Thursday, October 8, 2009

Gun-toting soccer mom, husband shot dead

UPDATE
Cops: Soccer mom shot during webcam chat
A Pennsylvania soccer mom was chatting with a friend via webcam when she was shot to death by her husband, who then went upstairs and shot himself, police said Friday. Meleanie Hain, 31, made national headlines last year as the mother who carried a loaded, holstered handgun to her 5-year-old daughter's soccer game. full story

Gun-toting soccer mom, husband shot dead
Story Highlights
Melanie and Scott Hain shot to death in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, home

Melanie Hain brought loaded gun to daughter's soccer game in 2008

Police are avoiding calling Wednesday night shooting a murder-suicide

Their three children are unharmed and in neighbor's care
By Edmund DeMarche
CNN

(CNN) -- Soccer mom Melanie Hain, who made national headlines last year by having a loaded, holstered handgun at her 5-year-old daughter's soccer game, has been found shot dead in her home along with her husband, police said Thursday.

Information from 911 calls shows that it took a SWAT team nearly an hour and a half to gain entry to the Lebanon, Pennsylvania, home Wednesday evening. Inside, they found the bodies of Hain, 31, and her husband, Scott, 33, police Capt. Daniel Wright said.

Police have avoided labeling the incident a murder-suicide. However, they do not believe that another person was involved, Wright said. A full investigation is under way, he added.

"Who [Melanie Hain] is does not change the course of this investigation," he said. The autopsies are scheduled for Friday.
read more here
http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/10/08/gun.soccer.mom.dead/index.html

Army investigating 14 possible Sept. suicides

Army investigating 14 possible Sept. suicides

By Michelle Tan - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Oct 8, 2009 20:16:56 EDT

As many as 14 soldiers are believed to have killed themselves in September, three fewer than the month before, the Defense Department announced Thursday.

Of the 14 deaths, seven were active-duty soldiers. So far, one has been confirmed to be a suicide, and the other six remain under investigation.

The other seven deaths were among reserve component soldiers who were not on active duty at the time of their deaths. All the cases are still pending a determination.

Army officials have said that 90 percent of pending cases typically are ruled to be suicides.

In August, as many as 17 soldiers –— 11 of them active duty — were reported to have committed suicide. Since those numbers were first announced, four of the 11 active-duty deaths have been confirmed to be suicides.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/10/army_suicides_100809w/

U.S. military challenges Marine's story of PTSD

There is a problem with this because you do not have to kill someone to end up with PTSD and you do not have to even see someone die to end up with PTSD. This is a fact and you need only visit a neighborhood after a natural disaster to find that out. There has also been a history of veterans after they worked in the motor pool after bombs have blown up ending up with PTSD, just as there has been other people never in combat with PTSD.

U.S. military challenges Marine's story of PTSD
by Elizabeth Dunbar, Minnesota Public Radio
October 8, 2009


St. Paul, Minn. — Military officials released a statement Thursday saying a Minnesota Marine diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder never engaged in combat while deployed to Iraq.

Pvt. Travis Hafterson's mother, Jamie Hafterson, has spoken publicly about her son's diagnosis and raised questions about whether he will receive adequate treatment at Camp Lejeune, N.C. Her son, who went AWOL, turned himself in to Fort Snelling last week before going to the Marine base.

Based on medical assessments in Minnesota, a judge had ordered Hafterson to be committed to Regions Hospital in St. Paul for treatment of his mental illness. Instead, the military held Hafterson at Fort Snelling before taking him to Camp Lejeune.

Jamie Hafterson has said her son's PTSD is linked to serving two tours in Iraq, where she said he killed people and saw a suicide bomb seriously injure other Marines.

But on Thursday, Marine Maj. Kelly Frushour said a Marine Corps investigation on the matter showed Hafterson did not witness the bombing that injured a lieutenant in his command and did not engage in any combat while deployed. Frushour also said Hafterson did not kill anyone or even fire his weapon.
read more here
U.S. military challenges Marines story of PTSD

Family wants answers after Ohio soldier's suicide

Family wants answers after Ohio soldier's suicide
By JOHN SEEWER (AP) – 6 hours ago

WILLARD, Ohio — Just about everyone in Keiffer Wilhelm's life — his father, his brother, his best friends — had worn a military uniform or grew up around someone who did.

