Sunday, December 28, 2014

Utah Iraq Veteran Killed by Police

Utahn killed in police shooting ‘loved life,’ father says
The Salt Lake Tribune
By MICHAEL MCFALL
First Published 4 hours ago

"The shooting ended the life of a man who had been a staff sergeant in the U.S. Army and had plans to become a nurse.

"He loved life. He loved his wife," said Russell McGehee. "… He had a lot of plans. It’s so difficult to look at a person who has all these plans [and see that end]."

McGehee had wanted to be a soldier since he was 10 years old, and in 2009, he was deployed on his first of two tours to Iraq.

Though McGehee was in the infantry, his father said that "they actually did some special ops stuff to actually catch the bomb makers [who created improvised explosive devices]."
A Stansbury Park man who aimed a handgun at a Tooele County Sheriff’s deputy was fatally shot by the officer early Sunday.

The deputy had responded to a 4 a.m. call, expecting to help 28-year-old Nicholas McGehee with a lacerated foot at a home near the intersection of Aberdeen Lane and Merion Drive. A Utah Highway Patrol trooper went with the deputy to assist, said Tooele County Sheriff Frank Park.

But through a window of the home, the officers saw a man holding a shotgun, the sheriff said.

"As they approached the house, [they could see] there was evidently more going on than the medical," Park said.

At some point, McGehee’s wife came out of the house. While the trooper helped her to his car for safety, McGehee came out holding a handgun, Park said.

The deputy commanded him two or three times to put the gun down — but when McGehee pointed it at the deputy, the officer fired three times, killing him, Park said.

McGehee’s father, Russell McGehee, said he understands his son had accidentally injured his foot, and his daughter-in-law called 911 because his son would not go to a doctor. What transpired after that is a mystery to the family.

"I had never seen him pull a gun on anyone. I don’t know what the deal was," said Russell McGehee, who lives in Sanford, N.C., where McGehee grew up. "I don’t know why he would have done that."

Russell McGehee had received a call several hours earlier, while still in bed, that his only son had died.
read more here

“Songwriting With Soldiers” Retreats Repairing Pain With Song

Vets and musicians meet to craft personal songs 
Associated Press
By MICHAEL HILL
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Iraq combat veteran Adan Olid, center, works on a song with songwriters Darden Smith, left, and Marshall Crenshaw during the Songwriting With Soldiers retreat at the Carey Institute for Global Good on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2014, in Rensselaerville, N.Y. Olid is one of more than 100 veterans who have turned their stories into sometimes affectingly personal songs at Songwriting With Soldiers retreats. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)
RENSSELAERVILLE, N.Y. (AP) - Adan Olid’s life took a turn on San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge.

As he stood at a railing, the troubled Iraq War veteran decided not to jump. He felt inspired to work through the “ghost-like feeling” of post-traumatic stress disorder.

Now that pivotal moment for Olid has inspired a song - written, performed and recorded by professionals. The 29-year-old former Marine is one of more than 100 veterans who have turned their stories into sometimes affectingly personal songs at “Songwriting With Soldiers” retreats.

Vets work with musicians hunched over guitars who turn anecdotes and raw feelings into lyrics and melody. Songs are laced with lyrics about “bullet catchers,” sacrifice, “hillbilly armor,” death and, in the case of Olid, renewal on a bridge. “I think music does a lot more than a pill can do,” said Olid, who wants to share his song with other veterans. Olid was deployed to Iraq three times before leaving the Marines as a sergeant in 2011.

Like many veterans, the stress of close calls or memories of dying friends lingered when he returned to Southern California. Music has been a comfort to Olid, especially the music of Johnny Cash and the old rockabilly stars. He uses recorded songs at his job as a counselor for fellow veterans and even plays guitar a little. It was a natural progression for him to attend the recent songwriting retreat at the Carey Institute for Global Good in rural Rensselaerville, near his Albany-area home.
read more here SongwritingWith:Soldiers

Citizens Support Police Because Blue Lives Matter Too

'Blue lives matter' rally held in Denver for police
KUSA.com
Ryan Haarer
December 27, 2014

Moment of silence in Denver for slain NY officers.
(Photo: Ryan Haarer)

DENVER- A crowd gathered at Civic Center Park on Saturday to show their support for law enforcement after months of criticism and attacks on police.

