Thursday, January 19, 2012

CNN needs to report on military heroes more than bad reports

CNN needs to report on military heroes more than bad reports
by
Chaplain Kathie

When I wrote about CNN took the easy way out on reporting Veterans with PTSD because they focused on two recent reports of headline grabbing veterans, I was deeply troubled by this
"A coincidence -- two recent high-profile cases? Or a sign of an increase in hostile behavior as U.S. troops complete their withdrawal from Iraq, similar to that seen when U.S. troops returned home from the Vietnam War?"

What CNN did not point out was this simple fact.
1.2 million veterans sought mental healthcare in 2011
January 15, 2012
Wait time critical in VA care for mental health
St. Cloud Times
Written by
Frank Lee

The number of veterans seeking mental health care has increased since 2006 from about 900,000 to 1.2 million last year, according to a Government Accountability Office study.

With all of these veterans seeking mental health help, how is it that CNN sought out "experts" that never seemed to be able to mention this very simple fact while reporting on these two cases?

That's the biggest problem in the fight to end the stigma of PTSD. As with Vietnam veterans coming home with PTSD, some did get into trouble, were arrested and locked up. Some were killed by police officers. Some ended up making the headlines as well but most of them came home suffering in silence while doing the best they could to adapt back to civilian life. They did all of this while reading reports about "crazy Vietnam veterans" and being told they were all someone to be afraid of. No matter what was being said about them many carried on their fight to make sure that "no other veteran would be left behind" and they managed to get this nation to come up with compensation and programs to treat their combat PTSD. It is because of them psychologist and mental health workers began helping average people.

Back then, all the general public knew was what was reported in their local papers and seen on news stations. It was all local. Now there are three major 24-7 cable news stations, FOX, CNN and MSNBC but while they should be reporting on every kind of story about our veterans, they seem to be only interested in reporting on them getting into trouble. Now there is the Internet connecting people across the globe so that anyone with an interest in finding out what is going on in another part of the country, they find it. A small town newspaper reporting on one of their veterans can be read about by everyone. Usually the attention grabbers are bad reports, or at least it seems that way but if this blog is any indication of what people really want to read about this is one of them.


"For those I love I will sacrifice"
is the most popular post on this blog with 28,789 Pageviews. The next most popular one is 12,970 Pageviews for Marine Lance Cpl. William Kyle Carpenter, hero Marine honored While I post about the bad reports as well as the good, no other posts have come close to these two.

I've been thinking about this for a long time and can only come to one conclusion. The popularity of these stories is because the general public never seems to be made aware they exist while watching or reading news coverage where they live. While they can find out about candidates running for the Presidency and what they are doing in a different state, since that is all the national media seems interested in covering, they cannot find out about veterans the same way unless they are in trouble. They have to spend the time searching for these stories while the national media stations take the easy way out and end up supporting the fear the general public has toward veterans.

The following are reports on this blog from the first 14 days of 2012 that are positive ones. While I do cover the bad reports along with the good it would be real reporting for the national news stations to do the same. That way the general public would finally understand that most veterans never stop giving back and want to do more for this country no matter what price they had to pay for what they've already done.

After reading these you'll understand why, even after tracking all these reports, there is no other group I'd rather spend my time with and on. I just wish that CNN could do the same. While they celebrate heroes every year, they never seem to be willing to spend the time to report on our veteran heroes making a difference everyday.
Caught on video: Unemployed Iraq Vet stops bullies on bus
Iraq war vet stands up to bullies on Lacey bus
by TONYA MOSLEY / KING 5 News
January 1, 2012
Posted on December 31, 2011 at 5:10 PM

LACEY, Wash. - Jim Hardie doesn't really see himself as much of a hero.

"I really don't feel like I have any more value than anybody else,” he said.

He's a family man with an eight-year run in the Marine Corps. But for the last two years he’s been riding the bus in search of a job.

Last week after a full day of searching, Jim sat across from three guys he felt were being disrespectful to everyone on the bus.

West Virginia Air National Guard female medic earns Bronze Star for Valor


W.Va. flight medic receives medal for bravery in Afghanistan
By Travis Crum
January 1, 2012

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Nicole Hopkins, a flight medic from West Virginia, said she would never forget the day she left Afghanistan with severe injuries received during a dangerous mission in one of the war's deadliest months.

She vividly remembers looking out her flight's window during her return trip at another plane carrying coffins draped in American flags.

"What I thought most about during that flight home was the guy we picked up that day, Sgt. Matthew Weikert," Hopkins said. "He was flying back to the states the same time as me, only he wasn't flying home injured."

Hopkins, a 35-year-old staff sergeant with the West Virginia Air National Guard, was presented the Bronze Star with Valor last month for her bravery during missions to rescue injured soldiers in July 2010.



Military veterans create Tampa charities to help troops

By HOWARD ALTMAN
The Tampa Tribune
Published: January 02, 2012

They were both in the Navy.

They are both named Bob.

And now they spend their days helping out those who serve by running two of Tampa Bay's biggest military charity organizations.

Bob Silah served 27 years, retiring as a captain in 1989.

An active member of the Tampa chapter of the Military Officers Association of America, he regularly kept in touch with the local military community, especially the folks at the James A. Haley Veterans Hospital.

In 2004, he got a call from a doctor there.

"They said they had more and more patients coming in and they needed help, especially with their families," said Silah, who came up with an idea to help.

He created Operation Helping Hand that May.



Veteran dies saving employee from gunman
Family, friends remember Carter’s kindness
SHEILA HAGAR
WALLA WALLA UNION-BULLETIN
January 3, 2012
MILTON-FREEWATER - Everyone knew Rob Carter, friends and family of the Milton-Freewater native said Saturday.

Carter, 58, died Friday doing just what he was known for - cherishing and protecting those he loved. When a gunman entered Carter's business shop, Carter threw himself over his employee to shield her from gunfire, McKenzie Marly said.

That's how her father did things, she explained. "He took care of everyone."

Cecil "Rob" Carter was born to Ray and Kathy Carter on July 18, 1953. He and his brothers, Alan and Cliff, found plenty of trouble to get into, much of it fights among themselves, Marly, 33, said, reciting family legend. "But if anyone messed with any one of them, you had to deal with ‘The Carter Boys.' That's what they were known as. But they were brothers in every way."



USO Sailor Of Year Killed In Afghanistan Standing In For Wounded Bomb Tech
U-T: USO Sailor Of Year Killed In Afghanistan
January 4, 2012
Chad Regelin Killed Monday

Jeanette Steele, U-T San Diego
SAN DIEGO -- When Navy bomb disposal technician Chad Regelin was named 2011 USO sailor of the year, he couldn’t make it to the October gala in Washington, D.C.

He was in Afghanistan, standing in for a wounded bomb technician.

That job took his life Monday. Regelin, a 24-year-old sailor assigned to a San Diego unit, was killed during combat operations with a Marine Corps special operations company in Helmand province, Afghanistan, the Pentagon announced.

His brother Ryan said the sailor was on foot patrol when an explosion occurred. Regelin went to check it out and a second bomb, detonated via a wire, went off.



Gainesville Florida woman lost 84 pounds to become a soldier
Woman Loses 84 Pounds to Become Soldier

Army News Service
by Cynthia Rivers-Womack, USAREC
January 04, 2012
GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- Allison Scarbrough will officially change jobs Jan. 3, 2012, from retail cashier to Health Care Specialist in the U.S. Army. But the change has not been easy.

In May 2010, then 20-year-old Scarbrough walked into the Gainesville recruiting station ready to become a Soldier. This was a brave move for her because before she could enlist two things had to happen. Weighing 240 pounds, the 5-foot-5-inch Scarborough had to lose 84 pounds -- and keep the weight off -- before she would be eligible to enlistment. But for the motivated Scarborough, failure was not an option.

Decorated marine forgives DUI driver who nearly killed him
January 6, 2012

SAN DIEGO (CNS) - A woman who was drunk when she hit a decorated Marine from behind on his motorcycle, leaving him with critical injuries that doctors initially thought would kill him, was sentenced Friday to four years and four months in prison.

Jessica Marie Bloom, 22, pleaded guilty Nov. 8 to felony charges of DUI causing injury and hit-and-run.

The crash left Gunnery Sgt. David W. Smith with numerous injuries, including a partial decapitation, lacerated kidney, lacerated liver and bleeding on the brain.

Smith, a Bronze Star recipient for valor, was comatose for two days, paralyzed completely for two of three days and on life support for 10 days.



Point Man shows the way to what faith can do

January 8, 2012

Point Man started with and for Vietnam Veterans.
Since 1984, when Seattle Police Officer and Vietnam Veteran Bill Landreth noticed he was arresting the same people each night, he discovered most were Vietnam vets like himself that just never seemed to have quite made it home. He began to meet with them in coffee shops and on a regular basis for fellowship and prayer. Soon, Point Man Ministries was conceived and became a staple of the Seattle area. Bills untimely death soon after put the future of Point Man in jeopardy.

However, Chuck Dean, publisher of a Veterans self help newspaper, Reveille, had a vision for the ministry and developed it into a system of small groups across the USA for the purpose of mutual support and fellowship. These groups are known as Outposts. Worldwide there are hundreds of Outposts and Homefront groups serving the families of veterans.

PMIM is run by veterans from all conflicts, nationalities and backgrounds. Although, the primary focus of Point Man has always been to offer spiritual healing from PTSD, Point Man today is involved in group meetings, publishing, hospital visits, conferences, supplying speakers for churches and veteran groups, welcome home projects and community support. Just about any where there are Vets there is a Point Man presence. All services offered by Point Man are free of charge.



Cancer survivor credits Army's help
January 8, 2012
Sgt. 1st Class Ana Carrizo Cancer survivor credits Army's help

Written by
Laura Ungar
The Courier-Journal

Army Sgt. 1st Class Ana Carrizo is surviving breast cancer while her mother is dying of the disease.