So when he decided that was his best option too, he heard plenty of advice about surviving boot camp and beyond. He ended up liking the Army so much, he wanted to make it a career. He even volunteered to join another unit so he could speed up his departure to Iraq.

Just days after arriving, everything changed.

Now his family and his friends want to know what happened in Iraq that pushed the gentle, playful 19-year-old to kill himself two months ago. His final desperate act, they say, doesn't fit with the young man who grew up in a proud military family and always wanted to please everyone.

They hope to get some answers on Friday when two soldiers who served with Wilhelm in Iraq are expected to appear at a military hearing similar to a civilian grand jury. They have been charged with cruelty and maltreatment related to Wilhelm and at least two others. Two more soldiers also have been charged and are scheduled to appear at hearings next week.

Military investigators say Wilhelm had been a target of the four soldiers, who were mistreating some of the men in their platoon. But they also concluded the alleged misconduct didn't cause Wilhelm's death.


read more here
Family wants answers after Ohio soldiers suicide

Pvt. Terrance Hilton flees federal escort in Colo

UPDATE
Suspected AWOL private from Carson arrested

The Associated Press
Posted : Sunday Oct 11, 2009 12:13:31 EDT

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. — Mesa County deputies arrested a 20-year-old private suspected of being AWOL.

Authorities say Pvt. Terrance Hilton had escaped a federal escort at Denver International Airport Wednesday while he was being transferred in handcuffs from Salt Lake City to Colorado Springs. Officials searched for him at the airport for about an hour.
go here for more
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/10/ap_awol_101109/



AWOL suspect flees federal escort in Colo.

The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Oct 7, 2009 20:52:26 EDT

DENVER — Authorities say a soldier suspected of being AWOL is again at large after escaping from a federal escort at the Denver airport.

Denver police say the handcuffed man was being transferred from Salt Lake City to Colorado Springs via Denver on Wednesday when he ran from his escort on Concourse B at Denver International Airport.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/10/ap_army_awol_suspect_100709/

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

House panel votes to overturn Feres doctrine

House panel votes to overturn Feres doctrine

By William H. McMichael - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Oct 7, 2009 17:42:11 EDT

A bill that would overturn a 59-year-old Supreme Court decision that bars service members from suing the government for peacetime medical malpractice narrowly passed a House Judiciary Committee vote Wednesday and now will be considered by the entire House.

The Carmelo Rodriguez Military Medical Accountability Act, sponsored by Rep. Maurice Hinchey, D-N.Y., and Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., is named for a Marine Corps sergeant who died in 2007 at age 29 from melanoma. The condition was correctly diagnosed 10 years earlier, but the doctor failed to tell Rodriguez or refer him for treatment. Years later, another military doctor said the growth was a birthmark.

The Rodriguez family could find no relief in the courts. A 1950 Supreme Court decision that became known as the Feres doctrine prohobits active-duty members from holding the government accountable for medical negligence.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/10/military_feres_overturn_100709w/

Tony Fein Iraq vet cut by NFL’s Ravens found dead

Iraq vet cut by NFL’s Ravens found dead

By Tim Klass - The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Oct 7, 2009 20:28:17 EDT

SEATTLE — Tony Fein, an Iraq war veteran and NFL rookie linebacker who played with the Baltimore Ravens during the preseason, has died of unexplained causes after collapsing at a friend’s house in what his agent said appears to be “an accidental situation.”

Fein, 27, an undrafted rookie free agent from Mississippi, was lying face down and unconscious, vomiting and barely breathing when medics arrived at a house outside Port Orchard on the Kitsap Peninsula on Tuesday morning, said Mike Wernet, a battalion chief and medical officer with South Kitsap Fire & Rescue.

A man and woman who were present described Fein as a friend who was staying with them. They told the aid crew they awoke to find him unresponsive and vomiting.

“They didn’t really give us a lot of information about what had happened the night before,” apparently because they were upset, Wernet said. “They didn’t indicate anything out of the ordinary.”
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/10/ap_army_vet_ravens_dies_100709/

Canyon County Paramedic ex-employee killed by door

Woman killed by garage door made fake 911 call

By KBCI Staff & Associated Press CALDWELL, Idaho -- An Idaho woman who died after being pinned under a garage door at the paramedic building where she used to work first lured emergency workers away with a fake 911 call.

