Veteran kept his cool in crisis but faces legal fallout
Boston Globe
By Thomas Farragher
Globe Staff
March 25, 2015
When Jeff Lorditch went off to work early that morning, his wife of nine years and his young son slept soundly in their beds. In the quiet of that dawn, there was no trace of the tumult and tears just over his horizon.
He got to work to discover he was fired. Laid off, he says. In any case, on that mid-October morning of 2013, his job was gone.
When he got back to his home in Auburn about 9 a.m., his 7-year-old boy had left for school.
He walked in to find his wife in bed with another man. And he knew the guy. It was his brother, visiting from New Mexico.
“I think every married guy probably runs through that scenario in their head at some point,’’ Lorditch, 34, said. “I know I had.
And I never knew how I was going to react and hoped I would never have to find out. But I walked in and it took me a few minutes to actually register what was going on.
“I just couldn’t process it. I did a lot of pacing. I know I did some yelling. I said some things I never say.’’
What happened next, supported by statements given by his wife and brother to the Auburn Police Department, is important because it shows that Lorditch, an Iraq combat veteran and honorably discharged US Marine, is capable of vast restraint.
His mind was racing, his temper understandably elevated. “The one thing that stuck with me is that neither of them was attacking me and I live my life by this,’’ he said. “The only time violence is ever justified is in self-defense. So even though I was going through hell at that moment, they were not attacking me.’’
Lorditch, a gun collector and former Marine marksmanship instructor, unloaded a gun he kept in the living room in front of his wife and brother, made no threats, and then left the house.
read more here
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Cater Ash Says ISIS Troops Info Taken From Social Media, Not DOD
Carter: Troop Data in Online Kill List Was Not Stolen
Associated Press
by Robert Burns
Mar 24, 2015
WASHINGTON — The names, photos and addresses of 100 U.S. military members posted online by a group calling itself the Islamic State Hacking Division were not stolen from confidential government files, Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Monday.
During a news conference at Camp David, Maryland, Carter was asked about the Internet listing over the weekend in which the purported hackers urged that the 100 individuals be murdered by sympathizers inside the U.S.
"The information that was posted by ISIL was information taken from social websites and publicly available," Carter said. "It wasn't stolen from any (Defense Department) websites or any confidential databases." He said the Pentagon, nonetheless, takes this event seriously.
Other officials have said it is being investigated by the FBI. "At the same time, this is the kind of social media messaging of a vile sort that ISIL specializes in" and is one reason the U.S. is determined to defeat the group, he added, using a common acronym for the Islamic State group that has captured large portions of territory in Iraq and Syria and beheaded a number of Americans.
read more here
Associated Press
by Robert Burns
Mar 24, 2015
WASHINGTON — The names, photos and addresses of 100 U.S. military members posted online by a group calling itself the Islamic State Hacking Division were not stolen from confidential government files, Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Monday.
During a news conference at Camp David, Maryland, Carter was asked about the Internet listing over the weekend in which the purported hackers urged that the 100 individuals be murdered by sympathizers inside the U.S.
"The information that was posted by ISIL was information taken from social websites and publicly available," Carter said. "It wasn't stolen from any (Defense Department) websites or any confidential databases." He said the Pentagon, nonetheless, takes this event seriously.
Other officials have said it is being investigated by the FBI. "At the same time, this is the kind of social media messaging of a vile sort that ISIL specializes in" and is one reason the U.S. is determined to defeat the group, he added, using a common acronym for the Islamic State group that has captured large portions of territory in Iraq and Syria and beheaded a number of Americans.
read more here
Google Maps Will Get Rural Veterans Care They Need, Yahoo! (Joy)
VA rule change could double number of vets eligible for health care
CBS
March 24, 2015
The change comes amid complaints from lawmakers and advocates who say the VA's current policy has prevented thousands of veterans from taking advantage of a new law intended to allow veterans in remote areas to gain access to federally paid medical care from local doctors.
The VA said it will now measure the 40-mile trip by driving miles as calculated by Google maps or other sites, rather than as the crow flies, as currently interpreted. The rule change is expected to roughly double the number of eligible veterans. "We've determined that changing the distance calculation will help ensure more veterans have access to care when and where they want it,"
Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert McDonald said in a statement. The change will be unveiled at a hearing Tuesday before the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.
read more here
UPDATE from the VA
CBS
March 24, 2015
Under the new interpretation, the distance veterans must travel will be calculated through commercial products such as Google maps or other websites, rather than a straight line.WASHINGTON -- Responding to pressure from Congress and veterans groups, the Department of Veterans Affairs is relaxing a rule that makes it hard for some veterans in rural areas to prove they live at least 40 miles from a VA health site.
