Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Hannity, the troops are waiting!

Sean Hannity, you said you would be waterboardered for charity then said "I'll do it for the troops" but so far, even though Keith Olbermann offered to pitch in $1,000 per second, you haven't done it or even arranged it. See the problem is Sean the troops don't get to say one thing and do another. They don't get to shoot their mouth off when some hack keeps saying he supports the troops but then turns around and does nothing when it comes to what they need. Did you go to Iraq and sit in a thrown? Sure but what have you really, really done for the troops? Please keep in mind that I no longer watch anything on FOX and I don't listen to people on the radio telling me that I am something I'm not, so I could have missed something monumental you've done for their sake, but I really doubt it.

So Sean, what's the problem? Is waterboarding torture or isn't it? If you still don't have a clue what it did and everything else done in Cuba and Iraq, ended up doing to our troops, then you must not watch much news or read many newspapers because the way we treated the detainees was directly responsible for outsiders going into Iraq on some kind of revenge trip from hell to get even. Do you understand this? Do you understand that some of the troops given orders to do these terrible things to the detainees ended up in prison but the people who gave the orders are being defended by you? Do you understand this? Somehow, I doubt you do.

We have wounded warriors all over the country and their numbers are climbing so why don't you live up to your tough talk and take Olbermann up on his offer. Last long enough so that you can kick in a couple of hundred thousand dollars to the Wounded Warrior programs. What's keeping you Sean because the troops are waiting?

GI Bill transfer rights rules anger some vets

GI Bill transfer rights rules anger some vets

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday May 5, 2009 12:17:45 EDT

As the Aug. 1 launch date nears for the Post-9/11 GI Bill, more people are realizing they won’t be able to share education benefits with their families.

One of the requirements to transfer benefits to a spouse or children is that the service member must still be in the military Aug. 1 — bad news for people about to separate or who have already separated.

Air Force Lt. Col. Lisa Henry-Hamilton, dean of academics at the Defense Language Institute’s Foreign Language Center, will miss the Aug. 1 date because she has a previously approved July 1 retirement date that it is too late to change. Already on terminal leave while awaiting the end of her 23-year career, Henry-Hamilton feels cheated.

“I might have changed my date if I had known this,” she said in response to the Pentagon’s announcement last week of how transfer rights will work.

“I have served 23 years,” she said. “For two months to make this difference after serving on 9/11 and deploying to both Iraq and Afghanistan just seems like perhaps everything wasn’t taken into consideration.”
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GI Bill transfer rights rules anger some vets

50 Sailors have flu symptoms, one confirmed H1N1

50 amphib sailors have flu symptoms

By Andrew Scutro - Staff writer
Posted : Tuesday May 5, 2009 17:45:11 EDT

A possible outbreak of the so-called swine flu aboard the San Diego-based amphibious transport dock Dubuque has caused Navy leadership to cancel the ship’s planned June 1 deployment in the Pacific.

One sailor on the ship was confirmed to have the virus, also called H1N1, and 50 other crew members are exhibiting flu-like symptoms, said Cmdr. Cappy Surette, a Navy spokesman at the Pentagon. It was not immediately clear if the 50 sailors have been confirmed as having a “novel virus” such as H1NI, as opposed to seasonal flu.

“Those are awaiting confirmation from the [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] one way or another,” Surette said.
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http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/05/navy_flu_dubuque_050509w/

VoteVets and CREW taking on DOD over PTSD


VoteVets.org and CREW Urge PTSD Investigation
by: Brandon Friedman
Tue May 05, 2009 at 11:57:42 AM EDT
VoteVets.org has again teamed up with Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Government (CREW) in an effort to urge the House Armed Services Committee to begin an investigation into whether or not the Army is pressuring doctors to misdiagnose PTSD. Our full press release is below. . . .
Brandon Friedman :: VoteVets.org and CREW Urge PTSD Investigation
CREW AND VOTEVETS.ORG ASK HOUSE ARMED SERVICES TO INVESTIGATE ARMY MISDIAGNOSES OF SERVICE MEMBERS AND VETERANS WITH PTSD
5 May 2009 // Washington, D.C. -- In light of news reports that the Army has instituted the cost-cutting practice of ordering doctors to misdiagnose soldiers returning from battle with anxiety disorder rather than post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) and VoteVets.org today asked the chair of the House Armed Services Committee to investigate the extent of this outrageous practice.


Last month, Salon.com reported on a series of conversations at Fort Carson last summer between a sergeant and his psychologist, Dr. Douglas McNinch, during which the doctor admitted he was under pressure from the Army to avoid diagnosing soldiers with PTSD. The sergeant, who taped his conversations because he suffers from memory problems due to brain injuries, met with Dr. McNinch to learn why the doctor had told the medical evaluation board responsible for the Army's disability payment system that the sergeant suffered from anxiety disorder rather than PTSD. Dr. McNinch explained, on tape, "I will tell you something confidentially that I would have to deny if it were ever public. Not only myself, but all clinicians up here are being pressured not to diagnose PTSD and diagnose anxiety disorder NOS instead." Dr. McNinch continued, "yours has not been the only case . . . I and other [doctors] are under a lot of pressure to not diagnose PTSD. It's not fair. I think it's a horrible way to treat soldiers . . ." Dr. McNinch has explained he was pressured to misdiagnose PTSD cases by a colonel, who was then head of Fort Carson's Department of Behavioral Health.


With a diagnosis of anxiety disorder, the sergeant would receive substantially lower benefits upon a discharge for a disability.

click above for more

Woman's Body covered in tattoos found in Polk County forest

Body covered in tattoos found in Polk County forest
Walter Pacheco Sentinel Staff Writer
7:17 AM EDT, May 5, 2009
Deputies found the body of a woman, covered in tattoos of dollar signs, cherries, flowers and several mens' names, in a pine tree grove in Polk County.

The names "Thomas", "Harold", "Otis" and other initials are tattooed on different parts of her body, Polk County sheriff's records show. She has several dollar signs, stars and cherries tattoed on her legs and back, as well as the phrase "Pretty Red" adorned with images of flowers on her left thigh.

Investigators with the Polk County Sheriff's Office found her body along Minute Maid Ramp Road Two in Davenport at 1 p.m. on Monday.

Authorities did not release other details on the unidentified victim.
Body covered in tattoos found in Polk County forest

44 Killed in Family Feud Attack in Turkey

44 Killed in Family Feud Attack in Turkey
IBRAHIM USTA, AP

BILGE, Turkey (May 5) - Turkish security forces on Tuesday detained eight gunmen suspected of fatally shooting 44 people, many of whom were praying, at an engagement ceremony in the rural southeast of the country.

Masked assailants with automatic weapons attacked the celebration Monday night in the village of Bilge, near the city of Mardin, in the deadly outcome of a family feud, the government said. Vendettas occasionally simmer among families in the region, where tribal ties and rivalries can eclipse the power of the state.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said "the result of a feud between two families" had led to the deaths of six children, 17 women and 21 men. He said some suspects had the same family name as the victims.

"The people were killed at a happy event, during a ceremony, while praying," Erdogan said in his weekly address to ruling party lawmakers in parliament. "The fact that they pointed guns and massacred children, defenseless people, is atrocious."
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44 Killed in Family Feud Attack in Turkey

Socialism needed in Texas for Veterans

Texas can't take care of their homeless citizens. Well maybe they blame them for ending up homeless in the first place. After all, it has nothing to do with the economy or the scandal of sub prime mortgages. Has nothing to do with mental healthcare spending that could end up putting people back into "productive" living on medications and off the streets, drug and alcohol rehabilitations. Hss nothing to do with homes gone from "acts of God" like in Galveston. This is what "socialism" programs do. Also consider they ended up with people from New Orleans after Katrina but they also faced what came with Ike. Federal dollars went to help and should have helped even more had they proper representation in congress.

This was five months after Ike.