Caldwell Police say Melissa Farris, 35, died when authorities found her pinned under the garage door at the Canyon County Paramedic building last week.

Farris identified herself as Stacy in the 911 call and reported a crash on Interstate 84.

"My name is Stacy and I'm driving toward Ontario and a car went off the median at mile marker 22," Farris says. "I'm trying to stop...go back and see if they need help." (Listen to the 911 call)

Authorities say they could not find any accident on the highway.
read more here
http://www.komonews.com/news/local/63672377.html

DOD issues list of fallen in Afghanistan

News
10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualties Identified (8 of 8)
Pfc. Kevin C. Thomson, 22, of Reno, Nev...died Oct. 3 in Kamdesh, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their contingency outpost with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade and indirect fires.


10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualties Identified (7 of 8)
Spc. Stephan L. Mace, 21, of Lovettsville, Va...died Oct. 3 in Kamdesh, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their contingency outpost with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade and indirect fires.


10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualties Identified (6 of 8)
Spc. Christopher T. Griffin, 24, of Kincheloe, Mich...died Oct. 3 in Kamdesh, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their contingency outpost with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade and indirect fires.


10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualties Identified (5 of 8)
Sgt. Michael P. Scusa, 22, of Villas, N.J...died Oct. 3 in Kamdesh, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their contingency outpost with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade and indirect fires.

10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualties Identified (4 of 8)
Sgt. Joshua J. Kirk, 30, of South Portland, Maine...died Oct. 3 in Kamdesh, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their contingency outpost with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade and indirect fires.


10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualties Identified (3 of 8)
Sgt. Joshua M. Hardt, 24, of Applegate, Calif...died Oct. 3 in Kamdesh, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their contingency outpost with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade and indirect fires.


10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualties Identified (2 of 8)
Sgt. Justin T. Gallegos, 27, of Tucson, Ariz...died Oct. 3 in Kamdesh, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their contingency outpost with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade and indirect fires.


10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualties Identified (1 of 8)
Staff Sgt. Vernon W. Martin, 25 of Savannah, Ga...died Oct. 3 in Kamdesh, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked their contingency outpost with small arms, rocket-propelled grenade and indirect fires.


10/07/09 DoD: Army Casualty Identified
Spc. Kevin O. Hill, 23, of Brooklyn, N.Y., died Oct. 4 at Contingency Outpost Dehanna, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when enemy forces attacked his unit using small arms and indirect fires. He was assigned to the 576th Mobility Augmentation Company, Fort Carson,

http://www.icasualties.org/OEF/index.aspx

The price of ignoring the oracle

In ancient times oracles were sought out and listened to. Anything important enough to wonder about, was important enough to know about.


oracle
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin oraculum, from orare to speak - More at - oration
Date: 15th century
Results

1 a. 1 aa person (as a priestess of ancient Greece) through whom a deity is believed to speakb. ba shrine in which a deity reveals hidden knowledge or the divine purpose through such a personc. can answer or decision given by an oracle

2 a. 2 aa person giving wise or authoritative decisions or opinionsb. ban authoritative or wise expression or answer


People often regretted ignoring the wise council of the oracle. Just as now this nation is filled with people scratching their heads wondering what to do about PTSD, pretending they have been inventing the answers only to find out none of them really work.

The problem is, the oracles in this case have not only lived in the past, they see clearly where it is all leading to today because nothing has changed. Mistakes will be repeated with deadly consequences. People will still search and a few of them will snag some media attention as if they are the only people on the planet paying attention to PTSD, but that's because the reporters just don't have a clue about what they have refused to listen to all along. Give me an oracle if you really want answers because finding out that the answers have been there all along, will leave a lot of people really, really pissed off no one told them.

The BBC did a report a few years about with our troops in Afghansitan talking about how little time they had to understand PTSD. The subject back then was Battlemind. No one is really doing anything if there are any colonels still out there saying they didn't have any training at all. Give this, looks as if my worst fears have been brought to life. The people with the power to listen wouldn't. The people who sought advice, did but had no power to make the changes.


PTSD: An Army colonel’s quest for answers

By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday Oct 7, 2009 14:51:58 EDT

Army Col. Rich O’Connor does not mince words when he talks about the amount of mental health training he had before he took a squadron in the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment to war in Iraq’s Diyalah province in 2006.