The change comes amid complaints from lawmakers and advocates who say the VA's current policy has prevented thousands of veterans from taking advantage of a new law intended to allow veterans in remote areas to gain access to federally paid medical care from local doctors.
The VA said it will now measure the 40-mile trip by driving miles as calculated by Google maps or other sites, rather than as the crow flies, as currently interpreted. The rule change is expected to roughly double the number of eligible veterans. "We've determined that changing the distance calculation will help ensure more veterans have access to care when and where they want it,"
Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert McDonald said in a statement. The change will be unveiled at a hearing Tuesday before the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.
read more here
UPDATE from the VA
VA Works to Expand Choice Program Eligibility
03/24/2015
Eligibility criteria for 40 miles calculation would change to driving distance
Washington -- In order to expand eligibility for the Veterans Choice Program, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) today announced that it will change the calculation used to determine the distance between a Veteran’s residence and the nearest VA medical facility from a straight line distance to driving distance. The policy change will be made through regulatory action in the coming weeks. The Veterans Choice Program was authorized by the Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014 (VACAA).
“VA has worked very quickly to implement the Veterans Choice Program and we appreciate the constructive feedback shared by Veterans and our partners to help us improve service to Veterans,” said Secretary Robert McDonald. “We’ve determined that changing the distance calculation will help ensure more Veterans have access to care when and where they want it. VA looks forward to the ongoing support of our partners as we continue to make improvements to this new program.”
The method of determining driving distance will be through distance as calculated by using a commercial product. The change is expected to roughly double the number of eligible Veterans.
The Veterans Choice Program is a new, temporary benefit that allows eligible Veterans to receive health care in their communities rather than waiting for a VA appointment or traveling to a VA facility. Veterans seeking to use the Veterans Choice Program should call 1-866-606-8198 to confirm their eligibility and to schedule an appointment. Since the Choice Program went into effect on November 5, 2014, more than 45,000 medical appointments have been scheduled.
Using expanded authorities from VACAA, VA continues to expand access to care through increased staffing and enhanced collaboration with both the Indian Health Service and Native Hawaiian Health Care Systems. See the VACAA progress fact sheet here:
VA is enhancing its health care system and improving service delivery to better serve Veterans and set the course for long-term excellence and reform. VA has made significant progress in various areas of the legislation, such as extending the Assisted Living/Traumatic Brain Injury Pilot program and Project Arch, to expand timely access to high-quality health care for Veterans.
A fact sheet on the 40-mile-rule change can be found at VA 40 Mile Rule.
Patience Running Out for Spreaders of Misinformation on PTSD
Watchfires Only Work If You See the Light
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
March 24, 2015
When I was a kid and my parents tried to get me to understand something, when I finally got it, they said "Light dawns on Marblehead" not referring to the town in Massachusetts, but to my thick head.
There is a lot of talk about MILITARY TEENS AT HIGHER RISK FOR SUICIDE but while it may be new to the civilian world, it isn't' to us. None of this is. Vietnam veterans and their families set the watchfires decades ago. We didn't want this generation to go through what we did. So why hasn't the light dawned on everyone sitting at their keyboards feeling as if they just did something worthwhile?
As you can see in the following studies, there is nothing new other than congress increasing spending to "do something" without ever knowing if that something will make things better, or as we discovered, much worse.
There are several issues with the new reports attempting to usurp experiences of other veterans and their families. Especially when most of the research began because Vietnam veterans demanded it. They came home, pushed for someone to understand what combat did to them so they would not only take care of them and older veterans, but make damn sure it didn't happen to the next generation coming behind them. Can you understand what all these years of suffering, hearing promised made while the results proved no one really did much at all? Can you see what it puts them through when they see all their efforts leaving heartache and devastation instead of help ready and waiting for them?
They read about the arrests of younger veterans and remember when it happened to them and no one cared. As they sit in jail, they hear about some younger veterans, depending on where they live, being taken to veterans courts where they are given the opportunity and the resources to get help to heal instead of being locked behind bars.
As they read about younger veterans committing suicide, they remember how many of their own friends ended their battle the same way and far too many of the suicide survivors lament the fact it is still happening after decades of promises from Congress to save their lives.
Ok, so now it seems as if everyone is just repeating the same old story without adding in how long all of this has been going on. Here's some eye-openers for you because when it comes to all the "new" reports, they are all ghosts to them.
A report from 2011 shows that not much has changed. While the report was published that year, notice the years the references come from.
There are reports on incarcerated veterans committing suicide going back to 2009.
Suicide Among Incarcerated Veterans includes PTSD and TBI
There are decades worth of reports but just like the database I work on all day, no database is any good if folks delete records already entered. The reports were done in the US but major research on children was done in Australia as one of the leaders.
