-year-old Specialist Taylor Hotzoglou.

The soldier was shot multiple times on April 28, 2012 in Clarksville, after giving the two teenagers a ride.
read more here

Fort Campbell soldier back from Afghanistan, dead from multiple gunshot wounds

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Man accused of four counts of murder faces charges

If we try to lump reports on PTSD together, it may be the easiest way out, like what is happening after a gunman opened fire at the Navy yard in Washington, but what good does it really do anyone? Here's another example of a veteran with PTSD being charged with murder.
Man Accused of Locust Avenue Quadruple Fatal Shooting Appears in Court
WBOY News
By Kim Freda, Assignment Editor
Posted: Sep 17, 2013

A Fairmont man facing four counts of first degree murder in the July 26 shooting deaths on Locust Avenue in Clarksburg appeared in Harrison County court for a mental competency hearing Tuesday.

Public Defender Wiley Newbold told Judge James Matish that Sidney Muller, 27, suffers from four of the five symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and that Muller regularly visits the Veterans Affairs hospital. Newbold said VA records reflect that Muller suffers from a history of mental illness and is on several prescription drugs for PTSD. Newbold also told Judge Matish that Muller receives a disability check.
read more here

Does PTSD cause violence? Sometimes. We have to face that reality. Sometimes they are paranoid and feel threatened enough to react. Those times they usually overcome the feeling to lash out and they walk away. Rare times they unfortunately lack the self control they used to have. Usually they punch someone out but sometimes, they commit murder. PTSD is not an excuse for murder because the simple fact is, the majority of veterans with PTSD are more dangerous to themselves.

It is complicated but does not make a very good headline for the press to get attention. There are different causes and different levels and just as many types as you can think of but it is all too easy to just use the four letters of PTSD.

There are some wanting to use the word "victim" but they are survivors and it is time to start getting that right at least. They are not victims of a hurricane, tornado, fire or flood. If they died then they were a victim but if they survived, then they are a survivor. They are not victims of crimes if they lived because they were stronger than the criminal. They are not victims if their job sends them rushing into situations everyone else is running away from. They are survivors! It is the same thing with veterans. They survived what too few others have known.

It is time for people to have an honest discussion about what PTSD is and what it is not just as much as it is time for the press to rethink when they have to add in PTSD when they report on a criminal act.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Green Beret's family shocked by outcome of murder trial

Local soldier Nic Moses' family shocked by verdict
KSDK.com
By Mike Rush
September 2, 2013

ST. CHARLES, Mo. (KSDK) - The trial is over, but a St. Charles family says justice was not served for their son.

Nic Moses, 26, was a green beret who had served in Iraq and Afghanistan, but he was killed by a fellow soldier last year in Tennessee.

Even though his killer was convicted, the family is outraged by the outcome.

Benjamin Schweitzer could have spent decades in prison for killing Nic Moses and shooting at two police officers, hitting one during a standoff. But, instead he may be in prison for as little as two years and the family is hoping their outrage in St. Charles will reach the courts in Tennessee.

The shooting happened in March of last year in Clarksville, Tennessee, not far from Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
read more here