Friday, October 4, 2013

One criminal's action cause other veterans to suffer

Veterans told to repay bonuses to government after fraud case
ABC
Rob McMillan
October 3, 2013

BEAUMONT, Calif. (KABC) -- The flag still flies outside the Beaumont home of Master Sgt. Richard Mosely. But for this veteran of the California Army National Guard, his feelings toward all things red, white and blue just aren't the same.

"I still get chills when I hear the national anthem, but when I hear people talk about the military or see commercials on TV about the National Guard, it hurts," said Mosely.

It hurts because after being paid more than $22,000 in enlistment bonuses over the years, and then coming back from a grueling deployment in Iraq with post traumatic stress disorder, he got a letter last August from the Army saying the government might need him to pay all of that money back.

"My heart dropped," he said.
So how did this happen? It turns out the person in charge of doling out all those bonuses, a former master sergeant, is now doing prison time after being convicted of fraud, for misappropriating millions of dollars in taxpayer money and giving out scores of bonuses to people who shouldn't have received them.

But because that person shredded so much paperwork, the National Guard can't tell who got legitimate bonuses and who didn't.

To help sort out this big mess, the National Guard has put together an Incentives Task Force, based in Sacramento, whose job is to find out who may have wrongly received money and get it back.
read more here

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Plans to double number of army reserves will create ‘surge in mental health problems’

Plans to double number of army reserves will create ‘surge in mental health problems’
Charities say members of the TA are twice as likely to suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder than soldiers in the regular forces
The Independent
ADAM WITHNALL
WEDNESDAY 02 OCTOBER 2013

Government plans to replace sacked full-time soldiers with reservists could create a new wave of former servicemen who need treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), mental health campaigners have warned.

Members of the Territorial Army are twice as likely to suffer from PTSD as regular soldiers, research has shown, because they lack the equivalent long-term support structures.

The chief executive of Combat Stress, Andrew Cameron, told Sky News: “The preponderance of post-traumatic stress disorder amongst veterans who are reservists is 50 per cent higher than it is for regular servicemen.

“The reason for that is they don't get the level of support from their regiment, their ship or their squadron that they might have done if they were a regular.

“If we double or treble the number and if we continue with high-intensity warfare then I think society has got a big challenge because we will see a lot more reservists who need help.”
read more here

Veterans, the lives the DOD loves to forget

Veterans, the lives the DOD loves to forget
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
October 3, 2013

We still don't know exactly how many servicemen and women committed suicide last year. The DOD has not released the report yet. While the Army has released reports this year on Soldier, National Guards and Reservists, we really don't know how many Airmen, Marines and Sailors ended their own lives in 2012. As a matter of fact, we don't know how many did this year either. We don't know how many attempted suicide or how many times they tried.

One thing stands out, the numbers are not good for veterans the DOD no longer has to count, not that they have been even willing to accept any responsibility for them after discharge and after they were trained to be "resilient" so let's take a look at what they love to forget.