So if you are among the hacks out there just spreading this kind of misinformation, without ever once considering what you're doing, remember that as much as you think you may know, your database has just been generated while ours is running out of storage and, frankly, patience.
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
March 24, 2015
When I was a kid and my parents tried to get me to understand something, when I finally got it, they said "Light dawns on Marblehead" not referring to the town in Massachusetts, but to my thick head.
There is a lot of talk about MILITARY TEENS AT HIGHER RISK FOR SUICIDE but while it may be new to the civilian world, it isn't' to us. None of this is. Vietnam veterans and their families set the watchfires decades ago. We didn't want this generation to go through what we did. So why hasn't the light dawned on everyone sitting at their keyboards feeling as if they just did something worthwhile?
As you can see in the following studies, there is nothing new other than congress increasing spending to "do something" without ever knowing if that something will make things better, or as we discovered, much worse.
Morbidity of Vietnam veterans
Suicide in Vietnam veterans’ children
Supplementary report no. 1
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2000
Total suicide rate
On average, between the years 1988 and 1997, children of Vietnam veterans committed suicide at a rate three times higher than children in the general population (Table 2). Pre 1988 rates have not been included because of the very small numbers of suicides (17 deaths between 1980 and 1987) and the corresponding small veterans’ children population at risk in these years. Substantial annual fluctuations have occurred in suicide rates for the veterans’ children population between 1988 and 1997, due to the relatively small numbers of deaths involved. However, no evidence of any change in pattern since 1988 is apparent.
There are several issues with the new reports attempting to usurp experiences of other veterans and their families. Especially when most of the research began because Vietnam veterans demanded it. They came home, pushed for someone to understand what combat did to them so they would not only take care of them and older veterans, but make damn sure it didn't happen to the next generation coming behind them. Can you understand what all these years of suffering, hearing promised made while the results proved no one really did much at all? Can you see what it puts them through when they see all their efforts leaving heartache and devastation instead of help ready and waiting for them?
They read about the arrests of younger veterans and remember when it happened to them and no one cared. As they sit in jail, they hear about some younger veterans, depending on where they live, being taken to veterans courts where they are given the opportunity and the resources to get help to heal instead of being locked behind bars.
As they read about younger veterans committing suicide, they remember how many of their own friends ended their battle the same way and far too many of the suicide survivors lament the fact it is still happening after decades of promises from Congress to save their lives.
Ok, so now it seems as if everyone is just repeating the same old story without adding in how long all of this has been going on. Here's some eye-openers for you because when it comes to all the "new" reports, they are all ghosts to them.
Australian veterans’ health: Vietnam
Researched and written by Maria Swyrydan
August 2012
60,000 Australian military personnel were sent to Vietnam to aid the United States between 1962 and 1972. The US had backed the South Vietnam Government against nationalists and communists who were fighting to re-unify Vietnam.
*National conscription was introduced specifically for this war and 15,381 of the serving soldiers were involuntary conscripts.
*A small number of Australian civilians also went, including 210 volunteer civilian nurses, medical staff and entertainers.
Other long-term studies have found that being the partner or child of a Vietnam veteran with PTSD predicts suffering from mental disorder, which can in turn affect grandchildren. The wives and partners of Vietnam veterans have been found to experience higher levels of PTSD themselves. Suicide levels among veterans’ children are up to three times higher than the rest of the Australian population.
A report from 2011 shows that not much has changed. While the report was published that year, notice the years the references come from.
TOGETHER WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL: CONNECTEDNESS, SUICIDE, AND SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE MILITARY
POLICY BRIEF ǀ JUNE 2011
ANTHONY FULGINITI
ERIC RICE
Mental health issues, particularly posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and Major Depression, have been implicated in suicide in military populations. For instance, combat exposure has been identified as a risk factor for greater depression (Lapierre, Schwegler, and LaBauve, 2007), PTSD (Bullman and Kang, 1994; Elbogen, Beckham, Butterfield, Swartz, and Swanson, 2008), and substance abuse symptomatology (Hooper, Rona, Jones, Fear, Hull, and Wessely, 2008).
A recent RAND survey indicated that almost one-third of servicemembers returning from deployment in Iraq or Afghanistan suffered a traumatic brain injury (TBI) or satisfied the criteria for PTSD or Major Depression (Kuehn, 2009). PTSD has been found to be strongly associated with suicidal behavior (Kessler, 2000) and is a potent predictor of the trajectory from suicidal ideation to attempt (Nock, Hwang, Sampson, Kessler, Angermeyer, Beautrais, et. al., 2009).*
There are reports on incarcerated veterans committing suicide going back to 2009.