Carrizo, 43, said she found her cancer early, thanks to an Army program that electronically reminds soldiers to get medical screenings. But her 69-year-old mother, Ruth Turner, who lives in Panama, found her disease late, and now it’s considered terminal.

“If I was not reminded to do the checks, I probably wouldn’t have found the cancer,” said Carrizo, who was diagnosed in December 2009. “Being female in the military, I think they do a great job … taking care of us.”




Last Vietnam veteran in Florida Air National Guard retires

Written by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
January 8, 2012
Feature Stories
Command Chief Master Sgt. Charles Wisniewski completes 41 years of military service

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (Jan. 8, 2012) – The last Vietnam veteran in the Florida Air National Guard is retiring and ending a more than 40 year military career.

State Command Chief Master Sgt. Charles Wisniewski, who served in Southeast Asia with the U.S. Air Force in 1972-1973, was honored during a retirement ceremony at the Florida National Guard Headquarters Jan. 6.

“Today really marks the end of an era,” said Adjutant General of Florida Maj. Gen. Emmett Titshaw Jr. during the ceremony. “When we say goodbye to (Wisniewski) today, we say goodbye to the last Vietnam veteran in the Florida Air National Guard. That is a milestone.”

Wisniewski, 59, joined the Air Force in 1971 and served as a weapons technician at Utipoa Royal Thai Air Force Base in Thailand. During his year in Thailand he helped load B-52 bombers flying into Vietnam on bombing missions, including during the famed Operation Linebacker II in late 1972.

Soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan wars reflect on coming home to NYC and transition to civilian life
Bronx Army vet says more aid available now from Veterans Administration

BY CORINNE LESTCH
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Tuesday, January 10 2012
When Sandra Rolon came home to the Bronx from her first U.S. Army deployment in Iraq in 2005, she was desolate and despondent.

The Mott Haven native was left homeless with two daughters to raise, and there were few services.

“I went to one or two meetings for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder,” she said. “There wasn’t anything at all.”

When she returned after her second round of duty--during which she helped close down the Camp Bucca detention facility in 2009--everything had changed.

“I got a call from the (James J. Peters Veterans Affairs Medical Center in the Bronx) the same day my orders ended,” said Rolon, 53. “They were directly calling all these soldiers, letting them know, ‘you have five years of medical coverage if you want to exercise that benefit.’”

Now, Rolon helps lead Military Women in Power, which operates out of the Bronx VA hsopital, and she said there has been a surge of interest in the group since the last troops returned to American soil in December.



Maj. Thomas B. Bryant sings for betterment of troops
Third Army soldier sings for betterment of troops
January 10, 2012
13th Public Affairs Detachment
Story by Cpl. Christopher Calvert

CAMP ARIFJAN, Kuwait – For many, singing offers an outlet to express one’s feelings. Troops often find singing helps pass the time during a deployment while building esprit de corps among members of a unit. For one Third Army soldier, singing is more than just a hobby; it’s a way to help his fellow brothers and sisters in arms.

Maj. Thomas B. Bryant, Third Army/ARCENT Logistics, deputy plans chief and Silver Creek, Miss., native, grew up singing his entire life.

“I’m the son of a preacher,” said Bryant. “I’ve been singing pretty much all of my life. It’s just been one of those things God has blessed me with. I like to make people feel what I’m feeling, and singing helps me accomplish this.”

When Bryant graduated from high school, he felt compelled to join the U.S. Army Reserves and serve his country like his father did before him, he said.

Lance Cpl. Donald Hogan to be posthumously awarded Navy Cross
Marine from Camp Pendleton to be awarded Navy Cross posthumously
January 10, 2012
The secretary of the Navy next week will present the Navy Cross to the family of a Marine from Camp Pendleton killed while saving the life of other Marines in Afghanistan, officials announced Tuesday.

Navy Secretary Ray Mabus is set to present the medal Jan. 17 to the family of Lance Cpl. Donald Hogan in a ceremony at Camp Pendleton. The Navy Cross is second only to the Medal of Honor for combat bravery by Marines or sailors.

Hogan, 20, assigned to the 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, was killed Aug. 26, 2009, by a buried explosive device after pushing a Marine to safety and yelling warnings to other Marines. Hogan was on a walking patrol in Helmand province, long a Taliban stronghold.


According to the Navy Cross citation, Hogan spotted a trigger wire for a buried bomb and hurled himself into the body of the nearest Marine to push him away from the imminent blast.



Triple amputee soldier wants to stay in Army!
US soldier who lost legs in Afghan blast wants to stay on active duty
January 11, 2012
By msnbc.com staff
A U.S. soldier who lost both legs and an arm from an improvised explosive device while on patrol in Afghanistan wants to stay on active duty, if the military will have him, according to a report on the Army website.

Pfc. Kyle Hockenberry, 19, nearly lost his life in the June 2011 blast in Haji Ramuddin that killed Pfc. Nick Hensley.



Veteran Uses His Disability Check To House Homeless Veterans
Shane D'Onofrio, N.M. Veteran, Uses His Disability Check To House Homeless Veterans
January 12, 2012
It's an understatement to say that Navy veteran Shane D'Onofrio would give the shirt off his back for his fellow servicemen.

The Rio Rancho, N.M. veteran actually dedicates his income to vets in need, according to KOAT.com.

D'Onofrio reinvests his disability check -- about $1,700 each month -- back into What Would U Give, a nonprofit he started a few years ago designed to help other disabled veterans get off the streets while building community development and helping veterans achieve their after-military life goals.



90 year old WWII veteran still doing her part to help the troops
January 13, 2012
WWII vet still doing her part to help the troops

By Arline A. Fleming/Special to the Independent



NARRAGANSETT — Doris Blaney might be 90 years old, but she is hardly an idle nonagenarian.

In addition to knitting items to sell at the South Kingstown Farmers Market and being an active member of the Washington County VFW Post 916, she decided that when it came time to donate to the state-wide project for the Ladies Auxiliary of the VFW, offering an average donation wouldn’t be enough.

This year’s cause, Suicide Prevention in the Military, just felt more important to her than that.

“I was a Marine during World War II and it just hit home, so I decided we should do something as big as we can possible do.”

Blaney decided to organize a fund-raiser to make a significant donation and raise some awareness in the process, and when she announced her intention to her five grown children, her 12 grandchildren, her great-grandchildren and other relatives and friends, “they all jumped in with both feet,” she said.



Super heroes get PTSD too
January 14, 2012
After all these years some people still think that cowards and criminals are the only veterans claiming PTSD. That if they have PTSD, they are dangerous. What can we expect when the only time they make the news is when they are arrested or killed in a police standoff? While we read other reports here, the general public has no clue what it is really like for any of them.

Here's a story you should pass onto anyone you think needs an attitude adjustment. Read about Sgt. Rieman and what he did to earn his Silver Star. If this isn't courage, nothing is.

Silver Star Recipient Talks About His PTSD at Free Symposium

Posted Fri, Jan 13, 2012

By Bobbie O'Brien
SARASOTA
Sgt. Tommy Rieman was awarded a Silver Star for conspicuous gallantry and courage under fire while serving in Iraq. But, he will do something that takes as much courage this Saturday in Sarasota. He will discuss living with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

The free symposium will start with a documentary that features the soldier and others struggling with PTSD and examines the military culture that stigmatizes mental health.

Rieman survived 11 wounds while guiding his team through multiple attacks in Iraq December 2003 and President Bush recognized his bravery.

“Tommy Rieman was a teenager pumping gas in Independence, Kentucky when he enlisted in the U.S. Army,” Pres. Bush said. “He was on a recognizance mission in Iraq when his team came under heavy enemy fire. For his exceptional courage, Sgt. Rieman was award the Silver Star. He has earned the respect and gratitude of our entire country.”

And Rieman is proud of his country and the Army. So much so, he agreed to be a part of the Army's video program called Real Heroes. But while on his second tour in Iraq, his situation changed and he considered suicide.

U.S. sailors help rescue 68 people on raft in Mediterranean Sea

U.S. sailors help rescue 68 people on raft in Med
By GEOFF ZIEZULEWICZ
Stars and Stripes
Published: January 17, 2012
NAPLES, Italy — A Navy aircrew over the weekend helped rescue 68 people adrift on a raft in the Mediterranean Sea, more than 80 miles off the coast of Malta.

The sailors, members of Hawaii-based Patrol Squadron 47 and working out of Sicily’s Naval Air Station Sigonella, received a distress call from Maltese authorities just before sunset on Saturday, according to a Navy release. The sailors, at Sigonella for a six-month rotation, boarded a P-3 Orion aircraft, scouring a 30-by-60-nautical-mile area.

The crew spotted a drifting raft that was empty and continued the search, said the crew’s commander, Navy Lt. Nicholas Warack.

“It was essential for us to get assistance to those people,” Warack said Tuesday.

Now flying in darkness, the crew spotted a rubber raft carrying 68 men, women and children of Somali origin, the release said.
read more here

Military amputees inspire through softball

Military amputees inspire through softball
BY MITCH STACY
Associated Press
Jan 19, 7:44 AM EST


PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) -- When a roadside bomb in Afghanistan shredded Marine Lance Cpl. Josh Wege's legs in 2009, the former high school baseball star wondered if he would even survive - let alone walk, run or play ball again.

But on a recent Saturday afternoon, a crowd at a Tampa-area stadium watched him drill a pitch from former U.S. Olympic softballer Jennie Finch over an outfielder's head and use his high-tech prosthetic legs to run out a triple - finishing with a belly-flop slide into third base. His Wounded Warrior Amputee Softball Team crushed an all-star squad that included former pro and college players 23-8.

