Saturday, January 5, 2013

4 dead, including gunman, in Aurora, Colorado

Police: 4 dead, including gunman, in Aurora, Colo., hostage situation
By NBC News staff
Updated at 12:45 p.m. ET:

Three people were found dead inside a home in Aurora, Colo., after a gunman took them hostage early Saturday morning, police told NBC affiliate KUSA. The gunman was also shot and killed by police after hours of failed negotiation attempts.

Another person who had been inside the house was able to escape and alert authorities, KUSA reported.

Officers were called to a town home around 3 a.m. after reports of shots fired. Several nearby homes were evacuated for safety reasons and police sent out emergency notifications for the other residents in the area.
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UPDATE

Four dead in hostage-taking in Aurora, Colorado
By Keith Coffman
AURORA, Colo.
Sat Jan 5, 2013

(Reuters) - Four people, including the gunman, were dead following a hostage-taking incident on Saturday in Aurora, Colorado, the same town where a man shot dead 12 people and wounded 58 more in a movie theater last July, police told reporters.

After nearly six hours of failed negotiations, police killed the gunman as he opened fire on them through a second-story window of a townhouse where he had barricaded himself, said Aurora police spokeswoman Cassidee Carlson.

It was unclear from police and media reports whether officers entered the home or shot the man through the window. KUSA television reported that he was killed after police fired tear gas and entered the home, where they found three more bodies.

The victims were believed to be related to the gunman, Carlson said.
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Latest UPDATE

Four dead in townhouse shooting in Aurora, Colorado
Sat Jan 5, 2013 5:26pm
About an hour later, the gunman began firing at police again from a second-floor window, and police returned fire, killing the suspect, according to a police statement following the incident. No police were wounded.

Who is responsible for military suicides now?

Who is responsible for military suicides now?
by Kathie Costos
Wounded Times Blog
January 5, 2012



If no one is held accountable for military suicides what do you think will happen?

A year ago today this was the headline
Marine Corps suicides plunge
2010 drop is first in four years; but reported attempts continue to climb
Written by
Gretel C. Kovach
9:46 a.m., Jan. 5, 2011

The number of suicides among active-duty Marines dropped last year for the first time since 2006, plunging 29 percent below 2009's record high, according to preliminary figures released by the Marine Corps.

In 2010, 37 Marines committed suicide, compared to 52 in 2009. The latest numbers include nine suspected suicides yet to be confirmed by the Armed Forces Medical Examiner.

The number of attempted suicides, however, continued to climb, with 173 attempts in 2010 compared to 164 the previous year. That is the highest number since the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq began.

Rigorous new reporting requirements for attempted suicides may be partly responsible for the higher numbers of documented attempts in recent years, said Lt. Cmdr. Andrew L. Martin, a clinical psychologist who took over in September as manager of the Marine Corps Suicide Prevention Program.


This was released before the December figures came out for 2012
Big news the earth is not round and too many suicides
Of that total, the Army accounted for 168, surpassing its high last year of 165
53 sailors took their own lives, one more than last year.
The Air Force and Marine Corps are only a few deaths from record numbers. Fifty-six airmen had committed suicide as of Nov. 11, short of the 60 in 2010.
There have been 46 suicides among Marines, whose worst year was 2009 with 52.
Yet this was the headline yesterday for the Army.

Majority of Army casualties in 2012 likely suicides
CBS NEWS
January 4, 2013

The number of active-duty Army service members who died by their own hands in 2012 potentially has surpassed the number killed in action, according to data from the Pentagon. And as the number of Americans killed in Afghanistan declined in 2012 from the previous year, the number of suspected suicides has risen.

Preliminary information released by the Army in December showed that, as of November, there have been 177 suspected active-duty suicides: 113 have been confirmed as suicides, while 64 remained under investigation. Among not-on-active-duty service members (Army National Guard and Army Reserve) there have been 126 suspected suicides: 97 have been confirmed as suicides and 29 were under investigation.