It isn't as if someone with a lot of power would listen to someone like me, so it is really not that shocking to be ignored. What is shocking is the fact that someone like me was right all along and they were wrong. I wrote that if they pushed this program, it would increase military suicides. As the military pushes their "resilience" propaganda on the troops, comes up with excuses for the reason why they keep going up even as the number of their ranks drops, it is a good time to take a look at what this year started out with. Take a look at this.
"The army’s suicide rate climbed nine-percent since a prevention campaign was launched in 2009." A local Army man is speaking out on military suicides and getting national attention. People Magazine recently did a feature on Army Major Jeff Hall, of Davenport, as a way to address the growing epidemic that’s got military leaders looking for answers.
January of 2013 didn't start out good. The VA said they didn't know if they has enough staff to take care of the veterans. "A January 2002 law "mandated that VA establish a nationwide policy to ensure medical facilities have adequate staff to provide appropriate, high-quality care and services" but the agency "did not have an effective staffing methodology to ensure appropriate staffing levels for specialty care services," the VA inspector general reported Thursday."
After being deployed into Afghanistan for a year, Eric Harm came home in January of 2012. He didn't survive a full year. He committed suicide on December 28, 2012 four months after he left the military. His suicide wouldn't be in the total of the lives lost the military tallied for the highest year but then again, too many others were not considered their responsibility.
"Dusty Michael Clark suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, his mother says. The Altona man, 28, was shot and killed by Clinton County Sheriff’s Deputy Jason R. Winters on Dec. 30, 2012, after Dusty threatened him with a knife and wouldn’t back down, according to the Sheriff’s Department. He was diagnosed in 2009 at a Veteran’s Affairs clinic in Albany but was not receiving treatment at the time of his death, said his mother, Sheila Clark of Altona."
The report of Navy SEAL Robert Guzzo committing suicide after Veterans Day in 2012 came out saying he "returned from Iraq, he feared seeking treatment for PTSD would endanger his career. After Veterans Day, he went to "be with the angels" after he committed suicide." There was a follow up report, "In 2006, shortly before serving a tour in Iraq, Robert's mother Robin Andersen said he was struck hard by the suicide of his best friend and fellow Navy SEAL. By the time he returned from San Diego a year later, something had changed."
On Jan. 2, Dr. Peter Linnerooth, 42, killed himself in Mankato. Linnerooth was awarded a Bronze Star after an honorable discharge in 2008 and became critical of the military's limited work on providing mental health care to soldiers, especially to those with PTSD, in the pages of Time magazine and the New York Times. Capt. Linnerooth will be buried with full military honors at 11 a.m. Monday, Jan. 14, at Fort Snelling National Cemetery. "He was really, really suffering," Linnerooth's widow, Melanie Walsh, told Time for its story on his death. "And it didn't matter that he was a mental health professional, and it didn't matter that I was a mental health professional. I couldn't help him, and he couldn't help himself."
As a machine gunner in the U.S. Marine Corps, John Lutz survived combat tours in Afghanistan and Iraq while earning 13 service commendations and the respect of his buddies. "He was a Marine to the fullest," said fellow Marine Kevin Ullman. "He was someone who could lighten any situation with witty sarcasm." Ultimately, however, Lutz could not escape the demons he carried back home to Davie after his discharge 18 months ago. On Saturday, just hours after a lunch with his mother in which he chatted about his classes at Palm Beach State College, Lutz swallowed a handful of pills VA doctors had prescribed to help him cope with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Lutz died in his bedroom, in the house where he grew up. He was 24. "I'm sorry," he said in a farewell note he left on his open laptop. "I am happier now."
Navy medic Dustin Wernli, 30, called 911 Tuesday night saying he wanted an officer to shoot him, according to the Tucson Police Department. Officers talked to Wernli for about 15 minutes when he pulled a gun and an officer lethally shot him, according to TPD. Wernli was a Navy medic who was deployed with the Marine Corps in Iraq, according to his father. He suffered a brain injury from an explosion in 2004. He was receiving treatment from the VA hospital for PTSD, according to Wernli's father.
The young Hawaii-based soldier who was shot and killed by police in a hail of bullets early Tuesday morning suffered from a severe case of post-traumatic stress disorder. That's the claim being made by a spokesperson on behalf of Pfc. Gregory Gordon's parents, Todd and Tracey Gordon. Amateur video of a shooting in Waikiki Tuesday morning. "He was a good person, and when he came back from the war he was not the same," said Amanda Cureton. "He came back a completely different person."
According to the audit, nine of 10 patients who were on the high risk for suicide list did not receive sufficient follow-ups. The VA is required to check on such patients weekly for the first month following their release, according to the review, but Fayetteville officials failed to check on the patients for the last two weeks of that period. The report released Friday by the Department of Veterans Affairs revealed that 80 percent of all suicide attempts among VA patients occur within that one-month span.
That is how 2013 started. Since nothing has really changed, it doesn't look as if it will end as good as it should considering the troops left Iraq in 2011.