Wege, 22, plays first base for the barnstorming bunch of Army and Marine combat veterans, most of whom rely on prosthetic limbs. Corporate sponsorships have allowed the team to travel around the country playing local teams for charity, amassing a 14-13 record going into a game Sunday against a team of first responders in Orange County, Calif. And their schedule is growing, with 75 games already booked for 2012.

All of the infielders are missing at least one of their legs. Two of the outfielders use those special carbon-fiber running legs, the ones that look like upside-down question marks, for speed. One outfielder is missing a hand, and the right-fielder plays without his entire left arm and shoulder.
read more here

GOP candidates vie for military votes

GOP candidates vie for military votes
By Brian Bakst - The Associated Press
Posted : Wednesday Jan 18, 2012 9:51:36 EST
BLYTHEWOOD, S.C. — Mitt Romney has ex-POW John McCain vouching for him. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum highlights his time on the Senate Armed Services Committee. And former House Speaker Newt Gingrich frequently calls himself an “Army brat” who grew up on military bases.

Although Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Texas Rep. Ron Paul are the only GOP candidates to have worn a military uniform, all of the Republican presidential contenders are emphasizing their military ties these days in a state that’s home to 413,000 veterans and eight military bases, with thousands of people on active duty.

“My purpose in life was to never be the president of the United States,” Perry says as he campaigns ahead of South Carolina’s primary Saturday. “My purpose has always been to serve my country and my state whenever they need or they call. That’s our duty as Americans.”

Perry’s days as an Air Force pilot in the 1970s and his father’s B-17 tail-gunner missions in World War II are staples of his South Carolina message as he looks to right his struggling campaign.

Paul, a flight surgeon in the 1960s who made his name as an antiwar congressman, is filling mailboxes with five-page letters that include a picture of him as a young draftee in a full-brimmed Air Force hat. “Let me begin by telling you that the troops know first and foremost that I am one of them,” he writes.

There’s a reason for the intensive courting: As long as South Carolina has been instrumental in deciding GOP nominees, the state’s voters have rewarded candidates with military service. Every GOP primary winner since Ronald Reagan in 1980 has been a veteran.
read more here

VA hiring more personnel to cut Florida guardianship backlogs

VA hiring more personnel to cut Florida guardianship backlogs

By William R. Levesque, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Thursday, January 19, 2012

The Department of Veterans Affairs is hiring 10 additional case managers in Florida to eliminate a backlog in a program providing financial guardians for veterans.

VA Secretary Eric Shinseki said in a Jan. 12 letter to U.S. Rep. Richard Nugent, R-Brooksville, that about 1,100 Florida veterans await initial appointments necessary to appoint a guardian and the average wait time is 75 days.

Nugent had complained to Shinseki in December after hearing from constituents facing long delays in getting guardians appointed. Nugent said some of the veterans his office worked with had waited more than 100 days for an appointment.

When his staff intervenes, the appointments are promptly scheduled by the VA, Nugent said.

"But for the untold numbers of veterans and families who didn't think to call their member of Congress, the situation was totally unacceptable," Nugent said in a statement.
read more here

Army soldier shot at San Bernardino homecoming to be moved

Army soldier shot at San Bernardino homecoming to be moved

Melissa Pinion-Whitt, Staff Writer
Posted: 01/18/2012


SAN BERNARDINO - The military is planning to soon move Army Spc. Christopher Sullivan to a facility specializing in treating wounded soldiers.

Sullivan, 22, has been hospitalized since Dec. 23 after he was shot at his welcome-home party in San Bernardino. His division at Fort Campbell, Ky., has been waiting for his condition to improve.

He remained on life-support Wednesday, his mother, Suzanne, said.

"He was in pretty bad shape," said Lt. Col. Frank Garcia with the 101st Airborne Division at Fort Campbell. "I know there were some concerns from the doctor about moving him."

read more here

Citizenship Changes Bittersweet for Deported Vets

Citizenship Changes Bittersweet for Deported Vets



January 19, 2012
Military.com
by Bryant Jordan
Former Army Spc. Hector Barajas sat at his computer in Rosarito Beach, Mexico. He logged into Facebook. He uploaded a photo of servicemembers celebrating their new U.S. citizenship in the White House Rose Garden, where they’d been sworn in.

“Interesting acknowledgment of service, loyalty and commitment to the U.S. and the change in [immigration laws] since 2001,” Barajas wrote. “What about those that have been forgotten or banished? Why do they not count?”

As pleased as he was to see the government pulling out all the stops to help foreign-born servicemembers become citizens, Barajas couldn’t help but feel down. The Mexican-born, U.S.-raised vet is among the thousands of so-called “banished veterans,” booted from the U.S. because of a law he and many others didn’t know existed until it was too late.

The 1996 law strips legal residents of their green cards and orders they be deported if they’re convicted of any number of crimes – from serious, violent felonies to possession of small amounts of marijuana – making no allowance to how long they’ve been in the U.S. or whether they’ve served in the military.
read more here

"The Dark Horse" Marines focus of how to ease combat stress

This is one of the best things they could do.

War's Lessons Being Applied to Ease Combat Stress

January 19, 2012
Associated Press
by Julie Watson
CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. -- When the Marine unit that suffered the greatest casualties in the 10-year Afghan war returned home last spring, they didn't rush back to their everyday lives.

Instead, the Marine Corps put them into a kind of decompression chamber, keeping them at Camp Pendleton for 90 days with the hope that a slow re-entry into mundane daily life would ease their trauma.

The program was just one of many that the military created as it tries to address the emotional toll of war, a focus that is getting renewed attention as veterans struggling to adjust back home are accused of violent crimes, including murder.

While veterans are no more likely to commit such crimes than the general population, the latest cases have sparked a debate over whether they are isolated cases or a worrying reminder of what can happen when service members don't get the help they need.

"This is a big focus of all the services, that we take care of our warriors who are returning because they have taken such good care of us," Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said, pointing out that tens of thousands of veterans return home to lead productive lives.

Some, however, fall on hard times, getting into trouble with the law. Others quietly suffer, with their families and friends trying to pull them out of a depression.


Few units know war's pain more than the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment. The Camp Pendleton battalion nicknamed "The Dark Horse" lost 25 members in some of the heaviest fighting ever seen in Afghanistan. More than 150 Marines were wounded. More than a dozen lost limbs.

The Marine Corps brass, concerned about the traumatic deployment's fallout, ordered the entire 950-member unit to remain on the Southern California base after it returned home. The 90 days was the same amount of time crews aboard war ships usually spend upon returning home.

During that time, the Marines participated in a memorial service for their fallen comrades. They held barbecues and banquets, where they talked about their time at war. Before the program, troops would go their separate ways with many finding they had no one to talk to about what they had just seen.

Mental health professionals are monitoring the group, which has since scattered. They say it is too early to tell what kind of impact keeping them together made. Combat veterans believe it likely will help in the long run. The Marines have ordered combat units since then to stick together for 90 days after leaving the battlefield.
read more here

Zion Marine takes a long walk back home

Zion Marine takes a long walk back home
BY DAN MORAN
January 18, 2012

ZION — Seven months after an explosion in Afghanistan took both his legs and his left hand, Larry Bailey completed the road back to his parents’ home on Wednesday — walking the final 20 feet on his own.

Ignoring the wheelchair that his father, Larry Sr., had assembled behind him, Bailey clutched a cane and worked his way from the family SUV into his garage, stepping carefully along a driveway that had been cleared of snow and ice.

Later, relaxing with friends and family in his basement, Bailey admitted that he wasn’t sure how that last walk home was going to play out after weeks and months of physical therapy at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.
read more here

Tank Chief charged in "friendly fire" death of Lance Cpl. Benjamin Schmidt

Tank Chief Is Charged in Death Of Marine

BY MICHAEL M. PHILLIPS

The military has charged a U.S. tank commander with negligent homicide and other offenses in the friendly fire death of a fellow Marine during a firefight in Afghanistan last year, a rare move that opens the door for a possible court martial.
read more here

Thousands welcome twice-injured Marine back home

Thousands welcome twice-injured Marine back home
Injured Marine Sgt. Ben Tomlinson is greeted by members of an honor guard following a welcome home celebration Wednesday in his hometown of Jacksonville. His father, Chuck Tomlinson, is pushing the wheelchair. / DAVE MARTIN/AP
Written by
Jay Reeves
The Associated Press
JACKSONVILLE -- A Marine twice injured in Afghanistan received a hero's welcome Wednesday from thousands of well-wishers waving flags and cheering in his Alabama hometown.

Sgt. Ben Tomlinson grinned widely from the family's minivan as a motorcade led by a long line of police cars roared into the city square in Jacksonville for a brief ceremony that included the mayor's declaration of "Ben Tomlinson Day." The one-time all-county football player and track athlete was shot in the chest on patrol about eight months ago during his second deployment to the country.

Two fire trucks held aloft a big flag between ladders, and motorcycle riders stood at attention with more flags. Elementary school students lined the streets.
read more here

Congressmen urged to invite Iraq Veterans to State of Union

Iraq vets invited to State of the Union

Posted: Jan 18, 2012

BIRMINGHAM, AL -
Congressman Spencer Bachus (AL-6) is urging Members of Congress to invite Iraq war veterans to attend next Tuesday's State of the Union Address in the U.S. Capitol.

In a bipartisan letter Wednesday, Congressman Bachus and Representatives Jeff Miller (FL), Tim Walz (MN), and Marcia Fudge (OH) asked colleagues to make a special effort to invite returning veterans to the House gallery for the Presidential address.

Bachus said his personal guest will be Noah Galloway of Alabaster, who was severely wounded in Iraq and has since become a spokesman for injured veterans.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Rep. Todd Akin thinks Arm Medevac helos to save more lives

Lawmaker: Arm Medevac helos to save more lives
By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Jan 17, 2012 19:35:22 EST
A key lawmaker says the military could save more lives in Afghanistan if the Army would arm its Medevac helicopters rather than worry about its commitment to the Geneva Convention.