“What kind of training did I receive on post-traumatic stress?” he said. “Zero. How much did our soldiers receive? None.”

O’Connor told a room of high-ranking officers and enlisted soldiers at the annual Association of the U.S. Army convention that he was too busy training for war to even think about post-traumatic stress disorder. And he said that after talking to other battalion commanders and command sergeants major, he realized nobody else had, either.

Then a military psychiatrist told him she didn’t believe commanders cared about PTSD.

“I can tell you that’s probably true,” O’Connor said. “We’ve got an issue here.”

As he returned from the battlefield, more and more of his men were diagnosed with PTSD, and he began to wonder if he was doing enough for them. The issue struck even closer to home when his son, Pfc. Ryan O’Connor, was diagnosed with PTSD and a traumatic brain injury after serving in Iraq during the same time period as his father.

He realized people needed to be educated about the issue, and he began with himself. He decided to write a paper about the history of PTSD, its definition, how soldiers see the issue, what therapists believe needs to be done, what research has shown and what needs to happen next.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/10/military_ausa_ptsd_100709w/



The problem is they also didn't listen to the people I listened to in the beginning.
Aphrodite Matsakis Ph.D.
Licensed Counseling Psychologist

Dr. Matsakis is an internationally recognized trauma specialist in areas such as post-traumatic stress disorder and other anxiety disorders, clinical depression, addiction and related issues and their impact on relationships and the family. She has authored twelve books self-help books for clients and therapists and two professional text books; three book chapters; and a book on the Greek-American experience.

Dr, Matsakis has over twenty five years experience counseling individuals, couples, and families and six years experience teaching at the university level. She has conducted trauma-processing, pain-management anger-management, self-esteem, and guilt processing groups and has presented seminars on these and other topics nationally and internationally to both professional and lay audiences. Following the bombing in Oklahoma City , she was called upon to assist survivors and professionals She's also presented at the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial on Memorial Day and at national conferences on sexual assault and anxiety management.

Most of her forensic work has involved vehicular accidents, personal injury, medical malpractice, murder, family violence and sexual assault. She has also testified on traumatic and stress reactions, addiction, mood disorders and issues pertaining to racial discrimination

Dr. Matsakis received a BA in history from Washington University in St. Louis , MO ; a MA in Secondary Education from Stanford University ( Palo Alto , CA ) and a MA and Ph.D. in Counseling Psychology from the University of Maryland in College Park ( College Park , MD ). See also resume.


Areas of Expertise:
Women's Issues Depression
Sexual Trauma Combat Civilian Trauma
Relationships Stress Management
Family Violence Eating Disorders Addictions
Divorce Parenting Contracts
Chronic Pain Medical Disability
Bereavement Midlife-Evaluation
Minority Issues Cultural Assimilation Issues
Services:
Individual Couples Family Counseling
Psychological Evaluation Expert Witness
Professional Lay Seminars Professional Supervision
Telephone Consultation Forensic Consultation: Records Review


With over 17,000 posts on my two blogs, there are only a few posts with her name even mentioned.


They didn't listen to Dr. Jonathan Shay either. While there are more posts on him, there is very little about his opinion being sought out. It didn't matter that he was already an expert when I started to learn about PTSD and why my husband was dying a very slow death in front of my eyes. I actually had a lot of communication with him because his book was so good and so true to life. Try reading Achilles in Vietnam sometime and you'll know what I mean.



Need I remind you, dear gentle reader that my husband and I just had our 25th wedding anniversary on Sept. 30th? The marriage that was supposed to fall apart before 5 years managed to thrive because of people like Shay and Matsakis. A lot of other people managed to stay alive, keep families together and find hope because of the work I was able to do, because other people did what they did first. Now do you get it? See, we're here, have been here, all along no matter how much others want to keep making their own wheel instead of using the ones already built. I may have tweaked the way I say things but Shay and Matsakis, among others, started to say it all first. I came up with putting this suffering into videos, but I had to learn what I was talking about first. While what I learned from them helped me to cope with my own marriage, living in my own marriage helped me help other people.

Maybe it's time old oracles were heard once again so that more lives can be saved instead of letting our hearts get broken watching the wreckage we couldn't have prevented. I'm not talking about just me, or Matsakis or Shay, but all the others out there all along. After all, skipping over what we've already learned has been a lesson in disaster.