Soldiers revisit 'Black Hawk Down' battle 20 years later

Soldiers revisit 'Black Hawk Down' battle 20 years later
Army Times
by Michelle Tan
Staff writer
October 3, 2013

Twenty years after fighting in the Battle of Mogadishu, Keni Thomas and Jeff Struecker returned to Somalia.

“You think I want to get on a plane for 40 hours and go riding around with my hairs standing on end, with my stomach churning, in the back of an SUV in downtown Mogadishu again?” Thomas said. “Hell, no, but I went because that’s the story that needs to be told. This is a story I’ve been tasked with.”

The story of the battle, made famous by the book “Black Hawk Down” and a subsequent movie, is something Thomas believes needs to be told, even two decades later.

It took him a while to realize that, said Thomas, who is now a country music singer based in Nashville.

“What I had to learn is, the story is not the curse,” he said. “If you don’t talk about the guys and girls that you fought with, no one else is going to.
read more here

Body of 14 year old found at Fort Hood school

Boy found dead at Fort Hood school
Army Times
By Antonieta Rico
Staff writer
October 2, 2013

A teacher found the body of a 14-year-old boy behind Clarke Elementary School on Fort Hood, Texas, on Tuesday, post officials said in a news release.

The parents of the student had reported him missing earlier in the day, along with a weapon from the home, the news release said.
read more here

Congressman blames park ranger for closing WWII memorial?

Congressman Castigates Park Ranger For The Memorial Closure He Voted For
Huffington Post
Jason Linkins
October 3, 2013

Day two of Government Shutdown 2013 offered America plenty of surreal moments, from the brief and ridiculous re-emergence of the Grand Bargain, to the sight of multiple members of a universally reviled governing body offering to give up their paychecks as if they thought it was a move worthy of a medal. But nowhere did Salvador Dali's clocks warp and melt under the heat of sustained stupidity as badly as they did down at the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C.

Yesterday, it became pretty obvious that if you wanted to catch the eye of any Beltway reporter to discuss what you were enduring during the shutdown, you had to go on down to this memorial to make your case. Unfortunately, that's where many members of Congress decided to while away their day as well.
read more here

Shots fired in DC Congress locked down due to shooter situation

Chase from White House to Capitol ends in gunfire
by BRADLEY KLAPPER and LAURIE KELLMAN
The Associated Press
Published: October 3, 2013

WASHINGTON — A woman driving a black Lexus with a young child in the car tried to ram through a White House barricade Thursday, then led police on a chase that ended in gunfire outside the Capitol, witnesses and officials said.

Tourists watched the shooting unfold on Constitution Avenue outside the Capitol as lawmakers inside debated how to end a government shutdown. Police quickly locked down the entire complex for about an hour, and both houses of Congress went into recess.

The pursuit began when a car tried to ram a security barricade blocking the stretch of Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House, according to a law enforcement official who was not authorized to discuss the case by name and insisted on anonymity.

Witnesses said at least 20 police cars chased the Lexus toward Capitol Hill, where the car crashed outside the Capitol.

Tourist Edmund Ofori-Attah said he walked toward the scene, curious about what was going on.
read more here
Congress locked down due to shooter situation
CNN
Washington (CNN) - Emergency vehicles swarmed the area of the U.S. Capitol on Thursday after an order given over the speaker system told people to shelter in place because of an active shooting situation.

CNN Chief Congressional Correspondent Dana Bash reported that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said there was one person injured.
go here for updates

Backmann hocus pocus stunt in Washington

Yesterday Michele Backmann tried to pull a stunt in Washington when WWII veterans were not able to visit their memorial. While it may sound like a good thing to do, this was nothing more than a stunt.

