Friday, January 22, 2016

Afghanistan Veteran Tried to Change Outcome, Killed By Police

Widow Sues Police Who Killed Her War Vet Husband
Courthouse News Service
By JAMIE ROSS
January 22, 2016

PHOENIX (CN) - City police officers south of Phoenix needlessly shot to death an unarmed Army veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder, his widow and children claim in court.

Maria Garcia and her four children sued the City of Maricopa and two of its police officers, Sgt. Leonard Perez and Officer Joshua Hawksworth, on Tuesday in Federal Court.

Maricopa, pop. 48,000, is south of Phoenix in Pinal County.

Garcia says the shooting was particularly egregious, as two days before he was killed, her husband went to the Maricopa police station to offer to help the Police Department learn how to interact with veterans with PTSD.

Garcia met her husband, Johnathon Guillory, in 2005 when they were both in the U.S. military. Guillory had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder in 2003 after he returned from a second tour in Afghanistan. They married in December 2008, and had two sons together. Guillory also had two children from a previous relationship.

His widow says that after going out on Jan. 18, 2015 to watch football and eat brunch, they returned to their home in Maricopa at about 1 p.m. Guillory went into the garage to listen to music.

At 2:30 p.m., an emergency call was made from Guillory's cellphone, but resulted in a hangup. After that call, "nearly every, if not every, on duty MPD officer decided to go to the Guillory residence to see what was happening," Garcia lawsuit says in the lawsuit.

She says the officers surrounded Guillory, who was standing outside his house, though he posed no threat and the officers knew "of his PTSD and sensitivity to being approached by police."
read more here

Georgia Police Officer Faces Trial Killing Naked Air Force Veteran

Georgia Police Officer Indicted for Murder of Unarmed Black Man
New York Times
By ALAN BLINDER
JAN. 21, 2016
Anthony Hill, a 27-year-old Air Force veteran, was in the midst of what his family described in a lawsuit as “a nonviolent mental episode.”
DECATUR, Ga. — A white police officer was indicted here Thursday on six counts, including felony murder, in the fatal shooting last year of an unarmed black man who was naked and described as acting in an erratic manner.

The indictment of Officer Robert Olsen of the DeKalb County Police Department came about two weeks after the district attorney said he would ask a grand jury to pursue criminal charges in the death of Anthony Hill, a 27-year-old Air Force veteran.

The indictment, which District Attorney Robert D. James Jr. of DeKalb County announced at a Thursday night news conference, with Mr. Hill’s family members seated in the first row, was an emotional and surprising development. It played out in this city just east of Atlanta where, it seemed, few people had expected that Officer Olsen would be charged with murder. Mr. James said a judge had issued an arrest warrant and that Officer Olsen would soon be arrested.
After the arrival of Officer Olsen, who had a Taser device and had received training about how to deal with people suffering from mental illness, witnesses said that Mr. Hill did not comply with the officer’s directions to stop his advance. Mr. Hill’s hands, they said, were raised or at his sides before Officer Olsen opened fire. Mr. Hill, his family said in a court document last year, “was unarmed, unclothed and displaying no signs of aggression at the time of the shooting, and he presented no threat to Officer Olsen or anyone else.”
read more here

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Civilian Doctors Still Don't Understand Veterans

This is why veterans do not want to see private doctors but Congress won't fix the VA. They want to kill it!

Doctors outside the VA need to know more about the veterans they treat
University Of Michigan
by Monica Lypson And Paula Thompson Ross
The Conversation
January 21, 2016
"But caring for veterans isn't just about being able to diagnose PTSD or depression. It's also about understanding who they are and where they've been."
Civilian doctors might not know that their patients have served in the military. In this photo Marines march around the World Trade Center memorial after participating in a memorial run in 2012. Credit: MarineCorps NewYork/Flickr
Each year the military discharges over 240,000 veterans to reintegrate into civilian society. It's a professional transition, but it's also a personal one.

Veterans go from TRICARE, the Department of Defense's own health care system, to navigating the ins and outs of the civilian health care system. Under TRICARE, military service members are cared for in a manner that meets their needs. When they're discharged, their new health care providers might not know that they were ever in the military.

Asking "Have you served in the military?" may seem like a minor issue, but it's actually much more important than you might think. And it's a question that few doctors make a point of asking, even though many medical residents and medical students receive all or part of their clinical training at VA medical centers and hospitals.

In fact, Jeffrey Brown, a professor at Weill Cornell Medical College and a Vietnam veteran, has called it the "unasked question." When physicians don't ask, they may miss critical parts of their patient's medical history, making it harder to provide the best possible care.
read more here

Palin Needs To See What Others Saw Long Ago Looking At Her

I was eating dinner last night with my husband when this came on the news,
At a rally for Donald Trump in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Wednesday, Palin said her son, "like so many others," came back from Iraq "a bit different" and "hardened." She also said veterans are forced to look at "our own president" and wonder if he can relate.
Needless to say, I pretty much gagged. The woman is out of her mind!