Galveston, Texas Still Struggling to Recover from Hurricane Ike
By Greg Flakus
Galveston
23 February 2009


Five months after Hurricane Ike devastated Galveston, Texas, the island city on the Gulf of Mexico below Houston is struggling to recover. The economic slump in the nation as a whole has made the task more difficult, but many islanders are determined to rebuild their homes and their lives there.

The party is in full swing at night in downtown Galveston as the city celebrates Mardi Gras, a smaller version of the big party held every year in New Orleans, 640 kilometers to the east. The event culminates on Tuesday, with parades and street parties. Both cities rely on these tourist-drawing celebrations for their economic vitality and both are ever more dependent on them as they recover from hurricanes. Hurricane Katrina flooded New Orleans in August, 2005 and Hurricane Ike caused widespread wind, surge and flood damage to Galveston on September 13 of last year.

Although many restaurants and hotels are open and thriving on the influx of visitors, nearly 75 percent of shops in downtown Galveston remain closed and some of the island city's biggest employers have either moved elsewhere or are considering moving.

Dottie Rutledge, who has lived here since 1968, lost her home to the hurricane and now lives in a hotel on vouchers provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

"Galveston is totally forgotten. There are piles of stuff here that nobody has picked up," she said.
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Galveston, Texas Still Struggling to Recover from Hurricane Ike



Not much better now for the homeless in Texas.

Homeless project ‘probably gone’
Harris County likely to remove funds to convert motel
By LIZ AUSTIN PETERSON
Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle
May 4, 2009, 10:01PM

Plans to turn a vacant motel into permanent housing for the homeless appear all but dead as Harris County withdraws funding for the project and even Mayor Bill White, one of its most influential supporters, concedes defeat.

Commissioners Court is expected to vote today to rescind a $1.67 million grant it gave the Housing Corporation of Greater Houston last year to convert the motel near the University of Houston into 220 housing units.

David Turkel, director of Harris County’s Community Services Department, said federal deadlines for using the money forced him to withdraw the grant. He said he would be happy to award another grant if the organization persuades the city to contribute its $4 million share.
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http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6407758.html




But when you think they are not taking care of the veterans either, you really have to wonder what it is exactly they do think is valuable enough to fund.

Trying to make do
Homeless vets await reopening of Ike-damaged housing
By LINDSAY WISE
Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle
May 4, 2009, 9:17PM
From the window of the bedroom he shares with another homeless veteran at Houston’s VA hospital, James Brooks can see the gutter alongside Almeda Road where his life almost ended five months ago.

The 53-year-old Navy veteran had been swilling a bottle of gin at an abandoned building on Thanksgiving Day when his chest seized in agony. He staggered to a bus stop and boarded the No. 11 to the Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center, but the pain became unbearable and he begged the driver to let him off early. “I didn’t want to die on the bus,” Brooks said.

He collapsed by the edge of the road, where a hospital worker found him praying. After an emergency angioplasty unblocked the flow of blood in Brooks’ heart, his case worker suggested he apply for a bed at the VA’s domiciliary, a short-term residential rehabilitation program for veterans suffering from psychiatric problems and substance abuse. Brooks has been clean and sober ever since, one of 30 homeless veterans temporarily living in a ward of the VA hospital after Hurricane Ike wrecked the original domiciliary — a newly renovated apartment complex at 7329 Fannin — within weeks of the ribbon-cutting ceremony. Nearly eight months after the storm, the facility still isn’t habitable.

“We prepare for the worst possible situation, but we can’t control Mother Nature,” said Luis Paulino, director of the VA’s Homeless Veterans Program.
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http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/6407744.html


When it comes to mental health, they dropped from a C grade in 2006 to failure!


Grading the States 2009 Report Card: Texas
Texas’ mental health care system is dwindling and faces a multitude of challenges. In 2006, it received a C grade. Three years later, it has dropped to a D. Greater investment is needed in order for the state to truly transform and move toward an evidence-based, cost-effective mental health system. Full narrative (PDF).


Grades by Category Detailed Score Card (PDF)
Health Promotion and Measurement: F 25% of Total Grade
Basic measures, such as the number of programs delivering evidence-based practices, emergency room wait-times, and the quantity of psychiatric beds by setting.

Financing & Core Treatment/Recovery Services: D 45% of Total Grade
A variety of financing measures, such as whether Medicaid reimburses providers for all, or part of evidence-based practices; and more.

Consumer & Family Empowerment: F 15% of Total Grade
Includes measures such as consumer and family access to essential information from the state, promotion of consumer-run programs, and family and peer education and support.

Community Integration and Social Inclusion: D 15% of Total Grade
Includes activities that require collaboration among state mental health agencies and other state agencies and systems.
Grading the States 2009 Report Card: Texas

Military Bases Texas
Major Installations

Army
Fort Bliss
Red River Army Depot
Fort Hood
Fort Sam Houston/Camp Bullis
Ingleside Army Depot

Navy & Marine Corps
Corpus Christi Naval Air Station/Naval Hospital/Naval Station
Kingsville Naval Air Station

Air Force
Randolph AFB
Brooks City Base
Lackland AFB
Sheppard AFB
Air Force Plant 4 (formerly Carswell AFB)
Dyess AFB
Goodfellow AFB
Laughlin AFB

Coast Guard
Group Corpus Christi
Group Galveston
Marine Safety Office Galveston
Marine Safety Office Houston
Marine Safety Office Port Arthur
Air Station Corpus Christi
Air Station Houston
Vessel Traffic Service Houston/Galveston

Personnel Totals
Army 60,945
Navy & Marine Corps 6,909
Air Force 40,981
Coast Guard 1,409
Active Duty Military 108,835
Reserve and National Guard 84,721
Total Personnel 194,965
Above Information Courtesy of American Forces News Service




General Information – Texas
Number of veterans: 1.7 million
VA expenditures in Texas: $6 billion
Compensation and pensions: $3 billion
Readjustment benefits: $298 million
Medical and construction programs: $2.2 billion
Insurance and indemnities: $97 million
Number of veterans and survivors receiving disability compensation or pension payments in Texas: 318,647
Number of Texas veterans using GI Bill education benefits: 42,173
Number of veterans owning homes backed by VA loan guarantees: 261,501
Value of Texas home loans guaranteed by VA: $8.3 billion

Health Care
One of the most visible of all VA benefits is health care. VA has 153 hospitals, 732 community-based outpatient clinics, 232 Vet Centers, 135 nursing homes, 47 residential rehabilitation treatment programs and 121 comprehensive home care programs. To improve patients’ ability to access care, VA has changed from a hospital-based system to a primarily outpatient-focused system over the past decade. Veterans will make more than 60 million outpatient visits to VA health care facilities this year.

Health Care - Texas
o Inpatient admissions, statewide, fiscal year 2007: 47,603
o Houston: 13,275
o Central Texas (Temple and Waco): 6,032
o North Texas (Bonham and Dallas): 13,485
o South Texas (Kerrville and San Antonio): 11,130
o Amarillo: 2,889
o West Texas (Big Spring): 792
o Outpatient visits, statewide, fiscal year 2007: 4,333,582
o Outpatient clinic locations

Abilene
Austin
Beaumont
Beeville
Bridgeport
Brownwood
Cedar Park
Childress
College Station
Conroe
Corpus Christi
Denton
Eagle Pass
Fort Stockton
Fort Worth (2)
Galveston
Granbury
Harlingen
Laredo
Longview
Lubbock
Lufkin
McAllen
New Braunfels
Odessa
Palestine
Paris
San Angelo
San Antonio (7)
Sherman
Stamford
Stratford
Texas City
Tyler
Victoria
Wichita Falls



Post-Conflict Care - Texas

Number of veterans from the Global War on Terror seeking treatment in 2007: 20,875
Houston: 2,935
Central Texas: 5,851
North Texas: 3,345
South Texas: 5,962
Amarillo: 666
West Texas: 615
El Paso: 1,501

Veterans Readjustment Counseling Centers (Vet Centers) Locations:

Amarillo
Austin
Corpus Christi
Dallas
El Paso
Fort Worth
Houston (2)
Killeen
Laredo
Lubbock
McAllen
Midland
San Antonio

http://www1.va.gov/OPA/fact/statesum/docs/txss.doc





There are 233 funded beds for homeless veterans but according to the National Coalition for Homeless veterans, the state of Texas has 15,967 homeless veterans. With all the military bases, (federally funded) and all the veterans facilities (federally funded) and all the veterans on disability (federally funded) you would think that when officials talk about "socialism" they would have some clue what they are talking about. Senator John Cornyn and Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson should be beating down doors to make sure the veterans were taken care of in Texas. They both received a B grade from the IAVA, so you know they do care about our veterans and that's a good thing. So what's going on in Texas when it comes to the state elected?

