Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Gulf War Vet with PTSD and cancer, killed by police, didn't get help he wanted

One more veteran killed by police because he didn't get the help he needed. This time it was a Gulf War veteran with PTSD and cancer. Think about that one! Stanley Gibson asked for help because of PTSD and cancer. Consider what having cancer did to his PTSD with the added stress. Then think about being told his claim was reduced and he could no longer get the care he needed.

His life went out of control after that. Read the following two reports and then think about his family but don't stop there. Think of the officers involved in this and how they must feel after killing a veteran this country let down.

Shooting Victim Suffered from PTSD
December 13, 2011

By Joe Bartels, Reporter
By Nate Kramer, Photojournalist

LAS VEGAS -- The family of Stanley Gibson, the man who was shot and killed by Metro Police late Sunday night, has been outspoken about his struggle with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder since he returned from the Gulf War.

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or PTSD is a mental health condition that can form after a life-threatening event. Doctors say the condition requires a combination of treatments including medication and counseling.
Gibson was getting help from Veterans Affairs for his disorder. However, when his benefits were reduced, he could not get in to see a doctor to get his prescription filled.

Doctors say people can live normal lives after seeking treatment. If a person does not seek out treatment or does not fully deal with the disorder, they can have flashbacks to the event that started the condition in the first place. Many veterans suffer from the disorder because of their war-time experiences.
read more here



Army veteran shot by Vegas police was ill with cancer and had dispute with VA

By Associated Press, Published: December 13

LAS VEGAS — The 43-year-old Gulf War veteran gunned down by Las Vegas police in a weekend parking lot confrontation felt like his life was spiraling out of control and sought help from a veterans advocate days before he was killed.

Stanley Lavon Gibson suffered from cancer he blamed on his Army service, faced eviction from his home, and was due for sentencing on an assault charge after an argument with a Veterans Affairs doctor.

He also was taking painkillers, antidepressants and anxiety medications.

After recently having his disability payments reduced, Gibson called the Las Vegas Review-Journal seeking help.

“I’m a desperate man. I’m very desperate,” he said in a Nov. 12 voicemail message to a reporter about fears that he and his wife would lose their home.

Gibson was put in touch with a veterans advocate, who told the newspaper he talked to Gibson last week and planned to start reviewing his case Monday.

read more here

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Army Offers $15K Reward In Suspicious Death Of Ex-Soldier

Army Offers $15K Reward In Suspicious Death Of Ex-Soldier

Joseph Barker's Body Found Floating In Wastewater Plant At Fort Carson In 2006

Alan Gathright, 7NEWS Content Producer
December 12, 2011
U.S. Army
U.S. Army investigators offer a $15,000 reward in an effort to solve the suspicious 2006 death of former Fort Carson soldier Joseph Eric Barker.
FORT CARSON, Colo. -- The U.S. Army is offering a $15,000 reward in an effort to solve the suspicious death of a former soldier whose body was found floating in a wastewater treatment plant at Fort Carson in 2006.

The U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command, known as CID, said the reward is offered to anyone with information that leads to the apprehension and conviction of whomever may have been responsible for the death of Joseph Eric Barker, 21, of Tulsa, Okla.

"We are confident that someone out there knows something about the death of Mr. Barker and we are not resting or giving up until we determine exactly what transpired," Army CID Special Agent Christopher Vitatoe said Monday. "We strongly encourage anyone with information to do the right thing and contact us immediately."
read more here

Command Sgt. Major and Daughter Serving in Afghanistan

Face of Defense: Father, Daughter Reunite in Afghanistan

By Army Spc. April York
2nd Brigade Combat Team
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan, Dec. 12, 2011 – An Army father and his soldier daughter have reunited in Afghanistan.

Army Command Sgt. Maj. Bobby Hagy and his daughter, Army Pfc. Amanda Hagy, share a laugh during their reunion on Camp Nathan Smith in Kandahar City, Afghanistan, Dec. 6, 2011. U.S. Army photo by Spc. April York

Army Pfc. Amanda Hagy is an imagery analyst here at Camp Nathan Smith for 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, from Fort Carson, Colo. Her father is Army Command Sgt. Maj. Bobby Hagy, the senior noncommissioned officer for the 528th Sustainment Brigade from Fort Bragg, N.C.
read more here

More women in combat means more mothers with PTSD

More women in combat means more mothers with PTSD
By Kyra Phillips and Michael Cary, CNN
Tue December 13, 2011

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Staff Sgt. June Moss was diagnosed with PTSD after serving in the Iraq war
As more women see combat, more female vets are suffering from PTSD
Treatment helps, but Moss worries about slipping back into depression
Today, Moss has gotten over her fear of crowds

Palo Alto, California (CNN) -- It wasn't until five months after Army Staff Sgt. June Moss returned from the Iraq war in 2003 that her real battle began. The horrors of the war -- witnessing decapitated and burned bodies amid mass destruction -- led to post-traumatic stress disorder.

"I do notice when I'm stressing out that I start having dreams about what I saw and how I felt," says Moss, now 40 and retired from the Army. "It does come back as if to haunt you."

The percentage of women in the military has doubled in the last 30 years, with more than 350,000 serving as of 2009, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs' latest figures. With more female troops in combat, there has been an increase in PTSD diagnoses: One in five female veterans suffer from PTSD, according to the VA.

As a light-vehicle mechanic, Moss drove across Baghdad and provided security at checkpoints during her combat tour in Iraq. When she returned home, she became overly protective of her two children, fearing that someone was going to kidnap or harm them.

At the same time, she hunkered down inside her home, staying in bed, because she says it was too hard to face the most mundane tasks such as shopping.

"It was crazy. I couldn't even do crowds. It reminded me when we were in a marketplace (in Iraq), and we didn't know if somebody was out there to kill us," Moss explains. "I'm back home, and I didn't have to worry about a suicide bomber, but I still felt as if there was one lurking in the mall or the grocery store."
read more here

Mitt Romney confronted by gay Vietnam veteran on gay marriage

Mitt Romney confronted by gay Vietnam veteran on gay marriage in New Hampshire: VIDEO

The cringe-worthy confrontation over same-sex marriage is just the latest for Republican presidential candidates this campaign cycle.
BY ALIYAH SHAHID
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Tuesday, December 13 2011,


When asked by reporters why he wanted to grill Romney on the issue, Garon said, "Because I'm gay, all right?" he said. "And I happen to love a man just like you probably love your wife."

A Mitt Romney endorsement event in New Hampshire turned incredibly awkward for the Republican presidential candidate after he was confronted by a gay veteran who challenged his views on same-sex marriage.

The former Massachusetts governor approached Bob Garon, 63, at a Manchester diner to ask him about his tour in Vietnam.

But Garon — who was accompanied by his husband — wanted to know if Romney would back efforts to repeal the state's law that legalized gay marriage in the state.

Romney insisted during the stop — meant to tout his recent endorsement by the city's mayor — that he believes marriage is “between a man and a woman.”

"It's good to know how you feel, that you do not believe everyone is entitled to their constitutional rights, Garon retorted.

"No actually I think at the time the Constitution was written it was pretty clear marriage was between a man and a woman," said Romney as an aide jumped in, insisting they had an interview with Fox News to go to.


read more here

In Florida, Using Military Discipline to Help Veterans in Prison

In Florida, Using Military Discipline to Help Veterans in Prison

By LIZETTE ALVAREZ
Published: December 11, 2011

Jason Henry for The New York Times
Inmates in the special dorm for military veterans at Sumter Correctional Institution in Bushnell, one of the five prisons with such facilities in Florida

BUSHNELL, Fla. — James R. White, a Marine Corps veteran in a blue uniform, saluted crisply as the honor guard marched around the courtyard, stopped and marched again.

But there were no weapons in sight here. No polished shoes. No gleaming caps. The 85 men standing at attention wore prison garb. When the ceremony was over, they ambled back to their wing of Complex 1, a housing area set aside for military veterans serving time at Sumter Correctional Institution, a maximum-security prison in rural central Florida.