Suicide Among Incarcerated Veterans includes PTSD and TBI
Among those screening positive for PTSD, 70 percent reported witnessing death or injury, 56 percent reported being physically assaulted, 34 percent had experienced physical abuse as a child, 32 percent reported neglect as a child, 28 percent reported combat, and 16 percent reported being raped or sexually molested.
Little is also known about the frequency of TBI among incarcerated veterans; this may contribute to the unique qualities of this subpopulation of veterans as well, adding to disturbances in cognition, emotion, and behavior (impulsivity). Of note, forensic psychiatric populations feature relatively high rates of TBI,50 and survivors of TBI appear to face a heightened risk of suicide, which raises the disturbing possibility that there is a population of veterans incarcerated for crimes related to the cognitive and behavioral sequelae of TBIs sustained during military service and facing elevated suicideEssays On The Vietnam Conflict The Three Walls Behind the Wall By Michael Kelley is also really good. That's the problem.
There are decades worth of reports but just like the database I work on all day, no database is any good if folks delete records already entered. The reports were done in the US but major research on children was done in Australia as one of the leaders.
So if you are among the hacks out there just spreading this kind of misinformation, without ever once considering what you're doing, remember that as much as you think you may know, your database has just been generated while ours is running out of storage and, frankly, patience.
Not Everyone Who Came Home From War Actually Left There
Veterans Gather To Honor Richard Miles and Call for Change
WHO 13 News
BY STEPHANIE MOORE
MARCH 23, 2015
DES MOINES, Iowa–Iowans are remembering a fallen veteran and in light of his death are calling for change.
Army Veteran Richard Miles was honored Monday evening by fellow veterans and those pushing for change in veteran’s mental health care.
On Monday, Miles was laid to rest and the Veteran’s Cemetery on what would have been his 41st birthday.
Also, not everyone who came home from Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan ever left there. Richard Miles was one of those individuals,” says Former Executive Director for the Iowa Department of Veteran Affairs Pat Palmersheim.
The Veterans National Recovery Center hosted the event and say 22 veterans are committing suicide every day and if more isn’t done there will be more cases like Miles.
“There is no doubt the federal VA needs to do more to assist those veterans who have returned and been diagnosed with PTSD, they need their help and not just more medications,” says Palmersheim.
read more here
WHO 13 News
BY STEPHANIE MOORE
MARCH 23, 2015
DES MOINES, Iowa–Iowans are remembering a fallen veteran and in light of his death are calling for change.
Army Veteran Richard Miles was honored Monday evening by fellow veterans and those pushing for change in veteran’s mental health care.
On Monday, Miles was laid to rest and the Veteran’s Cemetery on what would have been his 41st birthday.
“Not everyone who lost their life in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan actually died there.
Also, not everyone who came home from Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan ever left there. Richard Miles was one of those individuals,” says Former Executive Director for the Iowa Department of Veteran Affairs Pat Palmersheim.
The Veterans National Recovery Center hosted the event and say 22 veterans are committing suicide every day and if more isn’t done there will be more cases like Miles.
“There is no doubt the federal VA needs to do more to assist those veterans who have returned and been diagnosed with PTSD, they need their help and not just more medications,” says Palmersheim.
read more here
Iraq Marine Veteran With PTSD Tormented by Coworkers
Corrections Officer Says PTSD Treated As Joke
Courthouse News
By DAVID KLEIN
March 23, 2015
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (CN) - A corrections officer and former Marine was repeatedly discriminated against by his supervisors and co-workers who saw his Post Traumatic Stress Disorder as something to ridicule, the Iraq War veteran claims in a lawsuit.
Christopher Fustos served in the Marine Corps in Iraq from February 2004 through November 2007, and was honorably discharged after being wounded in combat. According to the complaint he filed in the Knoxville Federal Court, the wounding was caused by an exploding hand grenade, and the explosion left him with numerous scars on his back.
Fustos was hired by Knox County, Tenn. on March 26, 2012, to work as a corrections officer. He says the discrimination he experienced began just over two years later, when, while working on July 4, a fellow officer yelled, "So Fustos, those scars on your back, are they direction arrows for your boyfriend so he knows where to stick it?"
"During this incident, Mr. Fustos' superiors (Lieutenants) were among the crowd laughing and cheering," the complaint says.
"Multiple incidents of discrimination and harassment occurred thereafter."
Fustos goes on to claim that during another incident his "co-workers took facility-provided gloves, and popped them loudly behind Mr. Fustos' ears, stating, 'Hey, I'm helping you with your PTSD! Its therapy for you!!'"
In addition he says, on two separate occasions stated in front of his fellow officers, "Hey Fustos, when your PTSD kicks in and you shoot up the place, remember who was nice to you and who gives you time off!"
read more here
Courthouse News
By DAVID KLEIN
March 23, 2015
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (CN) - A corrections officer and former Marine was repeatedly discriminated against by his supervisors and co-workers who saw his Post Traumatic Stress Disorder as something to ridicule, the Iraq War veteran claims in a lawsuit.
