Monday, June 30, 2014

Starving veterans in the news?

Received an alert about a veteran suffering on a site called Rightwing News. The story of Joe Geoghagan is heartbreaking but it isn't the first time a story like this has been told. Joe has PTSD and some type of stomach problem requiring him to use a feeding tube but the article does not seem to explain why a feeding tube would be put in without them knowing what the cause was. It makes little sense.

It is true that veterans can now get up to five years of free care without a claim from the VA after their service. It is also true that one state is not the same as others on how veterans are treated or how fast their claims are processed any more than there is equality in how fast they see their doctors.

What keeps getting missed in all of this is how long it has all been going on. No matter how bad the stories are, there have been worse. No matter how heartbreaking it is to read their stories, it is even harder to live with these stories and know none of this needed to happen.

There is something wrong with this story itself. Too many questions not answered.

Enhanced Eligibility For Health Care Benefits
Veterans who served in a theater of combat operations after November 11, 1998 are eligible for an extended period of eligibility for health care for 5 years post discharge.

Under the "Combat Veteran" authority, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides health care services and community living care for any condition possibly related to the Veteran’s service in the theater of operations and enrollment in Priority Group 6, unless eligible for enrollment in a higher priority group to:
Combat Veterans who were discharged or released from active service on or after January 28, 2003, are eligible to enroll in the VA health care system for 5 years from the date of discharge or release.

Boost in feeding tube is also a problem. According to Nestle Health, Boost is "oral use" and does not go into feeding tubes.
The BOOST® family of products offers an extensive line of complete oral nutrition formulas. BOOST® is a great tasting, nutritionally complete meal replacement that can be used as a snack or as a meal. For oral use.


This veteran worked as a contractor after military service but the article gave no indication of when the unknown illness was tracked back to. Was this a matter of Workers' Compensation" instead of a VA obligation? Does he have a claim approved or filed or tied up in the backlog? Has he asked the hospital that treated him to give him another doctor? Has he contacted a lawyer since he can sue the VA and it has been done many times?

But this is not the first time a story came out about the same type of thing happening. It happened in Kentucky.
Malnourished Veteran Pleads For Help From VA reported by WBKO News June 27, 2014

Frank Coursey has not eaten solid food in nearly three years. As if this is not enough strain on his body, he goes to bed each night worried about the future of his family, if something were to happen to him.

"This picture is on 07-07-2007. I was 286 pounds. This picture was Father's Day of this year," said Frank Coursey, veteran.

Frank Coursey is currently 133 pounds, losing on average five pounds per week. His weight loss is the result of a gastric bypass surgery performed by a doctor in West Virginia, whom he was referred to by a his local VA physician.

Texas veterans fight for medical marijuana


Seems as if everyone is making money off veterans suffering with PTSD. Drug companies make money off medications. Private doctors make money off the overflow of patients the VA doesn't have time to see. Charities make a lot of money off raising funds to raise awareness and some of them even do the work to raise their spirits and help them heal instead of putting money first. With medical marijuana, it is more of the same. Does it work for some? Yes, it does.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta comes out in support of medical marijuana for PTSD after many years of being against it. He studied the research done and stopped listening to people talking without a clue.

Medical Marijuana helps veterans calm down and relax. Much like meditation and yoga help along with talk therapies, it gets the pressure off for a while.

Experiments in animals show that tetrahydrocannabinol, the chemical that gives marijuana its feel-good qualities, acts on a system in the brain that is "critical for fear and anxiety modulation," says Andrew Holmes, a researcher at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. But he and other brain scientists caution that marijuana has serious drawbacks as a potential treatment for PTSD.

The drawback is that this cannot be the only thing used to treat PTSD, especially PTSD caused by Combat which is totally different than any other category of causes. As there are different levels, there are also different causes but one thing remains constant in all PTSD cases. It has to be a triple approach treating the mind, body and spirit. Leave one out and you don't have healing. Leave out the spirit and you have numbing.
Some military veterans say marijuana Is saving lives
My FOX Houston
By Alexander Supgul
Digital Content Manager
Updated: Jun 30, 2014 3:58 PM EDT

Veterans say marijuana is saving lives, but here in Texas, smoking a joint to treat post traumatic stress disorder makes them criminals. Some hope our war heroes will play a role in changing minds at the state capitol.

