Tuesday, May 26, 2009

What Steven Green’s Case Says About the Health of America’s Military

I've posted about Steven Green and this trial on my other blog at Screaming In An Empty Room and to tell you the truth, the comments left there show how little people think about what is an alarming thought. The troops, however noble and rare most of them are, there are some with clearly other reasons for going into the military. There were waivers given with two active military campaigns going on allowing people that would never be allowed to served otherwise in, people with criminal records, gangs and even medically unfit. Green's actions were appalling, reprehensible, but if we fail to take a look behind the obvious, we will learn nothing.

This is a great article on some thoughts behind the trial of Steven Green.

What Steven Green’s Case Says About the Health of America’s Military
Matthew Newton
Mental Notes
This past Friday, former U.S. Army soldier Steven Green was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of four Iraqi civilians in March of 2006. Green’s case, and countless others, have become an example of the military’s growing failure to properly screen recruits prior to enlistment (e.g. Green was one of over 5,000 soldiers granted conduct waivers in 2005). And the fact that news of Green’s sentencing came just as the nation started the Memorial Day weekend acts as a sobering example of not only the horrors of war, but the psychic cost to both civilians and veterans.

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What Steven Green Case Says About the Health of America’s Military

Death of Pfc. James Coon was too much for step-mom

Two years after the death of her step-son, Marie Coon committed suicide unable to overcome the grief of his death. When we think about the fallen, especially as we did this past weekend for Memorial Day ceremonies around the nation, we need to also acknowledge the families of the fallen. We remember the sacrifices once a year, but they remember them everyday and every year.

Stepmother's grief over Iraq death leads to suicide
By Theresa Harrington
Contra Costa Times
Posted: 05/25/2009 01:45:51 PM PDT

WALNUT CREEK — Marie Coon is an Iraq war casualty. But not in the traditional sense.

Her stepson's fatal injuries from a sniper attack in Iraq in 2007 ended up causing two deaths — his and hers.

"She was having a hard time dealing with Jimmy's death," her husband, Jim Coon said Friday. "She just kept saying how she missed Jimmy."

On Mother's Day — after struggling for more than two years to cope with the loss of the young man she loved as her son — Marie committed suicide by locking herself in the cab of a pickup truck at Lake Arrowhead with portable lighted barbecues and a pail of burning coals. She left a note, saying she wanted to be with Jimmy. She was 48.


"I'm just walking around pretty much in a daze," said Jim, 51, who moved with his wife about a year ago from Walnut Creek to Paradise in Northern California. "I'm hoping that she's in heaven. I'm hoping she's with Jimmy. If she's not, I hope she's having a great life wherever she is. I never wanted to see her get hurt."

Jim said he planned to attend Walnut Creek's Memorial Day service Monday with his daughter and brother, to honor his son Army Pfc. James Coon and Cpl. Sean Langevin. Both were Walnut Creek soldiers who died in Middle East conflicts.
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http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_12446527

Pfc. James J. Coon 22 1st Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division Walnut Creek, California Died of wounds suffered when a roadside bomb detonated near his vehicle in Balad, Iraq, on April 4, 2007

Troops in Iraq, Afghanistan honor their fallen at Camp Victory


Troops in Iraq, Afghanistan honor their fallen

By Chelsea J. Carter and Heidi Vogt - The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday May 26, 2009 8:51:00 EDT

BAGHDAD — American troops on Memorial Day honored their fallen on two battlefields, one war winding down and another ramping up. In Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. military remembered the toll so far on the troops — more than 4,900 dead — with the outcome still unclear.

In Iraq, soldiers and Marines stood solemnly during a playing of Taps at Baghdad’s Camp Victory. They saluted a memorial of a single helmet propped on a rifle beside a pair of boots.

Thousands of miles away, in the Afghan capital of Kabul, soldiers left mementos at a similar memorial for two comrades who recently died.

“Memorial Day for us is intensely personal,” Gen. David McKiernan, the outgoing U.S. commander in Afghanistan, told a crowd at Camp Eggers. The training command based there has lost 70 soldiers since last Memorial Day.

