Wednesday, November 4, 2015

James "Jim" Boedeker the Death Spiral Dude

Phony Navy SEAL of the Week. James "Jim" Boedeker the Death Spiral Dude

Published on Oct 25, 2015
Retired Navy SEAL Senior Chief Don Shipley BUSTS James ’Jim’ Boedeker the Death Spiral Phony SEAL Dude.

Join the fight at www.phonyseals.com and see all the latest BUSTS not available of YouTube. Many thanks for the support...

-----I already knew Jim to be a fake Navy SEAL when I called.

***’Jim Boedeker and I were first introduced online through email a few years back. His background as a Navy SEAL was intriguing as hell, and we met in Patong Beach, Phuket, Thailand one weekend. Jim’s life story is flat-out amazing. Though this, his first book, is all fiction, I am hoping to read his biography at some point. He undoubtedly has had the most interesting life of anyone I’ve ever known.’
(http://www.thailandebooks.com/thailan...)

Vietnam Veteran With PTSD Helping Others in Arizona

Vietnam vet who briefed pilots helps those with PTSD
Arizona Daily Star
By Alexis Huicochea
November 3, 2015
Today, thanks to his faith and help from Veterans Affairs, Parker says his PTSD is manageable and he believes the events that occurred happened so he could serve others.
A.E. Araiza / Arizona Daily Star U.S. Air Force veteran Tom Parker served from 1968 to 1972, spending a year in Vietnam. Parker now helps other veterans who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.
More than four decades have passed since Tom Parker served in Vietnam, but he still feels the impact of his wartime experience.

The Air Force Buck Sergeant was sent to Vietnam in 1970, shortly after enlisting as a way to avoid the Army draft and, ironically enough, combat.

Serving in an intelligence role, Parker worked in forward air control, marking targets for fighters with smoke in the air, telling them where to drop bombs. On occasion, he went up in planes as an observer.

He also briefed pilots on what was happening in the area, advising them of where the enemy was and where they could safely land if needed.
read more here

Colorado Iraq Veteran Survived 3 Tours, Killed While Riding Bike

Bicyclist gunned down on Colorado street was Iraq War veteran
By The Associated Press
Tuesday - Nov. 3, 2015

DENVER — A bicyclist who begged for his life as a gunman killed him during a rampage on the streets of Colorado Springs was an Army veteran who survived three deployments in Iraq, his ex-wife said Tuesday.

Tina Myers recalled her former husband, Andrew Alan Myers, 35, as a decorated military veteran and caring father to their two young sons.

He was the first of three victims: A gunman shot him in daylight Saturday and calmly walked less than a mile to a home for people recovering from substance abuse, where he killed two women on the porch.

The shooter, Noah Harpham, 33, died in a gunbattle with police.
read more here

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

WWII Garlin Murl Conner Closer to Medal of Honor

World War II soldier from Kentucky is a step closer to posthumous Medal of Honor 
Kentucky.com
BY GREG KOCHER
November 2, 2015
Conner, a first lieutenant, earned four Silver Stars, four Bronze Stars, seven Purple Hearts and the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions during combat in World War II.
Garlin Murl Conner, a WWII Army officer, died in 1998.
Garlin Murl Conner, a World War II Army officer and a Clinton County native, is one step closer to posthumously receiving the Medal of Honor.

The Army Board for Correction of Military Records, a three-member panel, went against the advice of its staff and voted unanimously in late October that the evidence "was sufficient to warrant a recommendation" that Conner receive the Medal of Honor for the actions he took to save the lives of fellow soldiers.

Dennis Shepherd, an attorney for the Kentucky Department of Veterans Affairs, learned Monday about the panel's recommendation. Shepherd said it's rare for the panel to go against the advice of its staff, which had said there was "insufficient evidentiary basis" for granting the medal.
read more here

Man Faces Charges After Disabled Veteran Attacked

Man arrested for allegedly battering disabled man 
Journal Gazette and Times Courier
November 2, 2015

MATTOON (JG-TC) -- A local man has been arrested for allegedly battering a disabled man and resisting a police officer. A Mattoon Police Department press release reported that Paul J. Dhermy, 55, of Mattoon was arrested at 11:05 a.m. Sunday in the 800 block of Lafayette Avenue on charges of domestic battery, aggravated battery of a disabled person, and resisting a peace officer.