The rally is one of many being held across the country. Many were started through social media using the twitter hashtag #BlueLivesMatter.

"They are mostly good people who actually care about their communities and it is hard to see other people tear them down on a daily basis," said Kim Snetzinger who showed up to participate in the rally.

Those in law enforcement will tell you the job has always been dangerous, but it hasn't always been so thankless. This year's events involving the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner brought on an outpouring of anger towards police for what many see as excessive force.

"You can always find somebody to say something negative about you. But we say thank you. Thank you for running towards the gun shots. Thank you for securing our neighborhoods," said Pastor Larry Stevenson, exciting the crowd.
read more here

Organizers hope Sea of Blue is start of national movement
WKYC Staff
December 28, 2014

CLEVELAND -- They called it the Sea of Blue and that's exactly what it was as thousands packed downtown Saturday to rally for police officers.

They covered Public Square as supporters were not only rallying for the officers killed in the line of duty, but every officer and even for people killed at the hands of officers.
read more here



Sea of blue grief: 25,000 cops attend funeral for fallen NYPD officer
FOX.com
December 27, 2014

Thousands of police officers from across the country assembled in winter sunshine in New York City for the funeral of Rafael Ramos, a police officer shot to death with his partner in an ambush last week.

The officers in dress blue uniforms stood outside the Christ Tabernacle Church in Queens for the Saturday morning services. The sea of blue stretched more than six city blocks.

In his eulogy, Mayor Bill de Blasio offered the city's condolences to the Ramos family.

"All of this city is grieving and grieving for so many reasons," he said. "But the most personal is that we lost such a good man."

Vice President Joe Biden expressed his condolences to Ramos' two sons.

“You’ve shown tremendous courage these past days,” he said.

He said Ramos and his partner Wenjian Liu were officers who were committed, passionate and vigilant.
read more here

Fort Bragg Operation Toy Drop Helps Families in Need

U.S. Army paratroopers wait to be assigned to chalks before participating in an airborne jump during the 17th Annual Randy Oler Memorial Operation Toy Drop, on Dec. 8, 2014 at Luzon Drop Zone, N.C. Operation Toy Drop is the world’s largest combined airborne operation and allows Soldiers the opportunity to help a less fortunate child in the Sandhill region to receive toys for the holidays.
(U.S. Army photo by Spc Ashley Keasler)
Operation Toy Drop
Military.com
Posted 4 days ago by Member 30091762

Dozens of parachute silhouettes raining down against the North Carolina sky are nothing out of the ordinary around Fort Bragg, but each December since 1998, airborne operations have taken on a different meaning to America's men and women in uniform with the Randy Oler Memorial Operation Toy Drop.

An annual opportunity for Fort Bragg's military community to help families in need over the holidays, Operation Toy Drop combines the efforts of Army, Air Force and civilian service organizations in a truly unique event.

Operation Toy Drop is a week-long, philanthropic project where Fort Bragg's paratroopers (or visiting paratroopers from across the nation) individually contribute new, unwrapped toys to be distributed to local children's homes and social service agencies.

1 in 4 women veterans experienced sexual harassment or assault

It is a good time to look back at Victim advocates want radical overhaul in handling of military sex assaults on Stars and Stripes By Leo Shane III Published: December 29, 2011 after reading this to see that not much has changed since then.

Vets fight for care following sex traumas
WASHINGTON POST
By Emily Wax-Thibodeaux
DECEMBER 28, 2014
A recent VA survey found that 1 in 4 women said they experienced sexual harassment or assault.
WASHINGTON — Thousands of female veterans are struggling to get health care and compensation from the Department of Veterans Affairs on the grounds that they suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder caused by sexual trauma in the military.