This is from Governor Perry's site "Principles For A Stronger Texas" but it does not include anything about veterans.

Encouraging Stronger Families and Healthier Citizens
Gov. Perry is committed to building a stronger, healthier Texas with a citizenry that enjoys a fit, healthy, and safe lifestyle. Acknowledging that the family is the essential building block of a strong state, Gov. Perry has advocated strongly for a number of initiatives that protect marriage, strengthen parental rights and provide children the best opportunity to succeed in life. Although the state can never assume responsibility for an individual’s lifestyle choices, government can and must encourage Texans to make healthier, more responsible choices.


Does Governor Perry realize that taking care of the veterans should be a priority in Texas considering how many veterans and families they have? Do you think that would build stronger and healthier families? Do you think taking care of the homeless, especially when they are homeless thru no fault of their own, it would actually show where Perry's values are? When people complain about "socialism" they are also complaining about taking care of our troops and veterans but they don't seem to understand this.

We owe them. Why can't we ever seem to live up to the claim of being a "grateful nation" when it really matters?

Monday, May 4, 2009

2 Soldiers from Fort Hood Killed in Afghanistan, one from Fort Riley DUSTWUN


DoD Identifies Army Casualties


The Department of Defense announced today the death of two soldiers, and one soldier as Duty Status Whereabouts Unknown (DUSTWUN). The action occurred May 1 near the village of Nishagam, in Konar Province, Afghanistan, where all three were supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

Killed were:

Sgt. James D. Pirtle, 21, of Colorado Springs, Colo. He was assigned to the Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Hood, Texas; and

Spec. Ryan C. King, 22, of Dallas, Ga. He was assigned to the Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Hood, Texas.

These soldiers died of wounds suffered when insurgents attacked their unit using direct fire.

For more information on Pirtle and King, the media may contact the Fort Hood public affairs office at (254) 287-9993; after hours (254) 291-2591.

Staff Sgt. William D. Vile, 27, of Philadelphia, Pa. is now listed as DUSTWUN from this same incident. He is assigned to the 1st Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kan.

Hernando County women use stars to thank troops and veterans

Hernando County women use stars to thank troops and veterans
By Beth N. Gray, Times Correspondent
Monday, May 4, 2009


BROOKSVILLE — Stars that once fluttered from flagpoles flying the nation's red, white and blue are now going into the pockets of military men and women.

Four women from across Hernando County who have been providing goods from home and moral support to troops in Iraq and Afghanistan for several years have launched a new effort, called the Star Project.

From U.S. flags that have worn out their colors and fabric, the women and their friends are cutting from them the fields of blue, then scissoring off the embroidered stars.

Into a plastic bag goes a star and a wallet-sized card with a flag background explaining: "I am part of our American flag that has flown over a home in Florida. I can no longer fly. The sun and winds have caused me to become tattered and torn. Please carry me as a reminder that you are not forgotten."
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Hernando County women use stars to thank troops and veterans

Trinity coach has faced Vietnam, now cancer


Fight of His Life

Trinity coach has faced Vietnam, now cancer

By BUDDY SHACKLETTE
Staff Writer

DELTONA -- "He's been my best friend, my coach," Mikey Maples says with a cracking voice as his eyes well up with tears.

It's the kind of emotion that only a son, even at age 35, can feel for his father.

Mike Maples, Deltona Trinity's baseball coach, has been dad, coach and the example, among many other things, to sons Mikey and Bryan, along with countless other kids who have played for him over the last three decades.

But as the Trinity Christian Eagles (15-12) open the Class A state playoffs Tuesday, and begin what they hope is another trip to the Final Four, their coach is fighting for his life.

"That's been tough," said senior center fielder Cory Stafford. "Knowing (he's sick) it makes you want to work harder and go out there and play better because you want your coach to have a successful season, knowing that this could be his last season."

Maples, 61, is in this third season coaching the Eagles, but he's battled cancer for the past two decades.

The Vietnam veteran has undergone 85 skin cancer surgeries, had a kidney transplant 13 years ago and is undergoing radiation treatments five days a week on the left side of his face.

The cancers he has battled for the last 10 years are basal and squamous cell, and while this year has been his most trying thus far, he has not been diagnosed with melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.

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Funeral for Army Command Sgt. Maj. Benjamin Moore Jr


Services set for highly decorated Waycross soldier
Funeral for Army Command Sgt. Maj. Benjamin Moore Jr. to be in Blackshear
By Teresa Stepzinski Story updated at 1:05 PM on Monday, May. 4, 2009

Services for Army Command Sgt. Major Benjamin Moore Jr. of Waycross will be Saturday in Blackshear followed by burial May 12 at Arlington National Cemetery, family members said.

Moore, 43, died April 24 at U.S. Army Contingency Operating Base Speicher in northern Iraq of noncombat injuries received in Salah ad Din province, Army officials have said.

His funeral will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at Emanuel Baptist Church, 217 W. Carter Ave. in Blackshear, one of Moore’s sisters, Teresa Brakes, told the Times-Union today.

“We still don’t know what happened, but we are grateful that we have his body here, and we can get some closure,” Brakes said.

Known affectionately as “Benny” to his 17 siblings, Moore will be buried May 12 in Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, D.C., she said.

The Army is flying all Moore’s siblings as well as his wife and children to the burial, Brakes, 50, said.

Investigation continues into his death, and no additional information will be released until it is concluded, Loran Doane, public affairs officer for the U.S. Army Garrison in Hawaii, where Moore had been stationed.

Noncombat deaths can result from vehicle or other accidents or natural causes, Army officials have said.

An expert infantryman, Moore earned 55 medals including a Bronze Star with Valor during his nearly 26-year career, with overseas service in Korea, Germany, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq. He also was air assault and airborne qualified.

Moore was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii. His most recent deployment to Iraq began in October 2008.
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Services set for highly decorated Waycross soldier

Veterans receive mental, emotional aid from U.

Veterans receive mental, emotional aid from U.
Greg Flynn

Correspondent

A brief drive down the block can bring back flashes of Improvised Explosive Devices for an Iraq War veteran, Dr. Mike Petronko said.
The return of more than 2,900 members of the New Jersey National Guard throughout the summer and the enacting Post-Sept. 11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008 in August will likely result in an influx of veteran students on campus.
Vice President for Student Affairs Gregory S. Blimling said there is a clinic that provides services for veteran students with anxiety disorders.
“Any veteran, whether they’re a student here or not, can come and receive free services for [post-traumatic stress disorder] or other anxiety related illnesses at the clinic,” he said.
Petronko, the director of the Anxiety Disorders Clinic at the Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, said the mundane could quickly become severe.
“It can be difficult to drive down the street without looking vigilantly at the side [of the road] to determine if it’s safe or not,” Petronko said.
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Veterans receive mental, emotional aid from U.