The charges allege that Dhermy battered a disabled person and that he resisted arrest.

The victim reported that he has a disabled foot from an injury he sustained from an improvised explosive device during military service and that he has post-traumatic stress disorder.
read more here

GoPro Camera Captures Last Ride For Marine

Young Marine, Father Dies in East County Motorcycle Crash 
He would help anybody, even if we couldn't afford to help someone," his wife told NBC 7
7 News San Diego
By Andie Adams and Steven Luke
Dorson was a Camp Pendleton-based heavy machinery mechanic, and Jessica, who is pregnant with their third child, is a Navy service member.
Justin Dorson and his son
A young Marine killed in an East County motorcycle crash had two boys and another on the way, his wife told NBC 7 Monday.

Justin Dorson, 26, died Sunday after he overcorrected his 2012 Triumph motorcycle and ran into a large boulder on State Route 94, outside of Dulzura.

A friend's Go Pro camera captured the final images of Dorson's ride on his dream bike.
read more here

Vietnam veteran beaten, punched, kicked and left for dead meets Samaritan

Attacked veteran reunited with good Samaritan 
KSDK
Farrah Fazal
November 2, 2015
Police said three young men between 14 and 18 tried to rob him.
Brandi White and the Vo's share a group hug. (Photo: KSDK)
ST. LOUIS – A Vietnam veteran beaten, punched, kicked and left for dead last Wednesday had one thought as he struggled to recover from the brutal attack.

He wanted to find the good Samaritan who found him bleeding in the street at Taft and Dewey, sat with him, held him and called 911.

David Vo wanted to thank that good person for having the courage to help a bleeding man. His daughter-in-law appealed to people in a NewsChannel 5 story last Friday.

After the story aired, the boss of a woman who helped Mr. Vo emailed us. Brandi White was that 911 caller. read more here

Restore Your Honorable Service Get Your Discharge Reclassified

If you have PTSD or TBI and didn't get a discharge worthy of your service, then fight! Fight back to get the justice you were denied.
Veterans Are Not Applying For Discharge Status Upgrades, Pentagon Blamed 
Hartford Courant
Peggy McCarthy
Conn. Health I-Team Writer
November 2, 2015
"Without significant reform within these boards, veterans with TBIs and psychological disorders will be unsuccessful in acquiring discharge upgrades and the attending benefits they deserve,"
Very few veterans take advantage of a Pentagon policy designed to make it easier for veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) to upgrade their discharge status and become eligible to apply for veterans' benefits, according to a Yale Law Clinic report.

At a news conference Monday, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., veterans, and Yale law students, blamed the Department of Defense for not adequately publicizing the policy to veterans with less than honorable discharges. Since new guidelines were announced last year, just 201 of tens of thousands of eligible veterans applied for a PTSD-related service upgrade, according to the report. Blumenthal called the statistic "a staggering, outrageous fact."

"Veterans on the streets of New Haven or Connecticut or the rest of the country have no idea about this," Blumenthal said.

"It takes a vigorous and rigorous effort, which the DOD committed to and they have failed," he added.

Sundiata Sidibe, a student in the law school's Veterans Legal Services Clinic, called the number of applicants "miniscule." In previous years, an average of 39 veterans applied annually for status upgrades in connection with PTSD, the report states.

Blumenthal, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, had asked the Pentagon to give the committee a progress report by August 2015 on its efforts to inform veterans about the policy. A report was never submitted, he said.
read more here

Monday, November 2, 2015

Still More Hellish to Be Home Than in Combat?

They Knew And Let Them Die
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
November 2, 2015


They all knew what was going on and just let them die. There is no other way to explain any of this.

Congress knew and the news reports prove it. The Department of Defense knew and their own records prove it. The VA knew and their records prove it.

The American public should have known had they listed with their hearts and not walked way.

Everyone knew what was going on but few bothered to actually ask how it became more hellish to be back home than it was during combat.

No one can explain how all of it got worse than it was when no one was really doing anything.  How can what is in their mind be so much more dangerous than what was in front of them during combat?