In contrast, the Department of Defense said 295 Americans were killed in Afghanistan in 2012, out of a total 394 ISAF forces killed while supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

U.S. Army officials have been worried about the suicide rate despite the military's efforts to increase outreach and programs aimed at recognizing troubled service members.
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I tried to leave a comment on CBS about how much they were missing in the report but it didn't go through. Imagine that! Anyway, my comment was about the fact that when they point out the "non-deployed" troops they never seem to mention the fact that when you take a kid out of high school, put them through training, that in itself is traumatic for some of them. They are not prepared for it but they can't just say, "I quit" and go back home as if they quit a job pumping gas. They train to use their weapons, facing the fact they are training to kill someone at the same time they are discovering bullets are the least of the things they need to be afraid of. The IED attacks killing many and wounding more is an initiation they didn't expect. Still that is not the only problem they face with training. They are trained to also be "resilient" so they can become mentally tough enough and prevent PTSD. That tells them they are weak minded and as for sharing their fears it is hell no! I've been saying this since 2008 and now there is proof I was right. Read this part.

Almost three-quarters of troops who commit suicide do not inform others they are thinking about harming themselves, according to the latest Department of Defense Suicide Event Report. In light of that, the military trains troops to be vigilant for signs of suicidal tendencies among comrades. North County Times


Yet congress has held no one accountable for any of this. The DOD admitted they did not spend all the money they received for PTSD and suicide prevention, then add in all the funding for research that was done and redone over the last 40 years topping off with the fact the suicide prevention hotline states they have rescued 30,000 and the cherry on top of that is we still have all these deaths all this time later.

Wonder what the headline will be next year?

Former Marine killed by sheriff's deputy had PTSD

Parents: Former Marine killed by sheriff's deputy had PTSD
By FELICIA KRIEG
Press-Republican
January 5, 2013

PLATTSBURGH — Dusty Michael Clark suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, his mother says.

The Altona man, 28, was shot and killed by Clinton County Sheriff’s Deputy Jason R. Winters on Dec. 30, 2012, after Dusty threatened him with a knife and wouldn’t back down, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

He was diagnosed in 2009 at a Veteran’s Affairs clinic in Albany but was not receiving treatment at the time of his death, said his mother, Sheila Clark of Altona.

“At first, in my heart, I was so hurt (that Dusty died that way),” she said. “In retrospect, I am thinking my son had a flashback” when he grabbed the knife.

The day her son died, Sheila said, one of her brothers shared some information that Dusty had confided to him.

He had been among Marines who responded after the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami that rocked the world on Dec. 26, 2004.

“He had to take bodies out of the water,” she said. “Dead children.”
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Fort Carson 1st LT faces 100 years in prison

Alabama police release new details on Fort Carson soldier arrest
Emily Allen
General Assignment Reporter
Jan 03, 2013
EL PASO COUNTY, Colo.

Alabama police released new details on Thursday behind the charges on an arrest warrant for a Fort Carson soldier.

The El Paso County Sheriff's Office arrested 1st Lt. Aaron G. Lucas on Thursday on an arrest warrant from Madison, Ala., with charges of enticing a child and sexual child abuse of a child less than 12 years of age.
There are still a lot of unfinished cases involving Lucas. He faces 23 charges of sex crimes against young girls in El Paso County. He was arrested on Oct. 23, 2012, in connection with an El Paso County kidnapping case, a separate enticement of a child case and his connection to similar cases from other area jurisdictions.

He is accused of crimes in 14 incidents dating back to 2010. The charges he faces could put him in prison for more than 100 years. He was free on a $730,000 bond when the latest warrant was issued.

Lucas is an Afghanistan veteran who was awarded the Bronze Star.
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Marine receives medal for saving life in Afghanistan

Marine awarded medal
HHS grad saves worker's life in Afghanistan
Jan 4, 2013
Written by
Tena Lee
Sumner A.M.

Those who know 24-year-old Justin Williams were not surprised to learn that he saved a stranger’s life recently while serving in Afghanistan.

Williams, a 2006 graduate of Hendersonville High School, was recently awarded the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal for Meritorious Achievement for risking his own life and freeing a construction worker from a collapsed building at Camp Leatherneck, a U. S. Marine Corps base in the war-torn country.

“Corporal Williams' decisive action undoubtedly saved the constructions worker's life and prevented further injury,” reads the citation issued Nov. 27 by the U. S. Navy Department. “Corporal Williams' initiative, perseverance, and total dedication to duty reflected credit upon him and upheld the highest traditions of the Marine Corps and United States Naval Service.”

The citation says Williams risked his own safety by entering the collapse site, spotting the worker’s foot, and digging him out of three-foot-high dirt and debris with his bare hands.
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