The veterans and their advocates call it the second battle — with a bureaucracy they say is stuck in the past.

Judy Atwood-Bell was just a 19-year-old Army private when she was locked inside a barracks room at Fort Devens in Massachusetts, forced to the cold floor, and raped by a fellow soldier, she said.

For more than two decades, Atwood-Bell fought for an apology and financial compensation for PTSD, with panic attacks, insomnia, and depression that she recalls starting soon after that winter day in 1981. She filled out stacks of forms in triplicate and then filled them out again, pressing over and over for recognition of the harm that was done.
And the Pentagon released data on Dec. 4 that showed that 62 percent of those who reported being sexually assaulted had experienced retaliation or ostracism afterward. read more here

Kansas Iraq Veteran Personal Battle with PTSD Becomes Cause for Others

Kan. vet’s struggle with PTSD motivates desire to help others 
KHI News Service
By Andy Marso
December 28, 2014
After his Army service, Will Stucker earned a bachelor’s degree in family studies at Manhattan Christian College and is now working on a master’s degree in clinical psychology at Emporia State University. He plans to work with other veterans and help them overcome post-traumatic stress syndrome.- photo by Andy Marso
Need is great About one-third of the 2.6 million veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan have been diagnosed with mental illnesses like PTSD, anxiety and depression. The VA Eastern Kansas Health Care System, which includes the Topeka hospital where Stucker was treated, is seeing more patients for PTSD every year: up from 1,297 in 2011 to 2,216 in 2014. The costs of PTSD treatment there this year exceeded $28 million
TOPEKA — Sitting in a Junction City coffee shop with his laptop and a pile of textbooks splayed on a table, Will Stucker looks like any other college student, if a bit older than average. But Stucker, 38, has taken a different path to college than most of his classmates at Emporia State University.

His path took him to South Korea and Kuwait, then to a tank rolling toward Baghdad, then to an armored Humvee on the streets of a small town in Iraq where insurgents repeatedly tried to kill him — and two of them almost succeeded.

Then, finally, to a Department of Veterans Affairs hospital in Topeka, where counselors helped him work through the post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) he came home with. Stucker is working toward a master’s degree in clinical psychology so that he can help other veterans overcome PTSD. read more here

US and NATO End Afghanistan Mission

U.S., NATO mark end of mission to Afghanistan 
Associated Press
Lynne O'Donnell
December 28, 2014
It ends with 2,224 American soldiers killed, according to an AP tally, out of a total of some 3,500 foreign troop deaths.

Commander of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), Gen. John Campbell, center,
cases the ISAF flag during a ceremony at ISAF headquarters in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sunday.

(Photo: Massoud Hossaini, AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The United States and NATO formally ended their war in Afghanistan on Sunday with a ceremony at their military headquarters in Kabul as the insurgency they fought for 13 years remains as ferocious and deadly as at any time since the 2001 invasion that unseated the Taliban regime following the Sept. 11 attacks.

The symbolic ceremony marked the end of the U.S.-led International Security Assistance Force, which will transition to a supporting role with 13,500 soldiers, most of them American, starting Jan. 1.

Gen. John Campbell, commander of ISAF, rolled up and sheathed the green and white ISAF flag and unfurled the flag of the new international mission, called Resolute Support.

"Resolute Support will serve as the bedrock of an enduring partnership" between NATO and Afghanistan, Campbell told an audience of Afghan and international military officers and officials, as well as diplomats and journalists.

He paid tribute to the international and Afghan troops who have died fighting the insurgency, saying: "The road before us remains challenging but we will triumph."