Protecting veterans: Officials explore treatment court

Protecting veterans: Officials explore treatment court
By ANNE JUNGEN ajungen@lacrossetribune.com

His uncharacteristic behavior started with personal isolation that soon escalated to drunken driving and armed robbery.

Post-traumatic stress disorder after a tour in Iraq in late 2004 had festered inside the young war veteran, undiagnosed, his family unaware.
“We had no idea at that time what PTSD even was,” said the soldier’s Coon Valley father, who asked to remain anonymous.

His son, a former U.S. Army Calvary Scout, eventually was admitted to the Tomah VA Hospital and returned home in January 2006.

So did his PTSD.

Kitchen knives and aluminum foil began to vanish. He reeked of crack or methamphetamine.

“He looked terrible. He wouldn’t talk,” his father said. “That’s when I thought I would find him dead.”

He left home and stopped reporting to his probation officer. His mother immediately thought of him when she heard about a 2008 armed robbery at a North Side La Crosse tavern.

“I never thought in a million years I would do something like this,” the soldier later would tell the judge at sentencing.
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Protecting veterans: Officials explore treatment court

Dad's mental health affects children too

Dad's mental health affects children too
By Amy Norton

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Fathers' mental health problems may take a toll on their children's psychological well-being, particularly that of their sons, a new research review suggests.

The review, published online by The Lancet medical journal, found that when fathers had psychiatric conditions like major depression, drug or alcohol addiction, or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), their children were at increased risk of mental health problems.

Boys seemed particularly vulnerable to the effects of their fathers' depression, the study found. Sons of alcoholic fathers were at increased risk of serious behavioral problems and substance abuse.

The findings may not sound surprising, but they shed light on the ways in which fathers' mental well-being affects their children -- a subject that has been much less studied than the role of mothers' mental health, according to the researchers.

"I think the main message is that mental health problems affecting fathers are important, partly because of the impact on the men themselves, but also because they can impact on families, including children," said lead researcher Dr. Paul Ramchandani, of the University of Oxford in the UK.

Men are generally less likely than women to seek help for their mental health problems, Ramchandani told Reuters Health, but it is important that they do so.
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Dad mental health affects children too

Camp Lejeune Veteran Marines Subject to Cancer

This has been an ongoing story but you won't hear it covered on CNN or any other news station. You would think they would want to report on something like this considering the Marines and their families are not aware of what they were exposed to.

Camp Lejeune Marines Subject to Cancer - Report Reversed
Drinking the water takes on a new meaning - especially if you were stationed in North Carolina.

If you or someone you know was stationed at Camp Lejeune, NC some 12 to 15 years ago - this may be of interest.

In a recent release, the administration admits that:


Up to a million people could have been exposed to toxins that seeped from a neighboring dry cleaner and industrial activity at Lejeune.

The toxins seeped into the water supply and the report that minimized the cancer threat for adults has now been discredited, according to federal officials.
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Camp Lejeune Marines Subject to Cancer

Florida man kills wife, 2 kids, himself, officials say

Florida man kills wife, 2 kids, himself, officials say
Story Highlights
Bodies of gunman, wife, 2 children found at Lakeland, Florida, home, officials say

Boy, 13, was chased down street, fired at, but got away unharmed, officials say

Gunman used a high-powered rifle with scope, authorities say


(CNN) -- A man shot and killed his wife and two of their children and then killed himself in central Florida on Sunday night, authorities said.

Troy Ryan Bellar, 34, used a high-powered rifle with a scope to shoot his 31-year-old wife, Wendy, when she tried to leave their home, the Polk County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.

Two of the couple's children -- 5-month-old Zack and 7-year-old Ryan -- also were killed, but a 13-year-old got away, with the father chasing and firing after him, officials said.
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Florida man kills wife, 2 kids, himself, officials say

Vermont town rallies around wounded soldier

Here's a story that will warm your heart. Now this is how you really support the troops!

Vt. town rallies around wounded soldier

By Wilson Ring - The Associated Press
Posted : Monday May 4, 2009 9:57:56 EDT

HYDE PARK, Vt. — Greg Barnes is reluctant to say publicly what else he might need help with to make his home ready to accommodate the needs of his quadriplegic-soldier son because he’ll probably find it outside his front door.

Carpenters are donating their time, electricians have offered to do the wiring and concrete contractors have chipped in to build a foundation on what will become a handicapped accessible apartment for 21-year-old Andrew Parker that is attached to his parents’ home.

There have been car washes, a spaghetti dinner, bottle drivers and poker tournaments. A service group has donated a used handicapped accessible van; an architect designed, for free, the project to the specifications of the Department of Veterans Affairs; and a Web site has been set up to raise money and spread the word.

“I know there’s a lot of people who would like to help,” said Barnes, who didn’t ask for help after hearing his son had been wounded by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan the day after Thanksgiving.

“I wasn’t expecting anything. So it’s kind of hard to take. I’m not used to that,” said Barnes, who had begun planning to convert his garage into an apartment for his son before the community got involved. “I’m not a person who’d expect anything from somebody else or even ask for it.”
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Vt. town rallies around wounded soldier

Group helps soldiers when the military can’t

Group helps soldiers when the military can’t
SCOTT FONTAINE; The News Tribune • Published May 04, 2009


Tacoma – Service members contact Trisha Pearce in need of counseling. Spouses, girlfriends, boyfriends, relatives are welcome to get in touch with her, too. They may feel burnt out and worn down by the experience of fighting a war – or of loving someone who has.

But Pearce and her Puget Sound area organization are completely outside the military chain of command.


“By the time people call us,” the psychiatric nurse said, “they’ve already tried to get help elsewhere. Or they just want to be away from the whole military system. Whatever their reason, we get them help.”


It’s the work of Soldiers Project NW, a 14-month-old program that aims to help veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan who, for whatever reason, aren’t comfortable using the numerous mental-health programs the military medical system provides.


Pearce asks for basic information and links the caller with a nearby therapist, who offers free sessions.


The military isn’t notified.


Pearce, who has 30 years experience in the mental health field, has been the project’s director for the past six months. She organizes meetings every few weeks to draw support from therapists across the area.


“I just think that we, as a community, need to get behind the military and help them out,” she said.


Forty-two therapists have signed up in Western Washington, but many are in the Seattle area. Pearce is from Stanwood.


More providers are needed in the South Sound area, Pearce said, where they can help service members from Fort Lewis and McChord Air Force Base. There are currently 11 providers in the South Sound.


Some patients have met regularly with their therapist for more than a year, while others show up for only one session. It’s not uncommon for a person to skip the first appointment with no explanation.


Only licensed therapists can offer services through the program, and meetings take place at a neutral site away from the service member’s installation.
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Group helps soldiers when the military cannot

National Guard increases casualty notification training

Guard increases casualty notification training

By David Mercer - The Associated Press
Posted : Sunday May 3, 2009 17:41:59 EDT

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — A few miles outside a small town in Illinois’ farm country, the chaplain driving Capt. Jon Cape to one of the toughest assignments of the young officer’s career pulled the car over to pray.

Cape made a simple request of God: To grant him courage as he knocked on the door of the military wife who was about to learn she was a new widow.

She answered the door. And he began, “The Secretary of the Army has asked me to express his deepest regret. ...”

“She didn’t believe it; she was kind of in shock, didn’t think it was happening to her,” said Cape, an Iraq war veteran and Illinois National Guardsman. “Of course, (she was) going through the denial phase — No this isn’t happening. Are you sure, are you positive...?”

Cape, 28, learned about such reactions months before in a training session.

That training is part of the National Guard’s new push in at least a dozen states to prepare more soldiers to deliver the news that a soldier died and to help the family in the months afterward. More soldiers are being killed with the heavy demand on guard units fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. And there are plans to send more troops to increasingly dangerous Afghanistan this year.