Florida is one of a handful of states that are rethinking their treatment of incarcerated veterans in the hopes of easing their transition back to society and then keeping them out of prison for good. In August, the state created a program that provides separate dorms in five prisons for honorably discharged military veterans who have no more than three years left on their sentences and who volunteer for it. California and Illinois have similar programs, all designed to address the needs of imprisoned veterans better.

For now, 300 of Florida’s 6,700 incarcerated veterans live in the dorms, a number that state officials intend to increase. The state prison system houses 101,000 inmates in all.

“We’ve come a long way in a few months,” said Jeffrey P. Trovillion, the warden at Sumter Correctional, which does not house death row inmates. “It’s bringing back a sense of pride and discipline.”
read more here

Monday, December 12, 2011

Ex-naval officer gets prison time for 9-11 fraud

Ex-naval officer gets prison time for 9-11 fraud
BY NEDRA PICKLER
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A retired naval officer honored for helping rescue fellow Pentagon workers in the 2001 terrorist attack was sentenced Monday to 3 1/2 years in prison for defrauding the Sept. 11 victims' compensation fund.

Retired Cmdr. Charles Coughlin of Severna Park, Md., claimed he was injured when objects fell on him as a hijacked plane struck the building and again later when he went back inside to rescue others and hit his head. But prosecutors said Coughlin was not hurt and instead used an old injury to get $331,034 in compensation from the fund.

U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth, the chief of the Washington federal court, told Coughlin that stealing that much money from the government deserves a serious sentence. He allowed Coughlin to remain free pending appeal.

Coughlin, a 52-year-old father of four and grandfather of two, did not react to the verdict. When Lamberth invited him to speak just before delivering the sentence, Coughlin only had one thing to say: "I take full responsibility for the errors and mistakes I made."
read more here

Nurse, 93, who saved WWII GIs gets valor award

Nurse, 93, who saved WWII GIs gets valor award
The Associated Press - The Associated Press
Posted : Monday Dec 12, 2011
BRUSSELS — A Belgian nurse who saved the lives of hundreds of American soldiers during the Battle of the Bulge was given a U.S. award for valor Monday — 67 years late.

Congolese-born Augusta Chiwy, now 93, received the Civilian Award for Humanitarian Service medal from U.S. Ambassador Howard Gutman at a ceremony in the military museum in Brussels.

“She helped, she helped, and she helped,” Gutman said at the ceremony. He said the long delay in presenting the award was because it was assumed that Chiwy had been killed when a bomb destroyed her hospital.

The Battle of the Bulge was a ferocious encounter in the final stages of World War II. In desperation, Adolf Hitler ordered a massive attack on allied forces in the Ardennes, in southern Belgium. More than 80,000 American soldiers were killed, captured or wounded.

Chiwy had volunteered to assist in an aid station in the town of Bastogne, where wounded and dying U.S. soldiers in their thousands were being treated by a single doctor in December 1944 and January 1945. Chiwy braved the gunfire, helping whoever she could, and saving the lives of hundreds of American GIs.
read more here

Couple's love story was tested by war

Couple's love story was tested by war -- four times
By Chelsea J. Carter
CNN December 12, 2011

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Both Nathan and Raquel Dukellis served in Iraq; he returned to shut down U.S. bases
On this deployment -- his fourth -- he went back to the city that haunts the couple's marriage
They talk candidly about love's battle with separation, fear and doubt
Nathan says this deployment was like coming full circle -- with the war and with his marriage

Editor's note: This is the second of four stories profiling soldiers and their families whose lives were defined by the Iraq war. The first was published Sunday.
Fort Bliss, Texas (CNN) -- The pictures on the walls at the Dukellis home tell the story of the couple's time together -- and apart.

There's Nathan in his uniform with his comrades. There's Raquel with her sisters. Nathan serving in Iraq. Raquel working.

They're pictured together occasionally -- at their wedding, of course, and in a recent photo, during a vacation in the mountains.

At first glance, Raquel and Nathan Dukellis seem an unlikely pair. She's outgoing; he's reserved.

She has a large, extended family; he is an only child. Both sport tattoos on their arm -- Herman Munster appears on hers; his arm features her name and a skull.
read more here

Sunday, December 11, 2011

CNN reports on the last troops in Iraq

Frank Rosenblatt returns to Iraq as a lawyer -- and a new father
By Chelsea J. Carter, CNN
updated 2:11 PM EST, Sun December 11, 2011


STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Frank Rosenblatt is among the last soldiers sent to Iraq, to shut down U.S. bases
He leaves his wife and young daughter in Texas in late July, expecting to be gone a year
The military lawyer finds himself going after the enemy -- in an Iraqi court
Among his greatest concerns: Will his 1-year-old know him when he returns?
Editor's note: This is the first of four stories profiling soldiers and their families whose lives were defined by the Iraq war.
Kirkuk, Iraq (CNN) -- Rocket alarms pierced the quiet at Camp Warrior, breaking the concentration of Army Maj. Frank Rosenblatt.

The 35-year-old military lawyer was talking strategy with other attorneys on their effort to push the Iraqi government to prosecute a man accused of launching attacks against the American base. Now, another assault was under way.

A voice blared from the loudspeakers: "Incoming! Incoming! Incoming!"

It was early October, and insurgents had targeted the base in northern Iraq with surprising accuracy in recent weeks. Most of the time, the explosives fell short, hitting the ground in the base's protective perimeter. But sometimes a rocket found its mark. One had struck a housing area nine days earlier, killing a young soldier who was part of Rosenblatt's security detail on his trips to the courthouse in Kirkuk.

read more here

Ex-Marine's tall tales overshadow good deeds

Ex-Marine's tall tales overshadow good deeds
By Andrew Knapp, Florida Today

When Derek Walls was arrested early this year, some of his acquaintances were confused, perhaps angry.

Walls, 42, was a hero to many. As a Marine, he said he fought in Operation Desert Storm.

He was a father figure. Parents praised him for giving their children direction through the nonprofit he founded, the Florida Volunteer Search and Rescue Corps. He called himself "the colonel."

He was an entrepreneur. He owned Combat Zone, a paintball business on Florida's Merritt Island, and ran a nearby recreation park.

He was a community leader. He coordinated the local Marine Corps Reserve Toys for Tots drive. His name tag: "Col. Walls."

Supporters admired him and didn't believe the 16-year-old girl, a Toys for Tots volunteer, who accused Walls of raping her at his Port St. John home just after Christmas. The teen was labeled a liar. She tried to kill herself.

Prosecutors said there wasn't enough evidence to pursue the charges. They called it a typical case of "he said, she said."

In business, in charity and in the criminal investigation, Walls leaned on his military reputation: four years as an active-duty Marine and another two as a reservist.

But as part of the investigation, inconsistencies arose. Paperwork, which sheriff's investigators acquired from Marine Corps headquarters, show that he served only six months in 1988. He was discharged as a private first class. His tales were tall. He never lost friends in battle, as he claimed; he was never diagnosed with Gulf War syndrome; he never was a sergeant.

"Yes, I lied," he told FLORIDA TODAY, when confronted with the contradiction between his stories about his military record and what Defense Department records show. "There's really no reason for it. It's been a hard year."

read more here

Virginia Tech officer's widow: 'Somebody took our life from us'

Virginia Tech officer's widow: 'Somebody took our life from us'
Deriek Crouse was her first true love and her best friend, and in the shadow of his death, Tina Crouse grapples with grief and anger.
By Matt Chittum

December 11, 2011

The bullet that tore through Deriek Crouse on Thursday didn’t stop in his lifeless body.

It carried on and on, ripping through a home and family he had been after his whole life and only recently got, breaking the heart of a woman to whom he was a first and only real love, and bringing a crashing end to what had been a working-class fairy tale of a romance.

Crouse, 39, a Virginia Tech police officer, was killed seemingly at random during a routine traffic stop on the Tech campus by a part-time Radford University student, Ross Truett Ashley, 22, of Partlow, who soon after killed himself.

“Nobody knows what he lost,” said Crouse’s widow, Tina, 37, from her Christiansburg townhome Saturday morning. “Somebody took our life from us.”