She wants everyone to forget what she did in 2011 against veterans she pretends to care about now.

Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., has unveiled a plan for cutting $400 billion in federal spending that includes freezing Veterans Affairs Department health care spending and cutting veterans' disability benefits. (Charlie Neibergall / The Associated Press)


Bachmann plan would cut veterans benefits
By Rick Maze
Staff writer
January 28, 2011

Tea party favorite Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., has unveiled a plan for cutting $400 billion in federal spending that includes freezing Veterans Affairs Department health care spending and cutting veterans' disability benefits.

Her proposed VA budget cuts would account for $4.5 billion of the savings included in the plan, posted on her official House of Representatives website.

Paul Sullivan, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense, said cutting veterans' health care spending is an ill-advised move at a time when the number of veterans continues to grow as troops return from Iraq and Afghanistan. Sullivan said he finds it difficult to see how VA could freeze health care costs without hurting veterans.

"It is really astonishing to see this," he said.

In a statement, Bachmann said her plan is intended for discussion purposes as an example of ways to cut federal spending to make it unnecessary to increase the current $14.3 trillion limit on the amount the U.S. government can borrow.
read more here

Sheriff shares the story of PTSD

Cattaraugus County Sheriff Whitcomb shares the story of PTSD
Whitcomb makes presentation in Belmont to first responders
Wellsville Daily News
By Brian Quinn
Daily Reporter
Posted Oct 02, 2013

BELMONT
It might stay with you for a little while, but you’ll be able to return to normal on your own. It’s also possible, though, that you won’t be able to deal with it without help.

It is Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and a group of around 15 law enforcement officers and first responders, mostly from Allegany County, got a sense of what it’s all about from Cattaraugus County Sheriff Timothy Whitcomb.

Whitcomb shared examples of events which could lead to problems with PTSD for military personnel, police officers and volunteer firefighters and EMTs. It can occur when someone responds to or comes across a life-threatening event.

“It’s a diagnosable disorder. It’s real. It’s in the book,” he said, referring to DSM-5 — the fifth edition of the American Psychiatric Association's (APA) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

Among the hypothetical situations Whitcomb put before his audience was that they are driving along when they come upon a car wreck. There is gas leaking, the engine catches fire and it’s obvious the vehicle will be engulfed. There’s also a pregnant woman trapped in the car. The person who finds the wreck tries to help the woman, but is unable to save her and has to retreat.
read more here

Military families at Bangor event praise law use of marijuana to treat PTSD

Veterans, caregivers at Bangor event praise law allowing use of marijuana to treat PTSD
Bangor Daily News
Nick McCrea
BDN Staff
October 1, 2013

BANGOR, Maine — Former U.S. Marine Sgt. Ryan Begin returned from war in Iraq without his right elbow. A roadside bomb destroyed it in 2004. Begin’s scars weren’t all visible when he returned home.

“You can’t trust anyone,” said Begin, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder in the wake of his service. “Any situation, all you can see is the danger.”

Even routine events like driving under an overpass or hearing a loud bang can cause a person with PTSD to shut down or react aggressively, he said.

Marijuana eases Begin’s stress, which is why the Montville resident said Maine is taking the right steps by allowing veterans and others suffering from PTSD to take advantage of the drug.

Begin and Cpl. Bryan King, a retired Marine and medical marijuana patient from Fairfield, stood alongside representatives of the Medical Marijuana Caregivers of Maine and the American Civil Liberties Union Tuesday during a press conference celebrating a change in state law that will allow doctors to prescribe medical marijuana to patients suffering from PTSD.

The law, stemming from a bill proposed by Rep. Elizabeth Dickerson, D-Rockland, goes into effect on Oct. 9. The update also will allow physicians to prescribe marijuana to patients with inflammatory bowel disease and a few other illnesses. It will take effect without Gov. Paul LePage’s signature.
read more here

United for Care to Petition for Medical Marijuana Amendment in Florida