Leaving combat experiences behind is tough.

"I don't believe you can go through something like that and not be affected in some way," said a veteran named Josh.

Josh did three tours as an Army sniper. He's been shot at seen buddies killed and had to dodge grenades. His new battle is back in Houston, fighting sleeplessness, anxiety and anger.

"If people are doing something stupid on the roads, which is often, I lose it. Sometimes I would do that in front of my kids. I could tell they were like, 'That's not like daddy,'" he said.

Desperate, Josh has found relief in pot twice a day. The one thing he says helps treat his PTSD makes him a criminal in Texas.

"That's my medicine. It gets me through the day. I don't want to say I wouldn't be able to survive without it, but I'm a lot better of a person."

If it weren't for marijuana, Josh says he'd look like the vet in this picture, drowning in a sea of prescribed pills.

"Over and over, Sally, the people I talk to say they felt like a pilled up zombie. 'I wanted to get my life back, and marijuana helped me get my life back,'" said William Martin, director of drug policy at Rice University's Baker Institute.

Martin interviewed several veterans for an article in June's Texas Monthly.
read more here

My advice on this is simple. Talk to your doctor if your medication is not working for you. Your system is not the same as your buddies. If you are self medicating with drugs or drinking, stop. It is not helping even though for a time you think it makes you feel better. If medical pot is legal in your state, get a prescription from your doctor, don't just buy one.

If you are thinking it will solve all your problems, it won't. You need to take care of the whole you. Take care of your body by doing physical things, walking, swimming, running, yoga and meditation. Take care of your spirit as well because the weight on your spirit is doing the most damage. Find forgiveness for yourself and anyone else you believe harmed you. Find peace and work to hold onto it.

Learn all you can about what PTSD is and why you have it because it comes from the strength of your emotional foundation. That same ability within you allowing you to risk your life for someone else is what has allowed you to feel as much pain as you do. It was not out of weakness, but out of strength.

If what you are doing is not working, don't give up. Keep trying to find what works for you.

Boehner Sgt. Schultz Excuse VA Problems

It seems John Boehner forgot what part he and the rest of the members of the House played in the VA mess.

"Bob McDonald, a West Point graduate who served as chief executive of Procter and Gamble, to take over as head of the troubled Department of Veterans Affairs, according to White House officials."
In a statement, House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio), usually an administration critic, hailed McDonald’s experience as a veteran and as a leader in the private sector, calling him the “kind of person who is capable of implementing the kind of dramatic systemic change that is badly needed and long overdue at the VA. But the next VA secretary can only succeed in implementing that type of change if his boss, the president, first commits to doing whatever it takes to give our veterans the world class health care system they deserve.”

How the hell does Boehner have the nerve to talk about what is "overdue" at the VA?
From John Boehner's website
Elected to Congress in 1990
"His boss?" Why is he pretending that nothing happened to harm veterans before Obama? Boehner has been in long enough to know how many hearings members of congress have had every time the press got a hold of what was going on and outraged Americans flooded the offices of congress with complaints. Boehner also knows that CSPAN has hearings online for the entire country to see.

Boehner is pulling a Sgt. Schultz and veterans deserved so much better of him and every other member of the Congress.


VETERANS DESERVE THE TRUTH!

Veterans shafted by "substandard" colleges in California

GI Bill funds failing for-profit California colleges
Center for Investigative Reporting
Aaron Glantz
June 30, 2014

Over the last five years, more than $600 million in college assistance for Iraq and Afghanistan veterans has been spent on California schools so substandard that they have failed to qualify for state financial aid.

As a result, the GI Bill — designed to help veterans live the American dream — is supporting for-profit companies that spend lavishly on marketing but can leave veterans with worthless degrees and few job prospects, The Center for Investigative Reporting found.

"It's not education; I think it's just greed," said David Pace, a 20-year Navy veteran who used the GI Bill to obtain a business degree from the University of Phoenix's San Diego campus.

Although taxpayers spent an estimated $50,000 on Pace's education, he has the same blue-collar job he landed right after he left the service: running electrical cable for a defense contractor.

Financial records analyzed by CIR show that California is the national epicenter of this problem, with nearly 2 out of every 3 GI Bill dollars going to for-profit colleges.