“It is the empty seat in the mess hall, the battle buddy who is no longer here, or the friend who did not return from patrol. And it is the commitment to carry on with the mission in their honor,” McKiernan said.
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http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/05/ap_iraq_afghanistan_memorial_day_052609/

Soldier’s death at Knox leads to changes

Soldier’s death at Knox leads to changes

The Associated Press
Posted : Monday May 25, 2009 14:21:58 EDT

FORT KNOX, Ky. — Indiana National Guard Sgt. Gerald “G.J.” Cassidy, who served his country in Bosnia and Iraq, died alone and ignored in a barracks at Fort Knox from an accidental drug overdose.

His fate left a legacy that has changed the lives of thousands of wounded soldiers, Army officials say. The Louisville Courier-Journal reported Sunday that his death in September 2007 led to improvements at Fort Knox and all 45 Warrior Transition Units nationwide devoted to healing war wounds and getting soldiers back to military jobs or productive civilian lives.

“Any time you lose a soldier, you have to go back and examine what you’ve done wrong. It’s very apparent that mistakes were made with Sgt. Cassidy,” said Lt. Col. Gary Travis, battalion commander of the Fort Knox unit. “Cassidy’s incident occurred during a time of transition.”

Cassidy began experiencing migraine headaches after a roadside bomb exploded about 11 feet from his Humvee in Iraq in August 2006. With diagnoses of post-traumatic stress disorder and mild traumatic brain injury, Cassidy returned to the U.S. in April 2007 and was sent to Fort Knox, which launched its Warrior Transition Unit that June.
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http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/05/ap_SoldierMedical_052509w/

Veterans' Memories Can Haunt, But Also Heal, on Memorial Day

Veterans' Memories Can Haunt, But Also Heal, on Memorial Day
By Josh Farley (Contact)
Monday, May 25, 2009


POULSBO

So quickly the wounded came aboard USS Sanctuary that MaryAnne Harris recalls the "mud on their cammies was still wet."

Harris, a retired nurse and commander who served in the Vietnam War aboard the Sanctuary, a hospital ship, had once been unable to reminisce on the horrors she witnessed while on duty. Harris felt she would cry, "and never stop," she said.

But on Monday, Harris addressed a gathered crowd of veterans and non-vets alike at the Poulsbo waterfront gazebo at a Memorial Day ceremony, not only revisiting her Vietnam experiences, but encouraging others to let their own memories surface.

The event was hosted by Poulsbo American Legion Post 245 and Kingston VFW Post 2463.

She told the crowd of her post-traumatic stress disorder, which for years kept her from recognizing a holiday like Memorial Day.

But she would learn to face her fears, and — just as she helped heal the physical wounds during the war — Harris has learned to counsel veterans to face their own emotional wounds following combat.

One in three veterans suffer from PTSD, she told a crowd at the Poulsbo event. Some don't report it, and some even take their own lives, succumbing to it.

In 1991, Harris collected the courage to visit Washington D.C., and see the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall. At first she couldn't go to the site, because, "it represented my failures," she felt.

She finally went and began looking at the names on the wall. When she came upon a 19-year-old's name she recognized, Harris said she began to look back on her painful past.
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Veterans Memories Can Haunt, But Also Heal, on Memorial Day

Horses help returning soldiers

Horses help returning soldiers

RYN GARGULINSKI

Tucson Citizen
Soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan are finding horses can be a man's best friend.

A group of horses called The Warriors in Transition Unit are helping soldiers with their return to their home turf.

For soldiers coming back from Afghanistan or Iraq, the transition back into society can be a tough one.

As strange it may sound, horses are helping them overcome survivor's guilt, battlefield nightmares and the transition back into society.
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http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/ss/fromcomments/116768.php

Missing Fort Carson Soldier Found Dead


Carson issues alert on AWOL soldier

CARLYN RAY MITCHELL
THE GAZETTE

The Army is asking for help in finding an AWOL Fort Carson soldier who may be armed.

Police and residents are asked to be on the lookout for Pfc. Roy Mason Jr., 28, and the 2008 red Chevy Cobalt he rented from Enterprise with CO license plate 253SOX.

