Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Cause of arrest-PTSD


Orrin McClellan sits in the back of a Humvee in Afghanistan in June 2005. At that time he had been in the combat zone a little more than two months.
Photo courtesy of Orrin McClellan



Man involved in Choochokam brawl suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder
MICHAELA MARX WHEATLEY, Langley, Island County
mmarxwheatley@southwhidbeyrecord.com
Published: July 30, 2008 12:00 AM


LANGLEY — The man who allegedly attacked Langley Police officers during Choochokam Arts suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. And his family says the altercation with police was the result of nearly two years of suffering by a young veteran.

Orrin McClellan, 23, was arrested July 12 after he struggled with officers and threatened to kill them after police tried to stop him from kicking down barricades at the festival site.

“The period between Memorial Day and July 4th was torture for him. He was in Afghanistan,” said Judith Gorman, McClellan’s mother.

“He hasn’t taken off his combat fatigues since Memorial Day,” his mother said.

According to the police report, a Langley officer caught McClellan kicking over barricades at the festival. After a short foot chase, McClellan ambushed officer Corey Mills. A struggle ensued and McClellan yelled at the officer that he would kill him.

He shouted at Mills, saying that he was in the Army and that he was trained to kill people like him, the report said.

When another officer got involved, McClellan allegedly stuck his thumbs in the officers eyes. The officer had to seek medical treatment.

It took several officers to control McClellan.

The young veteran also asked police repeatedly to kill or shoot him, according to court records. Police finally gained control of McClellan and arrested him.
click post title for more

This could have happened if McClellan was having a flashback. His body may have been at the arts festival, but his mind could have been in Afghanistan.

1,250 Florida Veterans called VA suicide hotline in six months

VA Gets 55,000 Plus Suicide Calls
A Suicide Hotline Is Turning Into A Life Line For Veterans In Crisis.

July 28, 2008


(CBS) CBS News investigative producer Pia Malbran wrote this story for CBSNews.com.


More than 55,000 people - including about 22,000 who identified themselves as veterans - have called the Department of Veterans Affairs’ suicide hotline during its first year in operation and CBS News has learned that many of the calls, in recent months, have come from the mid to south central part of the country.

According to the VA’s own count, during a three month time period between March and May of this year, the regions where the highest number of calls originated include the states of Texas, Tennessee, Illinois and Florida among other surrounding areas. (California and Florida have the nation's largest veteran populations.)

Other data, obtained by CBS News, shows that during the first six months of the hotline’s operation, the state of Texas had more callers than any other state with 2,102 out of 21,439 calls. California came in second with 2,088 calls, then Florida (1,250 calls) and Massachusetts (1,051 calls.)
go here for more
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/07/28/cbsnews_investigates/main4300661.shtml

Groups Ask Court to Expedite PTSD Care

July 29, Lawsuit Update: Groups Ask Court to Expedite PTSD Care
Audrey Hudson


The Washington Times

Jul 29, 2008

July 29, 2008 - Two veterans groups have asked a federal appeals court to force the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to expedite disability claims and treat troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

The groups - Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans United for Truth Inc. - filed a notice Monday with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco to overturn a lower court ruling in their lawsuit. Filed in July 2007, their lawsuit claims that the VA system that identifies and processes sufferers of PTSD has collapsed.

Judge Samuel Conti, of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, rejected the lawsuit on June 25, saying the claims were outside of the court's jurisdiction and would require a complete overhaul of the VA by Congress.

The veterans groups contend that the VA and Congress do not have the exclusive right to decide due-process issues and that the courts have a pivotal role to help improve the lives of veterans suffering from the mental disorder.

"We think the judge's ruling is wrong, and where there is a wrong, there is some remedy," said the groups' attorney, Gordon P. Erspamer of the law firm Morrison & Foerster. "Look at all these soldiers coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan with horrible psychic wounds getting turned away from VA facilities."
go here for more
http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/ArticleID/10774

Again, all you have to do is think about the fact the suicide and attempted suicide rate has gone up in order to know someone else has to be the authority in this and make sure what needs to be done is done instead of someone just saying it is being done.

What are we doing when the citizen soldiers return?

Returning Troops Blunt Iraq as Campaign Issue in New Hampshire

By Hans Nichols

July 30 (Bloomberg) -- Sergeant Brian Moore had one foot in his bunker in April when a rocket exploded, spraying his back with a dozen bits of burning shrapnel. His spine swelled, paralyzing the New Hampshire National Guardsman for two days.

Two months later, back in New Hampshire from his second Iraq deployment, Moore, 47, told Republican presidential candidate John McCain that, even with his wounds, the U.S. troop surge has tamed the ``wild West'' conditions of Moore's first tour in 2003 and 2004. Now, Moore told McCain in a meeting before a town-hall meeting, Baghdad streets are as safe as ``downtown Nashua.''