Christopher Fustos served in the Marine Corps in Iraq from February 2004 through November 2007, and was honorably discharged after being wounded in combat. According to the complaint he filed in the Knoxville Federal Court, the wounding was caused by an exploding hand grenade, and the explosion left him with numerous scars on his back.
Fustos was hired by Knox County, Tenn. on March 26, 2012, to work as a corrections officer. He says the discrimination he experienced began just over two years later, when, while working on July 4, a fellow officer yelled, "So Fustos, those scars on your back, are they direction arrows for your boyfriend so he knows where to stick it?"
"During this incident, Mr. Fustos' superiors (Lieutenants) were among the crowd laughing and cheering," the complaint says.
"Multiple incidents of discrimination and harassment occurred thereafter."
Fustos goes on to claim that during another incident his "co-workers took facility-provided gloves, and popped them loudly behind Mr. Fustos' ears, stating, 'Hey, I'm helping you with your PTSD! Its therapy for you!!'"
In addition he says, on two separate occasions stated in front of his fellow officers, "Hey Fustos, when your PTSD kicks in and you shoot up the place, remember who was nice to you and who gives you time off!"
read more here
Monday, March 23, 2015
Camp Lejeune Contamination Victims Include Thousands in Florida
Thousands in Florida potential victims of Marine camp contamination
Orlando Sentinel
By Elyssa Cherney
March 21, 2015
Christina Peach's parents welcomed a seemingly healthy baby into the world in 1975 at the Naval Regional Medical Center in Camp Lejeune, the North Carolina base where her father was stationed as a Marine sergeant.
Seven years later, a chemical consulting company found that water from the emergency-room sink contained 1,400 parts per billion of trichloroethylene — 280 times its regulatory limit for drinking water today — which "has been reported to produce liver and kidney damage and central nervous system disturbances in humans," according to a memo from Grainger Laboratories in 1982.
Peach, 39, who now lives in Mount Dora, believes the water she was exposed to in utero and as an infant is responsible for the kidney cancer she developed last year and for her father's premature death.
Doctors discovered the mass growing on her right kidney when she got a CT scan for appendicitis in January 2014. Her father, Michael Hightower, 61, died 10 months later from lung cancer that had spread to his brain, bladder and bones, she said.
read more here
Orlando Sentinel
By Elyssa Cherney
March 21, 2015
Christina Peach, 39, was diagnosed with stage 1 kidney cancer last year. Peach, who was born on the Marine base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, attributes her illness to contaminated groundwater she may have consumed while living nearby in 1975. Her father , Michael Hightower also died
(Tom Benitez, Orlando Sentinel)
Christina Peach's parents welcomed a seemingly healthy baby into the world in 1975 at the Naval Regional Medical Center in Camp Lejeune, the North Carolina base where her father was stationed as a Marine sergeant.
Seven years later, a chemical consulting company found that water from the emergency-room sink contained 1,400 parts per billion of trichloroethylene — 280 times its regulatory limit for drinking water today — which "has been reported to produce liver and kidney damage and central nervous system disturbances in humans," according to a memo from Grainger Laboratories in 1982.
Peach, 39, who now lives in Mount Dora, believes the water she was exposed to in utero and as an infant is responsible for the kidney cancer she developed last year and for her father's premature death.
Doctors discovered the mass growing on her right kidney when she got a CT scan for appendicitis in January 2014. Her father, Michael Hightower, 61, died 10 months later from lung cancer that had spread to his brain, bladder and bones, she said.
read more here
Iraq Veteran with PTSD Service Dog Wins Lawsuit Against Former Employer
Jury awards Iraq vet $28,600 in service-dog case
Chronicle
By Patrick Danner
March 23, 2015
SAN ANTONIO -- A federal jury on Monday awarded nearly $28,600 to an Iraq War veteran who sued his former employer, a Schlumberger subsidiary, over his request to bring a service dog to work to help him cope with his post-traumatic stress disorder.
Juan Alonzo-Miranda, 33, alleged that Schlumberger Technology Corp.'s delay in granting him a "reasonable accommodation" for his disability violated the Americans with Disabilities Act.
The company took about six months before it approved the request in November 2012.
read more here
Iraq Veteran Sues After PTSD Service Dog Not Allowed on Job
Chronicle
By Patrick Danner
March 23, 2015
SAN ANTONIO -- A federal jury on Monday awarded nearly $28,600 to an Iraq War veteran who sued his former employer, a Schlumberger subsidiary, over his request to bring a service dog to work to help him cope with his post-traumatic stress disorder.