Paul Rieckhoff of the IAVA said it best with this,
"I hope this doesn't become a portable chew toy in a political campaign," he said. This is a great opportunity for Sarah Palin to sound the alarm on PTSD.
But unfortunately, Rieckhoff is giving Palin more credit than she deserves. Back in 2008, the Alaska National Guard was facing a crisis and they had to "look" at her.

In July of 2008 there was this piece of news that didn't seem to bother Palin much at all.
Washington, DC - The U.S. Army knew that the site chosen to build a family housing complex at Fort Wainwright was a toxic dump but proceeded anyway, in violation of federal laws and service policies, according to an audit by the Army’s own Office of Staff Judge Advocate that was released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). Despite creating a hugely expensive debacle, sickening workers, spreading pollution and retaliating against whistleblowers, the base command has absolved itself and issued an "outstanding" rating to the official who green-lighted the project.
And this one
Air Force Maj. Gen. Craig Campbell, the Alaska Guard's top officer, warned in an internal memo that "missions are at risk." The lack of qualified airmen, Campbell said, "has reached a crisis level."
And then there was this too,
Veterans For America, a veterans advocacy group based in Washington, D.C., released a report on the Alaska Army National Guard Oct. 15 that stated the Guard does not adequately care for soldiers who return from deployment. The report accuses Gov. Sarah Palin of not taking action to address this issue.
And this,
Brig. Gen. Thomas Tinsley by self-inflicted gunshot wound
It is one thing to say foolish things but quite another to not give a crap about service people when she had a chance to do something and maybe, just maybe, make a difference before her son fell through the cracks after being trained to be "resilient" and then didn't get what he needed at home just like all the others before him, and well, sadly, after him.
Head of Veterans Organization Says Obama Is Not to Blame for Sarah Palin's Son's Issues, Urges Her Not to 'Politicize' PTSD
People.com
Char Adams
January 21, 2016

Paul Rieckhoff, head of the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, and Sarah Palin (bottom left corner)
JEMAL COUNTESS/GETTY; INSET:ALEX WONG/GETTY
President Obama isn't to blame for Sarah Palin's son's PTSD, the head of a New York City-based veteran's organization says.

"It's not President Obama's fault that Sarah Palin's son has PTSD," Paul Rieckhoff, head of the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, told NBC News on Wednesday. "PTSD is a very serious problem, a complicated mental health injury and I would be extremely reluctant to blame any one person in particular."

The comments came after Palin linked her son, Track's, recent domestic violence arrest to his PTSD and Obama's lack of "respect" for veterans.

Track, 26, who served in Iraq, was arrested in the family's hometown of Wasilla, Alaska, on Monday for allegedly punching his girlfriend in the face, kicking her and threatening to commit suicide with an AR-15 assault rifle.
read more here


Guess someone else doesn't know this stuff either. Read this Opinion piece.

Disillusioned by America's treatment of vets? Place blame where it's due
Alaska Dispatch
Phillip Morrill
January 21, 2016

Sarah Palin has blamed Obama and post-traumatic stress disorder for her son’s troubles. She is absolutely right that today’s veterans face some tough challenges: PTSD, the worst economic growth since the Great Depression hindering civilian job prospects, flat wages since the 1970s, political impotence, lack of medical treatment and resources, outdated GI bills, etc.

I did not vote for Obama, but Obama did not get us into Iraq or Afghanistan. Those are the actions of George W. Bush -- a Republican. However, Obama is not innocent of military support and aggression in regime change -- Libya, Syria, Ukraine, Egypt (twice), Tunisia and Yemen to name a few.
read more here

WWII Veteran Will Meet Old Girlfriend on Valentines Day!

World War II Veteran to Reunite with Wartime Girlfriend 
Military.com
Associated Press
January 21, 2016
In this photo taken Nov. 6, 2015, Norwood Thomas, 93, talks with Joyce Morris via Skype from his home in Virginia Beach, Va. (Bill Tiernan/The Virginian-Pilot via AP)
VIRGINIA BEACH, Virginia -- A World War II veteran will travel to Australia to reunite with his wartime girlfriend after more than 70 years. The Virginian-Pilot reports 93-year-old Norwood Thomas will travel to Adelaide, Australia, next month to reunite with 88-year-old Joyce Morris.