Veterans' memorial dedication set

Veterans' memorial dedication set
Buzz up!By Jeff Pikulsky, VALLEY INDEPENDENT
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Last updated: 11:09 am

NEW EAGLE - Borough officials and residents Saturday will unveil a rebuilt veterans' memorial that's been five years in the making.

A dedication ceremony will take place 11 a.m. at the monument on Main Street outside of the Ringgold School District administration building.

Borough residents formed the New Eagle Veterans' Memorial Committee in 2004 to raise $50,000 so the monument could be expanded and updated.

The original memorial, built in 1948, showed names of New Eagle residents that served in World War I and II.

Plaques on the old memorial recognized that soldiers from the area served in the Persian Gulf, Korean and Vietnam wars - but their names were not listed.

Those names - and many more - are on the new memorial wall.

Memorial committee member Arch Caseber, a Vietnam veteran, said there are more than 2,000 names on the new monument, with room for 500 to 600 more.

The names of those involved in such smaller military engagements such as the conflicts in Grenada and Panama are included.

Coast Guard member names are also displayed - a tribute Caseber said some memorials miss.

"They really didn't get much recognition from World War II," he said.
read more here
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/valleyindependent/s_646852.html

40 men from Camp Lejeune now report breast cancer

40 men from Camp Lejeune now report breast cancer
By William R. Levesque, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Wednesday, October 7, 2009
A Florida man with male breast cancer says he has now identified 39 other men with the rare disease who all share one thing: They lived at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.

The numbers surprise scientists studying water contamination at the Marine Corps installation where up to a million Marines and family members may have been exposed to tainted water during 30 years ending in the late 1980s.

Among them are more than 12,000 Floridians who have signed up for a health survey.

"This is statistically unheard of," said Tallahassee resident Mike Partain, 41, a breast cancer survivor who was born at the base and is looking for others like himself. "We've got a cancer cluster that defies explanation."

The cluster is expected to be discussed Thursday when the U.S. Senate Committee on Veterans Affairs holds a hearing on contamination at U.S. military installations. A Marine Corps major general is expected to testify, as will Partain.
read more here
40 men from Camp Lejeune now report breast cancer

Neighbor saves politician from burning home

Fire destroys Mount Dora candidate's home

By Martin E. Comas

Sentinel Staff Writer

12:07 p.m. EDT, October 7, 2009


MOUNT DORA - The home of former City Council member Fay Brooks-Williams, who is running for the at-large seat on the council this fall, was destroyed in a fire this morning, fire officials said.

Brooks-Williams was taken to Florida Hospital Waterman in Tavares after suffering from smoke inhalation, officials said. A neighbor had carried her out of the burning home, according to authorities.

"We heard that she is going to be all right," fire Chief Ronnie Snowberger said.

However, two of Brooks-Williams' three dogs, died in the blaze.
read more here
Fire destroys Mount Dora candidates home

For Max Cleland, Politics Was A Refuge From War


Courtesy of The Max Cleland Collection, duPont-Ball Library, Stetson UniversityMax Cleland reads Arthur Schlesinger's biography of John F. Kennedy, A Thousand Days, while recuperating at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in 1968.




For Max Cleland, Politics Was A Refuge From War

October 6, 2009
As a boy growing up in a small town in Georgia, Max Cleland, a former Democratic senator from Georgia, was inspired by the adventures of the Lone Ranger on his TV screen.

Just as the Lone Ranger was motivated by a sense of duty, so was Cleland. As he tells NPR's Renee Montagne, Cleland's parents raised him "to be an eagle, not a sparrow." When he was in college, he joined the ROTC and volunteered to go to war in Vietnam. There, he was brutally maimed by a grenade that a fellow soldier dropped accidentally. The explosion took away both of his legs and his right arm.

In his new memoir, Heart of a Patriot, Cleland recalls that moment, and how he overcame the trauma it caused. The book is subtitled "How I Found The Courage To Survive Vietnam, Walter Reed and Karl Rove."

After his military service, Cleland turned to public service as a way to find meaning in life outside of his own struggles. "It meant survival. It meant a purpose and destiny," he says.