Deriek met the woman who would become his first wife, Marie Thomas, in Galax.

He joined the Army to save himself from himself, Tina said. His life was on a wrong path and headed for trouble.

He spent three years in the Army, mostly at Fort Hood, Texas, where he and Marie had their only son, Dustin.

They returned to Galax, where Deriek installed vinyl siding for a while, then worked at National Textiles. He also joined the Army Reserve.

About 2002, he and Marie separated, and shortly after he had moved out, he was deployed to the war in Iraq.
read more here

Volunteers Fix Injured Camp Pendleton Marine's Home

Volunteers Fix Injured Camp Pendleton Marine's Home

Sgt. Jason Swofford Injured By Bomb In Afghanistan In 2009
December 10, 2011

OCEANSIDE, Calif. -- A Camp Pendleton Marine who was injured in Afghanistan received a life-changing gift from dozens of local college students this weekend.

As part of the "Healing Our Heroes' Homes" program, several contractors and more than 50 student volunteers from San Diego State University will be making about 30 home improvements to the Oceanside home where Sgt. Jason Swofford lives with his family.
read more here

Adjusting to college can pose special challenges for veterans

Adjusting to college can pose special challenges for veterans
Published: Saturday, December 10, 2011
By Brian Albrecht

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Going from mortars to mortarboards isn't always a seamless transition when it comes to veterans on campus.

They're students in their 20s "with the life experience of 50-year-olds," noted Rick DeChant, executive director for veterans services and programs at Cuyahoga Community College. "Sometimes they don't always see eye-to-eye, maturity-wise, with nonveterans."

One Tri-C student-veteran, Maria Popow, said she tends to gravitate toward other vets on campus. "I relate better to veterans, because we get it," she said. "But I have no problems with civilians, either."

Kent State University student Cat Hofer, 29, of Cuyahoga Falls, noted, "A lot of people in my classes are 18 or 19. Coming back from a combat deployment, and having two kids, at times it makes you feel old."

"The military is like a family -- in relationships and how you are cared for," she added. "Once you come out of deployment, you lose that camaraderie and are on your own."
read more here


Four students talk about their experiences going back to college after serving in the military.


Transition from Combat to College is the subject of this project I did for Motion Class. It was done with stop motion (pictures instead of film) because it is a huge issue for veterans at Valencia College as well.

Former SWAT team leader lifts veil on PTSD

When you think about Navy SEALS, Green Berets and SWAT police officers, you may be linking them to the Hollywood stars pretending to be them. Tougher than tough, trained killers unable to feel regret but that is not the truth. They are still as human as anyone else.

Here's a story you won't read about often. An ex-SWAT team leader talks about PTSD and the price he paid for what he had to do.

In tailspin after police shootings, former SWAT team leader lifts veil on post-traumatic stress syndrome

Curtis Rush
Police Reporter

It was 12 years ago when Jim Bremner killed a man.

Looking at him now, balding at age 52, with sorrowful blue eyes and an apple-pie humbleness, it’s hard to imagine him as a trained killer.

Now he’s a spiritual man who talks about lifting the veil of secrecy over an alpha-swagger police culture that treats post-traumatic stress disorder as a weakness.

But 12 years ago, he was a different man. He was the team leader of Special Weapons Team One on the elite Emergency Task Force.

He was the best of the best. An assassin if he needed to be.

However, nobody trained him how to deal with the crippling emotions, nightmares and flashbacks that followed.

How terribly ironic that it was in a major metropolitan hospital, where countless lives are saved, that he took a life with an assault rifle on New Year’s Eve in 1999.

read more here

Oklahoma County prosecutors program gives veterans a second chance

Program gives veterans a second chance

Oklahoma County prosecutors and public defenders have started a program to help veterans with legal trouble get help instead of going to prison.

BY BRYAN DEAN
Published: December 11, 2011

Chris Seals' Air Force career came to an end after an on-duty injury in South Korea and the resulting surgeries left him with debilitating pain.

It also left him addicted to painkillers. Seals, 29, of Oklahoma City, ended up in jail on complaints including obtaining a controlled dangerous substance under false pretenses. Now he is among 32 veterans getting a second chance as part of a program run by Oklahoma County District Attorney David Prater and Public Defender Bob Ravitz.

The project, modeled after similar “vet courts” in other states, allows veterans to have charges against them dropped and get help they might need as long as they stay out of trouble and complete a one- to three-year program which includes group therapy and weekly meetings with attorneys assigned to keep them on the right track.

Seals has used the program to turn his life around and volunteers with the public defenders office and the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Oklahoma City.
read more here

New videos feature military service stories of women veterans

New videos feature military service stories of women veterans
Written by Department of Veterans Affairs
Saturday, 10 December 2011


WASHINGTON, DC – The Department of Veterans Affairs has released a series of videos in which women veterans describe their experiences serving in the military, ranging from their significant contributions to national safety and security to the challenges they faced during their service and after returning to civilian life.

“These videos show the important contributions women have made to this country through their military service,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “Women veterans have earned the respect of a grateful nation for their tremendous service and sacrifice.”

The three- to five-minute videos are part of VA’s ongoing “Rethink Veterans” campaign to increase awareness of women veterans and their vital roles in our nation’s history.

read more here



Here's one of mine on the history of women at war

In the dying process, PTSD can "rear its ugly head"

This is one more thing not being discussed as much as it should be. When we talk about "secondary stressors" turning mild PTSD into a full blown assault, knowing the end of you life is near, is just about as stressful as you can get.

There are many veterans with mild PTSD and doing ok until they have an accident or face an illness, then everything they have been trying to "get over" boils to their awareness and takes over.

It happens with elderly veterans when they experience losing a spouse or other family members. It also happens when they experience something else traumatic. An elderly WWII veteran had experienced a long list of stressful things in his life. Past the age of 90, his apartment was broken into and after that, he was never the same. Think of living all those years believing you escaped it only to discover that it was just sleeping.

Program to help ensure that no veteran dies alone

Mary Garrigan Journal staff
Posted: Saturday, December 10, 2011

John Fleming wants to make sure his fellow veterans do not die alone.

Fleming is a volunteer with No Veteran Dies Alone, a new program of the Veterans Affairs Black Hills Health Care System. Everyone dies, he says, but no one should do it alone, least of all someone who has served his country.

"Someday, we're all going to be in that same boat," Fleming said. "I just like to be there with these guys."

The new hospice volunteer program is patterned after No One Dies Alone, a national end-of-life concept that was launched at a hospital in Eugene, Ore. Mary Ann Herrboldt, coordinator of the hospice and palliative care program at Fort Meade, said military veterans have some unique end-of-life needs, and other veterans often are best equipped to meet them.

"Veterans do have a unique culture and they do have some unique needs at the end of life," Herrboldt said. Some studies show that as many as 65 percent of veterans experience some form of post-traumatic stress disorder, whether it is ever diagnosed or addressed, she said.

In the dying process, PTSD can "rear its ugly head," sometimes for the first time, said Mary Graham, a nurse practitioner with the hospice program.
read more here

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Man prevented more injuries when he yelled at gunman in Hollywood

Gunman identified in Hollywood shooting
By the CNN Wire Staff
updated 7:34 PM EST, Sat December 10, 2011

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Police don't know why man fired from street
NEW: Man who filmed, yelled at suspect may have prevented more injuries, police say
Police killed the gunman, Tyler Brehm, 26
Christopher Johns filmed the scene from his apartment window

Los Angeles (CNN) -- Authorities on Saturday identified a gunman killed by police after he opened fire at passing vehicles along a downtown street in Hollywood.

But they said they don't know why Tyler Brehm, 26, went on a surreal shooting rampage captured on amateur video Friday.

The video shows Brehm walking down Sunset Boulevard, wielding a handgun and firing at vehicles, seemingly at random. Brehm fired a "significant number" of rounds, wounding three, police said.
He then returned to an intersection, where he was confronted by a plainclothes police detective and an off-duty police officer working on a nearby movie set, officials said.