Rep. Todd Akin, R-Mo., a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee, said in a letter sent Tuesday to the Defense Department that current Army policy of having unarmed Medevac helicopters is slowing transport of injured troops. The helicopters, marked with a red cross, are accompanied by armed aircraft when flying into dangerous areas.

Army officials responded to Akin’s letter, making the case for continuing the MEDEVAC program as it now stands. Adding weapons, they say, would take up space and weight that could be used for patients.

“Longstanding Army policy and doctrine prohibit the mounting of crew-serve weapons on MEDEVAC aircraft and provide detailed guidance on the utilization of the MEDEVAC aircraft, lest the platform lose its protected status under the Geneva Convention,” the Army wrote in an email to Army Times. “AH64 is infinitely more effective in targeting enemy and protecting MEDEVAC helicopters than arming the MEDEVAC itself.”
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PETA to Army: Investigate sheep-beating video

This video is on their site. The person described as "a soldier" is in civilian clothes, so who knows how they figured out it was a soldier?

PETA to Army: Investigate sheep-beating video
By Joe Gould - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday Jan 17, 2012 17:08:33 EST
The animal rights group PETA is calling on the Army to investigate a video depicting what appears to be soldiers watching while a sheep is beaten with a baseball bat.

In the video, posted to PETA’s website Jan. 13, the sheep is repeatedly clubbed by a man in civilian clothes amid laughter and whooping.

“When you have a group standing around and gratuitously and ineptly smashing at this poor animal, the Army needs to say this won’t be tolerated,” said PETA President Ingrid Newkirk told Army Times.

She said PETA was sent the video anonymously, and it has since been posted online. She said has heard from current and former service members who condemn the beating, and she is called on the “top brass” to do the same.
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From PETA
Sheep-beating Video Surfaces

Written by PETA 3 hours ago

UPDATE: PETA has just been informed that the Army never received the letter and apparently never received the thousands of calls or tweets from PETA supporters, including those from Hollywood songwriter Diane Warren, either. We will keep you posted as we hear more.

The following was originally posted January 13, 2012:

Last year, a scandalous video emerged of a U.S. marine throwing a puppy off a cliff. Now there is this video of a soldier repeatedly beating a sheep with a baseball bat to the whoops and laughter of other soldiers who are looking on. I would say "beating to death" because that is probably what happened, but we do not know the upshot. We only know, from watching the video and seeing the mood of the soldiers -- and what appears to be a local lad who arrived with the animal -- that the sheep could only have come to a very nasty end. He or she tries to rise several times but the soldier continues to thwack away amid the laughter.
go here for video

Wife of beaten Marine feels compassion for husband's killer

Wife of beaten Marine feels compassion for husband's killer
Submitted by WWAY on Tue, 01/17/2012
JACKSONVILLE, NC (WCTI) -- A Marine's wife says she feels nothing but compassion for the service member who investigators say fatally wounded her husband.

Staff Sergeant Jimmie Senn, 34, died from severe head trauma Saturday, days after police say he was punched by fellow Camp Lejeune Marine, 22-year-old Brandon Cotter.
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Marine found dead at Camp Pendleton on Sunday

UPDATE
Local marine found dead at Camp Pendleton
Posted at: 01/18/2012
By: Christine VanTimmeren
WHEC.com

The family of a local marine is searching for answers after their son was found dead in his barracks at Camp Pendleton.

21-year-old Private First Class Tom Angelo was found dead early Monday morning. NCIS investigators say there is no sign of foul play in this case, but the official death investigation will probably take another couple months.

Private Angelo was a 2008 graduate of Gates Chili High School. His stepmom says after graduation Tom immediately went into the military.

The family is still trying to make sense of how their marine could have died on American soil.

Christine Andrews says her stepson wanted to do more than sit at a desk in college. He wanted hands on experience. “I think he just wanted to find a place in life and thought he might learn something from the military.”
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MILITARY: Marine found dead at Camp Pendleton on Sunday
Story
Discussion
By MARK WALKER
Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Foul play has been all but ruled out in the death of a Marine private found dead in his Camp Pendleton barracks room on Sunday.

Pfc. Thomas J. Angelo, 21, of Rochester, N.Y., was an avionics technician assigned to a helicopter training squad.

A base announcement on Tuesday gave no hint of how Angelo might have died, referring any questions to the Naval Criminal Investigative Service.
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After decades of untreated rage, Vietnam veteran finds peace

After decades of untreated rage, Vietnam veteran finds peace

Lorene Parshall, Staff Writer
January 17, 2012

Edward Fischer Jr. served as senior radio operator for Combat Operations with the 1st Battalion, 50th Infantry, 1st Cavalry Division in Vietnam (Courtesy photo)
GAYLORD — Friday, Jan. 27, will mark the 39th anniversary of the signing of the Paris Peace Accord that ended U.S. participation in the Vietnam War.

Many of the veterans who fought in that war, however, have yet to find peace.

A government study estimated there are a million Vietnam vets with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following them throughout their lives.

Edward Fischer Jr. was one of those vets. He served with the 1st Cavalry Division from September 1967 until May 1968.

“One of the traumas for me was the day after day, week after week, month after month of constant combat,” said Fischer, who was a senior radio operator. “There were 900 men in my unit. We trained together for nine months before leaving the states and all knew each other. I had to watch my buddies getting killed and wounded all around me.”

Photos of a 23-year-old Fischer in Vietnam give the impression of a good-natured young man with a big grin, a person who looked forward to the glories of war. The realities of war knocked that grin off his face and tortured him for decades with the invisible wounds of PTSD.

“I had nightmares about combat every night,” he said. “I felt aghast, helpless, anxious, lost. I started drinking constantly and was angry and screaming at people all the time.”
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Retired Military Officer's body found on Camp Bullis

Man's body found on Camp Bullis
By Sig Christenson
Tuesday, January 17, 2012

The Army on Tuesday said it was investigating the death of a retired military officer whose body was found on Camp Bullis.

The man, whose identity wasn't immediately available, suffered an apparent gunshot wound to the head.

“It looks like suicide,” said Brent Boller, a spokesman for Joint Base San Antonio. “It's just not formally declared yet.”
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Marine Corps ends 2011 with record number of suicide attempts

MILITARY: Marine Corps ends 2011 with record number of suicide attempts
By MARK WALKER
Posted: Tuesday, January 17, 2012
The Marine Corps ended 2011 with 175 suicide attempts among its active-duty troops, the highest number ever recorded.


Thirty-three Marines committed suicide during the year, down from 37 reported in 2010, according to the latest report from service's Suicide Prevention Program.

The 175 attempted suicides were three more than the 172 recorded in 2010 and more than twice the 82 recorded in 2002, the first year the Marine Corps began keeping a detailed count of the grim statistic.

Suicide attempts jumped dramatically between 2007 and 2008, going from 103 to 146.

Officials have not been able to fully explain the increase other than to point to stress from multiple combat deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.

At least 11 Marines who took their own lives last year were stationed at Camp Pendleton or assigned to a unit headquartered at the base, officials recently confirmed.
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Alleged Dyer Street Shooter Was A Homeless Iraq Veteran

Alleged Dyer Street Shooter Was A Homeless Veteran
By ABC-7 Reporter Darren Hunt
POSTED: 6:17 pm MST January 17, 2012

EL PASO, Texas -- New details have emerged on Sunday morning's soldier shooting on Dyer street, which left one military man dead, two others injured and another behind bars.

Police say shots were fired in the air before the fatal shots being fired. ABC-7 also learned that the alleged shooter, 29-year-old Craig Graham, is a homeless veteran of the Marine Corps, who recently returned from a tour in Iraq.

"We currently have a caseload of about 63 or 65 homeless veterans," said Chet Frame, Director of the Excel Learning Center's Homeless Veteran's Program, which had been working with the alleged shooter. "He had just started back into the re-integration program."
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Friends say Iraq vet charged with killing Mom had PTSD

Friends: Veteran charged with killing mom suffered from PTSD
by Sherry Williams / KHOU 11 News KHOU.com staff
khou.com
Posted on January 17, 2012
HOUSTON – The man suspected of shooting his mother eight times last week suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, according to friends.

James Alan Rogers, 26, asked for a court-appointed attorney in his first court appearance.

Prosecutors say Rogers shot 50-year-old Reyna "Yuki" Rogers at their townhome on Jan. 11.

She was rushed from their home at Las Palmas and West Main to Ben Taub Hospital, but doctors couldn’t save her.

The family’s dog and cat were also shot to death.

Rogers’ younger, Joe, managed to escape to a neighbor’s house when the shooting began.

Police found an arsenal of weapons stacked in an upstairs closet. Friends said James Rogers is a veteran who served in Iraq.

"He was ex-military and has the post-traumatic syndrome and I feel bad for him and I’m sure it’s difficult," said Donna Fujimoto Cole, a family friend. "I’m sure it was difficult and God bless him, and we all have to find a way to forgive him."
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original story
Military Veteran accused of killing Mom and pets

Fallen Soldier's Bible Signed by FDR Returned After Nearly 70 Years

Soldier's Bible Returned After Nearly 70 Years

by Mark Bellinger

COOKEVILLE, Tenn. – A family Bible carried through World War II has been returned almost 70 years later.

Sometimes things have a way of correcting themselves. During World War II, a Tennessee veteran was killed carrying his Bible. For nearly 70 years his family never knew it even existed. Now, it's back in Middle Tennessee in the hands of the soldier's family in Putnam County.

The Bible was part of another soldier's belongings in Maine. It was discovered by his daughter this past year. After some research she called the soldier's cousin in Cookeville.