Since combat began in Afghanistan in late 2001, 85 National Guard soldiers have been killed there, including 12 from Illinois. All but one were members of the state’s 33rd Infantry Brigade, whose nearly 3,000 soldiers have been in Afghanistan since last fall. In Iraq, 436 National Guard soldiers have died since that war began in 2003, 15 from Illinois.

The casualty figures are far higher than anything the guard is used to dealing with.
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Guard increases casualty notification training

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Cowboys scout paralyzed after canopy collapse

Cowboys scout paralyzed after canopy collapse
Story Highlights
Rich Behm one of three Cowboys staffers seriously hurt Saturday

Behm's spinal cord severed by a fractured vertebrae, paralyzing him from waist down

Canopy over Dallas Cowboys' practice facility collapsed during thunderstorm

Team photographers were up in framework of structure, rode it down, witness says

A Dallas Cowboys scouting assistant suffered a broken back and has been permanently paralyzed after the collapse of the team's practice canopy during a heavy thunderstorm, the Cowboys announced Sunday. full story

Radio Host Erika Roman Killed In Crash, Boat Owner Sought

Radio Host Erika Roman Killed In Crash, Boat Owner Sought
Sunday, May 03, 2009 7:56:00 AM

FORT PIERCE -- The Florida Highway Patrol is looking for the owner of a boat who caused a fatal crash on the Florida Turnpike Friday.

Radio personality Erika Roman, known as “Your Chula” on Orlando's Power 95.3, swerved to avoid a boat lounge chair in the road, and wound up upside down in a canal.

About a dozen Good Samaritans tried to help her, but say they had trouble breaking the driver's window, and unbuckling her seat belt.

Troopers say right now the owner of the boat will be charged with failing to secure a load. They also say it would be up to the State Attorney's Office to pursue additional charges.
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Radio Host Erika Roman Killed In Crash, Boat Owner Sought

Gathering gives military families support through grief

Gathering gives military families support through grief
May 2, 2009 - 4:39 PM
R. SCOTT RAPPOLD
THE GAZETTE
Robert Pirelli's pain was like a cancer, eating away at him, sapping his will to live.

Through a national nonprofit, the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, he has found the answers he needed about the death of his son, Staff Sgt. Robert R. Pirelli, 29, a Fort Carson Green Beret killed in Iraq in August 2007.

He's also found the comfort of knowing he is not the only one hurting.

"When you come to TAPS, people say, ‘I know what you're going through,' and they really do know what you're going through," Pirelli said.

He came to Fort Carson from Boston this weekend for a TAPS grief seminar, one of 150 widows and mothers, fathers and brothers, fellow soldiers and friends, who gathered to remember loved ones lost to war and to find support in each others' stories.

"It lets the families know their loved ones' sacrifice is remembered and their life made a difference," said Bonnie Carroll, who founded TAPS two years after the death of her husband, Brig. Gen. Tom Carroll, in a 1992 plane crash.

At the time, there was no support system in place for survivors to keep in touch with other military families and people who served with their lost loved ones. She and the families of other people lost in the crash got together on their own.

Ronnie Barrett came from Johnson City, Tenn, for the seminar. His son, Sgt. Chad Barrett, with Fort Carson's 3rd Brigade Combat Team, committed suicide in Iraq in February 2008.

For the father, coming here has been cathartic.

"I didn't realize until I got here there would be so many people with the same story I've got," he said.

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http://www.gazette.com/articles/pirelli-52877-through-robert.html

Stephon Marbury blames PTSD from dad's death for woes with Knicks

Stephon Marbury blames 'posttraumatic stress' from dad's death for woes with Knicks
BY Samuel Goldsmith
DAILY NEWS WRITER

Sunday, May 3rd 2009, 1:18 AM

Stephon Marbury has finally revealed the cause of his tumultuous tenure with the Knicks - posttraumatic stress disorder following his father's sudden death.

The embattled former All-Star told his sob story to ESPN last week, saying it wasn't just clashes with team coaches that plagued his time in New York - it was the same clinically diagnosed illness that haunts many Iraq war vets.

"I had posttraumatic stress from different things going on," Marbury told ESPN. "\[My psychiatrist\] told me, 'You're a mess, basically.' "

"Everything that I went through this \[season\], it was tough," he said.

But less than three months after leaving New York for the Boston Celtics, Marbury said many of his demons are behind him.

"To end up in this situation, it's like you go from hell to being in heaven," he said.

Marbury discussed at length the despair he suffered after his father died during a Dec 2, 2007, game between the Knicks and the Phoenix Suns.

"I basically lost my mind when my father died," he said. "I was in shock. Going to a psychiatrist was the best thing I ever did."



Read more: "Stephon Marbury blames 'posttraumatic stress' from dad's death for woes with Knicks" Stephon Marbury

PTSD:Mental health professionals need to listen

by
Chaplain Kathie
When a choir sits listening to the sermon each and every week, they are often surprised when they hear something new but often they hear something they had not thought of before. The saying "you're preaching to the choir" comes from this experience.

When it comes to mental health professionals it's time they began actually listening to the choir and stopped being offended by what they could learn if they got their egos out of the way. Advocates are not your enemy. We cannot diagnose conditions and we cannot treat psychological illnesses. We can however assist you in doing both. Most of us live with what you are trying to take care of.

When it comes to PTSD you can study all of it until you believe there is nothing more you need to know but unless you are living with it on a daily basis, there is much you will never learn in a book.

Often veterans are stunned by what I have to tell them and they will respond with "My psychologist never told me that." leaving me to respond with "They don't know because they don't live with it." but personally I want to add in "they will not listen either."

What you miss is that most of the veterans with PTSD were always sensitive people, caring about others more than themselves. They walk away from horrific events in combat taking away the pain of others along with their own. You need to treat them for the pain they feel inside but first you need to understand them and what made them different. This answers their most usual question of "Why me?"

What you fail to point out to them is that they showed great bravery when they kept on doing their duty, facing more and more traumatic events after they were wounded by PTSD and kept on doing it until they and their friends were out of danger or back home and then collapsed. They feel as if they are weak or cowards because the military tells them they can prepare their minds to be "tough" enough to take it.

What you fail to address is their soul. PTSD did not attack their mind first. It attacked their soul. It is an emotional wound setting off changes to the rest of the warrior. You need to find out if they believe God is judging them or they believe God abandoned them. This weighs heavily on their lives and cannot be dismissed. When they survive the horrors of war wondering where God was is often eating away at them and research has shown the faith of the "patient" does have a lot to do with the healing of that patient. Reconnecting them with their faith and God offers one more thing science cannot deliver on and that is hope. The loss of hope is one of the primary reasons many veterans commit suicide.

What also fail to understand is often they are not addicted to the chemicals alcohol and drugs offer but are seeking to kill off feelings, good and bad, they do not want to feel. There are times however you are dealing with both PTSD and addiction. If you misdiagnose either, the treatment will not work. If they have both then both need to be addressed. Ask if there is a history in the family of addiction and then take it from there. Do not assume it is an "either or" when it very well could be both.

What many of you are doing is talking to the family members to have a better understanding of what is going on. They know the history of your patient but they will not often know how things connect. Listen to key words like "suddenly changed" and then find out what happened before they "changed" to know what you are dealing with. Remember that family members are not mental health experts and will not think of things you need to know unless you ask them and listen carefully to what they do say. You also need to acknowledge that often the veteran will hide facts you need to know because they are either in denial or afraid to admit it. The spouse often can supply what they are not telling you.

In the process you also need to inform the spouse of things they can avoid to keep confrontation at a minimum. Often family troubles escalate because of their reactions to the veteran. If they do not understand what PTSD is and what it does, they will react as if they are dealing with the same person instead of a changed person. They react out of frustration and anger instead of reacting with knowledge. All the knowledge you give them will not only help them cope but will assist in treating the veteran as well.

Advocates can help you to help them. We are not in competition with you and we are not trying to take away your jobs. We're trying to make you better at doing your jobs so that you send back our warriors to us in the best possible condition so that we can live with them as well as possible.

