'There are no requirements': Service dog misrepresentation a growing problem
Veterans plead for fakers to stop as task force looks into issue
WMTV News
By David Charns
UPDATED 6:11 PM EST Feb 25, 2016
PORTLAND, Maine —The misrepresentation of service dogs in Maine has become such a large issue that the Legislature tasked a panel to find a way to resolve it.
"I said he's not a pet, he's a service dog,” Christopher Henry, of Auburn, said. “’And he then asked me, "for what?’”
It’s just one time someone has asked Henry if his service dog, Brewsky, is legitimate. The 17-year-old combat veteran has post-traumatic stress disorder. Brewsky is there to keep Henry calm and keep strangers a good distance away.
"We're hearing about it all the time,” said Jennifer Norris, of Bethel. Norris, a 15-year veteran, is a sexual assault survivor and her dog, Onyx, helps her with her PTSD.
Both dogs underwent rigorous training. Their owners said the animals keep them from isolating, something they said is common with veterans with PTSD.
"She helped pulled me out of the deepest darkest depression I've ever been in my life,” Morris said.
But some Mainers are faking it.
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Friday, February 26, 2016
Charges and Questions Surface Over PTSD "Service" Dog "Theft"
Considering Melnick "trained Kai to be her service dog" then the title should be simply "dog" unless she is a certified trainer.
Charges filed in alleged theft of service dog
San Diego Union Tribune
By Teri Figueroa
Feb. 25, 2016
Marine veteran Alexandra Melnick hugs German shepherd Kai in this September 2015 file photo. The pair were reunited that month after Kai was stolen from her Vista home ten months earlier. — Misael VirgenThe ex-husband of a Marine veteran whose service dog went missing in late 2014 — and was found in Texas last summer — has been charged with taking the dog, a case his attorney said Thursday is rooted in an ownership dispute.
Marine Gunnery Sgt. Pablo Cortes was charged last month with stealing Kai, a German shepherd, from ex-wife Alexandra Melnick. He has pleaded not guilty.
A preliminary hearing is set for mid-March in Vista Superior Court, where a judge will determine if there is enough evidence for the case to proceed to trial.
Cortes’ attorney, Alex Ozols, said his client contends that Melnick — whose search for Kai garnered news coverage — knew Cortes had taken the dog.
“They both loved that dog and they both wanted it,” Ozols said, adding that Cortes has said the dog is legally his.
The attorney also said his client is distraught over the criminal case, which could ruin his 11-year military career.
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Thursday, February 25, 2016
Patrick Murphy is sworn in as Army under secretary
Iraq veteran Patrick Murphy is sworn in as Army under secretary
Stars and Stripes
By Corey Dickstein
Published: February 24, 2016
WASHINGTON – Iraq war veteran Patrick Murphy was officially sworn in as the Army’s under secretary on Wednesday, about two months after the senate confirmed him for the position.
“This is such an awesome, awesome honor to be back in the Army family,” said Murphy, who served as a judge advocate officer in the 82nd Airborne Division in Baghdad in 2002 and 2003. He later taught law at The U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
In 2006, Murphy became the first Iraq War veteran to be elected to U.S. House of Representatives, serving the eighth congressional district in his native Pennsylvania from 2007 to 2011.
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Stars and Stripes
By Corey Dickstein
Published: February 24, 2016
WASHINGTON – Iraq war veteran Patrick Murphy was officially sworn in as the Army’s under secretary on Wednesday, about two months after the senate confirmed him for the position.
Patrick Murphy, the under secretary of the Army and the acting Army secretary, speaks Wednesday at the Pentagon after being officially sworn in as the Army's 32nd under secretary. COREY DICKSTEIN/STARS AND STRIPESThough the Pentagon ceremony officially installed him as the Army’s No. 2 civilian, he has been serving as the acting secretary of the Army since mid-January, when President Barack Obama’s choice for that role, Eric Fanning, stepped aside amid a political dispute.
“This is such an awesome, awesome honor to be back in the Army family,” said Murphy, who served as a judge advocate officer in the 82nd Airborne Division in Baghdad in 2002 and 2003. He later taught law at The U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
In 2006, Murphy became the first Iraq War veteran to be elected to U.S. House of Representatives, serving the eighth congressional district in his native Pennsylvania from 2007 to 2011.