Kenneth Simmons received the Bible in the mail just before Christmas. Simmons spoke to NewsChannel5 from his living room in Cookeville.

"I couldn't believe, I just couldn't believe that it turned up like that," said Simmons.

He said he's still amazed. The special family Bible is more than just an heirloom. The copy was signed by President Franklin Roosevelt.
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Navy Cross awarded to family of Marine killed in Afghanistan

MILITARY: Heroic Marine now 'in the company of the finest and bravest'
By MARK WALKER
Posted: Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Lance Cpl. Donald J. Hogan was remembered Tuesday as an exceptionally upbeat and selfless young man whose valor in detecting a roadside bomb and using his body to shield fellow Marines from the blast claimed his life at age 20.

That heroism led Navy Secretary Ray Mabus to come to Camp Pendleton to present Hogan's family with the Navy Cross, the highest award for valor after the Medal of Honor. A new barracks complex has also been named in Hogan's honor.

"The actions of Lance Cpl. Donald Hogan place him in the company of the finest and bravest Marines in our nation's history," Mabus said during a Tuesday morning ceremony at the base. "He is now part of Marine Corps lore."

Mabus said that after examining nominating papers for Hogan that would have garnered him a Silver Star, he elevated the award to the highest one that the Department of the Navy can bestow on its own.

"He displayed the most remarkable bravery in combat," Mabus said. "He fully embodied the Marine Corps motto of Semper Fidelis (always faithful)."
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Navy Cross awarded to family of Marine killed in Afghanistan
January 17, 2012


In a ceremony Tuesday at Camp Pendleton, the secretary of the Navy presented the Navy Cross for bravery to the family of a Marine killed in Afghanistan.

Navy Secretary Ray Mabus presented the medal to Jim and Carla Hogan, whose son, Lance Cpl. Donald Hogan, was killed Aug. 26, 2009, while saving Marines from the explosion of a roadside bomb.
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Iraq War memories haunted Raytown veteran shot by police

Iraq War memories haunted Raytown veteran shot by police
BY BRIAN BURNES
The Kansas City Star
An Iraq War veteran fatally shot Thursday by Raytown police had been haunted by memories of his service, family members said in a statement released this week.

Some media reports had described Long as excited about his upcoming deployment to Afghanistan, according to the statement.

But, the statement added, “those who knew Rob best recognized that, although excited about serving his country, Rob was troubled by lingering memories of his previous deployment to Iraq.”

Long returned in 2008 from a six-month deployment struggling with bouts of depression, according to the statement.

“Friends have relayed moments when Rob would try to share his haunting memories from the war, but even the memories were overwhelming and difficult to express.”

Long, 26, was shot while threatening officers with a rifle.

He and a roommate had begun drinking at about 7 a.m. Thursday, first at a residence then moving to a bar. Bar employees later removed the two after they became confrontational, and police were called when they tried to re-enter the bar that afternoon.
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Iraq veteran with rifle killed by police in Kansas

Air Force Colonel's wife accused of murder

Wife Kills Husband's Mistress:
Shannon O'Roark Griffin Charged With Murdering Irina Puscariu

A former NASA specialist allegedly drove 250 miles to shoot and kill her husband's mistress after he refused to end the extramarital affair.

Police say that Shannon O'Roark Griffin left a marriage counseling session in Texas on Friday after her husband Roscoe Griffin revealed he was having an affair and refused to break off the romance, The Associated Press says. He told his wife that wanted to get a divorce, police told The AP

Later that afternoon, O'Roark Griffin, 52, arrived at the home near Kansas City of psychiatrist 46-year-old Irina Puscariu, Griffin's lover, and shot her in the face three times, KDAF says. Puscariu's mother was home and witnessed the shooting, police said according to ABC.

However, it's possible that the affair was already over by the time O'Roark Griffin showed up in Kansas City.

A retired Kansas City police officer who was friends with Puscariu told KCTV that she ended the relationship with Griffin, an Air Force colonel, when she learned he was married.
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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

CNN took easy way out on reporting Vets' PTSD, violence a growing problem

CNN took the easy way out on this report and it is depressing to have to say that. They usually do an outstanding job. Of all the cable news stations I use their reports more than others.

"Violence by returning veterans may be on the rise, experts say" is wrong simply because it is what has been on the minds of experts for a very long time but has been based on facts and stone, cold hard data. Not just a couple of news reports. The first thing is there are more veterans getting into trouble with the law simply because there are more veterans. Over 2 million of them.

With two wars going on as long as these, you'll have veterans getting into trouble simply because they come from the same backgrounds the rest of the population does, face the same problems the rest of us do with families, relationships, finances topped off with coming back from deployments into combat zones. We commit crimes too and we make headlines everyday without ever having been in combat. Veterans make the news because they are less than ten percent of the general population and the troops serving are less than one percent.

If you take the percentages of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans coming home with PTSD, it looks like this.
We are well past a million with PTSD but think about the few reports coming out on them getting into trouble. I track reports from across the country and most of them never made it onto CNN.

Since 2007 police shooting (49)police shootout (12) police standoff (53) just to give you some idea of the numbers we're talking about. While it is true the numbers are going up, they will keep going up because there will be more veterans.

CNN mentioned the suicides but didn't address the rise in calls to the suicide prevention hotline or the fact that as the suicides have gone up, so have the attempted suicides despite the suicide prevention hotline. Military suicides have gone up as well. So have divorces, drunk driving arrests, single car accidents, motorcycle crashes, you name it. What CNN didn't understand is that most experts were screaming about all of this as soon as the troops were sent into Afghanistan in 2001.

There are so many parts to what's going on that it is mind boggling. Medications that have side effects that cause anger and suicides. Training that tells them if they end up with PTSD it is their fault because they didn't train their brains to be tough enough. Redeployments increasing the risk of PTSD by 50% topping off the extra stress families already have being left over and over again worrying about someone they love not coming back and in the case of National Guards and Reservists families, they have to worry about income being lost and no jobs for them to come back to.

The nature of what is part of combat these men and women face is worst because of the IED attacks planted on so many roads it makes them a target every time they get behind the wheel and then there are the suicide bombers blowing themselves up. Amputation are up because of the number of bombs and the battlefield medics saving more lives. Along with this are the witnesses seeing it all happen and being helpless to do anything about any of it. You can't shoot back after a bomb has blown up. Then you have the VA claim backlog leaving them with no incomes when they are unable to work because of what serving did to them.

Ask a young kid after they joined right out of high school if they are happy having to give up the only career they ever wanted because they don't have legs anymore or have been so deeply changed by combat they have to be on so many medications they can't do what they used to do.

The two veterans they reported on made the headlines but they forgot about these.
Police suspect Army vet in shooting of six officers
OGDEN, Utah
Thu Jan 5, 2012 5:10pm EST

(Reuters) - Six police officers were shot, one of them fatally, when a gunman said to be a U.S. Army veteran opened fire on them as they served a drug-related search warrant in Utah, authorities said on Thursday.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Iraq War veteran home just 4 days is fatally shot during standoff
UPDATE to this story
Troubles haunted soldier killed in confrontation with troopers from WBTV

Iraq War veteran home just 4 days is fatally shot during standoff
Jan 08, 2012
IREDELL COUNTY, NC (WBTV) - Three troopers with the North Carolina Highway Patrol are on administrative leave after they were involved in the deadly shooting of an Iraq War veteran early Sunday morning.


Troubles haunted soldier killed in confrontation with troopers

Posted: Jan 10, 2012
By David Whisenant, Salisbury Bureau Reporter
STATESVILLE - To his fellow soldiers, Bill Miller was the kind of guy who would do anything for you. He was generous and hardworking.

But now many are saying that Miller was fighting some personal demons, and that those problems may have played a role in his fatal confrontation with state troopers on Sunday morning.

Troopers had confronted Miller at the home of his former girlfriend on Sain Road, east of Statesville. They say that moments earlier, Miller had driven his car off the road and through a neighbor's yard.

When they arrived at the house, they found Miller with a gun. They say he refused to obey their orders to put the gun down, and when an Iredell County deputy tried to use a Taser to subdue him, they say Miller started shooting. The troopers and the deputy returned fire, killing Miller.

Miller served with an Army National Guard unit based in Salisbury where he was a mechanic on the UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters.

Fort Bragg Soldier in Fayetteville standoff facing 30 charges

Soldier in Fayetteville standoff facing 30 charges
By: JACKIE FAYE , JUSTIN QUESINBERRY , NBC17 STAFF | NBC17.com
Published: January 13, 2012

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. --
A Fort Bragg soldier is facing 30 charges after exchanging gunfire with police and barricading himself in his apartment for hours Friday night and Saturday morning.

Staff Sgt. Joshua P. Eisenhauer is charged with 15 counts of attempted first-degree murder, six counts of felony assault on a law enforcement official and nine counts of felony assault on a government official.

Saturday, January 14, 2012
Iraq veteran with rifle killed by police in Kansas

Veteran with rifle fatally shot by Raytown police
BY DONALD BRADLEY
The Kansas City Star

The man shot to death by Raytown police Thursday while threatening officers with a rifle was a veteran of the Iraq war who had recently learned he was being sent to Afghanistan.

In describing events that led up to the shooting of 26-year-old Robert G. Long, Raytown police Capt. Ted Bowman on Friday said he did not want to suggest that Long’s military service was responsible for what happened. In talking with officers during the ordeal, Long, a reserve medic, said he was proud of serving his country.


These are just some of the recent ones. It is happening all over the country but considering how many are coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan, the bigger issues these veterans face is healing and the next part of their lives but those stories are not as attention grabbing as facing off with police.