Mason is part of Carson's Warrior Transition Unit, to which physically and psychologically wounded soldiers are assigned as they recover or wait for reassignment.
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http://www.gazette.com/news/carson-54506-fort-mason.html

UPDATE

Missing Fort Carson Soldier Found Dead

Posted: 6:48 PM May 22, 2009
Last Updated: 11:09 PM May 22, 2009

Fort Carson officials tell 11 News a 28-year-old soldier who has been missing since Tuesday has been found dead in California.

Brandy Gill, a Fort Carson spokesperson says PFC Roy Mason II was found dead this afternoon in Santa Cruz, California by the Santa Cruz Police Department.

Gill said she could not release any other details because the death is still under investigation.

A California newspaper is reporting that Mason's death was a suicide. Fort Carson officials would not confirm.

PFC Roy Mason II, was assigned to the Warrior Transition Unit, and was listed as AWOL Tuesday when he did not report to the morning's accountability formation.
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http://www.kktv.com/news/headlines/45878117.html

Fort Hood investigating soldier's death on post


Fort Hood investigating soldier's death on post
© 2009 The Associated Press
May 20, 2009, 7:15PM

FORT HOOD, Texas — Fort Hood officials are investigating the death of a soldier found in his barracks, at least the fourth such incident this year at the Central Texas Army post.

Spc. Caleb Allen Bezanson, 28, of Ridgecrest, Calif., was found unresponsive Monday in his room by fellow soldiers and was later pronounced dead after being taken to the Army hospital, Fort Hood officials said Wednesday in a news release.

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Soldier's wife charged with having him killed

Austin woman charged in murder for money plot

Posted: May 20, 2009 12:11 PM EDT

by Patrick Tolbert

KILLEEN - An Austin woman is facing capital murder charges after police say she paid friends to kill her ex.

On October 14, Killeen Police met Fort Hood officials at an apartment in the 3400 block of Girard to conduct a welfare check after a soldier failed to show up for work. When officials made their way into the residence, they found the body of 26-year-old Ryan Michael Sullivan. His death was ruled a homicide.

Austin Police served a search warrant on Kathryn Nellie Briggs' home Tuesday. Officers seized a number of personal items, documents and computer hardware during the search.

According to police documents, Sullivan's Army insurance policy named Briggs as a beneficiary of $100,000. Briggs, who is also known as Kate Briggs and Arianna Benitez, then "intentionally and knowingly cause the death" of Ryan Sullivan.
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Austin woman charged in murder for money plot

PTSD Caused Him To Forget He Was Still Married?

Is this a case of abusing PTSD or can this be for real? Somehow I doubt it's really what happened. While I am not a psychiatrist and do not play one on the blog, there doesn't seem to be any condition of PTSD that makes them forget something as important as being married and having five kids. Short term memory loss, sure, this happens all the time, but we're talking about having five children and a wife, not what he had for dinner the night before.


Woman Upset Husband Legally Has 2nd Wife
Man Says PTSD Caused Him To Forget He Was Still Married

POSTED: 5:12 pm CDT May 20, 2009

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. -- An Independence woman said her husband abandoned his family before the war and when he came back, he got a new wife and baby and a new life.

Marcella Rivera found out about her husband William Rivera’s possible bigamy in an unusual way. Her mother saw him on a Valentine's Day television special last year, marrying another woman. Rivera said she was floored, because he was still married to her.

"I don't think he should get away with it," said Marchella Rivera.

But he may have done just that.


Rivera found out Friday that the criminal bigamy charges against her husband were dropped. She said his attorney stated that he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a condition he suffered after his military tour in Iraq. Rivera said he didn't remember still being married to her and thought they were divorced.

"I guess if I truly believe in my heart that he didn't know, then OK, yes, he has PTSD and he didn't know; Iraq totally messed him up. But I know he knew he was married, because we had discussed it," she said.