"At that point the police ordered him to drop his weapon and he pointed his gun at the police and an officer-involved shooting occurred," police spokeswoman Sgt. Mitzi Fierro said on CNN.
Brehm died at a nearby hospital, a police statement said.
read more here

Poor PTSD cure rates motivate research, again


Again and again they invest more and more money repeating research already done to death, and I do mean "death" since that has been the result of not paying attention to what has already been learned.

40 years ago there were plenty of excuses for these "trail and errors" because no one knew much at all. 30 years ago experts knew just about as much as they had to learn in order to treat PTSD. The success have been dropped replaced by what was already known to be failures.

Telling them it is their fault is the first problem. This has been the quiet basis of programs like Battlemind when the troops are told they are not mentally tough enough to experience combat so they can train their brains to be tough enough. Whopper of a failure that was with deadly results, they repeated this notion with different names expecting different results. How in the world did they expect any of the servicemen and women to take training and not end up blaming themselves for being hit with PTSD?

Then they further insulted them by saying they were just too sensitive. Way off base on this one when you consider that they are compassionate to the point where the life of someone else matters more to them then their own lives, they act out of courage to save someone no matter what price they may end up paying for doing it. How can you get tougher than that?

Leaving the families out of all of this destroyed families and left the veteran with little support. Giving them the wrong advice made PTSD worse, as a matter of fact, actually spreads PTSD throughout the family, known as "secondary PTSD" and left everyone wounded.

The Greeks use the word "trauma" for wound. It comes after an outside force strikes and does not begin within. It invades like an infection taking over healthy parts of the person and eating away until it reaches the core.

Another massive failure is not using Chaplains for what they do best. They address the spiritual ravages after combat actions. Killing someone leaves regrets no matter how justified. Seeing friends die leaves guilt because they wonder why it was someone else and not them. Ever talk to a soldier after his buddy took over his patrol and was killed? Survivor guilt in overdrive consumes them. When the DOD allowed some Chaplains to spend more time trying to get converts to their own group seeking butts in the pews instead of healed souls, this was another blunder. Telling a soldier they will go to hell if they don't convert is plunging the negativity poison into their soul.

When Vietnam veterans came home, families had no support. These men and women were in Vietnam one day and back home in civilian clothes the next. It was almost as if they had been regarded as simply as someone coming home from an extended vacation. Everyone expected them to just get back to "normal" including the veteran fresh back from combat.

There were no PTSD programs. There were no support groups. The internet had not been invented so families had no way of finding others. Newspapers only seemed interested in reporting on Vietnam veterans getting arrested or shot by police. The 24 hour cable news shows were not around and national news was limited to just 30 minutes. Not much time for telling the general public what was going on and even less of a chance for a Vietnam veteran to find someone else just like them. Most of them lost contact with the people they served with.

By 1978 the Disabled American Veterans commissioned a study showing there were already 500,000 Vietnam veterans with PTSD, over 70 Veterans Centers and way too many sad outcomes. Two reports put the number of suicides between 150,000 and 200,000 but that was only part of the story. We also had way too many arrests with nothing like what we see in Veterans Courts popping up all over the country. There wasn't a network to prevent suicides like we see today either. Families fell apart and there were 300,000 homeless veterans in the 80's and 90's followed by more homeless veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. This proved the simple fact that what worked was forgotten.

Why? Money? Maybe mostly money because the programs that did work didn't cost much at all.

Poor PTSD cure rates motivate research
By Patricia Kime - Staff writer
Posted : Friday Dec 9, 2011 13:48:03 EST
Medications and psychotherapy work for fewer than half the patients diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, an abysmal success rate the Defense Department wants to change within 18 months to two years.

Since 2006, the Army’s Medical Research and Materiel Command has spent $297 million on 162 research programs to dissect PTSD’s causes and find ways to prevent or treat it.

Among the most promising solutions: therapy using virtual reality programs enhanced with sensory input like smells, sounds and vibration to mimic a traumatic event, and the use of FDA-approved medications to enhance sleep and memory processing.

The aim of the research blitz, according to Ronald Hoover of the command’s Military Operational Medicine Research Program, is to create a standard of care with an 80 to 90 percent cure rate.

“We envision a program that combines prolonged exposure therapy, technology and drug therapy,” Hoover told practitioners, doctors and researchers attending the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury Trauma Spectrum Conference in Bethesda, Md., on Friday.
read more here

Point Man International Ministries is one of the forgotten successes.


Iraq veteran talks about coming home with his life like a "train wreck" and how he didn't want to live.

This begins with talking about having the gun in his mouth and how his wife walked in before he pulled the trigger.


It was last year after I had done my presentation during a Point Man conference in Buffalo. I took my camera to the back of the room to video tape the church band. For some odd reason I still haven't figured out, but have some guesses, I kept the camera on when this veteran stood up to talk about his life. As you can tell, it wasn't planned with the shaking camera and poor audio.

After he was done I went over to him during a break, introduced myself and he knew who I was. I told him I filmed him. The color left his face until I assured him he had the choice to make. I could give him the tape, destroy it or put it up on YouTube. Without hesitation he said "get it up on YouTube. I'm tired of losing my men!"

All the members of Point Man Ministries feel the same way. Outpost leaders have been there and done that, expect me. I am an exception simply because of how long I've been doing this and how much I do understand. While they lived with what happens after war comes home inside of them, I know what it is like to have the war invade my family. All of us know the pain and suffering but we also know the healing power available to all of us through faith. We are not selfish and want to share this with everyone so that we stop reading reports about men and women suffering instead of healing, or losing hope when they only need help to get to where we are, or feeling so much pain they reach for a gun instead of reaching for a hand, pick up that gun instead of picking up a phone.

Point Man doesn't cost millions of dollars but it works and has been working since 1984. We also know support groups work, yet again, not expensive, usually lead by volunteers, maybe operating on donations to cover coffee and other refreshments. So why aren't these types of programs supported? Simple. There isn't any money in it for anyone. No huge corporations coming up with research needing lab rats and government funding to the tune of millions a year. We don't have lobbyists rubbing elbows with Congressmen in Washington. The only time we end up in Washington is Memorial Day and a trip Congress is not on the list of events to attend. While we do the best we can to find as many in need as possible, each one of us struggle to get to where we need to be. Most of the time the money comes out of our own pockets or from small donations to help us. One huge problem with having a small financial need is most people figure we just don't need it but it sure could help cover the cost of doing what works vs what is nothing more than pricy failures.

We're going to keep reading reports like the one on Army Times over and over again until the DOD and the VA go back to "lessons already learned" and stop trying to change the past. One more thing already learned is, while no one can changed their past, they can in fact make peace with it if they have the right kind of help to do it.

American mother missing in Japan after row with airman husband

'Love my kids, hubby and parents. Bye': Haunting 'suicide' note left by American mother missing in Japan after row with airman husband
By RACHEL QUIGLEY
8th December 2011

Mother: Kelli's children, aged one and four, have been trying to come to terms with her disappearance

An American mother-of-two who has been missing in Japan for the last six weeks may have committed suicide.

Kelli Abad, 27, from Georgia, disappeared on October 26 after arguing with her husband Vince Abad - an airman at a major U.S. Air Force facility in Japan.

He told CNN that she had threatened to kill herself when they argued over the phone, after he had gone to see their pastor, who had helped resolve disputes between them in the past.

When he came home later that night, their children, aged one and four, were in their beds sleeping and his wife was gone.

Her car was found two days later at Cape Zanpa on the island of Okinawa, about ten miles from the base, with her cell phone and purse inside.

Mr Abad said there was also a note which read: 'Love my kids, love my hubby and parents. Bye.'

The 30-year-old told CNN: 'We'd had arguments before - it didn't feel too out of place. I assumed she went to see a friend.'
read more here

Marine Corps reports record number of suicide attempts

Do you think they will finally figure out they have been wasting lives by wasting time and money on programs that do more harm than good? Suicides have gone up despite prevention programs. Attempted suicides have gone up despite "training programs" that claim to "toughen their minds" to prevent the ravages of PTSD. With all the evidence coming out over the last 10 years, now they are wondering why everything has failed?