And yes, you guessed right. I had another argument with another "expert" pointing out that they have a "Masters degree" but I pointed out I live with what they had to go to college to learn. Big difference.

Borrowed Trauma

Borrowed Trauma
Why we relive our patient’s pain & how to avoid it
By Judith Acosta, LISW, CHT
May 2009 JEMS Vol. 34 No. 5
2009 May 1
A patient I had been treating for trauma for about six months sat before me, his hands moving restlessly as he talked, his legs spasmodically bouncing up and down. It had been more than 15 years since J.J. had been a young firefighter, and he was recalling one of his first calls as if it happened yesterday. His anxiety and discomfort were palpable.

He had been barely 20, inexperienced, anxious to do everything right on one of his first major calls. It was a two-story clapboard house with old wiring and pre-code construction. The crew knew an older woman was inside but didn’t know where. The neighbors had seen her before the engines pulled up: She was leaning out of her upstairs bedroom in a blue robe, waving her arms frantically, screaming, but then she disappeared suddenly.

J.J. was one of the first inside. Moving through the still-rising smoke with a limited range of vision through his mask, he walked through the hallway slowly, his eyes focused on the ceiling overhead, a part of which had already fallen. There were piles of smoldering beams, ash and the remains of a table. He stepped to his left around the banister and ... crunch .

He looked down and nearly vomited.

"Don’t move!" his chief, who had been keeping an eye on the rookie, yelled from down the hall. J.J. froze until he got the sign that he should lift his foot back up—slowly—and then step to the right. The chief lifted a charred two-by-four to reveal a small piece of blue robe. It was the only color left in the room besides the yellow stripe along their coats. She had tried to get downstairs herself when the ceiling collapsed on top of her.

As J.J. spoke, I found my posture mirroring his own, my heart rate slightly elevated, and my hands and feet fidgeting more than usual. By the end of the story, I felt as if I had stepped on the woman myself.

I sat still, facing him, and took a deep breath. He had stopped fidgeting. Once again, I saw the pain in his eyes and considered the importance of what had happened. It was the same process that storytellers and listeners have experienced for centuries. The words we use—even in the most ordinary conversations—move us. Not just metaphorically. Literally . The stories we hear don’t just make us frown; they don’t just elicit a good laugh from time to time. They impact us physically. They touch us where we feel it most deeply, sometimes without our permission. It was his trauma, but for a few moments I had all the symptoms of having undergone it myself.
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Borrowed Trauma

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Ill soldier from Texas dies at Walter Reed



DoD Identifies Army Casualty


The Department of Defense announced the death of a soldier who was supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom.



Sgt. Christopher D. Loza, 24, of Abilene, Texas, died Apr. 10, 2009, at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D.C., of a non-combat related illness after becoming ill 17 March in Radwaniyah, Iraq. He was assigned to the 1st Squadron, 124th Cavalry Regiment, 56th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 36th Infantry Division, Waco, Texas.


http://icasualties.org/Iraq/index.aspx

12 injured in Dallas Cowboys practice arena collapse

12 injured in Dallas Cowboys practice arena collapse
Story Highlights
NEW: None of the injuries appears to be life-threatening, says county EMS chief

About 70 people were inside the facility when it fell, fire official says

Video footage showed roof caving in during storm in Irving, Texas

About 27 Dallas Cowboys rookies were practicing at the time, team's owner says

(CNN) -- An air-supported roof over the Dallas Cowboys' practice field collapsed during a heavy thunderstorm Saturday afternoon, leaving 12 people injured, authorities said.


A photojournalist from CNN affiliate WFAA captured the collapse of the practice facility on Saturday.

About 70 people, including more than two dozen of the team's rookies, were in the facility when it was blown down shortly before 3:30 p.m. (4:30 p.m. ET), team officials said.

Two or three suffered serious injuries, but none were believed to be in life-threatening condition Saturday night, said Dr. Paul Pepe, Dallas County's emergency medical services chief.
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12 injured in Dallas Cowboys practice arena collapse

Gunman in Iraqi uniform kills 2 U.S. soldiers, 3 wounded

Gunman in Iraqi uniform kills 2 U.S. soldiers

By Brian Murphy - The Associated Press
Posted : Saturday May 2, 2009 14:49:46 EDT

BAGHDAD — A gunman wearing an Iraqi army uniform opened fire on a U.S. military team Saturday, killing two American soldiers and wounding three others at a combat outpost in northern Iraq, the military said.

A military statement said the attacker was killed after the ambush-style assault 12 miles south of Mosul, which is one of the last urban strongholds for Sunni insurgents.

In the past, attackers have used military and police uniforms to bypass checkpoints and gain access to heavily guarded bases. But Iraqi military officials said the gunman was an Iraqi soldier who also served as a Sunni Muslim preacher for an army unit.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
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Gunman in Iraqi uniform kills 2 U.S. soldiers

Two Medal of Honor Heroes from Vietnam visit new generation in Iraq

This is post 6,000 on this blog. Very fitting that it links two of our heroes from Vietnam, both Medal of Honor Recipients paying a visit to our newer generation. Can't think of a better way to celebrate 6,000 posts!


3IBCT Soldiers inspired by visit from heroes
By Staff Sgt. Tim Meyer, 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs, 25th Infantry Division, Multi-National Division - North PAO
May 1, 2009 - 6:46:03 PM


Blackanthem Military News

Sgt. 1st Class Justin Walker, battle captain, Headquarters and Headquarters Co., 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, explains procedures in the brigade’s tactical operations center to Medal of Honor recipients retired Col. Robert Howard and retired Command Sgt. Maj. Gary L. Littrell. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Tim Meyer.)



CONTINGENCY OPERATING BASE SPEICHER, TIKRIT, Iraq - When the two old men arrived their appearance personified a leadership trait that no one could ignore.

The Vietnam veterans were humbly dressed in civilian clothes, but still had a core of military bearing, despite having been retired for many years.

Each retired Soldier wore around their neck a gold medal attached to a sky blue ribbon adorned with 13 white stars -- an image that speaks volumes and the Army condenses into two words: Personal Courage.

Retired Col. Robert Howard and retired Command Sgt. Maj. Gary L. Littrell both received the Congressional Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry under fire, without regard to their own safety, during the Vietnam War, and are among the lucky few who lived to tell about it.

Thirty six years later the Soldiers of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division were lucky enough to meet them April 13 during their tour of Iraq.
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3IBCT Soldiers inspired by visit from heroes

Fort Drum leaders look at history of ancient wound

by
Chaplain Kathie

A rather ornery man said to me, "What do you know? I can track my ancestors back to the Revolutionary war!" as if telling me I didn't know what I was talking about. I smiled and stated, "Young roots. I can track mine back to the Trojan war. So what's your point?" War did not begin when the Patriots decided to get the British out of control. It didn't start when the Romans decided to conquer the world. It's started as soon as Cain killed Able.

Taking a look at the past generations of warfare in history is a great start to supporting the fact that what we now call PTSD has been around as long as man has. The only thing that really bothers me about this is too many people act as if they just began to study it. This is what I've been reading since I was handed a copy of it, now so old, it's yellowed and fragile.

This is when we knew it even though it had been happening to warriors since time began.






This is what we knew.





As you can see the term Post Traumatic Stress Disorder was already being used and it can be tied into the Greek language. Trauma is Greek for "wound." You can also see that we knew there were 500,000 veterans of the Vietnam war wounded by it. It also warned the numbers would go up and they did. We knew a lot for over 30 years but some people are acting as if the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans are the only ones suffering with it. The truth is that they are only the latest in a very long list of combat actions throughout history. It's just that no one did anything about it until the Vietnam veterans fought for it.