Juan Alonzo-Miranda, 33, alleged that Schlumberger Technology Corp.'s delay in granting him a "reasonable accommodation" for his disability violated the Americans with Disabilities Act.
The company took about six months before it approved the request in November 2012.
read more here
Iraq Veteran Sues After PTSD Service Dog Not Allowed on Job
Artist Matt Mitchell Decade of 100 Veterans' Project
In artist’s project, veterans’ words complete their portraits
Stars and Stripes
By Heath Druzin
Published: March 22, 2015
So the artist sought understanding through a familiar medium: portraiture.
That was in 2005, and nine years later he finally completed “100 Faces of War Experience” and put it on display for the first time at the National Veterans Art Museum in Chicago.
Mitchell reflected the range of experiences of returning troops by creating 100 oil-on-canvas paintings, spending 40 to 80 hours on each life-size head-and-shoulders portrait.
Many times, the veterans would tell him their experiences, often painful ones, as he painted. Their stories were often emotionally draining, he said, but ultimately were “uplifting” and educational for him and viewers of the project.
“Sure, you talk about heavy things, and the project is pretty heavy, but you realize that every single [veteran] out there fills in part of the picture,” he said. read more here
Stars and Stripes
By Heath Druzin
Published: March 22, 2015
At times, it was a struggle for Mitchell, now 45, to make ends meet as the project became a full-time job. He was helped by a few grants and most of all by his wife, Rebecca Guay, a fellow artist whom he says made tremendous sacrifices to help him.As bombs fell on Baghdad and Kabul, Matt Mitchell went about his normal routine, an unaffected spectator while troops died overseas. “I found I could just live my life as if nothing was happening, and it got under my skin,” he said.
So the artist sought understanding through a familiar medium: portraiture.
That was in 2005, and nine years later he finally completed “100 Faces of War Experience” and put it on display for the first time at the National Veterans Art Museum in Chicago.
Mitchell reflected the range of experiences of returning troops by creating 100 oil-on-canvas paintings, spending 40 to 80 hours on each life-size head-and-shoulders portrait.
Many times, the veterans would tell him their experiences, often painful ones, as he painted. Their stories were often emotionally draining, he said, but ultimately were “uplifting” and educational for him and viewers of the project.
“Sure, you talk about heavy things, and the project is pretty heavy, but you realize that every single [veteran] out there fills in part of the picture,” he said. read more here
Veterans Court May Provide Intervention in Florida
Veterans court would provide intervention for troubled vets in Manatee-Sarasota
Bradenton Herald
BY JAMES A. JONES JR.
March 22, 2015
MANATEE -- A delegation from Bradenton-Sarasota visiting veterans court Monday in Pinellas County can expect to see a court proceeding that is unique, emotional and even uplifting.
Those who have watched Judge Dee Anna Farnell preside at veterans court describe her as passionate in her desire to help troubled vets overwhelmed by psychological and physical wounds suffered while in service to their country.
"She is a very dynamic person. She comes off the bench and stands next to the veteran," said Patrick Diggs, who serves as a justice-outreach coordinator for Bay Pines Veterans Affairs Healthcare System.
"It takes a special type of judge to facilitate the delicate balance between compassion, helping the veteran and public safety," Diggs said.
State Attorney Ed Brodsky of the 12th Judicial Circuit wants to explore launching veterans court in Manatee, Sarasota and DeSoto counties as a way of helping vets who honorably served the United States, and may be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, homelessness and unemployment. Veterans court would be keyed to nonviolent offenders who pose a threat to themselves but not society.
read more here
Bradenton Herald
BY JAMES A. JONES JR.
March 22, 2015
MANATEE -- A delegation from Bradenton-Sarasota visiting veterans court Monday in Pinellas County can expect to see a court proceeding that is unique, emotional and even uplifting.
Those who have watched Judge Dee Anna Farnell preside at veterans court describe her as passionate in her desire to help troubled vets overwhelmed by psychological and physical wounds suffered while in service to their country.
"She is a very dynamic person. She comes off the bench and stands next to the veteran," said Patrick Diggs, who serves as a justice-outreach coordinator for Bay Pines Veterans Affairs Healthcare System.
"It takes a special type of judge to facilitate the delicate balance between compassion, helping the veteran and public safety," Diggs said.
State Attorney Ed Brodsky of the 12th Judicial Circuit wants to explore launching veterans court in Manatee, Sarasota and DeSoto counties as a way of helping vets who honorably served the United States, and may be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, homelessness and unemployment. Veterans court would be keyed to nonviolent offenders who pose a threat to themselves but not society.
read more here
Vietnam Veterans Sings Song of Thanks at Soup Kitchen
Vietnam vet sings at Harrisburg soup kitchen
Lionel Gonzalez, 67, sings his thanks after a meal in March 2015 at Harrisburg's Downtown Daily Bread soup kitchen.