From Jan. 1, the new mission will provide training and support for Afghanistan's military, with the U.S. accounting for almost 11,000 members of the residual force.
read more here

Orlando VA Medical Center is more than 95 percent complete

VA Medical Center nearly done but disputes continue
Orlando Sentinel
By Naseem S. Miller
December 27, 2014
"Lawmakers say that the House Veterans' Affairs committee will have hearings on VA hospital construction early next year."
VA Medical Center -- Ongoing construction at Lake Nona, on Thursday, September 5, 2013.
(Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda, Orlando Sentinel)
After years of squabbles and delays, the long-awaited Orlando VA Medical Center is more than 95 percent complete.

If all goes as planned, the Department of Veterans Affairs will take it over in January, and the hospital will be fully operational by summer.

The $665 million, 1.2 million-square-foot facility at Medical City in Lake Nona is expected to have more than 3,500 employees and serve as many as 115,000 veterans every year.

It is also two years behind schedule and, by some estimates, more than $200 million over budget.

The hospital's groundbreaking was in October 2008, and it was expected to be finished in October 2012. Since then, deadlines have been broken as the VA and its contractor, Brasfield & Gorrie, continue to blame each other for the delays.

There have been "numerous issues that surrounded the construction delays," including problems with "contractor manpower shortages and poor management of resources," VA officials said in a statement.
read more here

Reducing Military Suicides Impossible Dream with These Folks in Charge

Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
December 28, 2014

When the subject of suicides tied to military service comes up it feels more like the impossible dream of changing the outcome. Most of what is going on with military suicides has been going on for so long it is hard to hold onto hope they will finally understand what is behind it, especially when veteran suicides are factored in. The numbers are staggering leaving far too many questions leaders never get asked to account for.
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed"

They derived their powers because men and women in this country stepped up for decades putting their lives on the line to obtain freedom and retain it. Congress failed all of them for decades. The wounds are not new. PTSD has been reported under different titles but the lingering effects of war have been carried to the grave. Instead of learning from the past, taking what was proven to provide healing so they can live better lives, failed research projects were passed off as the best thing going no matter what came next.

For starters, Congress should have been demanding answers as to why billions of dollars and a long list of hearings produced such deplorable results. After more was being done, people made money, got promoted, members of Congress got their name attached to bills but never noticed they will forever be connected to massive failures.

There has been a massive deception pulled off by the majority of the members of the press and they didn't even know it. How could they know when they simply reported what they were told, when they were told it to make the news cycle? They didn't think investigating was worth the time to report the truth?

It is a great PR piece but nothing more. Even the author didn't catch what was obviously part of the problem. When you read this part make sure you haven't just taken a sip of coffee. I squirted mine out and have to clean my keyboard.
"So Chiarelli set out to learn everything he could about PTSD and TBI. The task took on even greater urgency a month later, when the Army tallied that 115 soldiers had committed suicide in 2007. That was the most since the Army began counting in 1980 and nearly twice the national suicide rate. Chiarelli’s boss, General George Casey Jr., asked him to figure out why so many soldiers were taking their own lives."

Exactly what happened before and after that is very telling on what Chiarelli learned.
That chart is from The Guardian US military struggling to stop suicide epidemic among war veterans

This is from Senator Joe Donnelly's site on military suicides.
Using an updated method of tracking suicides, DoD also announced in the new military suicide report that 475 servicemembers took their lives in 2013.

This total is slightly lower than the 479 total DoD had previously reported.

While the total number of servicemembers who took their lives declined from 522 in 2012 to 475 in 2013, there was an increase in the number of National Guard and Reserve Members who committed suicide last year. The 134 National Guard Members who took their own lives is a record high, up from 130 in 2012. Last year, 86 Reserve Members committed suicide compared to 72 in 2012.

Like most, Chiarelli had good intentions however he failed to figure out what was going on with the "task" he was given. The number of enlisted went down due to sequestration along with the number of deployed with troops pulled out of Iraq. The flip side was more suicides than combat fatalities. In the Veterans' Community, the numbers went up as well.
General Chiarelli’s Brain Crusade
How one Army officer raised the nation’s consciousness about head injuries
Politico
By HOWARD SCHULTZ and RAJIV CHANDRASEKARAN
December 27, 2014


Soon after Peter Chiarelli became vice chief of staff of the Army in 2008, a subordinate showed him a bar graph depicting the number of soldiers determined by the Department of Veterans Affairs to be at least 30 percent disabled. The tallest column was on the far left.