MILITARY: Marine Corps reports record number of suicide attempts

By MARK WALKER
Posted: Wednesday, December 7, 2011



Eleven Marines who have taken their own lives this year were stationed at Camp Pendleton or assigned to a unit headquartered at the base, an official with the suicide prevention program said last month.
More U.S. Marines have attempted to take their own lives this year than ever before, according to the service's latest report from its suicide prevention program.

The report said that 176 Marines attempted suicide through November, more than double the 82 reported in 2002, the first year the Marine Corps began recording and reporting the statistics.
Officials say better reporting procedures and heightened awareness is largely responsible for the higher numbers. In 2010 there were 172 attempted suicides, up from 164 in 2009 and 146 in 2008.

The report also said three active-duty Marines committed suicide in November, raising the number of self-inflicted deaths for the year to 32.

Thirty-seven Marine suicides were reported in 2010 compared with a record 52 in 2009 and 42 in 2008.

Defense Department officials have struggled to prevent and reduce suicides among active-duty and reservists troops as well as veterans.

Last month, the Center for a New American Security in Washington, which analyzes Pentagon statistics, said service members or veterans were taking their own lives at a rate of one every 36 hours between 2005 and 2010.

This week, the issue went before the House Committee on Veterans Affairs in Washington, where an official with the Military Officers Association of America said a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan has placed unprecedented demands on troops and their families.

read more here

Canadian Troops' Christmas packages arrive in wet garbage bags

Troops' Christmas packages arrive damaged

CBC News Posted: Dec 9, 2011 8:36 AM PT Last Updated: Dec 9, 2011 9:18 AM PT Read 118 comments118

A Victoria mother says it's going to be a blue Christmas for many soldiers in Afghanistan because their holiday packages from home are arriving damaged and destroyed.

Terrie Marchand says military officials sent letters to families in October urging them to send Christmas cards and parcels to their loved ones serving overseas.

So she and her family put together a package for her son, who is stationed at Camp Mike Spann in Afghanistan with the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry.

But when it arrived, she was devastated to hear back from her son that most of the mail "arrived in sealed garbage bags filled with water, making the cards and letters unreadable and destroying the parcels."

"He got his Christmas parcel from this sister, a Christmas card from his sister-in-law… and he couldn't even read them. The parcel was so soaked right through the actual wrapping of the DVD right to the disc," she told CBC News.
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Army Sergeant's widow told " no one wanted my husband" before landfill toss

The pubic image of how this nation's fallen are treated has been one of dignity and honor. In the movie Taking Chance, Kevin Bacon escorted the remains of a fallen Marine, never leaving his body after he was prepared tenderly for his last journey home. The remains are prepared, uniforms are pressed before dressing and everything is done with dignity.


The right thing to do is followed by the book. Bacon wanted to honor Chance so much so that he refused to take off his uniform with going through the metal detector at the airport. He slept outside one night with the covered casket refusing to leave Chance. Bacon was upgraded to a first class seat when it the purpose of the trip was discovered. Upon landing, the pilot asked all the passengers to wait until the flag draped coffin was removed. No one complained as they watched it vanish from view.

This is what the public thinks is happening all the time. After all, treating the fallen with tenderness after they sacrificed their lives in service to this country, is the least we can do.

With roadside bombs blowing up, there are many times when body parts are blown off, mixed up with other parts from other KIA's. While we'd like to think that there is a whole body in the coffins we see, too often, there are only body parts. The men and women they served with rise above their heartache to find as much of their "brother" or "sister" as possible.

All of this goes on but the pubic never hears about it. Because family members have come forward to tell about a darker secret, we now know our image of dignity has been a delusion.

NJ widow exposes mishandling of troop remains with push for answers about her husband

By Associated Press
Saturday, December 10, 6:55 AM

FRENCHTOWN, N.J. — It took Gari-Lynn Smith more than four years to learn what happened to the final remains of her husband, an Army sergeant killed in Iraq.

The New Jersey widow never thought that knowing would be worse than not, or that her search would lead to the bottom of a landfill.

“I was told no one wanted my husband, so he was cremated with the medical waste and thrown in the trash,” Smith said in an interview with The Associated Press this week from her home.
Her quest to find the truth of what happened to her husband’s remains led to an even more disturbing revelation this week as the Air Force acknowledged it had dumped cremated partial remains of at least 274 troops into a Virginia dump — far more than previously acknowledged.

Her story, first told by The Washington Post, along with information from multiple whistleblowers about other mistreatment of fallen soldiers’ bodies became the catalyst for an investigation that found “gross mismanagement” at the Air Force’s mortuary in Dover, Del. — the first stop on American soil for fallen troops coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan.

It’s where the body of Sgt. 1st Class Scott R. Smith, a bomb-disposal technician, was flown in July 2006. Smith was killed after he stepped on a pressure plate above a roadside bomb as he worked to clear the area. Several limbs and much of his torso were lost in the explosion, his wife said.

Initially led to believe her husband’s entire body was returned, Gari-Lynn became suspicious after being told she shouldn’t ask to see the body before the closed-casket funeral. Later, she ordered copies of the autopsy and learned there were additional remains located, leading to more questions.

This spring, after years of pestering Air Force officials, she received a letter from the Dover mortuary telling her some of her husband’s body was incinerated and sent to a landfill. It closed: “I hope that this brings you some comfort in your time of loss.”
read more here

Friday, December 9, 2011

Tampa Marine's arm sawed off to be "dressed" for funeral?

Remains of Thonotosassa soldier at center of military mortuary probe

By Jessica Vander Velde
Times Staff Writer
In Print: Friday, December 9, 2011
[STEPHEN J. CODDINGTON Times (2010)]
The casket of Marine Sgt. Daniel Angus, 28, arrived at MacDill Air Force Base on Feb. 4, 2010. His widow, Bonnie, second from the left, looks down at it as family members comfort each other.



TAMPA — As the family of fallen Marine Sgt. Daniel Angus mourned, strangers honored him. They held flags and saluted his casket when it passed through Tampa in a January 2010 motorcade.

Nearly two years later, the Armwood High graduate's funeral preparations are at the center of a federal investigation that concluded the U.S. Air Force has mishandled troops remains.

The Air Force dumped the cremated partial remains of at least 274 American troops in a Virginia landfill and sawed off part of Sgt. Angus' left arm without his family's permission, according to reports from the Air Force and the U.S. Office of Special Counsel, a federal watchdog agency.

The Air Force, while declaring an end to such practices, concluded the military did nothing wrong by removing part of the sergeant's arm so he could be dressed in uniform.

Angus' parents and sister disagree, a family attorney said. They're horrified about his "mutilation," and learning of it has led to a fresh wave of grief, attorney Mark O'Brien said.
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National Guard soldier in uniform victim of hit and run

National Guard soldier in hit & run in Vineland, police want information
Published: Thursday, December 08, 2011
By Stephen Smith
The News of Cumberland County

VINELAND — The state police are asking for information about a truck that hit an Army National Guard soldier as he was trying to repair his car along Route 55 and did not stop.

The soldier, whose name was withheld, did not suffer life-threatening injuries.

Public information officer Christopher Kay said that the guardsman was driving north on Route 55 in the area of milepost 35 just before 4 a.m. on Saturday, Dec. 3.

He was reporting to West Orange for active duty and was dressed in his full camouflage uniform.
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Commander of Maine National Guard was helped to heal his PTSD

Maine top soldier says help is available for PTSD
Dec 8, 2011

Written by
Krister Rollins

AUGUSTA, Maine (NEWS CENTER) - Soldiers returning from the war in Iraq and Afghanistan may suffer a variety of problems adjusting to civilian life--- and some of those may be serious problems.

Major general John "Bill" Libby, commander of the Maine National Guard, says he wants to help all returning service members, regardless of their branch of the military, to make sure they get the help they need.

Libby says he knows the problem first hand. He is a combat veteran of Vietnam and says he came home in 1969 suffering from post traumatic stress disorder.

Libby says it hasn't prevented him from being successful in life, but he says he has needed to seek help from time to time.
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Fatal stabbing suspect told police he suffers from PTSD

Report: Fatal stabbing suspect told police he suffers from post-traumatic stress
By SABINA BHASIN
Posted December 8, 2011

NAPLES — A 37-year-old man charged in an October fatal stabbing in Naples told detectives he suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder stemming from his service in the U.S. Army.