Combat Troops

National Guard members, from military reserve units in every U.S. state, provided a bigger share of combat troops in Iraq and Afghanistan than they have in any other overseas conflict. Since hostilities began, almost 200,000 Guard troops have served in Iraq and more than 25,000 have been in Afghanistan.

At the peak, more than 95,000 Guard soldiers were in Iraq and 10,000 were in Afghanistan, said Major Randal Noller, a National Guard spokesman. Today, the force has fallen to 25,887 Guard troops in Iraq and 5,189 in Afghanistan -- the fewest since the march on Baghdad began in 2003.

Returning National Guard soldiers influence public perceptions of the war because most go directly back to civilian life, said Anthony Cordesman, a security analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

``Communities know when someone from the Guard is out, like a sheriff, a police officer or a doctor,'' Cordesman said. ``The whole community is likely to know it.''
click post title for more

I want to focus on addressing the National Guards unique issues here.

While they train to deal with emergencies in their own states, prepare for combat, they are not like the other members of the armed forces. For the branches of the regular military, living on bases, living in units, it is a lot easier for them to be deployed. They are leaving behind families, but the citizen soldiers also leave behind their jobs and their incomes as well. They do not return to bases. They return to work. A great deal of them are in the service to their local communities. Some in law enforcement. Some in fire departments. As this report points out, ``The whole community is likely to know it.'' This leaves a question needing to be answered. When they come home, does the community remember it?

Many of these citizen soldiers need help to heal from their wounds, physical and emotional. Many need help catching up on bills that they could not pay while living on military pay when they made more money in private life. Doctors and other highly paid people, along with blue collar workers and business owners, base their budgets on what their professions pay. With a year or more of deployment causing financial hardship, it only adds to the stress they and their families are under. There have been far too many reports of families having to rely on food stamps and being foreclosed on.

225,000 National Guard citizen soldiers have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. We can think of how they have been affected but we need to remember the families as well. Without the proper support of veterans centers and community involvement in taking care of their needs, they are falling thru the cracks. These men and women are our neighbors. There is a saying the military takes care of it's own but do communities take care of their own?

What are you doing in your community for them? Are there support groups set up for them? Are churches stepping up to help them heal the spiritual wounds? Are the police departments educated on what PTSD is and how it causes a unique issue when they come into contact with a combat veteran? Are employers aware of the need and are they doing anything about it?

There are communities across the nation preparing for the veterans to return. There are some courts addressing the unique circumstances of veterans but there are not enough of them. This should be done in every state and especially in states with sparse populations. Every community should not only be aware of what PTSD is, they need to set up programs to help them heal. If you are a community organizer, work in a City Hall or Town Hall, find the people with the power to begin the programs to address the needs of the citizen soldiers. If you attend a church, make sure your pastor, minister or priest is aware of what PTSD is and what they can do to help members of their church family. If you are involved in hospitals, make sure nurses and doctors are aware of this and the hospital chaplains are capable of serving the veteran and the family.

I belong to NAMI and the IFOC, among other organizations. There have been too many people telling me there is nothing being done in their own communities. Right here in central Florida, I visited over 20 churches to make them aware of the needs our veterans have. Only one pastor contacted me and he happened to be a chaplain as well. They need to step up or they are not really serving their congregations. We notice when someone in the National Guard has been deployed and they notice when they come home and no one seems to care. Let's get this right for them.



Senior Chaplain Kathie Costos
International Fellowship of Chaplains
Namguardianangel@aol.com
www.Namguardianangel.org
www.Woundedtimes.blogspot.com
"The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation." - George Washington

South Florida Veterans Center Grand Opening

SOUTH FLORIDA VETERANS
MULTI-PURPOSE CENTER
4311 SW 63RD AVENUE
DAVIE, FL 33314
954-791-8603





YOU ARE INVITED TO A GRAND OPENING





SOUTH FLORIDA VETERANS MULTI-PURPOSE CENTER’S

NEW MILITARY VETERANS, NATIONAL GUARD

SUPPORT CENTER



DEMONSTRATION OF EQUINE ASSISTED THERAPY FOR DISABLED VETERANS



TYPICAL AGENDA OF THE WEEKEND RETREAT PROGRAM



MEET VA AND COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS,

COMMUNITY ELECTIVE OFFICIALS,

PROGRAM SPONSORS,

NATIVE AMERICAN HEALING,

CENTER VOLUNTEERS,

VETERANS ORGANIZATIONS,

HORSE PROFESSIONALS,





FREE FOOD AND BEVERAGES



PLEASE RSVP TO 954-791-8603



AUGUST 3RD 2008 NOON TILL

I was honored to have been invited to this but unfortunately I cannot attend. They are showing some of my videos. My heart is tugged but I cannot get out of a prior commitment. If you live in Florida, please go to the Grand Opening and show your support of this. Veterans centers are vital in the healing of our veterans. There is not enough help to go around for them and many do not want to turn to the VA for help and support. Please support all veterans centers, not just for the new veterans, but all veterans.