They still don't know they can heal and live better lives so please, if you want to raise awareness of what the problem is, then consider yourself part of the problem.
Army Suicide Rates Climbing
KKTV News
By: David Nancarrow
Apr 14, 2008
Even more alarming, according to Department of Defense sources, attempted suicides rose to more than 2,000, up from about 1400 in 2006.
The Colorado Springs community is constantly reminded of the men and women in uniform who are lost in combat. The Army is now reporting a dramatic rise in the number of soldiers taking their own lives.

There is a single diamond set in a black band on the finger where Mia Sagahon expected to wear her wedding ring.

She thought her fiancee, a veteran, Walter Padilla would be by her side forever.

"You wake up and see them daily and then they're just gone," she said.

Visions of the battlefield haunted the medically discharged Padilla. He tried to hide his pain and tormenting questions from the ones he loved. Mia now knows these questions all too well.

"Am I a weak person?" she believed he wondered. "Why is this happening to me? feeling alone, why am I having these dreams?"

Walter silenced the voices in 2007, taking his life with a single shot from his own gun.

"You can't say good-bye, or anything. It's horrible," Sagahon said.

The Army expects 2007 will have been one of the worst in years in terms of suicide among active soldiers. If 32 cases still under investigation are added to the 89 confirmed, 121 suicides represent a 20 percent spike from 2006 - more than twice the number reported in 2001, pushing the Army rate closer to that seen among the civilian community.

DoD sources report Army officials are currently working on a list of ways to update the Army's suicide prevention program.
read more here
Actually the original report came out in February
Wednesday, February 27, 2008 Army Suicide Rates Go Up, Alarm Bells Don't
Army Suicide Rates Climbing
Posted: 10:27 PM Feb 26, 2008
Last Updated: 6:24 AM Feb 27, 2008
Reporter: David Nancarrow
There was another report by CBS News of the number of veterans attempting suicide

The link is still active and you should really read it.
Suicides Seen Among Vets Treated By VA
The data reveals a marked overall increase - from 462 attempts in 2000 to 790 in 2007.
"They need to listen to these guys and listen not only with their ears but also with their hearts." Harold Pendergrass
According to the experts, two age groups stood out between 2000 and 2007. First, ages 20-24 - those likely to have served during the Iraq-Afghan wars. Suicide attempts rose from 11 to 47.

And for vets ages 55 to 59, suicide attempts jumped from 19 to 117.

In both age groups, the attempted suicides grew at a rate much faster than the VA patient population as a whole. In addition, this VA study, also obtained exclusively by CBS News, reveals the increasing number of veterans who recently received VA services ... and still succeeded in committing suicide: rising from 1,403 suicides in 2001 to 1,784 in 2005 - figures the VA has never made public.
In addition, this VA study, also obtained exclusively by CBS News, reveals the increasing number of veterans who recently received VA services ... and still succeeded in committing suicide: rising from 1,403 suicides in 2001 to 1,784 in 2005 - figures the VA has never made public.
As you can see, these are just some of the reports I remember. So when you read about anything that is "being done" to raise awareness on what is happening to our veterans, ask yourself a simple question. "What good has any of this done when it has all gotten worse for all of them?

They survived combat but couldn't survive being "helped" by far too many who just let it all happen. With Veterans Day coming, hey go out and buy a green lightbulb to show your support and write a big fat check to groups being accountable to no one for any of this.  Make sure you support a politician running for office when none of them have ever been held accountable all these years. While you're at it, make sure you feel as if you just did something to feel better because frankly, your ignorance is exactly what they didn't need!

Accused of Stolen Valor, Real Marine Iraq Veteran Beaten

Sacramento Marine Vet Says He Was Beaten Over Mistaken Case Of Stolen Valor
CBS News
By Nick Janes
October 28, 2015

SACRAMENTO (CBS13) — A Marine Corps vet who served his country in combat says he was attacked by someone who believed he was lying about his military service.

It happened over the weekend at The Long Shot, an Arden-area bar. Michael Delfin says the man was looking for a fight, saying Delfin had never served.
He says he was jumped by the first man and one of his friends. Delfin’s tibia is broken, and his jaw might be too.

As for the claim of stolen valor, his service was very real.

“I did over 12 years in the Marine Corps; I was a tracker and I was in combat in 2004 in Fallujah,” he said.
read more here