John Orr is charged with second-degree murder in the Oct. 2 death of Jon Wayne Joseph, 63, in the city’s Lake Park neighborhood.

Orr told Naples police, in an interview after the killing, the stress disorder is the result of a sexual assault from his time as an Army soldier in Central America in the 1990s, according to new case documents released this week by the State Attorney’s Office.

Orr’s close friend, Aimee Wolfe, portrayed him as a “walking time bomb” suffering from extreme anxiety. Orr’s father, Joseph Orr, 72, told police his son recently completed a rehabilitation program for the stress disorder, as he had many times before.
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Iraq veteran responds after report of remains taken to landfill

Soldiers' Remains Taken To Landfill; Local Iraq War Vet Responds

By: MIKE BOWERSOCK
Published: December 08, 2011

HILLIARD, Ohio --
A local Iraqi war veteran is speaking out after learning that the remains of 274 service personnel killed in action were cremated and taken to a landfill.

"I served in Iraq in 2006 and four of my really good friends were killed and it makes my blood boil to think they may be in a landfill right now," said Daniel Hutchison, an Iraqi war veteran.

Hutchison spent 2006 and 2007 in Iraq and has written a book on his experiences. He also runs Ohio Combat Veterans, an organization based in Hilliard that helps Iraq and Afghanistan veterans transition into civilian life.

There are no reasons, he contends, no excuses, for allowing the remains of any U.S. service member to go to the dump.

"The argument can be made that it is difficult to try to identify all the pieces to bring it back home, but it's difficult to fight in a war," he said.
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Iraq Veteran commits suicide after killing deputy

Police: NC deputy slain trying to arrest Iraq vet

Associated Press
Posted: Thursday, December 8, 2011


A North Carolina deputy sheriff was shot and killed Wednesday as he tried to arrest an Iraq war veteran with an outstanding arrest warrant for not paying child support, authorities said. The suspect then took his own life.

Moore County Sheriff Lane Carter said that Deputy Richard Rhyne had spoken to the suspect around noon and determined he had an outstanding arrest warrant.

Carter said the suspect, Martin Poynter, pulled out a gun and fatally shot Rhyne outside an abandoned home near Vass, which is 60 miles southwest of Raleigh.

Poynter then turned the same gun on himself and also died, the sheriff said.

The sheriff said the 58-year-old Rhyne went to the home after deputies received a trespassing complaint. The deputy found the 33-year-old Poynter and his brother and had time to check their names before he was killed.

Rhyne had been in law enforcement for 37 years and a Moore County deputy since 2007.

"Our hearts are awful heavy. It's like losing a family member," Carter said.

The suspect's brother witnessed both shootings, Carter said, but he was not involved in the killing and was not arrested.
read more here

Tango Mike Mike video Medal of Honor Roy P. Benavidez

Great way to start the day. I received this link in my email and very glad it was the first one I opened.





Tango Mike Mike is the story of Green Beret Roy P. Benavidez and his heroic action in Vietnam that earned him the Medal of Honor.
read more here



While it takes an act of Congress to award the Medal of Honor to a serviceman or, in the case of Dr. Mary E. Walker, the only woman to receive the Medal of Honor, there are other heroes walking around everyday.

They earned Silver and Bronze Stars for acts above and beyond what anyone else expected out of them. They did whatever they could to save the lives of others.

There are others, not standing out in the crowd, right next to their military brothers and sisters. Each one of them knows the risk of being in the military. They know they can get deployed into combat zones. They know they can be killed in the line of duty just as much as they know parts of their bodies may not come home with them. They know that their days in combat will never leave them even though they have left where it happened.

Would you do it? Would you risk your life for someone else? Would you take so many risks, set aside your personal desires and be willing to leave your families and friends?

Would you want to do it if you only had to do it part time? National Guardsmen and women are walking around looking like everyone else, doing normal jobs and you'd never know they were in the military. We had a supervisor of our cable company come out to the house because of problems no one else could solve. He saw the Bronze Star Award my husband has hanging on the wall and we started to talk about it. Then he told me that he was in the Army. He is in the National Guards.

We talked some more and then it struck me I wouldn't have ever known he was serving if he had not made some kind of connection with me. They don't just tell you about it.

How do you know if you are talking to a hero when you meet them? They all look just like everyone else. When I go to meetings and gatherings, I assume they are all veterans, since that is the purpose of the events, but when I am in the grocery store or even in church, it is nearly impossible to tell if someone served or not.

You can't tell by the haircuts anymore. You can't assume someone with long hair and dressed in leather riding a Harley is nothing more than "just another biker" instead of a veteran of Vietnam, Gulf War, Afghanistan or Iraq. Short hair and shaved heads are in style so that doesn't help either.

The only way to know if you are face to face with a hero going above and beyond what you expect out of them is when you make a connection to them as a person first. You'll be amazed by how many heroes are in your life everyday.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Snowball Express Needs You

Mother Of Fallen Marine Asking All Of St. Louis To Help
Snowball Express Needs You
Teresa Woodard
Reporter
9:46 p.m. CST, December 7, 2011

(KTVI-FOX2now.com)— Even if you have no vacation scheduled and no flight to catch Friday morning, a St. Louis area woman is hoping you show up at Lambert airport anyway. She`s extending a cordial invitation to a very special sendoff.

Julie Vinnedge has started making a living by warming hearts, even though her heart is broken.

"This Christmas is very difficult for us," she said, standing in the lobby of a St. Peters, Missouri, bank, smiling at a pile of toys. "But this makes me feel wonderful."


"If they can just get one or two gifts that they can call their own, it makes their day," she said of the kids who will be on the receiving end of the toys she and her adopted Marine family have taken in. Wednesday night she was collecting toys at the Enterprise Bank's Christmas Party.

There's a sad reason this Christmas will be difficult. "Phillip should be able to be home," she said. "Last year he was going to be deployed so we were prepared. But this Christmas he should be in my living room Christmas morning."

But he won't be. Phillip Vinnedge was a 19-year-old United States Marine Lance Corporal, killed in action in Afghanistan on October 13, 2010. He's the reason she's so involved in the Marine Corps' annual Toys for Tots toy drive, and the reason she's taken on another special project, and she needs all of St. Louis on board. It's called the Snowball Express, and it departs Lambert Friday.
read more here

Additional remains sent to landfill, Air Force acknowledges

Additional remains sent to landfill, Air Force acknowledges
By Charley Keyes and Barbara Starr, CNN Senior National Security Team
updated 4:11 PM EST, Thu December 8, 2011

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Mortuary at Dover Air Force Base handles remains of returning war dead
New Jersey congressman says the Pentagon should have acted faster
An earlier report found mismanagement at the mortuary
Service members' body parts incinerated, buried with medical waste

Washington (CNN) -- The Air Force is admitting Thursday that it sent more sets of military personnel remains to a Virginia landfill than it originally acknowledged.

Backtracking on initial information about how it handled the remains of American service members killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Air Force now says the cremated body parts of hundreds of the fallen were burned and dumped in the landfill.

Earlier, the Air Force said only a small number of body parts had been buried in a commercial landfill and claimed it would be impossible to make a final determination of how many remains were disposed of in that manner.

The Washington Post broke the story Thursday, and the Air Force now confirms that body fragments linked to at least 274 fallen military personnel sent to the Dover Air Force Base Mortuary were cremated, incinerated and buried with medical waste. That procedure was in place between November 2003 and May 1, 2008. The Air Force also said that 1,762 body parts were never identified and also were disposed of, first by cremation, then by further incineration and then buried in a landfill.
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Protestors try to stop Iraq veteran from losing her home

Occupy Atlanta takes over another home


Posted: Dec 07, 2011 1:37 PM EST
Updated: Dec 08, 2011 8:11 AM EST
By Sonia Moghe - email
By Jocelyn Connell

RIVERDALE, GA (CBS ATLANTA) -
Occupy Atlanta protesters camped-out in below-freezing temperatures Thursday morning to make a statement. They want to save people's home from foreclosure.