Experts: Vets' PTSD, violence a growing problem
By Ashley Hayes, CNN
updated 5:02 PM EST, Tue January 17, 2012

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Veterans are accused of homicides in Washington and California
Violence by returning veterans may be on the rise, experts say
Some may experience relationship difficulties or struggle with substance abuse
Loved ones can be key in encouraging vets to seek help

(CNN) -- A man opens fire in a national park, killing a ranger who was attempting to stop him after he blew through a vehicle checkpoint.

A second man is suspected in the stabbing deaths of four homeless men in Southern California.

Both men, U.S. military veterans, served in Iraq -- and both, according to authorities and those who knew them, returned home changed men after their combat service.

Iraq War vet could face death penalty

A coincidence -- two recent high-profile cases? Or a sign of an increase in hostile behavior as U.S. troops complete their withdrawal from Iraq, similar to that seen when U.S. troops returned home from the Vietnam War?

"You're going to see this more and more over the next 10 years," said Shad Meshad, founder of the National Veterans Foundation, who has been working with veterans since 1970. "... There's a percentage that come back, depending on how much trauma and how much killing they're involved in, they're going to act out."

Margaret Anderson, a ranger at Washington state's Mount Rainier National Park, was shot to death on New Year's Day. Police believe Benjamin Colton Barnes, who served in Iraq from 2007 to 2009, was responsible for the shooting. After a manhunt, authorities found Barnes' body face down in a creek in the park.

According to court documents obtained by CNN affiliate KIRO, the woman with whom Barnes was in a custody dispute said she believed he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from his deployment. Barnes was emotionally unstable, vindictive and anger-prone, the woman said, and owned many knives and guns. The woman said she was frightened to be in the same state with him, the documents said.
read more here


We talk about what happens to them but what we don't talk about enough is what the families go through especially when they don't have a clue why it is happening.

We talk about them having nightmares but we don't talk about a spouse being woken up by the veteran having one. That is stressful. What is even more stressful is making the mistake of trying to wake them up in striking distance. Whatever you do, don't touch them or yell at them.

Untreated PTSD is a destroyer. They drink to numb themselves so they don't have to feel anything and usually they'll end up doing drugs when alcohol stops taking care of it. They take off for hours at a time leaving their families to wonder if they are alive or dead or arrested for DUI. They have mood swings without warning. They over-react to sudden moves or noises. Sometimes they take something said innocently as an attack against them. They can get paranoid.

That is the worst part of PTSD but then there is mild PTSD caused by combat when a sadness comes over them and they are no danger to themselves or anyone else. That is one more thing we don't talk about. There are many different levels to PTSD with just as many outcomes. Combat PTSD is a whole different type of PTSD than what average people get because of the nature of the trauma itself, the duration and the number of exposures.

The good news is that they can heal if they get the right help and they'll heal better if they get help fast instead of putting it off hoping they just get over it. It is also important here to mention the simple fact that it is never too late to begin to heal since Vietnam veterans have proved that one. They are still discovering another side of life than just suffering in silence.

There is so much that can be done but as long as the media spends so much time on putting the spotlight on a few of them, the rest of the population will learn absolutely nothing about the reality of PTSD and combat. The stigma will live on because the average veteran with PTSD is not reported on enough.

UPDATE
Christian Science Monitor
Veteran charged with homeless murders:
Hint of larger problem for US military
A veteran charged with killing four homeless men was troubled after returning from Iraq, reports say. That has highlighted the rising mental-health problems facing the US military.

UPDATE 4:27 January 18, 2012
Warning: Veterans are dangerous, crazy criminals
By LEO SHANE III
Published: January 18, 2012

WASHINGTON – CNN and the Christian Science Monitor had separate stories today chronicling the growing problem of post-traumatic stress disorder and unchecked violent tendencies among returning veterans. Both pieces hinge on a pair of recent stories involving veterans from Iraq who committed shocking killings, and may have been suffering from war-related mental trauma.

But two incidents don’t necessarily equal a trend, at least in the eyes of veterans who lashed out at the stories over social media. They say the narrative of the unstable, potentially dangerous war veteran provides an easy and inaccurate stereotype that keeps the military community distant from the rest of American society.

The Monitor story couches their findings with a statement from a spokesman from the National Alliance of Mental Illness saying that speculating on mental illness shouldn’t be used to imply a correlation to violence.
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1 shot at smoke shop; gunman inside store

Peoria police: 1 shot at smoke shop; gunman inside store

by Sasha Lenninger - Jan. 17, 2012 02:34 PM
The Arizona Republic-12 News Breaking News Team

A gunman is inside a north Peoria smoke shop and at least one person has been shot, authorities said.

The gunman is believed at the store on 10140 W. Lake Pleasant Parkway, police spokesman Jay Davies said. The Euphorium Emporium on the southwest side of the Camino A Lago Marketplace.
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Comrades will honor fallen Marine Sgt. Daniel J. Patron

Comrades will honor fallen Perry Marine
By Matthew Rink
IndeOnline.com staff writer
Posted Jan 16, 2012


There’s a young man that Kathy and Frank Patron have never met or spoken with, and yet he was standing 20 feet away from their son when he died.

His name is Sgt. Jason R. Slattery and he was Sgt. Daniel J. Patron’s partner on an Explosive Ordnance Disposal unit when Patron was killed Aug. 6, 2011, in Sangin, Afghanistan. Though Patron’s family, friends and community formally honored Patron more than five months ago, there is a group of men and women who have not yet had the chance.

Slattery is among them.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Marine Corps will hold a special memorial service at Camp LeJeune, N.C., so Marines like Slattery, who returned home for the first time in November, finally have the chance to say goodbye to their fallen comrade.

“None of them were home when this happened,” mother Kathy Patron said. “This is it. None of the EOD guys have had any recognition for Danny. This one, of all of the services and memorials we’ve been invited to, this is the one I’m most nervous about because we will meet Jason Slattery.

“He was there,” she said. “He was 20 feet from the blast. He saw it. I’m really, really nervous about this one.”

Patron, 26, was killed while trying to defuse a roadside bomb. He was a member of the 2nd Explosive Ordnance Disposal Co.
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Victim allegedly assaulted by two Camp Lejeune Marines dies

Victim allegedly assaulted by two Camp Lejeune Marines dies

By: WNCT STAFF
Published: January 07, 2012
Updated: January 16, 2012

JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (WNCT) – The man allegedly assaulted by two Camp Lejeune Marines has died.

A spokesperson for New Hanover Regional Medical Center tells 9 On Your Side that 34-year-old Jimmie Senn has died.

Two Camp Lejeune Marines face charges after they were arrested early Saturday, January 7th.
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Suspect Held in Shooting of Fort Bliss Soldier

Suspect Held in Shooting of Fort Bliss Soldier

January 17, 2012
El Paso Times
by Adriana M. Chavez and Daniel Borunda

Police arrested a 29-year-old man Monday in connection with Sunday's shooting death of a Fort Bliss soldier.

Craig Allen Graham faces a murder charge and two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. He remained in the El Paso County Jail Monday in lieu of a $650,000 bond.

Two other victims who were wounded during the shooting, which took place shortly after 2 a.m. Sunday, were also soldiers stationed at the post, Fort Bliss officials confirmed Monday.

All three victims were 21 years old. Officials couldn't confirm whether Graham is a current or former member of the military, but according to a Facebook profile belonging to Craig Graham, he was stationed in Afghanistan and suffered serious injuries in a 2010 motorcycle crash.

The shooting apparently took place outside of the Fussion nightclub at 4304 Dyer. Residents in the area reported hearing several gunshots.
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The power of empathy, peer groups support with understanding

The power of empathy
Peer groups help veterans, police and moms of kids with special needs
8:42 AM, Jan. 17, 2012

Written by
MaryLynn Schiavi
For NJ Press Media


What do police officers, military veterans and mothers have in common?

They all fall into the category of those who help and support others — but often, do not get the help and support that they need, according to Cherie Castellano, the driving force behind the creation of three Central Jersey-based peer-to-peer support programs.

The programs, offered by the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, are proving that empathy, which arises from walking in the shoes of another, creates a powerful connection and support for those in crisis.

That, in turn, helps both parties heal.

Castellano is a crisis intervention professional and program manager at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey’s Behavioral HealthCare division in Piscataway.

She is the director of Cop2Cop, which she established over a decade ago prior to the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001; NJ Vet2Vet, established in 2005; and Mom2Mom, established in late 2010, which offers support and guidance to mothers of children with special needs.
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A soldier's fatal burden

A soldier's fatal burden
January 17, 2012 - 2:34PM

John Birmingham

When we think of soldiers, we think of the things they carry on the outside. The rifle. The bayonet. The camouflage pattern of a uniform. A helmet. Boots. Perhaps a canteen or a poncho or a hand grenade. And when we think about these things we might see them, but we don’t actually think about them, about their uses and their true meaning and how they make a soldier so very different from us that we can never really understand him or her.

What we don’t think about are the things a soldier carries on the inside. The things that make him or her exactly the same as us. Take away the rifle and bayonet, strip off that uniform, whether starched and pressed or tattered and bloody, and the soldier is merely a man or a woman.

Noble in reason, as Hamlet knew deep in his melancholia, infinite in faculties, admirable in form and movement, but like Hamlet and like you and I, prey to the anxieties and slights and failings of our common humanity.

The hard and melancholy things a soldier carries inside are the same as those we carry, but more so. They love each other as we do, they know fear, as we do, the cry sometimes and exult at others. They know boredom and frustration and resentment and rage. But sometimes, because of the extremes at which they must live and die and – lets not forget – kill, they know those things more intensely than we can ever imagine.

It destroys them. Not all of them, not all the time. But the strange, unnatural intensities of a soldier’s life and the proximity to violent death in which it is lived during war time destroys many, many more of them than the commonplace demands of life do us.