His political career spanned four decades, and ended with a loss to Republican Saxby Chambliss in 2002. Cleland says that his opponent — backed by Karl Rove's political machine — questioned his patriotism by airing attack ads that listed his votes on homeland security bills that opposed President George W. Bush's policies.
read more here


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113497762

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Little known underground Horrorcore music genre celebrates macabre killings

'Horrorcore' singer suspected in Virginia killings
Story Highlights
20-year-old rapper of "Horrorcore" accused of Virginia slayings

Little known underground music genre celebrates macabre killings

Tow-truck driver gave suspect a lift; said he was "stinkiest rascal I've ever smelled"

Defense lawyer said he's unsure Richard McCroskey "gets the severity of everything"


By Wayne Drash
CNN


(CNN) -- Elizabeth McCutchen and a friend were walking to book club two weeks ago in quaint Farmville, Virginia, when they strolled by a home on First Avenue. "Something smells dead," her friend said.


They were thinking animal. A dog, a cat, something like that. They never imagined they were smelling the remains of massacred humans. It was Thursday, September 17. But another 24 hours would pass before police made the gruesome discovery.

Richard Samuel McCroskey III -- a 20-year-old rapper in the underground genre of "Horrorcore" who sang of chopping people into pieces -- has been arrested in connection with the slayings. The crime scene was so horrifying police would not even describe it, saying only that the victims died of blunt force trauma.

The victims were Mark Niederbrock, 50, the beloved pastor at Walker's Presbyterian Church; his 16-year-old daughter, Emma Niederbrock; Melanie Wells, Emma's 18-year-old friend from West Virginia; and Niederbrock's estranged wife, Debra Kelley, 53, a professor at Longwood University.
read more here
http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/10/06/virginia.horrorcore.killings/index.html

Leaders must focus on military families, McHugh says

It is the families on the front lines when it comes to them coming home, and one day, being able to be sent back again. It is the families on the front lines for the rest of their lives as well when they do not go back. This we've heard before, but this may be just more talk instead of plans we waited for.

Leaders must focus on families, McHugh says

By Karen Jowers - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Oct 6, 2009 17:22:24 EDT

If Army leadership doesn’t take care of the Army family, then the leadership has failed.

That, said new Secretary of the Army John McHugh, is one of the lessons he took away from his 17 years in Congress, delving into military quality-of-life and personnel issues.

At a family forum of about 800 people at the Association of the U.S. Army’s annual meeting, McHugh said he has a lot of things to focus on as the new top civilian Army leader. But when it comes to challenges, “preeminent in my mind is ensuring we take care of soldiers, and that means taking care of their families,” he told the attendees — more than half of whom were family readiness group leaders.

In his discussions with Army uniformed leaders during his first two weeks in the job, McHugh said, he has been “uplifted by the fact they understand.”

Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey, Vice Chief of Staff Peter Chiarelli and Lt. Gen. Robert Wilson, chief of the Army’s Installation Management Command, are “leading in this initiative to do a better job for families,” McHugh said.

He said it is critical to encourage bases — from the unit level on up — to “think innovatively to implement programs that tend to the needs of Army families.”
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/10/military_mchugh_families_100609w/

Army vet donates $1.5m to VA hospital

Army vet donates $1.5m to VA hospital

By David Mercer - The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Oct 6, 2009 20:33:50 EDT

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — After serving in the Korean War, John Wright apparently lived a quiet life in Danville, where he volunteered at the local Veterans Administration hospital but otherwise kept to himself.

As it turns out, Wright was also building a fortune in real estate and other investments worth $1.56 million, all of which he left to the eastern Illinois town’s VA hospital when he died.

The staff and other volunteers he got to know in his 40 years volunteering at the hospital’s recreation therapy section were the closest thing Wright had to family, said Douglas Shouse, a hospital spokesman.

“They were his family,” Shouse said. “On holidays he would go to [meet] the recreation staff for meals.”

His colleagues at the hospital did not know much more about Wright’s life outside the hospital or his military record.

“John was pretty subdued and didn’t really talk about his military service,” Shouse said.
read more here
http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/10/ap_army_va_hospital_will_100609/

PTSD and AWOL, is this justice?

Soldier turns himself in after deserting

Alexandra Poolos and Ismael Estrada
AC360°

Jerri Hyde first sent Anderson an email in July. In it, she wrote that her sons Donald and Daniel had both served in Iraq. Dan, 23, worked as an explosives expert in the Marines, and Don, 25, had been in the Army. Both, Jerri wrote, now suffered from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and weren’t getting the help they needed.