They scheduled a press conference for Thursday afternoon at a home in Atlanta on Glen Iris Drive where the family faces eviction. About half-a-dozen tents filled the front yard. Protesters said the family was a victim of predatory lending.

They also remained at a home in Riverdale where a war veteran will soon lose her home.

Brigitte Walker said she bought the Riverdale home in 2004 and three years later was discharged from the military because of medical reasons.
read more here

"Dwell Time" for Soldiers May Lead to Increase in PTSD Diagnosis

Study Says Longer "Dwell Time" for Soldiers May Lead to Increase in PTSD Diagnosis
By Lauren Zimmerman - Web Producer
Wednesday, December 7, 2011

"Dwell time" is the term used by the military for the time at home between deployments.According to a new Pentagon study, service members who have more dwell time may have a greater chance of being diagnosed with a mental health disorder.

As the war in Iraq winds down with troops expected to be out by the end of the year, deployments continue to other places including Afghanistan.

Going to war and coming home has been a steady cycle for many who've served over the past ten years. Both are an adjustment.

"For me personally, shorter dwell time is good, just so I can get back out there," said Corporal Nick Parker, USMC.

"When you're over there, it's pretty much life and death every day, and you always have to be looking out for yourself - so dwell time is definitely important," added Corporal Jared Tittle, USMC.
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Soldier’s ‘Avoidable’ Death Spurs Gold Star Dad to Action

Man On a Mission: Soldier’s ‘Avoidable’ Death Spurs Gold Star Dad to Action
BY LEON WORDEN
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 7, 2011


Rudy Acosta was a Santa Clarita boy through and through. Born at Henry Mayo Newhall Memorial Hospital, he attended Santa Clarita Christian School and enlisted in the Army as a medic. He wanted to save lives and become a surgeon.

He shipped off to Afghanistan in the summer of 2010. When he came back home for a visit in January, he came back a man.

Two months later he was dead.

He didn’t step on a land mine. He didn’t get shot by a sniper. He didn’t fall in a firefight.

Rudy and his fellow soldiers were back at their base – safely, by all rights, inside the wire.

They were preparing for a mission, cleaning their guns, when an Afghan insurgent masquerading as a protector opened fire on the troops he was hired to guard.

Rudy may have saved one last life as he fell. Reports suggest he may have stepped into a bullet intended for another solider – a woman who credits Rudy for the fact that she is alive today to raise her own family.
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National Guard soldier jumped to his death


Soldier falls to his death from Columbia bridge

Written by
Barbara Leader


Caldwell Parish Sheriff’s deputies say a National Guard soldier jumped to his death Tuesday from the U.S. 165 bridge in Columbia.

Chief Deputy Glenn Gilmore said that Marcus Delon White, 24, of Monroe was travelling to Camp Beauregard in Alexandria with his fiance when he stopped his car on the Ouachita River bridge. Gilmore said White worked at Camp Beauregard 4 days each week.

“He stopped the car and he got out,” Gilmore said. “I don’t think he told her he was going to jump.” Gilmore said that his fiance called for help and passers by stopped to try to keep him from jumping.

“They were holding him, but he broke free just as the officer arrived on the scene,” Gilmore said.
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Georgia school on lockdown after Iraq veteran's suicide threat

Here is one more veteran making the headlines after he didn't get the help he needed. He's getting it now according to this report. Thankfully it ended the way it did but all of us should be asking how it began.

How do they go from being willing to die, facing days trying to stay alive, then end up wanting to die when they come home? These veterans are supposed to be safe back here but too often there is more danger to face from the enemy inside of them. The last thing they want to do is hurt someone else or make them feel fearful because of them, but it happens. It happens when a family doesn't understand what is going on, why their veteran changed or how to help them. It happens when the veteran is not getting the help they need, either because they don't seek it or when they do, it is not the right kind of help. Complicating this is the fact there is a huge backlog of claims in the VA, long waits for appointments and some programs that don't work. All this adds to the stress the veteran feels.

Do you read about all of this in your newspaper? Do you see it on the cable news stations? No, but when one of them gets into trouble, you hear about it over and over again. Wouldn't it be wonderful to know about all of this before it ever gets to the point where a family falls apart, a veteran commits suicide, a school has to be put on lockdown or a police officer has to kill a veteran?

Digging Deeper: PTSD its affects and resources

Posted: Dec 07, 2011
By Jennifer Emert

Lee County, GA -
Lee County schools were on lock down Wednesday morning due to a former Marine's suicide threat.

Tim Tompkins threatened to kill himself in a neighborhood near the schools. Tompkins was taken into custody Wednesday afternoon. He is not charged with a crime and is being treated for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

Family members say Tompkins struggled after serving in Iraq.

They say left his Canal Street home with a knife today and used social media to communicate the threat.

It was the resolution Tim Tompkins family hoped all morning for. Tompkins was taken into custody on River Street around 1:00 PM after police used his cell phone to find him.

"It registered at different places in the city and it finally registered up here and came up here and started looking and he was at a friends house," said Chief Charlie Moore, Leesburg Police.

His mother called police after Tompkins threatened his own life Wednesday morning. They say he left the Canal Street home with a knife. On his facebook page he posted, he saw dead people and when a friend asked if he was losing his mind, he replied, "yea I am". Schools were put on lock down and K-9 units from Mitchell County and the DNR searched wooded areas around the schools.
read more here

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Across the years, an unbroken connection

This picture is of photos hanging in my kitchen. They are my husband's father (top middle) and uncles. All of them served in WWII. The Marine in the bottom of the photo is uncle John, killed in Saipan. My husband served in Phu Bai Vietnam entering into military service because of his family and the fact that he figured as soon as he was done with high school, he'd end up there anyway. Both of us are second generation Americans. My Dad served in Korea but my uncles served during WWII.

The following is something sent to me and is very moving, especially today. My Dad, uncles and my husband's family are all gone now but we are reminded of them everyday.

Across the years, an unbroken connection: The Navy of Pearl Harbor was a proud, professional force
Published: Wednesday, December 07, 2011
By Guest Columnist

By Eric Schuck

Seventy years on, she still bleeds. In sun and in rain, in wind and in calm, she slowly weeps away a drop of black oil for each of the souls lost on that now distant Sunday. The drops rise slowly, countless small spheres ascending through crystalline waters only to break in an iridescent sheen on the harbor, mirroring the colors of the rainbows that glow so often in the Hawaiian sky. But there can be no mistaking this for a place of beauty: Each drop reeks of sulfur. Each drop carries the unmistakable smell of death.

Here lies the USS Arizona, late of the U.S. Navy. Her grave rests in shallow water on the eastern side of Ford Island, her shattered, burned and broken hull forever holding more than 1,100 sailors and Marines for whom the world ended shortly after 8 a.m. on Dec. 7, 1941. I have seen her a dozen times, and each time I mourn the same as the first.

Despite the remoteness of seven decades, Pearl Harbor is, for me, an intimately personal place. On the day of the attack, my grandfather had been in the Navy for nearly nine years. He was part of the "old Navy," the $21-a-month professionals who stood watch through the Depression and who still formed the bulk of the Navy on Dec. 7. His ship was not in port that day, instead desperately attempting to deliver a deckload of Marine scout planes to Midway. It was only through the fickle but most providential favor of Neptune and Mars that his ship was at sea.

His time would come. Six months and a day later, he would find himself on the bright, burning deck of a dying carrier in the Coral Sea. Battered and beleaguered, he would survive, earn an officer's commission and retire from the Navy 14 years later, going on to a magnificent second act as a gentleman farmer and grandfather. But he never forgot the tragedy of that December day. For while to most of us the dead of Pearl Harbor are nothing more than marble-carved names or sepia-tinged photos, for him they were living, breathing men, eternally young in his memories. They were always with him.