Those are amputations, Chiarelli thought. Or burns.

Then he examined the graph more carefully. Burns were off to the right, accounting for just 2 percent of disabled soldiers. Amputations were in the middle, at 10 percent. The big column, which represented 36 percent of seriously injured soldiers, was labeled “PTSD or TBI.”

Chiarelli was dumbfounded. PTSD, or post-traumatic stress disorder, is the catchall term to explain the anxiety, anger, and disorientation people can experience after exposure to physical harm or the threat of it. An insurgent attack would qualify, as would the threat of one, which most troops in Iraq faced every day. TBI, or traumatic brain injury, can happen when a soldier suffers a concussion from the blast of a roadside bomb. While some soldiers appeared to recover from concussions quickly, for others the effects lingered for months, or even indefinitely.

What stunned Chiarelli was not just the high percentage but the long-term persistence of PTSD and the aftereffects of concussions. He had been the operational commander of all American ground forces in Iraq. Before that, he’d led an Army division that was responsible for Baghdad. And yet the prevalence of debilitating post-traumatic stress and serious brain injuries was news to him. He had assumed that the stress of a near-miss would dissipate. So, too, would the effects of a concussion. He figured they were no big deal.

“If I had a platoon that lost folks, I had combat-stress teams, and I made sure they were flown to whatever base they needed to go to,” he said. “I knew what my football coach told me about traumatic brain injury: ‘Shake it off and get back in the game.’”

The graph sobered him. As vice-chief, his job wasn’t to focus on war strategy. He was responsible for “the force”—for training and equipping soldiers, modernizing weapons and overseeing the budget, and ensuring the well-being of the half-million men and women in the Army, the second-largest U.S. employer after Walmart. But it also was personal: he had put many of these soldiers in harm’s way in Iraq, and he believed he had a duty to those who returned harmed.
read more here

It will all continue to be a bad dream until the leaders stop being asleep on the job and open their eyes. Otherwise nothing will ever change. Had the reporters dared to delve into the decades of data, they would have not just been asking the right questions but demanding the right answers.

The reports of soldiers coming out of Warrior Transition Units have been around for years but it took a six month investigation, a real investigation, by reporters from the Dallas Morning News and NBC out of Texas to show the entire country how wrong the leaders continued to be.

Once you read this whole article on General Chiarelli, I suggest you read what the attitude was in the Army along with how the PTSD soldiers were actually treated. INJURED HEROES, BROKEN PROMISES

After the news broke this was the result.

Army orders new training for Warrior Transition Units

Texas Congressman Frustrated by WTU Complaints Highlighted in NBC 5 Investigation
This is what reporters should have been asking about.

Saturday, December 27, 2014

WWII Nurse Receiving French Foreign Legion of Honor

Veteran Army nurse to receive French Legion of Honor
Rusty Rice will receive France's highest award for her service in the Army during WWII
WDBJ7
Reporter Nadine Maeser Nadine Maeser
December 26, 2014

BLACKSBURG, Va.
A Blacksburg woman will be recognized for her service to our country on Saturday.

Rusty Rice served as a nurse in World War II and nearly 70 years later, she's receiving the highest honor from France.

Rice, 94, is set to receive the French Legion of Honor.

She is the second veteran in Virginia to receive it.

“I'm nervous,” she said.

Rice, a New Jersey native, worked as a registered nurse in a maternity ward before joining the Army in her early 20's.

"I was an Army nurse and I happened to be stationed where the Battle of the Bulge was occurring and it was a very difficult time."

Rice said she loved serving her country.

"Much to my mother's horror she wouldn't hear of it, but then my brother was drafted,” she said.

Rice gained her mother’s approval after she explained there might not be enough nurses to care for her brother.
read more here
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