One of the little secrets about WWII is that there were many with PTSD and one of them was my husband's uncle. He was a Merchant Marine and his ship was hit by a Kamikaze pilot. He ended up with "shell shock" and spent the rest of his life living on a farm where he could be taken care of. Yes, PTSD can get that bad.

We have a friend, another Vietnam vet that came back home, worked up until last year even with PTSD but went over the edge and "flipped out" to the point where he will remain in a "home" for the rest of his life.

There are literally hundreds of thousands of their stories and the newer veterans are able to tell their's because of the Vietnam veterans finding the strength and courage to begin to speak out about this wound that followed them back from hell.

There are still some using the words "crazy vet" but then they'd be the type of person to use derogatory terms to describe anyone of "lesser" value in their eyes. It's easier than facing the fact that "crazy vet" was willing to risk his/her life for them and they were paying the price for it.

Anyway, with all we have known and for how long we've known it, I still find it very interesting that it's all been forgotten as if all of this is new and they are just coming to grips with the need of our veterans. By 1978 there were 70 outreach offices for veterans but the VA is just now understanding how vital these centers are. This is a quote from the same pamphlet.

"In its efforts to help these veterans, the million member Disabled American Veterans (DAV) funded the Forgotten Warrior Project research on Vietnam veterans by John P. Wilson, Ph.D. at Cleveland State University. That research resulted in providing counseling to these veterans in 1978. With 70 outreach offices across the United States, this DAV program served as a model for the Veterans Administration (VA) Operation Outreach program for Vietnam era veterans which was established approximately a year later."



This is part of the reason I get so angry with the Vietnam veterans still suffering without help to heal and why the newer veterans have to suffer at all. We knew it too long ago to have been this far behind in any of this but the same studies are being done and the same research is being done as if any of this is knew instead of as ancient as mankind. Taking a look back at the historical aspects of warfare and knowing humans are still human is a good step but it also proves the point, "those who do not learn from history are destined to repeat it" and in this case, leaving veterans to suffer because all the knowledge we gained was lost and no one will bother too look.
Drum leaders learn combat stress timeless
By SARAH M. RIVETTE
TIMES STAFF WRITER
SATURDAY, MAY 2, 2009


FORT DRUM — The military leadership here took the conversation about combat stress back 2,500 years Wednesday night to the time of Sophocles and the age of the Trojan War.

The point was to show that cases of soldier's heart, shell shock or post-traumatic stress disorder — names from different eras of the same malady — transcends time and advances in warfare.

"This is an ageless phenomenon and we are just starting to take a scientific look at it," said Brig. Gen. Kevin W. Mangum, the rear detachment commander for the division and post. "We've called it different things, but these soldiers are facing the stresses never faced before."

The presentation was brought to Fort Drum by Walter Reed Army Medical Center to help start conversations on soldier and family reintegration after a deployment. The two-hour presentation has been shown at various military bases throughout the country, but Fort Drum is the first Army post to participate.



Based on feedback, Gen. Mangum said this was definitely something he would like to see happen at the brigade and battalion level so soldiers have an interactive way to talk about combat stress and the reintegration process. Brigade and other rear detachment leadership felt the same way.

"It's a different venue to talk about soldiers and these issues," said Col. Willard M. Burleson III, commander of the 1st Brigade Combat Team. "It's human interaction and it's emotion. The impact of war on the soldier and the family has been the same since the beginning of time, and that combat stress hasn't changed."

There were three scenes from the plays "Ajax" and "Philoctetes." Both were soldiers during the time of the Trojan War and both were dealing with issues that stemmed from their service.

Ajax was enraged when he did not receive the armor of his fallen comrade, Achilles, and in madness slaughtered a herd of sheep and cattle. His wife, Tecmessa, and fellow sailors tried to talk him out of suicide but were unsuccessful.
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Drum leaders learn combat stress timeless

As Iraq war wanes, National Guard families still struggle

As Iraq war wanes, families still struggle

By Kevin Maurer and Mitch Weiss - The Associated Press
Posted : Saturday May 2, 2009 8:55:48 EDT

[Editor’s Note: The 30th Heavy Brigade of the North Carolina National Guard returns to Iraq this year, including the 76 combat engineers of E Company. Most of them are from Hamlet, a close-knit community long abandoned by the good jobs that made it a prosperous railroad town. The Associated Press has followed several members of E Company and their loved ones in an occasional series as the unit trained for combat.]


HAMLET, N.C. — Spc. Jobel Barbosa had spent the past hour with his family in a parking lot after a public ceremony marking his unit’s deployment to a war that’s coming to an end. It was time to go.

As other National Guardsmen boarded a white bus behind him, Barbosa hugged his mother, two sisters, his daughter, his girlfriend and their baby girl, then turned to join the other troops. His four-day leave, the last time he would see his family for a year, was over.

“It takes everything I got to keep it inside,” he said.

While the gaze of generals has drifted east to Afghanistan, the last waves of American troops are headed into Iraq. Among them: 4,000 soldiers of the North Carolina National Guard’s Heavy Brigade Combat team, including the 76 men of Barbosa’s bomb-clearing unit, E Company, which departed days ago from its base in tiny Hamlet.

It is six years since the U.S. invaded Iraq, and fewer soldiers are dying there. That does little to console the families of those just shipping out — the troops’ absence at home causes as much strain there as their presence in a faraway combat zone.

“We’re praying nothing happens,” said Barbosa’s mother, Rosa Lamourt. “But you can never be sure.”

Back to the sandbox
Always on their mind
‘I have to stay positive’
Stresses on the children
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As Iraq war wanes, families still struggle

Fort Hood to host federal jobs fair

Fort Hood to host federal jobs fair

By Michelle Tan - Staff writer
Posted : Saturday May 2, 2009 8:21:10 EDT

Nearly 50 federal agencies, the Army National Guard and Army Reserve on May 11 and 12 will be at Fort Hood, Texas, for a pilot program aimed at connecting soldiers who are leaving the Army with federal job opportunities.

The continuum of service fair, organized by Human Resources Command, will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. both days at Club Hood on post. It is open to soldiers, veterans, family members and retirees.

“The purpose is … to showcase the benefits and opportunities of continuing in federal service,” said Col. Barbara Zacharczyk, chief of the force alignment division in HRC’s enlisted personnel management directorate. “We want to make sure that those soldiers who are going to be separated soon have all the information they need to make an informed decision. We’re trying to promote a lifetime of service. Soldiers have already signed up for service, and even when you retire, some people still want to look to serve in some way and we’re trying to facilitate that.”

Representatives from agencies such as the FBI, Secret Service, the Veterans Affairs and Homeland Security departments, the Federal Bureau of Prisons and the Civilian Human Resources Agency, which can offer soldiers opportunities to work as civilians in the Army, will be at the service fair.
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Fort Hood to host federal jobs fair

Answering the call to become a Chaplain

by
Chaplain Kathie

Many times in my life I was told, "You missed your calling." because friends thought I should have been a minister. Considering I'm Greek Orthodox and a female, that was not something available to me. While I have a deep devotion to God and my faith, there was something missing. Since 1982 I've been working with veterans suffering from PTSD. I felt that was my calling and never thought of doing anything else aside from working regular jobs to pay the bills. One of those jobs brought me to the doors of a Presbyterian Church where I was hired to head up Christian Education. I loved it and part of my job was preaching to the children. The economy hit the church and the position was eliminated two years later.

One of the interim pastors, a wonderful man, decided he wanted to enter into hospital chaplaincy. While he was training, he called me to address questions the chaplains in his group had about PTSD. From that day on, I knew that was where God was trying to lead me. I was already doing the work but had a few more things to learn. Considering I did not have a degree in theology, it was hard to find an organization to offer the credentials I needed, but I was lead to the International Fellowship of Chaplains. I am certified, licensed, ordained and insured and have my credentials hanging all over my office wall.