The Vietnam veteran and state retiree isn't homeless or necessarily needy. But he grew up hungry in Puerto Rico and knows well the value of a hot meal.
He says he likes spending time talking with other patrons at Downtown Daily Bread, where he plans to volunteer. He also said he likes the food. His spontaneous songs, belted in rich baritone, are his way of saying thanks.
Lionel Gonzalez, 67, sings his thanks after a meal in March 2015 at Harrisburg's Downtown Daily Bread soup kitchen.
The Vietnam veteran and state retiree isn't homeless or necessarily needy. But he grew up hungry in Puerto Rico and knows well the value of a hot meal.
He says he likes spending time talking with other patrons at Downtown Daily Bread, where he plans to volunteer. He also said he likes the food. His spontaneous songs, belted in rich baritone, are his way of saying thanks.
Maj. Gen. Harold Greene's Aide Honored at Pentagon
This soldier, wounded with a U.S. general killed in Afghanistan, was just celebrated at the Pentagon
Washington Post
By Dan Lamothe
March 23, 2015
In the Pentagon courtyard, the world was introduced Monday to Capt. Jeremy Haynes, a wounded U.S. Army officer whose life was intertwined with the death of the highest-ranking U.S. service member killed in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Haynes served as an aide to Maj. Gen. Harold Greene, of Falls Church, Va., when both of them were shot multiple times Aug. 5 by a lone gunman at an Afghan military training academy outside Kabul.
Greene was killed instantly, and Haynes was left paralyzed and with numerous life-threatening wounds, said Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter.
At least 18 people were wounded.
read more here
Washington Post
By Dan Lamothe
March 23, 2015
In the Pentagon courtyard, the world was introduced Monday to Capt. Jeremy Haynes, a wounded U.S. Army officer whose life was intertwined with the death of the highest-ranking U.S. service member killed in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Haynes served as an aide to Maj. Gen. Harold Greene, of Falls Church, Va., when both of them were shot multiple times Aug. 5 by a lone gunman at an Afghan military training academy outside Kabul.
Greene was killed instantly, and Haynes was left paralyzed and with numerous life-threatening wounds, said Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter.
At least 18 people were wounded.
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Navy Veteran and Couple Killed in Orlando Helicopter Crash
Police identify 3 dead in College Park helicopter crash
Orlando Sentinel
By Henry Curtis, Tiffany Walden
March 23, 2015
The trio that died in Sunday's helicopter crash in College Park were remembered Monday as sharing a love for aviation.
Police identified them as Bruce Teitelbaum, his wife Marsha Khan and friend Harry Anderson.
Teitelbaum, a licensed pilot, and his wife frequently few in helicopters, according to their Facebook pages.
And Anderson, a former bomb technician in the U.S. Navy, loved to fly, a friend said Monday.
Neighbor describes what they heard and saw when helicopter crashed in College Park. Preliminary reports say the three were flying around downtown Orlando before the crash, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.
"I don't know if it was a sightseeing flight or anything like that," said Eric Alleyne, an Air Safety Investigator for NTSB.
"We're just collecting data, documenting the site and collecting evidence that we find on scene," Alleyne said. "At this point, we don't have any cause to the accident."
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Orlando Sentinel
By Henry Curtis, Tiffany Walden
March 23, 2015
The trio that died in Sunday's helicopter crash in College Park were remembered Monday as sharing a love for aviation.
Police identified them as Bruce Teitelbaum, his wife Marsha Khan and friend Harry Anderson.
Teitelbaum, a licensed pilot, and his wife frequently few in helicopters, according to their Facebook pages.
And Anderson, a former bomb technician in the U.S. Navy, loved to fly, a friend said Monday.
Neighbor describes what they heard and saw when helicopter crashed in College Park. Preliminary reports say the three were flying around downtown Orlando before the crash, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.
"I don't know if it was a sightseeing flight or anything like that," said Eric Alleyne, an Air Safety Investigator for NTSB.
"We're just collecting data, documenting the site and collecting evidence that we find on scene," Alleyne said. "At this point, we don't have any cause to the accident."
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Camp Pendleton Marine Killed in Motorcyle Accident
Camp Pendleton Marine Dies in 805 Freeway Motorbike Crash
The man was 34-year-old Sacramento resident.
Patch.com
By Mirna Alfonso (Patch Staff)
March 23, 2015
A 34-year-old Camp Pendleton Marine was killed early over the weekend in a crash on Interstate 805 in Kearny Mesa.