Davie is near Fort Lauderdale.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Flag-raising Marine recognized as an American citizen

Flag-raising Marine recognized as an American citizen
WASHINGTON — The flag raising at Iwo Jima has become an iconic American image, so federal officials were surprised to learn recently that one of the men was never fully recognized as an American citizen.

Sgt. Michael Strank, one of the Marines immortalized while struggling to lift Old Glory, was officially honored as a U.S. citizen and hero at a ceremony Tuesday in front of the Marine Corps War Memorial in Virginia. It was long overdue.
click above for more

Church shooting witness screamed "why" in gunman's face

No matter what Adkisson uses for an excuse of why he did this, it will never make sense. That's what happens when someone does such an evil act.

Witness screamed 'Why?' in gunman's face
Story Highlights
Eric Dixon was watching daughter in church play when shooting began on Sunday

Dixon and other church members rushed the gunman and subdued him

Shooting killed two, injured seven; suspect says hatred of liberals was motive

Police chief says more might have died without church members' action



(CNN) -- Eric Dixon was watching his daughter act in a church production of the musical "Annie" on Sunday in Knoxville, Tennessee, when paternal pride turned to horror.

"We heard a loud boom. I looked up at my daughter on the stage and she was looking up at the lights and I figured a light blew up or something," Dixon said. "I looked up and then the second shot happened."

The 12-gauge shotgun blasts were the opening rounds of an attack that killed two people at the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church.

Six people were wounded by gunfire. A seventh person was injured diving under a pew. Four patients remain hospitalized.
go here for more
http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/07/29/shooting.witness/index.html

Man arrested in death Spc. Megan L. Touma

Man arrested in death of pregnant soldier

The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Jul 29, 2008 21:48:35 EDT

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — Police in North Carolina say they’ve arrested a suspect in the death of a pregnant soldier whose body was found in a motel bathtub.

Fayetteville police said Tuesday that 27-year-old Edgar Patino has been charged with first degree murder in the death of Army Spc. Megan L. Touma.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2008/07/ap_pregnantsoldier_072908w/

PTSD on Trial: Iraq vet with PTSD "had big plans for violence"

Pewaukee Tactical Suspect Had Big Plans For Violence
Today's TMJ4 - Milwaukee,WI,USA

Mick Trevey
Katie DeLong
Erin Drew Kent

PEWAUKEE - New information about the man behind a bomb threat at Pewaukee’s City Hall Tuesday: he claimed to have big plans for violence.

Suspect Malcolm Richards, 26, told Pewaukee police he wanted to steal a gun and a squad car and go on a shooting spree.

Richards told officers he wanted to shoot lawmakers in Madison and Washington, D.C.

Richards doesn't fit the profile of a typical criminal. He's a college graduate. He's an Iraq war veteran. His mom told officials he has post traumatic stress disorder.

Richards was in court Tuesday on charges he locked himself in a City Hall bathroom claiming to have a bomb.

We learned Tuesday that the SWAT unit used pepper spray to get him out.
go here for more
http://www.todaystmj4.com/news/local/26069459.html

Report appears to clear KBR in Sgt. Ryan Maseth's death

Report appears to clear KBR in soldier's death
The Associated PressPublished: July 29, 2008

WASHINGTON: An interim Defense Department report has found no evidence KBR was involved in the death of at least one U.S. soldier electrocuted in Iraq.

The inspector general's report said while electrical systems in Iraq were known to "pose a hazard to personnel," there is no evidence Houston-based KBR Inc. was aware of any life-threatening hazards at the Army barracks where Sgt. Ryan Maseth died.

Maseth, an Army Ranger and Green Beret from Pittsburgh, was electrocuted in January while showering.

Details of the IG report explain that an ungrounded water pump on the roof of Maseth's barracks failed and electrified the water pipes. Additionally, a circuit breaker failed because tar from roof repairs appeared to have leaked into the panel.

Maseth's mother, Cheryl Harris, has filed a lawsuit in Pennsylvania against KBR over her son's death. Her attorney, Patrick Cavanaugh, said the inspector general's conclusions do not change their position that KBR is at fault in Maseth's death.
click post title for more