Rivera said she filed for divorce before his second marriage, but they dismissed the case and were going to reconcile for the sake of the five children they have together.
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Woman Upset Husband Legally Has 2nd Wife

Monday, May 25, 2009

Paying tribute at Arlington

Paying tribute at Arlington

The Associated Press
Posted : Monday May 25, 2009 14:29:46 EDT

WASHINGTON — Barack Obama marked his first Memorial Day as president Monday, saluting the men and women of America’s fighting forces, both living and dead, as “the best of America.”

The president spoke after participating in a solemn holiday tradition, laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery, the burial ground for American veterans dating to the Revolutionary War.

In brief remarks after laying the wreath and observing a moment of silence, Obama said he wondered why the country’s fallen warriors felt a sense of duty and answered the call to serve, knowing they might have to make the ultimate sacrifice.

“Why in an age when so many have acted only in pursuit of narrowest self-interest have the soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines of this generation volunteered all that they have on behalf of others,” he said. “Why have they been willing to bear the heaviest burden?”

“Whatever it is, they felt some tug. They answered a call. They said ‘I’ll go.’ That is why they are the best of America,” Obama said. “That is what separates them from those who have not served in uniform, their extraordinary willingness to risk their lives for people they never met.”
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http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/05/ap_arlington_052509w/


What President Obama said is beautiful and echoes what many of us wonder all the time. While some were drafted in wars of the past, they also gave their lives for the sake of the nation and what was asked of them. What does it take to be like that? I always wondered when I thought of my father and my uncles and a cousin that served in Vietnam. All of them survived and all of them enlisted. I grew up surrounded by veterans and ended up marrying one. I still, to this day, wonder among all the excuses he used to enlist, why exactly he felt he had to.

Over the years I've met some of the most wonderful men and women this country has to offer. Whatever it is inside of them hangs on long after the days of wearing a uniform and boots ends. They still go on serving others. They go into the police force, DEA agents, become firefighters and emergency responders. They enter into the Reserves and National Guards. No matter what they do, they go on giving until their last breath comes.

Some go on to serve other veterans, homeless veterans and other citizens. They go into the Disabled American Veterans and other service organizations helping veterans maneuver around the red tape and bureaucracy of the VA making sure they get what they need and what they've already paid for by their service to this country.

Veterans that go into organizations like Point Man Ministries taking care of the spiritual needs of veterans from all generations.

Even veterans going into groups like Rolling Thunder and Nam Knights, going on to be of service to others so many years after their duty has been done. I just spent the last 5 days with them, watching them and listening to them, all the time wondering how this nation was so blessed to have so many willing to do for others while asking so little for themselves.

The fallen, those we remember this Memorial Day as with all other years were the same way. They knew the risk they were taking but did it anyway. To forget them is to refuse to acknowledge exactly what made them risk it all for the sake of the rest of us. Sure, we can debate the necessity of the war they died fighting, that's political arguments and I doubt anyone will ever find a way for people to all agree over the worthiness, but we all manage to agree on the men and women sent to fight the nation's battles. Only days out of a year we take time to remember them. We remember the lives lost on Memorial Day and the living from all generations on Veterans Day. We remember them on Vietnam Veterans Day and we celebrate them on the 4th of July. For the rest of the year, they humbly serve with all they have to give and we are all better for them having been here because our dependence on them never seems to end.

Vietnam veterans fought to make sure PTSD was treated and recognized as service connected and because the government invested a lot of money into it, the mental health community and Chaplains take care of people from all walks of life after trauma. But we never seem to notice when we have a crisis and find someone right there to help us after.

Most of what we use today was developed either for NASA and the space missions or the military but we never seem to notice when we use the inventions.

The giving these men and women are ready to do just never ends and when their lives do come to an end, their families pick up where they left off. Wouldn't it be a wonderful thing to finally, once and for all, live up to the motto we so easily let fly from our lips the rest of the year when we say "grateful nation" and prove it with what we are willing to do for them?

Train Hits Stalled Van, 2 Rescuers Hurt

Train Hits Stalled Van, 2 Rescuers Hurt
By CARRIE ANTLFINGER, AP
(May 25) - A freight train smashed into a minivan stuck on the tracks Monday as a police officer struggled to help a man pull his wife and child to safety.