The University of Phoenix in San Diego outdistances its peers. Since 2009, the campus has received $95 million in GI Bill funds. That's more than any brick-and-mortar campus in America, more than the entire 10-campus University of California system and all UC extension programs combined.
read more here

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Congress shell game with veterans lives

Part Two of Congress Played Shell Game With Veterans
There is no need for me to add to any of this. I'll just let the reports show you what was happening while Congress was playing their games.
Nationwide, the number of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans diagnosed with PTSD at VA medical facilities jumped by nearly 70 percent in the 12 months ending June 30, 2007.

In Tucson, 31 percent of the combat veterans who have come to the VA for medical care since last October have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.
Four Erie County soldiers committed suicide
Matthew A. Proulx. Andrew L. Norlund. Justin C. Reyes. Gary M. Underhill. They didn’t die in combat. They didn’t die from friendly fire. They died by their own hands.
Veteran Suicides Twice Rate of Civilians
CBS News has now completed a five-month study of death records for 2004-05 which shows that the actual figures are "much higher" than those reported by the VA. Across the total US veteran population of 25 million, CBS found that suicide rates were more than twice as high as for non-veterans (according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, suicide accounted for 32,439 deaths in 2004).

CBS spoke to the families of several veterans who killed themselves after returning from Iraq. "The war didn't end for him when he came home," said the mother of one soldier. "I think he was being tormented and tortured by his experiences."
In a November 9, 2007, VA court filing related to our VCS class action lawsuit against VA, attorneys for VA revealed that nearly 264,000 Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans were already treated in VA hospitals and clinics through the end of October 2007.


Minnesota Marine's case is part of lawsuit against VA
The suicide of Jonathan Schulze is cited in the class-action suit filed by two national veterans groups.
By KEVIN GILES, Star Tribune
Last update: February 22, 2008

A class-action lawsuit filed by two national veterans organizations accusing the U.S. Veterans Administration of neglecting psychological fallout from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars cites the suicide of Minnesota Marine veteran Jonathan Schulze.

Schulze is one of several deceased veterans named in the suit, which a judge last month allowed to proceed and is headed for a hearing in U.S. District Court in San Francisco in March. Schulze, 25, committed suicide in January 2007 in New Prague, Minn., five days after he allegedly was turned away from the VA hospital in St. Cloud when seeking psychiatric help.

He had fought in Iraq. Medical records showed that he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder.

PALISADES - After two tours in Iraq with the Marine Corps Reserve, Steven Vickerman tried to resume a normal life at home with his wife, but he could not shake a feeling of despair.

The VA, they believed, had failed their son. The services available, they said, were insufficient, and the government should do more to address the issue for returning war vets.

"There should be something that can be done, not only for the proud soldiers but also for their families," Carole Vickerman said. "When you hear the word 'stress,' it sounds so innocuous. It's not stress; it's a killer."

Steven Vickerman, a Tappan Zee High School graduate, enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve in 1998. A whiz at technical jobs and an electrician by trade, the staff sergeant served as a small arms technician with Marine Aircraft Group 49, Detachment B, at Stewart Air National Guard Base in Newburgh.

His first tour in Iraq was interrupted when he returned home to be with his older brother, who was dying of a brain tumor. Robert died at age 35. Vickerman served a second tour and was honorably discharged in 2005.

About two weeks ago, Vickerman's wife went on a business trip in New York City and could not reach her husband by phone. The Vickermans also could not reach him.

They called his therapist, who was scheduled to see him on a Wednesday, but Vickerman missed his appointment. The therapist called police, who found Vickerman dead at his home, where he had hanged himself.

But while all this was happening and Congress was cutting back there were lawsuits going on and Doctors telling the truth.
A deposition by a VA medical center psychiatrist caring for veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan backed up the veterans groups' assertion that the department had not done enough to provide adequate mental health care for all veterans.

Dr. Marcus Nemuth, medical director of Psychiatry Emergency Service for VA's Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle, which operates three hospitals, said in his deposition on March 25 that he expected a high volume of post-traumatic stress disorder cases among veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. He said he was concerned with both with the quantity and quality of care provided to those veterans.

Nemuth said during the past year he had seen such a growth in the caseload of Afghanistan and Iraq veterans seeking psychiatric emergency help at the Seattle VA hospital that he concluded the department faced a "tsunami of medical need."