Perhaps that’s why, in the US, which has been at war for over 10 years now, a serving member of the military takes their own life every 36 hours. Perhaps it is significant that of those suicides, the heaviest numbers are to be found among infantrymen – the soldiers on whom the most grievous and intense demands are laid.

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Homes Evacuated and Streets Closed During Stand-off with Armed Man

Homes Evacuated and Streets Closed During Stand-off with Armed Man


Updated: Jan 16, 2012 6:46 AM EST

Several residents on Green Bay's west side were evacuated Sunday night, as police were involved in a stand-off with an armed man.

The incident lasted about five hours.

Police were called to Thrush St., just south of Velp Ave. about 9:30 Sunday night.

Police blocked off streets in the area, including Velp, and people in nearby homes were told to evacuate or hide in their basements for safety.

Police say the man had threatened suicide, but a woman he was related to was also in the home, plus he had fortified the house, had several guns, and was recently in the military.
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Waverly police seize guns from distraught man

Waverly police seize guns from distraught man
WAVERLY, Iowa --- Authorities seized a loaded handgun and a military-style rifle after being called about a distraught man on Saturday.

Waverly police took the man, whose name wasn't released, to the Waverly Health Center for observation after he was detained without incident during a traffic stop on Bremer Road at about 9:40 a.m.
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Soldier home just in time for teen brother's funeral

Bittersweet return: Soldier home just in time for teen brother's funeral
By Jed Boal

OREM -- The community lined Main Street with American flags Monday afternoon to show support for a family that has faced gut-wrenching challenges in the last week.

As the family prepares to bury one son, they welcomed another one home from the war in Afghanistan.

"This last week, it's been a surreal situation," said Troy Peterson, their father.

As friends and neighbors gathered and waited the brilliant sun battled a biting wind. Dozens of American flags fluttered in the stiff breeze. Yellow ribbons dangled in many trees.

It was a homecoming that drew out many different mixed emotions: joy and gratitude, but also sorrow and disbelief. But everyone wanted to be there, waiting in front of the Peterson's home.

The crowd gathered in anticipation of the soldier's arrival: A chance to welcome Army Private First Class Anthony Peterson home from a year in Afghanistan, and show their love for the family.
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Veteran running to Indianapolis to raise awareness on military suicides

Veteran running to Indianapolis to raise awareness

Posted: Jan 16, 2012
By Matt Barbour, Reporter


Cpl. Cory Smith. Photo by Doug Strickland (Times Free Press).
CHATTANOOGA -
(WRCB) -- Corporal Cory Smith calls Indianapolis home. By car or plane, the trip from Ft. Benning, Georgia would be easy. But Smith is pounding the pavement for hundreds of miles all for a good cause.

We caught up with Corporal Cory Smith, as he made his way through Chattanooga.

He says he is running for two reasons. One is to get back home to his baby daughter. The other is to help other veterans in need.

Smith, who has served almost four years as an Army Ranger, says veterans coming back home face so many challenges.

"Every 80 minutes in America, according the Veteran Affairs, there's a veteran suicide and only nine states actually claim those suicides," says Smith.

He says he has faced some challenges himself.

"You're kind of in this closed world where everybody kind of takes care of you in the military, but when you get out, you know, you're lucky even to have your parents around to take care of you," he says.

Smith says once he got back home, things were much rockier than expected. His wife left his home with his young daughter and he said he knew he had to do something to keep going.

"All I had left was an air mattress and a television. And that was it. And just a whole lot of emptiness inside," says Smith.

That is why he started running.


Ending Nightmares Caused By PTSD

Ending Nightmares Caused By PTSD
by AMY STANDEN
Everyone has nightmares sometimes. But for people with PTSD, it's different.

Sam Brace doesn't want to talk about what he saw when he was a soldier in Iraq eight years ago. In fact, it's something he's actively trying not to dwell on. But what he can't control are his dreams.

They're almost always about the same explosion. "When I was overseas, we'd hit an IED," Brace says. "When I have a nightmare, normally it's something related to that."

Healthy dreams seem kind of random, according to Steven Woodward, a psychologist with the National Center for PTSD at the VA Medical Center in Menlo Park, Calif. "They're wacky," he says. "They associate lots of things that are not normally associated."

PTSD dreams are the same real-life event played over and over again like a broken record.

"Replicative nightmares of traumatic events ... repeat for years," Woodward says. "Sometimes 20 years."

Scientists wanted to find out the reason why people with PTSD can't sleep and dream normally.

One theory comes from Matthew Walker, a psychology researcher at the University of California, Berkeley. His particular interest lies in rapid eye movement, or REM. It's the time during sleep when a lot of dreaming occurs.

It's also a time when the chemistry of the brain actually changes. Levels of norepinephrine — a kind of adrenaline — drop out completely. REM sleep is the only time of day when this happens.

That struck Walker as a mystery. "Why would rapid eye movement sleep suppress this neurochemical?" he asks. "Is there any function to that?"
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Prazosin Oral
Prazosin is used with or without other medications to treat high blood pressure.

Lowering high blood pressure helps prevent strokes, heart attacks, and kidney problems.

Prazosin belongs to a class of medications called alpha blockers. It works by relaxing and widening blood vessels so blood can flow more easily.

OTHER USES: This section contains uses of this drug that are not listed in the approved professional labeling for the drug but that may be prescribed by your health care professional.

Use this drug for a condition that is listed in this section only if it has been so prescribed by your health care professional.

This drug may also be used to treat certain blood circulation disorders (Raynaud's phenomenon), as well as problems urinating due to an enlarged prostate (benign prostatic hyperplasia).

PRAZOSIN ORAL SIDE EFFECTS
Headache, drowsiness, tiredness, weakness, blurred vision, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or constipation may occur as your body adjusts to the medication. If any of these effects persist or worsen, tell your doctor or pharmacist promptly.

Lightheadedness or dizziness upon standing may also occur, especially after the first dose and shortly after taking a dose of the drug during the first week of treatment. To reduce the risk of dizziness and fainting, get up slowly when rising from a seated or lying position. If dizziness occurs, sit or lie down immediately. Your dose may need to be adjusted.

Remember that your doctor has prescribed this medication because he or she has judged that the benefit to you is greater than the risk of side effects. Many people using this medication do not have serious side effects.

Tell your doctor immediately if any of these unlikely but serious side effects occur: pounding heartbeat, fainting, frequent urination, mental/mood changes (such as depression), swelling of the feet/ankles.

For males, in the very unlikely event you have a painful, prolonged erection (lasting more than 4 hours), stop using this drug and seek immediate medical attention, or permanent problems could occur.


PRAZOSIN ORAL PRECAUTIONS
This drug may make you dizzy or drowsy or cause blurred vision.

Do not drive, use machinery, or do any activity that requires alertness or clear vision until you are sure you can perform such activities safely.

Do not drive or participate in hazardous activities for 24 hours after your first dose, any increase in your dosage, or restarting treatment. If your doctor prescribes any additional blood pressure drugs, avoid driving and hazardous activities for 24 hours after your first dose of the new medication. Limit alcoholic beverages.

To reduce the risk of dizziness and fainting, be careful when standing for long periods. Avoid getting overheated during exercise and hot weather. When first starting this drug, avoid situations where you may be injured if you faint.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Vietnam Memorial Replica escorted into Orlando by over 100 motorcycles

Vietnam Memorial Replica Visits Lake Eola

Memorial In Town Until Sunday

POSTED: 11:56 am EST January 16, 2012

ORLANDO, Fla. -- A half size replica of the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial is visiting Central Florida.

The memorial will be at Lake Eola Park in downtown Orlando until Sunday.

Over 100 motorcycles escorted the wall to Lake Eola Monday morning.
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"Quick Draw" soldier could face serious charges

Soldier From Baldwin County Could Face Serious Charges In Shooting
By: CHAD PETRI
WKRG-TV
Published: January 16, 2012

FAIRHOPE, Alabama --
Sgt. Matthew Gallagher was just days away from his 23rd birthday when he was shot to death in Iraq. The gunman was not an insurgent but allegedly his roommate, a soldier from Fairhope Brent McBride. I spoke to Gallagher's family in Massachusetts via Skype.

“[Matthew] didn't have holidays with his family so [McBride] needs to serve some time,” says Gallagher’s mother Cheryl Ruggiero. Based on conversations with the family and media reports soldiers may have been playing a game of quick-draw--where they see who can be the first to draw their weapon--McBride's gun fired and Gallagher was dead.

“This guy destroyed our lives, took away the most important person and we will never ever have him back,” says Gallagher’s wife Katie. The shooting happened in late June of 2011 in Iraq.

The military held an Article 32 hearing last month in Texas. McBride could be charged with manslaughter, or negligent homicide, or murder, or nothing--depending on what military officials decide.
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As soldiers return home, patients expected to increase

As soldiers return home, patients expected to increase
VA Healthcare expects more patients

Updated: Monday, 16 Jan 2012, 1:04 PM MST
Published : Monday, 16 Jan 2012, 1:04 PM MST

Amanda Goodman

The New Mexico Department of Veterans Affairs says in 2011 it recorded 116 suicide attempts and 21 completed suicides.
ALBUQUERQUE (KRQE) - It has been nearly one month since the last of the U.S. soldiers in Iraq rolled across the border into Kuwait and out of Iraq for good.

Over the next few months many of those soldiers will be heading home, bringing their battle scars whether physical or emotional back with them.

"It is about 50 percent that seek VA healthcare for mental health conditions and those conditions include post traumatic stress and post traumatic stress disorder,” Melissa Middleton with NM VA Healthcare system said.

New Mexico’s Veteran’s Affairs Healthcare System is expecting to see an increase in patients in 2012.

"Of the ones that were just discharged, I'm expecting somewhere around 1,000,” Middleton said.