Thomas told Morris that he would love to see her again in person when the two recently spoke via Skype. After their story went public two months ago, more than 300 people made donations online to help the two rekindle their romance.
The newspaper reports Air New Zealand has also made arrangements to send Thomas and his son to Australia free of charge. read more here

Iraq Veteran Turned Wheelchair into Snow Plow

Veteran doesn’t let being wheelchair bound keep him from plowing snow
WCMH News
By NBC4 Staff
Published: January 21, 2016
“The community has supported me immensely with my struggles and tough times as I had a leg amputated and my fight with brain cancer. This is my way of giving back.” Justin Anderson

BELLEVUE, Neb. (WCMH)– Veteran Justin Anderson doesn’t complain when it snows.
“I don’t want kids or parents having to go through the snow and possibly trip or hurt themselves,” Anderson told WOWT. “I had a half-dozen people stop to take a picture because they hadn’t seen a chair like this before.”

Anderson, who is an Iraq War Veteran and lives in Bellevue Nebraska, put a snow blade on his off-road wheelchair last year and now, with every snowfall, he does his part and more.
read more here

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Younger PTSD Marriages Show They Learned Nothing

I started to read this article before going to work today. Not sure what to make out of it, I just didn't want to go with my gut on this and now I am glad I did.

When I re-read this part, I knew there should be a lot said about all of this.
“Sometimes it’s really hard,” Kerrie Bowers said. “The only way I have of coping is to just push through it. I have yet to really find a way to cope with the emotional part. I just have to take a moment and remind myself that this is how it is and I have to find a way to help him express how he is feeling, good or bad.”
The article on the Aurora Sentinel is a good one to read especially when it points out how little these younger generation couples know about PTSD.

That's pretty sad considering we've been doing it for decades and managed to do it without all the bells and whistles or attention, or even the claims of so many charities stepping up to pull the wool over our eyes masquerading as changing anything for real.

They have the internet but we did it without it. So did our parents and their parents and all other generations going back to the Revolutionary War.

OK, as a second generation Greek American, all the way back to the Trojan War and Achilles other than Brad Pitt was in a movie about it. But why bring that up? After all one of the best minds in the country on PTSD and combat is Jonathan Shay and his book on PTSD about Vietnam Veterans is one of the best I ever read. Plus it came out long before troops were sent into Afghanistan and Iraq, yet too few of this generation even know it exists. Ok, then again, they forget we exist too.

Most of the 400,000 new veterans charities popping up all over the country have nothing to do with us including asking us about what worked for us. To hell with the fact that over 70% of the suicides hit our generation harder. To hell with the other fact that while the younger marriages end because they "aren't happy" while our marriages are up there in the 30+ year range. Most of us are doing a lot more than "pushing through it" as if it is supposed to be easy at all.

All marriages are hard work on both parts but with PTSD, we have an extra fight to take on and it's time they realized they need to kick the crap out of it.

So how is it that they know so much less than we managed to learn without all the gadgets, social media and all the news reports about how bad it all is? After all, isn't that what all the "awareness raisers" have been telling everyone? Would love to see them actually make folks aware that PTSD is change after trauma and they can change again. We all change! We decide what is not that big of a deal and what is important enough to fight for!

We "adapt, improvise and overcome" whatever the enemy (PTSD) tries to unleash on our families. Is it hard? Hell ya! Maybe we were just tougher? Some of us will admit maybe we were a bit high in the 70's and 80's, so we didn't sweat the small stuff. Considering how our husbands were treated and are forgotten as if all their problems never happened, I'd love to hear them explain how everything available on PTSD was ready when their husbands and wives came home. Hell I'd really love to hear the politicians explain why after all these decades they still haven't managed to fix anything with the VA or stop funding research that was proven to be a waste of time (and money) over the last 40 years.

Oh, but then again, remembering our generation would prove how bad they all suck at their jobs because if this generation has learned to little after all has been said and done, God help the next generation to come.
THE WAR BROUGHT HOME: Veterans, spouses fight together
Aurora Sentinel
By Airman 1st Class Luke W. Nowakowski, 460th Space Wing Public Affairs
January 19, 2016

“They might be afraid to talk to anyone about it and that makes them feel alone, which is so difficult. This is a hard thing to deal with and there, unfortunately, is such a stigma attached to post traumatic stress.”

When troops return home from a combat zone, for some, the fight isn’t over. According to the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Foundation of America, one in three troops returning from combat will be diagnosed with PTSD. Many have difficulty understanding and processing the experiences of combat, leading to a number of different issues.

Spouses are on the front lines of having to help and care for these returning service members. For them, their spouse’s combat experiences can seep into their relationship, bringing the war into the household.

“I think it’s hard for the spouses because they often don’t know there is help out there,” said Kerrie Bowers, spouse of Senior Master Sgt. Colby Bowers, 460th Medical Group superintendent. “They might be afraid to talk to anyone about it and that makes them feel alone, which is so difficult. This is a hard thing to deal with and there, unfortunately, is such a stigma attached to post traumatic stress.”