Then there was Walter Reed Hospital. Dana Priest and Anne Hull proved what reporters could do when they cared enough to investigate and tell the truth.
Post reporter Dana Priest said the Walter Reed story was among the work in which she took the most pride. She and Hull worked on the story for about six months, developing sources among soldiers and their families.

``It's a reminder of what basic journalism can get you involved in,'' she said. ``At a time when journalism is under this cloud of financial uncertainty, reporters have to stay focused, and if we don't, we sort of doom people like the Army specialist who lived with the cockroaches in Building 18.

``We can do better than that.''

We could do better than all that happened to our veterans but we didn't. That is something no one should ever be expected to be forgiven for.

AWOL Marine faces charges after 10 years

Marine who disappeared in Iraq in 2004 back in US
Jun 29th 2014

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Marine who was declared a deserter nearly 10 years ago after disappearing in Iraq and then returning to the U.S. claiming he had been kidnapped, only to disappear again, is back in U.S. custody, officials said Sunday.

Cpl. Wassef Ali Hassoun, 34, turned himself in and was being flown Sunday from an undisclosed location in the Middle East to Norfolk, Va. He is to be moved Monday to Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, according to a spokesman, Capt. Eric Flanagan.

Maj. Gen. Raymond Fox, commander of the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force at Lejeune, will determine whether to court martial Hassoun.

In a written statement from its headquarters at the Pentagon, the Marine Corps said the Naval Criminal Investigative Service "worked with" Hassoun to turn himself in and return to the U.S. to face charges.

Hassoun disappeared from his unit in Iraq's western desert in June 2004. The following month he turned up unharmed in Beirut, Lebanon and blamed his disappearance on Islamic extremist kidnappers. He was returned to Lejeune and was about to face the military equivalent of a grand jury hearing when he disappeared again.

Wonder if he was getting paid too?
Audit: Army paid $16M to deserters, AWOL soldiers
The Associated Press
By BRETT BARROUQUERE
Published: September 27, 2013

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Even as the Army faces shrinking budgets, an audit shows it paid out $16 million in paychecks over a 2 1/2-year period to soldiers designated as AWOL or as deserters, the second time since 2006 the military has been dinged for the error.

A memo issued by Human Resources Command at Fort Knox, Ky., found that the Army lacked sufficient controls to enforce policies and procedures for reporting deserters and absentee soldiers to cut off their pay and benefits immediately. The oversight was blamed primarily on a failure by commanders to fill out paperwork in a timely manner.
the link is still live so go here to read the rest

What makes a hero?

What makes a hero? I have been lucky enough to spend time with two who wear the Medal of Honor. Sammy Davis and Melvin Morris, both heroes of the Vietnam War. Sammy is in this video and yes, he is that humble in real life. I've met hundreds of other heroes who do not see themselves as anything special and spent my life with others. My Dad and uncles were all in the service and so was my husband. They do not seem themselves as heroes but see it in others.
"For the men and women taking part in Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan, each day brings the possibility for tragedy or victory, death or heroism. They are not mutually exclusive, and often a single instant produces them all. These themes run through the pages of the ninth edition of Stars and Stripes' annual Heroes special section. These tales of valor, courage and compassion tell the story of a nation at war."

Clinton Romesha

Congress played shell game with veterans

Members of Congress can play the shell game all they want and hope that we don't notice which cup is in what hand, but they can't change history. They can pretend this is all new to them but they can't change reality. They cannot pretend they had nothing to do with any of this and get away with it. Sooner or later someone notices the ball has been removed and all the cups are empty.
Annual Report to Congress on Combating Terrorism 2001
While it seemed as if the government was focused on defending this nation against terrorists, they were not really focused on taking care of the men and women putting their lives on the line to do it.

Table 1. Historical Budget Authority for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in Current and Constant (FY2011) Dollars, FY1940-FY2012 (dollars in millions)

Just an example, when adjusted for inflation to 2011 values, in 1976 the VA budget was $76,940.2 million. The Vietnam War was over. By 1977 funding started to drop from $69,992.9 million to a low of $51,849.3 million in 1990. In 2004, with two wars producing more disabled veterans, the VA budget was still less than it was in 1977 at $75,827.4 million.