The Marine, a Sacramento resident, crashed his speeding motorcycle into a Honda Accord, which had just been struck by a hit-and-run driver in the northbound lanes near exit ramp to Balboa Avenue about 3:45 a.m., Saturday, according to the California Highway Patrol and the county Medical Examiner’s Office.
He died at the scene.
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The man was 34-year-old Sacramento resident.
Patch.com
By Mirna Alfonso (Patch Staff)
March 23, 2015
A 34-year-old Camp Pendleton Marine was killed early over the weekend in a crash on Interstate 805 in Kearny Mesa.
The Marine, a Sacramento resident, crashed his speeding motorcycle into a Honda Accord, which had just been struck by a hit-and-run driver in the northbound lanes near exit ramp to Balboa Avenue about 3:45 a.m., Saturday, according to the California Highway Patrol and the county Medical Examiner’s Office.
He died at the scene.
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World War II Experiences Left Him Shattered But Not Broken
VA helps Iowa veterans tell their life stories
Des Moines Register
Tony Leys
March 23, 2015
The Vinton retiree was one of the first to volunteer for a new project in which VA staffers interview veterans and write up short biographies. The resulting essays are to be attached to the veterans' medical charts, to help VA health care providers understand their patients' perspectives.
Gualtier, 89, went decades without discussing the World War II experiences that left him shattered. But he's opened up in the past few years, because he wants younger veterans to avoid the mistake of trying to bury troubling memories.
"During combat, when I was into some really gory stuff, I never gave any thought about the effects it might have on me later," he told Stephanie Henrickson, a nurse who coordinates a mental health program for the regional VA system based in Iowa City.
Henrickson sat across from Gualtier at the VA's Coralville clinic one morning last week, taking notes in pen and capturing his gravelly voice on a digital recorder. She plans to write up his story, go over it with him, then put it in his medical file and give him a copy to share with his family. She has interviewed about 15 veterans so far as part of a pilot project in the Iowa City area and five other U.S. locations.
Most of Henrickson's interviews have taken an hour or so, but Gualtier's has required several sessions. He has so much to say.
In the most recent session, Henrickson asked Gualtier about his childhood in a small Ohio town during the Depression. "It seems like we always had it rough until the war broke out," he said. "It was a very, very hard time."
Des Moines Register
Tony Leys
March 23, 2015
"I cleaned out wounds. I patched them. I gave them morphine. I didn't have the stomach for it. I treated German soldiers and U.S. soldiers. They died just like we did. They were just like us, they had to do what they had to do. I felt helpless to alleviate terrible suffering, no matter how much I tried. Then over six years later, I came to realize that the work I did with so many other casualties helped prevent them from developing horrible consequences."
U.S. Army veteran John Gualtier, 89, of Vinton holds a photo of himself from World War II at the VA Outpatient Clinic in Coralville on Tuesday. He served as a medic in the war.CORALVILLE, Ia. –If the Department of Veterans Affairs wants to take down John Gualtier's life story, it's going to take a while.
(Photo: David Scrivner/Iowa City Press-Citizen)
The Vinton retiree was one of the first to volunteer for a new project in which VA staffers interview veterans and write up short biographies. The resulting essays are to be attached to the veterans' medical charts, to help VA health care providers understand their patients' perspectives.
Gualtier, 89, went decades without discussing the World War II experiences that left him shattered. But he's opened up in the past few years, because he wants younger veterans to avoid the mistake of trying to bury troubling memories.
"During combat, when I was into some really gory stuff, I never gave any thought about the effects it might have on me later," he told Stephanie Henrickson, a nurse who coordinates a mental health program for the regional VA system based in Iowa City.
Henrickson sat across from Gualtier at the VA's Coralville clinic one morning last week, taking notes in pen and capturing his gravelly voice on a digital recorder. She plans to write up his story, go over it with him, then put it in his medical file and give him a copy to share with his family. She has interviewed about 15 veterans so far as part of a pilot project in the Iowa City area and five other U.S. locations.
Most of Henrickson's interviews have taken an hour or so, but Gualtier's has required several sessions. He has so much to say.
In the most recent session, Henrickson asked Gualtier about his childhood in a small Ohio town during the Depression. "It seems like we always had it rough until the war broke out," he said. "It was a very, very hard time."
About the project
The Iowa City VA is one of six sites recently chosen to try the "My Life, My Story" project, which was pioneered in Madison, Wis.
Nurse Stephanie Henrickson said her agency plans to hire a full-time writer to do more such interviews and work up the stories.
Regular medical appointments usually focus on specific ailments, Henrickson explained. If a patient has heart issues, he'll get cardiac tests and questions. If a patient has a dermatology issue, the doctor will ask her about her skin. The storytelling project is an attempt to step back and get a sense of the patients as people and to understand what's important to them.
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