Senior Master Sgt. Bowers has spent more than a thousand days down range as a medic since September 11, 2001. As a medic, he experienced first-hand the horrors of war.

“Four hundred ninety-three outside the wire missions and seven mass casualty events,” Bowers said. “I did four mass casualties in one deployment.”

When Bowers returned home, at first, he wasn’t aware he was dealing with any ill effects of his time down range.
read more here

Dad of Missing Fort Myers Marine Asks For Prayers

Missing Marine's dad asks for prayers; search suspended
News Press
Stacey Henson
January 20, 2016
The father of Marine Cpl. Thomas Jardas, of Fort Myers, says the
search for his son off the coast of Hawaii will likely end tonight.
Thomas and 11 other Marines are missing after a Thursday
helicopter crash. (Photo: Courtesy of the Thomas Jardas family.)
A few days ago, Tim Jardas was encouraging his son to see the world.

Today, he's asking for prayers. Cpl. Thomas Jardas, 22, of Fort Myers, is one of 12 Marines missing after a helicopter crash off the coast of Hawaii late Thursday.

Officials suspended the five-day search for the Marines on Tuesday night. The Marine Corps is transitioning to "recovery and salvage efforts."

Tim Jardas could not be reached for comment Tuesday night, but earlier in the day the father sounded resigned.

"Our faith is getting us through this, and I need people to pray for us," he said. "I know my boy is in Heaven, but the rest of the family still needs the prayers."
read more here

PTSD Cured at Fort Hood?

Head exploding time! Just got done reading a post on the Huffington Post claiming to have cured PTSD. Yep, that's right, silly season has begun again and it is just the first month of 2016 following 4 decades of PTSD researchers telling us they all had the answer. The trouble is, folks are still out there claiming they can "cure" PTSD.
"One of the hurdles they face is a lack of belief that PTSD is curable. Many veterans simply don't believe this is possible. Yet there are many studies showing the value of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) approaches such as those used at Reset."
There are also studies on rats showing researchers think they are the same as men and women risking their lives for the sake of others.

When you read the following notice title does not fit the article or even facts.  Just take a look at the news reports from Killeen about suicides and discharges and you'll see for yourself. As for anyone claiming a "cure" for PTSD, that's been claimed for 4 decades but no one has seen proof of it. Love to see a brain scan before and after this to see what exactly had been cured.
Successful PTSD Treatments at Fort Hood
Huffington Post
Dawson Church
Author of "The Genie in Your Genes"
Posted: 01/19/2016

There's plenty of bad news to report on PTSD and veterans, such as a report in Slate magazine about the high rape and murder rates near military bases. Yet these tragedies can obscure the good news, which is that effective PTSD treatments exist, and are finding their way into primary care.

I recently spent a week in Texas, where I had the opportunity to visit Fort Hood, present my research at "Grand Rounds" -- a forum in which health professionals share the latest scientific findings -- and work with a group of veterans with PTSD.

The group was progressing through an 11-week PTSD recovery program called the Warrior Combat Stress Reset Program (usually simply referred to as "Reset"). The impact of PTSD was apparent on their faces and in their stories, as well as their multiple diagnoses: depression, anxiety, and hostility. Several mentioned their desire to deal with their anger, and return to normal lives with their families.
you can read the rest of the article here.

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

UK Homeless Veterans Build Homes and Rebuild Lives

Veterans construct their own homes, and rebuild their lives
The Guardian
Nicola Slawson
January 19, 2016
“I met a homeless guy in London who told me he was a veteran and showed me his service record. I was appalled that he had risked his life to serve his country and yet now faced life on the streets.” Matthew Bell.

One in 10 rough sleepers has a military background; a self-build housing scheme is offering them accommodation and, with it, a fresh start

Danny Heavens, 28, still can’t believe that the bright, warm flat close to Bristol city centre is his home. Adjusting to stability after the six years of homelessness that followed a six-year stint in the army is going to be a challenge, admits the former Grenadier Guardsman.

For the last 12 months, Heavens has been one of 10 homeless veterans who has helped build the very homes they now live in. Pioneered by the charity Community Self Build Agency (CSBA), the initiative was the brainchild of its chair, Stella Clarke, whose brother Lord King served as defence secretary under Margaret Thatcher, and a former army major Ken Hames.
Heavens didn’t spend six years solely on the streets, he also stayed on friends’ sofas – known as sofa surfing – and lived in hostels. He says that adjusting to civilian life was a shock to the system, especially as he was suffering from severe post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). “In the army, you do and see things that no human being is meant to see or cope with and then you come out and you feel you can’t trust anyone.”
read more here