But that wasn't the worst of all. The American Federation of Government Employees issued this statement in a report to the Washington Post.
According to John Gage, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, the VA is calling for a reduction of 540 full-time jobs in the Veterans Benefits Administration, which handles disability, pension and other claims by veterans.
In the same post, there are other comments and claims made.
Dr. Jonathan B. Perlin, acting under secretary of veterans affairs, said the medical staff of the department would be reduced by 3,700 employees under the president's budget. About 194,000 employees now provide medical care.

Representative Steve Buyer, Republican of Indiana, chairman of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, indicated he was open to the ideas. Laura J. Zuckerman, a spokeswoman for Mr. Buyer, said he saw the proposals as a way to "bring balance, fairness and equity into the system."

The president's budget would save $293 million by reducing federal payments for state-run homes that provide veterans with long-term care. It would also save more than $100 million with a one-year hiatus in federal spending for construction and renovation of such homes.

As for "privatizing care" politicians like John Boehner and John McCain have been pushing for, they have been at it for a very long time.

Their answer at a time when the needs of our veterans was growing, was to cut.
The crisis in veterans' healthcare
Honolulu Advisor
By Tom Philpott
March 14, 2005

Rep. Steve Buyer, R-Ind., new chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, says the medical and rehabilitation needs of a new generation of war veterans leave him more certain than ever that Congress erred in 1996 when it opened VA healthcare to any veteran willing to pay modest fees.

"While some veterans organizations like to create a theme, that 'a veteran is a veteran (and) there is no difference,' I disagree," Buyer said.

A decade ago, in the wake of a Persian Gulf War that saw relatively few U.S. casualties, the Department of Veterans Affairs went back to worrying about an aging patient population and underused VA clinics and hospitals, Buyer said.

Those concerns, along with wishful thinking about the VA billing employer-provided insurance plans for the cost of care, led Congress to open VA facilities to veterans neither poor nor disabled.

Time has shown that to be a mistake, Buyer said. Today, the VA has $3 billion in uncollected healthcare debts for services that insurance companies have not paid.

"And we find ourselves now in protracted wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the war on terror all over the world. So the sense from 1996 that we could open up the VA to protect the bricks and mortar because of a declining population of veterans," Buyer said, is replaced by "the reality that we have more veterans now that have to come into the system."

His comments came in an interview for this column days after his committee voted to impose an enrollment fee of $230 to $500 a year on 2.4 million veterans in priority categories 7 and 8, those who are not poor and have no service-connected disability.
• Develop a "seamless transition" process for veterans moving from active duty to VA care. So far, more than 10,000 have been wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan, and as many as 100,000 could have post-traumatic stress disorder, Buyer said.

They cut more and outsourced more.
AFGE strongly opposes the 15% privatization quota at the VA. It is divorced from the needs of veterans, ties the hands of VA medical directors, and will adversely impact on the quality of veterans’ health care. The quotas prevent the VA from using other tools to make their operations more efficient. The VA has no system in place to the track costs or quality of performance from service contractors. Federal employees, unlike VA contractors, have no rights to appeal bad service contracting decisions to the Court of Federal Claims or the General Accounting Office. The administration’s privatization quotas only subject current government work to contracting out review. No VA contractor’s work will be reviewed for consideration to be performed by VA staff.
And now the ultimate shell game was and still is, ignoring what caused most of the damage to our veterans. Each year the list increased and so did calls from veterans to their members of congress complaining about the lack of care. Each year members of congress were pretending they had nothing to do with any of it as actors on a stage showing their shocked faces as yet one more report surfaced.

Article in Today’s Congressional Quarterly:
CQ TODAY
Nov. 14, 2005 - 10:48 p.m.
American Legion to Chairman: We Will Not Be Talked Down to or Lectured
By Tim Starks, CQ Staff

The tense relationship between House Veterans’ Affairs Chairman Steve Buyer and veterans’ groups is deteriorating rapidly - to the point of nastiness - in the wake of a revamped hearing schedule the Indiana Republican unveiled recently.

The latest row: The American Legion’s national commander, Thomas Bock, fired off an angry response Monday to a Buyer letter about a Nov. 7 summit at which the chairman announced the new schedule.

“You begin your letter by stating in an almost condescending manner that, ‘it is unfortunate that the American Legion chose not to send a representative,’” wrote Bock. “I might say to you that it is unfortunate that your staff chose not to send an invitation to the National Commander of The American Legion.” By the time Buyer’s staff “deigned” to contact the group, Bock said, it was too late.