“I am writing because I feel Mr. Cooper just might be the one to listen,” Jerri wrote. “My sons are suffering PTSD after serving our country. And getting no help. I don’t understand this.”

Jerri’s email arrived after visiting her younger son Dan in Texas.

When we first called her, Jerri told us that Dan’s problems seemed minor when compared to his older brother Don’s, who had deserted the military almost six months ago after reenlisting for another tour of duty. Don didn’t know what to do now that he deserted the army. Jerri didn’t know where he was hiding, just that he was somewhere in their home state of Illinois. For three months, the family kept in touch, and then finally in late September, Don reached out and said he wanted to talk.


Don was on the run and was getting tired of looking over his shoulder. He was ready to turn himself in and face the reality of his decision to abandon his duties.

According to the army, the penalties for desertion can be quite steep. He could receive up to 5 years of confinement, forfeiture of all pay, and a dishonorable discharge.

Still, Don showed up at the Illinois State Police station with his mother, father-in-law and girlfriend. He was emotional, but ready to turn himself in. He says leaving was a good decision because he was worried that he would hurt himself or a fellow soldier while he was in the army. His only regret was re-enlisting.

PTSD across military and civilian communities

Ret. Chaplain: PTSD across military & civilian communities
By Arthur Mondale Reporter
Published: October 1, 2009

A chaplain in the heart of military country is tackling one of the biggest problems facing service men and women: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The problem stretches equally across the military and civilian populations.

When it comes to PTSD, Lt. Col (Ret.) Chaplain Charles Smith of Saint Paul’s Lutheran Church in Havelock wants to dispel a myth. He says you don’t have to go to war to have a problem.

Chaplain Smith brings 25 years of experience down range and across the country asking one question: Do you know the signs to identify PTSD? Because you could be suffering from it.

“Commanders or supervisors tend to key in on the symptoms of something and not the cause of the symptoms,” Chaplain Smith said. “And PTSD—you not only have to know the symptom you have to know what causes it and try to go to the root of it.“

Smith says 60% of men and 51% of all women have suffered a traumatic experience that could lead to PTSD. Stress could intensify the problem.

Smith says the answer is coping and overcoming individual circumstances—not avoiding it. He adds, “You have to reach out to something that’s real and what’s real is medication or some kind of spiritual outlet…there are people to help.“

Saint Paul Lutheran Church in Havelock will host two more rounds of seminars on PTSD later this month. Classes planned for October 8th and October 15th.
go here for video
PTSD across military and civilian communities

Stolen Valor - At War Blog - NYTimes.com

There is so much that is missed when we hear stories about phony veterans, especially posers pretending to have medals of valor, as if they would even know what that word meant. This one, did much more damage than that but I doubt he cared at all.

He claimed he had a Purple Heart, when he never even served. Then he claimed he had PTSD, when again, he never served. People will read this story and just think about the fact this is one more coward-lower-life-form wanting to take what he did not earn. The problem is, he took a lot more than that when he claimed to have PTSD.

There have been Vietnam veterans suffering for over 30 years with PTSD, real veterans with real battle scars, with real suffering. They will not admit they have PTSD because they cannot overcome the stigma of it as if it is some kind of stain on their courage, but this fake, saw it as a badge of courage he would take as well. He had no clue. We've lost too many because they viewed PTSD as something to be ashamed, instead of something that came home with them because they cared. This man, this man didn't care about anyone but himself.


October 5, 2009, 6:19 pm
Stolen Valor
By James Dao
Fraudulently claiming to be a decorated war hero so infuriates veterans that they have given the deception a name: stolen valor. And since 2005, it has been against federal law, punishable by a fine and up to a year in prison.

Now, in perhaps the highest-profile case of its type this year, the government has charged a Colorado man, Richard G. Strandlof, with fraudulently claiming to have won a Purple Heart in Iraq.


Until he was unmasked this year, Mr. Strandlof was better known in Colorado as Rick Duncan, a charismatic former Marine Corps captain who had served three tours in Iraq, been wounded by a roadside bomb in Falluja and struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder.

His tale was convincing enough that Mr. Strandlof became a spokesman for Iraq veterans in Colorado, meeting with mayors, appearing with political candidates and forming a well-regarded group, Colorado Veterans Alliance.
read more here
http://atwar.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/10/05/stolen-valor/