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VA: Action on Wrongdoing in Cincinnati
PRESS RELEASE
VA Takes Action on Allegations of Wrongdoing in Cincinnati
Network Director Proposed for Removal, and Acting Chief of Staff Reassigned Pending Further Action
WASHINGTON -- The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced today actions against two senior leaders in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Based on preliminary results of a joint VA Office of Medical Inspector (OMI) and Office of Accountability (OAR) review conducted February 9-11, 2016 at the Cincinnati VA Medical Center, Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Sloan D. Gibson, has proposed the removal of Jack Hetrick, the Veterans Integrated Service Network (VISN 10) director, from Federal Service. oday, Mr. Hetrick submitted his retirement.
Additionally, VA’s Undersecretary for Health, Dr. David J. Shulkin, has detailed the Cincinnati VA Medical Center Acting Chief of Staff, Dr. Barbara Temeck, out of her current duties pending appropriate administrative action.
Hetrick received a notice of pending removal today. As of today, Shulkin has summarily suspended Temeck’s privileges and detailed her to non-patient-care duties while he considers appropriate additional actions.
“We are committed to sustainable accountability,” said Gibson. “We will continue to use VA’s statutory authority to hold employees accountable where warranted by the evidence. That is simply the right thing to do for Veterans and taxpayers.”
The VA joint team conducted the site visit to investigate allegations of professional misconduct on the part of Temeck along with allegations that she directed the referral of Veterans for care in the community as a cost-shifting mechanism, resulting in poor quality of care.
The team did not substantiate any impropriety with respect to community care referrals or quality of care for Veterans. However, the team did substantiate misconduct by both Hetrick and Temeck related to Temeck’s provision of prescriptions and other medical care to members of Hetrick’s family. VA OIG has accepted VA’s referral of the substantiated allegations for potential criminal investigation.
Florida Mug Shot Not So Funny When He's a War Hero With PTSD
Fred Grimm: Story of disabled combat vet muddled by strange “only in Florida” mug shot
Miami Herald
Fred Grimm
February 24, 2016
A strange jailhouse mug shot of a man whose face was smeared with black grease paint — that was irresistible stuff for a local media ever vigilant for bizarro material. We’re always looking for proof that we’re living in a caldron of crazy.
NBC 6 added the story to its “Only in Florida” feature: “A Virginia man was arrested in South Florida after several 911 callers claimed he was acting suspiciously.” There was a link to another story in the same category: “Naked woman kicks out police car window.”
Both ABC Channel 10 and the Sun-Sentinel ran with reports of the incident early Monday morning in Oakland Park, describing an arrest following 911 calls about a young man’s strange and threatening behavior.
Miami Herald
Fred Grimm
February 24, 2016
Bizarre booking photo of grease paint-smeared man was irresistible fodder for local media. Familiar “only in Florida” story line missed the part about three combat tours in Iraq. Veteran came back from Iraq with 100 percent disability for PTSD.We played Case No. 16001719MM10A for laughs, of course.
A strange jailhouse mug shot of a man whose face was smeared with black grease paint — that was irresistible stuff for a local media ever vigilant for bizarro material. We’re always looking for proof that we’re living in a caldron of crazy.
NBC 6 added the story to its “Only in Florida” feature: “A Virginia man was arrested in South Florida after several 911 callers claimed he was acting suspiciously.” There was a link to another story in the same category: “Naked woman kicks out police car window.”
Both ABC Channel 10 and the Sun-Sentinel ran with reports of the incident early Monday morning in Oakland Park, describing an arrest following 911 calls about a young man’s strange and threatening behavior.
Because, really, that crazy mug shot told us all we needed to know about Craig Bolin.
Except for a few missing details. Like Bolin’s three combat tours. With actual combat, including a stint with Charlie 1-26, the storied infantry outfit that lost more men in Iraq combat than any Army battalion since Vietnam. Sgt. Bolin posted a YouTube video in 2006 of a harrowing night fight as his unit fended off a siege of an Iraqi police station.
In 2009, Stars and Stripes featured a photograph of young Sgt. Bolin patrolling the Jamilla market on the outskirts of Sadr City, “a volatile Shiite slum in east Baghdad.” In 2009, volatile Shiite slum had become just another euphemism for hell.
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