They got the woman out but the 2-year-old boy was still inside when the 94-car train rammed the vehicle, crumpling the front and throwing the van into the two men. The child was unhurt, but both men suffered injuries, said Jim Gage, police chief in suburban Elm Grove.
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Train Hits Stalled Van, 2 Rescuers Hurt

Nam Knights Memorial Day Washington DC Ride

852.9 miles from Orlando to Washington DC, but it was so worth it.
It rained Thursday when we left Orlando and followed us most of the way to North Carolina.

While Saturday there was a ride of the Nam Knights and the 20th anniversary, there was no doubt why we were in Washington DC. This was for the fallen and to remember them. Rolling Thunder had their ride on Sunday and a lot of the Nam Knights rode that day as well but Saturday it was just for the Knights.




Traffic was pretty hairy at times.


Other chapters met at the hotel in North Carolina

This great bunch of officers gave an escort back onto I-95






















We were escorted from the hotel past Arlington National Cemetery to the Wall. We had to form on the grass for a brief ceremony because there was construction going on near the Wall. A lot of people were disappointed we didn't get to walk the Wall but we understood because there were almost 400 (by some counts) bikes to get moving, traffic to stop, so that we could go to the Law Enforcement Memorial.

At the law enforcement memorial





After a ceremony there, we were escorted all the way to Maryland for a great feast at the VFW hall and greeted with people waving flags and two fire engines with joined ladders.










Just some of the over 300 bikes at the VFW Hall. They fed about 500 people is my guess. I'll do an update on the numbers when I get them after everyone has a chance to get back. They came from all over the country and Canada.



Being with all of these members of the Nam Knights was simply amazing. I've never seen such a huge bunch of people so caring about each other. If you don't know anything about the Nam Knights, look them up on line. They are Vietnam veterans, police officers and firefighters. All of them willing to lay down their lives for the sake of others in war and in this nation. They have devoted their lives to all veterans.

It was also wonderful to see how much appreciation there is for these men. At the VFW Hall, I thanked the volunteers for putting themselves out for all of us. I was told "We didn't do much compared to what these men did and keep doing." They do a lot for others and are always having one fund raiser after another for someone, but to hear how much they are appreciated, it left a lump in my throat and I was at a loss for words. (Imagine that!)

There is a lot more to say but having just got back today from this long ride, I'm drained. I'll be putting up a video of parts of the ride tomorrow.

Are these people out of their minds?

Just back from the DC Memorial Day ride with the Nam Knights out of Orlando. Think about taking that long of a trip, trying to stay together in a pack with a couple of chase trucks towing hitches in case someone broke down and then having idiots decide they were more important than their lives. Not much fun dealing with such careless, thoughtless people thinking they needed to go faster and our lives just didn't matter. I'll do a post in a bit about the rest of the trip but this is just some of what we had to put up with on the road. Traveling in a pack is dangerous enough but when you're trying to keep everyone together so you can watch over each other, there really isn't much of a choice. What comes into some people's minds is beyond belief so lets see why they did it. If you know anyone with these vehicles, let them know they endangered all the lives of the bike pack and the two chase trucks. Ask them if it was worth it?

This jerk cut us off first, but then decided to cut them off on the ride back home. Drive going so fast I couldn't get a good shot of the plate.
This jerk thought it was so funny the first time to play games with the chase truck that he did it a few times and then cut off the bikes. Look at how close he came to the car in front of him.


Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Vets join priest to fight violence

Vets join priest to fight violence
Tuesday, May 19, 2009 10:28 PM

May 19, 2009 (CHICAGO) (WLS) -- Veterans of several different wars joined together to support a Chicago pastor in his battle against gun violence.

The veterans prayed with Fr. Michael Pfleger outside St. Sabina church on Tuesday night.

Some veterans have criticized Fr. Pfleger for turning the church's flag upside down as a sign of distress. But those who came out on Tuesday night say something must be done to draw attention to the escalating violence. They include a Vietnam veteran who lost three young relatives, including a nephew killed just weeks after getting out of the army.

"I didn't know I had to fight two wars," said Claude Hilliard, Vietnam veteran.
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Vets join priest to fight violence