“I must tell you, sir, to a person, we find your letter and your implications to be insulting and patronizing,” Bock fumed, adding that the group would not be treated as if it were “superfluous.”

Buyer said that while he strongly disagrees with “much of the letter’s accusations and rhetoric,” he still wants to work with it and other groups “for the good of our nation’s veterans.”

There is a very long list of issues covering three years beginning with this,
Timeline on Veterans’ Health Care – 3 Years of Facts
2003

January 2003 Bush Administration cuts off veterans’ health care for 164,000. In January, the Administration cut off VA health care for 164,000 veterans without service-connected disabilities, who make as little as $25,000 a year. Through 2005 this has denied health care to more than 522,000 veterans. [68 Fed. Reg. 2670, 2671, January 17, 2003]

March 2003 Republicans vote to slash veterans’ health care. House Republicans voted in their budget to cut $14 billion from veterans’ health care. The GOP budget also included the President’s proposal to impose a $250 fee for enrollment in VA health care for low and moderate income veterans, along with a doubling of the drug co-payment for those veterans. [H Con. Res 95, Vote #82, 3/21/03]

July 2003 Republicans break promise on veterans’ health care. After agreeing to reduce some of their budget cuts, the House GOP reneged on their promise to increase funding for VA health care and passed an appropriations bill providing $1.8 billion less than their FY 2004 Budget. [H. Res. 338, Vote #450, 7/25/03]

October 2003 Democrats seek an additional $1.3 billion for veterans health care, but Republicans reject it. The Bush Administration opposed and House Republicans rejected a Democratic motion to include $1.3 billion for veterans’ health care in the Iraqi Supplemental. [H.R. 3289, Vote #600,10/31/03]


Disabled Iraq Veteran Heads Beverly Veterans Service Office by HImself

Beverly veterans services a 'one-man show'
Beverly Wicked Local
By Martha Shanahan
Posted Jun. 28, 2014

BEVERLY
Beverly Veterans Services director David Perinchief spends his days meeting with Beverly’s veterans in his Memorial Building office. His dog, Gunner, sits by his side and greets everyone who walks in the door with a friendly wag of the tail.

When he’s not in meetings, he’s on the phone. Veterans and widows call him to get help navigating the twists, turns and bureaucratic mazes of the Veterans Affairs system.

When he’s not in his office, he’s finding the veterans who can’t find him — sometimes driving to their houses to pick up forms — or meeting with Veterans Affairs officials in Boston.

"It’s a one-man show," he said. "I have one of the largest clientele bases in the area by myself, and I have no other help. It gets a little overwhelming."

He has a computer full of spreadsheets logging every veteran who comes through his office — part of a new approach he has brought to the job that combines tough love with a serious commitment to efficiency.
The city receives 75 percent of its spending on veterans back from the state. The proposed budget for fiscal year 2015, under review by the city council, increases the amount of funding allocated for benefits by a proposed $62,757 more than is expected to be spent this year.
read more here

Marine Lieutenant Colonel Andrew P. Reed collapsed during run and died

Camp Lejeune identifies Marine fatality
By U.S. Marine Corps
Published: Saturday, June 28, 2014

U.S. Marine Lieutenant Colonel Andrew P. Reed, who was due to assume command of Logistics Operations School at Camp Johnson Monday, passed away suddenly there early yesterday morning after collapsing during the run portion of a semi-annual physical fitness test. The cause of death is still under investigation.

Lt. Col. Reed, 39, received his commission in 1996 after graduating with a Bachelor of Special Studies degree in Secondary Education and Physical Education from Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, IA. A career logistics officer, Lt. Col. Reed served in combat operations during Operation Enduring Freedom in 2004 and Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2005 and 2006 as an assistant logistics officer with the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit.

Prior to his recent arrival at Camp Lejeune, he was the Senior Forum Coordinator at Headquarters Marine Corps for the Deputy Commandant for Programs and Resources between 2012 and May 2014.

Lt. Col. Reed’s military decorations include the Defense Meritorious Service Medal, the Navy/Marine Corps Commendation Medal with four gold stars in lieu of subsequent awards, and the Combat Action Ribbon. Our thoughts and prayers are with Lt. Col. Reed’s family during this difficult time.

For the near term, the current commanding officer of Logistics Operations School, Lt. Col. Michael J. Monroe will remain in command.
read more here