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Fresno VA live music calms PTSD TBI veterans waiting for appointments

Live music at Fresno's VA hospital makes a big difference
Musicians in the hospital waiting room were meant to provide simple distraction, but doctors noticed improvement in many patients, especially those with PTSD or traumatic brain injury.

By Diana Marcum, Los Angeles Times
January 16, 2012

Reporting from Fresno— The hospital was built in the years after World War II. Its ceilings are low, corridors long and corners sharp — all possible stress triggers for those who have been in combat.

Not to mention that a hospital waiting room can make anyone edgy.

But the Veterans Affairs hospital in Fresno has found a way to make the experience easier: live music.

A musician playing amid the hustle and bustle is familiar to anyone who has ever sat at a cafe with entertainment or taken the subway. But this has proved to be more. The hospital set out to provide simple distraction, but soon doctors noticed a marked improvement in many of their patients, especially those with post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury.

Dr. Hani Khouzam, a psychiatrist who treats both disorders, said patients have been arriving for appointments so notably calmer that it takes him longer to make a diagnosis — something he welcomes.

"You have to understand what it means for a combat veteran to be agitated in the waiting room.

Their pupils are dilated. They are angry or waiting for something to happen," he said. "But when we have live music that day, they come to me far more relaxed. It's like an amazing miracle, and I don't say that lightly."

On a recent day in a busy main reception area, grandfathers waited for blood work and a young veteran was whisked through on a gurney, face-down and in restraints — possibly headed for a locked psychiatric unit. Jon Sharp, a classical guitarist, played Francisco Tarrega's "Recuerdos de la Alhambra," which begins in wistful melancholy and builds to an uplifting melody.

George Flores, head of the hospital's police force and himself an Iraq War veteran, paused to listen.
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Fort Bragg soldier faces multiple charges after shootout with Fayetteville police

Fort Bragg soldier faces multiple charges after shootout with Fayetteville police
Jan 16, 2012
By Paul Woolverton
Staff writer

Kimberly Brown was relaxing in her west Fayetteville apartment with some television Friday night when she smelled smoke and saw firetrucks come through the gate into the complex's parking lot.

In the next 30 minutes, she heard pounding footsteps, men banging on doors, water spraying the outside of her apartment building and gunfire.

Brown's upstairs neighbor, Fort Bragg Army Staff Sgt. Joshua Paul Eisenhauer, was involved in a shootout and standoff with police. He ended up critically injured and charged with 30 felonies, including 15 counts of attempted first-degree murder.

Two police officers suffered minor injuries. One was treated at the scene, the other at Cape Fear Valley Medical Center, police said.

And Brown spent the night in a Fayetteville fire station.

The incident started about 10 p.m. Friday when someone reported a fire at Austin Creek Apartments on Capeharbor Court, which is off 71st School Road between Raeford Road and Cliffdale Road, the Police Department said.

Brown said firefighters knocked on residents' doors, asking if they had a fire in their units.

She saw two go up to the third floor, she said, and then heard them talking to Eisenhauer, asking him to open the door.

He refused, Brown said.
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Fort Bragg Soldier in Fayetteville shootout

Syracuse VA helps vets battle hidden wounds of war

VA helps vets battle hidden wounds of war
Published: Monday, January 16, 2012,
By James T. Mulder / The Post-Standard

Dick Blume/The Post Standard
Military veteran Chip Crawford of Baldwinsville says the VA has helped him cope with post traumatic stress disorder

Syracuse, N.Y. -- Chip Crawford of Baldwinsville estimates that for every military veteran like himself who has been treated for post-traumatic stress disorder, there are five others who need the same help but are not getting it.

“They’re just living with the pain, trying to go about living in the world, even though you don’t fit in,” said Crawford, 50, who served with the U.S. Coast Guard in the early 1980s in Grenada and Lebanon.

Crawford shared his story at the Syracuse VA Medical Center earlier this week at Recovery Day, a program designed to encourage veterans who need help with PTSD and other mental health issues to come to the VA. Other veterans, family members and VA officials joined Crawford.

“The nightmares never end but the treatment you get helps you deal with them,” Crawford said.

The Syracuse VA provides mental health services to more than 7,000 patients annually and expects those numbers to grow as more soldiers return from combat in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Error spurred false alarm at Tucson base

Officials: Error spurred false alarm at Tucson base
by Dennis Wagner on Jan. 15, 2012, under Arizona Republic News

The false report of a hostage incident that shut down Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson four months ago was the result of a misunderstanding rather than a hoax, a base spokesman says.

During the Sept. 16 incident, which began about 9 a.m., SWAT teams were deployed from as far away as Phoenix. Base personnel were put in lockdown or evacuated for most of the day. Military flights were disrupted. Major streets were closed. Frightened parents were unable to pick up children from base schools.

Finally, the base commander, Col. John Cherrey, announced without explanation that the threat was over and no gunman or weapon had been found.

In response to a Freedom of Information Act request, the Air Force provided partial records to The Arizona Republic that shed some light on the incident. Those documents do not explain who first reported the threat or how the error occurred.

In an interview, Capt. Jonathan Simmons said, “We don’t believe it was a hoax. We believe it was a mistake. And, if someone thinks they see a gunman on base, they should report it.”

E-mails among Air Force officials sent during the six-hour episode indicate fears of a tragedy similar to the November 2009 rampage at Fort Hood, Texas, where a U.S. Army psychiatrist is accused of killing 13 and wounding dozens.

“Planning for worst case mass casualties,” advised an 11:24 a.m. message from the base vice commander.
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"The Senator" 3,500 year old tree falls due to fire

UPDATE-Woman charged with burning 'The Senator' says she did it 'to use illegal drugs'


UPDATE
Investigator: Fire that destroyed 'The Senator' was not arson
Investigator has not determined the cause of the fire
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(Off topic)

This is one of the first sites we saw when we first moved to Florida. The massive tree was stunning. Looking at news footage, it is the only tree burning in the forest and looks like someone must have done this despicable act.

Tree Known As The Senator Falls Due To Fire

3,500-Year-Old Tree Oldest Of Its Kind

LONGWOOD, Fla. -- A fire that was burning on the inside of a historic tree known as The Senator has caused it to topple.

The fire was burning on the inside and on top of the 125-foot tall tree. The fire weakened it so much that it collapsed a little after 8 a.m. Monday.

The tree is located in Big Tree Park in Longwood.

The Pond Bald Cypress is the oldest tree of its kind in the world. It is estimated at 3,500-years-old.

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Suspect in homeless slayings has homeless Dad

Friend's death haunted suspect in homeless slayings
Jan. 15, 2012 Updated: 11:54 p.m.
Suspect Itzcoatl "Izzy" Ocampo, 23, lonely and depressed after discharge from the U.S. Marine Corps, had lost his best friend, who also served in the military, family says.

By GREG HARDESTY / THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

YORBA LINDA – Early last week, Itzcoatl "Izzy" Ocampo showed his father a newspaper story about a suspected serial killer targeting homeless men in the area.

His father, Refugio, lost his home in 2008 and lives out of the cab of a big rig parked in Fullerton.

The elder Ocampo, who once lived under a freeway overpass, turned to his son.

"Don't worry, mijo," he said. "I'll be fine."

Three days later, on Friday, the younger Ocampo was arrested on suspicion of carrying out the vicious stabbing deaths of four homeless men between Dec. 20 and Jan. 13, terrorizing several communities and putting transients on high alert.

With murder charges expected to be filed against Ocampo, 23, on Tuesday, his parents, siblings and friends said in interviews Sunday that the former Marine showed signs of being troubled since being discharged from the military in June 2010, but that they can't fathom him carrying out the bloody slayings.

"It doesn't make any sense to me at all," said Refugio Ocampo, 50.

Although he never saw combat, Ocampo's main job was to provide security and inspect wounded patients – fellow armed service members, civilians, enemy combatants – and also to bag up bodies of fallen Americans, said Cpl. Bonnie Tisdale, who supervised Ocampo for two years.

"These things change a person," Tisdale said. "Nothing can prepare you for war. If you have any type of mental issues going in, the military just basically heightens those issues – it makes them worse."

Tisdale said Ocampo was disciplined a couple of times for minor violations during his deployment, but that she saw no obvious signs he was troubled.

"He showed up for work on time, and was a funny guy," Tisdale said. "He seemed like an ordinary Marine."

Sgt. Michael Stil served with Ocampo.

"He never talked bad about anybody and wouldn't judge anyone," said Stil, 23. "Everybody down here (at Miramar Base, in San Diego) is shocked. We didn't expect this.

"It's just very shocking. We're all like, 'No way – that's not him.'"
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Fourth victim of serial killer was Vietnam veteran

Early Retirement Could Be Bad Deal for Troops

Early Retirement Could Be Bad Deal for Troops

January 16, 2012
Military.com
by Michael Hoffman

Servicemembers who accept a 15-year retirement incentive approved by Congress this month stand to lose hundreds of thousands of dollars over the lifetime of their retirement payments, according to early estimates.

This realization, combined with poor national economic factors that are expected to compel many servicemembers to stay in uniform, could make it even tougher for service officials to entice troops to leave on their own to meet the services' goals of reduced end strength.

Earlier this month, the chiefs of the military services received approval to reinstitute Temporary Early Retirement Authority -- better known as "15-year retirement" -- that allows officers and NCOs to retire up to five years before the traditional 20-year service mark at a reduced pay rate.

The services have not yet announced if they will offer early retirements, but defense analysts expect the services to try to use the incentive to pare down their forces, especially in the Army and Marine Corps, the two branches likely to suffer the deepest reductions.

A servicemember's retirement pay is calculated similar to traditional retirement pay: A Soldier might receive 50 percent of his basic pay after serving 20 years. However, those who accept an early retirement must subtract 3.5 percent for each year of service below the 20-year mark.
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