That sense of loss cannot be understated. The Navy was much smaller then, a much more intimate fraternity than it would be in 1945. As historian S.E. Morison notes, through most of the 1930s the Navy typically numbered around 10,000 officers and 100,000 men. The losses at Pearl Harbor fell disproportionately among these long-service brethren, and it was these men who bore the brunt of those first bitter months of the war.
read more here

Also from CNN

Nation pauses to remember Pearl Harbor
By the CNN Wire Staff
updated 2:27 PM EST, Wed December 7, 2011

The commemoration at the Pearl Harbor visitor center included a rifle salute and wreath presentations.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: "We stop and stand fast in memory of our heroes," Navy regional commander says
This year's commemoration marks 70 years since the attacks on Oahu
The attack pulled the United States into World War II
The Pearl Harbor Survivors Association is disbanding this month
(CNN) -- Survivors of the surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor gathered Wednesday to remember the 2,400 people who lost their lives exactly 70 years ago.
"Just as every day and unlike any other day, we stop and stand fast in memory of our heroes of Pearl Harbor and the Second World War," Rear Adm. Frank Ponds, commander for Navy region Hawaii, told the gathering.
U.S. Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus took note of the devastating legacy of the two-hour attack on Pearl Harbor 70 years ago.
"The history of December 7, 1941, is indelibly imprinted on the memory of every American who was alive that day. But it bears repeating on every anniversary, so that every subsequent generation will know what happened here today and never forget," Mabus said.
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What Ancient Greeks Can Teach Us about War

What Ancient Greeks Can Teach Us about War
A reading from Ajax at Tsai Center on anniversary of Pearl Harbor

12.07.2011
By Rich Barlow

Think ancient literature is only for scholars? The Pentagon paid almost $4 million to Theater of War, a New York performance company, to present Sophocles’ Ajax at military sites around the country. Why would the brass promote a play about a mythical Greek hero who tries to assassinate his generals after the Trojan War for awarding a prize to his rival, Odysseus, instead of him?

Stay with us. In the play, believed to have been written about 440 B.C., the goddess Athena, Odysseus’ benefactress, clouds Ajax’s mind so that he butchers livestock instead of generals, after which, shamed, he kills himself. The tragedy centers on Ajax’s mad rage and the wartime situation that spurs it. Fighting two wars themselves, American military leaders wanted to mine Ajax for its insights into combat stress and to show soldiers suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that they are not alone. Theater of War brings the play and a follow-up discussion to the Tsai Performance Center tonight.


Actor Reg E. Cathey stars as Ajax tonight at the Tsai Performance Center. Photo courtesy of Theater of War

Today, of course, is the 70th anniversary of Pearl Harbor, and “it seems like an excellent time to honor our warriors, past, present, and future,” says Stephen Esposito, a College of Arts & Sciences associate professor of classics, who teaches in the Core Curriculum, which is copresenting tonight’s event.
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Thank you for another year of encouragement

I can understand being too busy, especially this time of year. My neighbors are putting up their decorations and lighting their homes, spending hours of their days on making displays. They do a great job. Shoppers are finally getting to the malls with their lists in hand searching for the bargain on what they think will make someone else happy. Christmas cards are starting to arrive in mailboxes from friends we hear from once a year but think about off and on during the year. It is almost as if these are all reminders of people we care about.

For me, this semester at college has been, to put it bluntly, kicking my ass. I can't believe the hours it takes to deliver projects and study for just two classes! I have been so focused that yesterday I had to call my Godchild to wish her happy birthday because I forgot it was already December. Humiliating for me but she got a kick out of it knowing her "Godmother" is usually out of her mind.

While most people don't take the time to think about what is going on in the military or with our veterans, some people take the time everyday to keep informed.
In four years this blog has had over 400,000 pageviews. For a blog like this covering just the military and veterans, that proves people do care about what is going on and they don't get the coverage from major media outlets. Some of the best reporting going on in this country is done at the local levels with small newspapers and TV stations caring enough to devote some time to these men and women. I am doing my best to be a reminder of people we care about. If you are reading this, then you must be doing it because you care about them as much as I do.


One more indication of this is when Stars and Stripes did a fantastic report from FORWARD OPERATING BASE PASAB back in August I posted the link to it with a powerful image. I was stunned by the pictures in the report but this one stood out.

For Those I Love I Will Sacrifice
Pfc. Kyle Hockenberry, of 4th Squadron, 4th Cavalry Infantry Regiment, 1st Heavy Combat Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, who was injured in an improvised explosive device attack near Haji Ramuddin, is treated by flight medic Cpl. Amanda Mosher while being transported by medevac helicopter to the Role 3 hospital at Kandahar Air Field in Afghanistan on June 15, 2011. Laura Rauch/Stars and Stripes

Since this post went up, over 28,000 people have read it. A month after the post went up, Time Magazine did a follow up for what happened to Kyle Hockenberry "No Idle Boast: A Soldier's Tattoo Becomes Truth" and you can read more about it at the above link. Why? What caused so much attention?

We've seen thousands of reports since the troops were sent into Afghanistan ten years ago. On this blog we've tracked stories of veterans giving back as well as getting into trouble, suffering and overcoming, stories about heroes and the homeless. I believe this post reflected the fact that while most of us just get on with our own lives, we know there are many risking their lives everyday willingly. They do it for each other.

To the readers of Wounded Times, I want to thank you for your encouragement. It has been a struggle to stay up on all that is going on while in college. If I didn't have you reading what I post, there would be no reason for me to do it. I believe that the public cares about this topic but no one is reminding them of people they care about but don't think about. If you know someone not paying attention, send them the link to the story Stars and Stripes did and remind them during this Christmas season there are loving sacrifices being made everyday by the men and women serving this country.

Three Receive Silver Stars at Stuttgart Ceremony

Three Receive Silver Stars at Stuttgart Ceremony

December 06, 2011
Stars and Stripes
by John Vandiver



STUTTGART, Germany -- When Capt. David G. Fox regained consciousness shortly after a massive roadside bomb detonated nearby, the only words his comrades down the mountainside could understand on the radio was the message: "urgent … surgical."

That was enough.

After hearing their commander's muffled radio call and seeing a plume of black smoke billowing high above on the ridgeline in Kapisa province, Afghanistan, Fox's men sprung into action.

Under heavy enemy fire, Sgt. 1st Class McKenna L. Miller and Staff Sgt. Matthew D. Gassman began a desperate climb up the mountain. Then they and Fox made a harrowing journey back down -- one carrying an injured Afghan soldier, another a dead French trooper, and the thirdproviding cover fire, according to the medal citations.
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Fort Carson soldier's body found in car at rest stop


The Pueblo Chieftain News Crime Beat
Soldier's death under investigation
Wednesday, December 7, 2011 12:00 am
By LORETTA SWORD

A 40-year-old Fort Carson soldier was found dead in his car Tuesday afternoon at a rest stop on northbound Interstate 25.

Pueblo County Coroner James Kramer said the man's death is being investigated as a suicide but he declined to specify the suspected cause of death pending notification of the victim's family members.

Kramer said the cause of death was apparent, "but that's all I can release at this time."
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Marine to be honored for volunteering in Times Square

Marine Corps Public Affairs Office New York
Courtesy Story
NEW YORK - A local Marine will be honored for his community service in a Times Square-ceremony Wednesday, Dec. 7, at 3 p.m. before he and his family departs for California just before Christmas in preparation for an Afghanistan deployment.

Staff Sgt. Daniel Valdes, a father of three children, will receive the Meritorious Volunteer Service Medal for his community outreach work as a member of 6th Communications Battalion in Brooklyn since 2008. Later this month he and his family will move to Camp Pendleton, Calif., where he will join the 1st Assault Amphibian Battalion and deploy to Afghanistan in early 2012.

The Meritorious Volunteer Service Medal recognizes service members who perform outstanding volunteer community service of a sustained, direct and consequential nature, above and beyond their duties as a Marine.

As a family man with a wife and three children, Valdes has spent his time supporting organizations that seek to help families. He has been the driving force behind the battalion's key community outreach events over the past years. Most notably, Valdes initiated a relationship between the battalion and the Ronald McDonald House, serving families of children who are hospitalized, by organizing three separate events featuring a spaghetti meal for the families, gift baskets, toy giveaways, and entertainment.
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