If you have ever considered becoming a Chaplain, I can vouch for it 100%. There is nothing more spiritually rewarding than being a Chaplain and nothing better I can think of than taking care of our troops and in my case, the veterans as well. In my own life, God has comforted me in the darkest of times, and believe me, we've been thru hell and back. He has lead me to others offering support to me as I regained the strength to go on helping others. Calmed my nerves with public speaking more times than I can remember and gave me the words to use when I could find none.

Above all of this, working with our warriors and their families has restored my faith in human nature and the magnificence of the soul. Problems in their lives, traumatic events they are exposed to take them into the darkest of thoughts. Reconnecting them with God, no matter what faith they have been lead to, restores hope by the Grace of God. When they endure the worst humans have to offer, they end up either blaming God or believing He has abandoned them. It is the Chaplain's job to provide the reconnection to their spiritual well being and showing that they were sent by a loving God to help them. But restoring that does not end there.

When they are filled with God's mercy and love, they then take that into the relationships they have with their families and friends and most of the time, they in turn reach out to someone else in need of comforting. When they do not have someone to do this, they take the hopelessness, sense of abandonment or judgment into their families and communities and in turn hang onto anger. Chaplains are there for the warrior to take care of their wounded soul and for all they will come into contact with after. You are part of their futures.

Now it appears the Air Force is making it easier for you to train to become a Chaplain with scholarships. If you feel God has been calling you to serve others, answer His call. I can assure you that serving His children will strengthen your own faith in Him and in others. You're heart will be broken over and over again but restored over and over again in doing His work. We are all called to work with different groups of people because their needs vary. I was called to work with veterans and have met some of the finest individuals this nation has because of this.

Pray on it and then see where you are being lead to and go where you are being called without trying to find excuses for not doing it. He'll find a way. After all, if He can take a Greek Orthodox female into a Presbyterian Church so that I could finally answer my calling, think of what He can do for you if you answer Him as well.


New scholarships available for chaplains

Staff report
Posted : Saturday May 2, 2009 8:20:26 EDT

A call to the chaplaincy can only come from God, but the Air Force wants to make answering that call easier.

Struggling to fill a shortage of chaplains, the service is offering scholarships for commissioned officers, or anyone currently enrolled in a commissioning program, to earn a master’s of divinity degree. Two scholarships, which will pay tuition and a stipend, will be funded in fiscal 2009.

Because Roman Catholics are the most underserved religious population in the Air Force, these two scholarships will likely go to Catholics, said retired chaplain Rev. John Kurzak, director of chaplain accessions for the Air Force Recruiting Service. The Air Force has only about 70 Catholic chaplains to serve a population that makes up 25 percent of the service, according to the Air Force. More than 25 bases have no Catholic chaplain.

Future scholarships could go to chaplain-hopefuls of other faiths as the needs of the Air Force change.
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New scholarships available for chaplains

Nearly 11,000 could have been exposed to HIV as 5th case is linked

5th HIV Case Linked To VA Equipment

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. -- A fifth patient has tested positive for HIV, and seven more have tested positive for hepatitis after being exposed to contaminated medical equipment at three Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals, the agency said Friday.

That brings the total who have tested positive for hepatitis to 33.

They are among thousands tested because they were treated with endoscopic equipment that wasn't properly sterilized between patients and exposed them to the body fluids of others. The equipment is often used in colonoscopies and ear, nose and throat procedures.

Nearly 11,000 former sailors, soldiers, airmen and Marines could have been exposed at the hospitals in Miami, Murfreesboro, Tenn., and Augusta, Ga.

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5th HIV Case Linked To VA Equipment

Related Stories:
April 24, 2009: VA Reports 4th HIV Case
March 26, 2009: 10 VA Patients Have Viral Infections
March 11, 2009: VA Denies Hepatitis Results
January 8, 2009: Valve Problem Cited In Colonoscopy Issue
January 8, 2009: VA Volunteer Calls Hospital Tools Dirty

Ronald Richard Fajbik posthumously honored at Vietnam Memorial


Local family remembers loved one at The Wall
By LYDIA COTTRELL lcottrell@timesobserver.com
A Warren County family recently attended a memorial service in Washington, D.C., to honor its fallen hero.

On April 20, Ronald Richard Fajbik was posthumously honored during a ceremony at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, commonly referred to as "The Wall," with his wife, Laurlie; daughter, Kim; son, Brian; and grandson, Darrin in attendance.

Ron passed away in on Nov. 20, 2005 following an illness as a result of his exposure to Agent Orange in Vietnam. Herserved in the U.S. Army from 1969 to 1971.

The ceremony was a part of the In Memory program through the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, which honors those who died as a result of the Vietnam War, but whose deaths do not fit the Department of Defense criteria for inclusion on The Wall.

"There was information via the web with the Veteran memorial fund," said Laurlie.

She submitted an application for the In Memory program and was accepted.

Laurlie and her family joined 122 other families for the ceremony.

"It was very emotional," she said. "It's rewarding to know there are people out there that do care."



In Warren County, she is the director of the Order of the Silver Rose, which recognizes and honors those who have been stricken with one of the 43 diseases connected with the herbicide Agent Orange while serving in Vietnam and parts of Korea.

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Local family remembers loved one at The Wall

Friday, May 1, 2009

Army recalls helmets after test failure

Are you reading what I'm reading? I just want to make sure I'm reading this right. How is it possible they know for a fact "no soldiers or airmen" have been injured if they don't have a clue how many of these helmet were even worn in combat?

No soldiers or airmen have been injured as a result of the defect, Army officials said. They don’t know how many of the helmets have been worn into combat, they said, but about 30,000 of them have been issued to soldiers and airmen.

Next question is how can they be sure no soldier or airmen had their brains injured by these defective helmets? If they have a weak spot then isn't that possible?

Army recalls helmets after test failure

By Matthew Cox - Staff writer
Posted : Friday May 1, 2009 18:19:56 EDT

The Army has recalled about 30,000 of its Advanced Combat Helmets after a manufacture’s defect caused the helmets to fail ballistic testing.

The helmets issued to soldiers and Air Force personnel from November 2008 to February 2009 are the subject of an investigation by Army Criminal Investigation Command.

Gentex Corp. of Carbondale, Penn., was “supposed to provide a particular product and they provided something different,” Lt. Col. Robert Myles, product manager for Soldier Survivability, told Army Times April 30.

Gentex notified the Army in January that one of its subcontractors used “a different finish on the screws than what is required by the government,” Myles said. The finish is designed to protect the screws from corrosion.

The former subcontractor, A.J. Hughes Screw Products Company Inc., is under investigation by Army CID and Gentex is not, said Ken Lee, corporate counsel for Gentex.
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Army recalls helmets after test failure

White House Kicks off Wounded Warrior Ride

WH Kicks off Wounded Warrior Ride
May 01, 2009
Military.comby Bryant Jordan

They numbered 40. Some walked from the White House on legs of alloy and cable, some rolled out in wheel chairs. Some bore wounds unidentifiable by any prosthesis, chair, cane or crutch.

But all had inside them the steel that served themselves and their fellow troops so well on the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan, and which propelled them to take part in an annual Soldier Ride sponsored by the Wounded Warrior Project. The event, dubbed the "White House to the Lighthouse" ride because it runs from Washington and Annapolis, raises funds for Wounded Warriors programs.

"These wounded warriors didn't get to choose the direction their lives would take the instant they were injured, but now they choose to prove that life after injury isn't about what you can't do -- it's about what you can," President Barack Obama said. "They choose to keep their faith with the future. They choose to keep fighting for their brothers and sisters and show them that they're not alone.

As of posting time the White House was unable to furnish Military.com with complete names, service branches or unit affiliations of the participants.

The ride is now in its fifth year, and this year's marks the third between Washington and Annapolis.

Obama was accompanied at the podium by Defense Secretary Robert Gates, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki and Assistant Secretary of Veterans Affairs Tammy Duckworth. Shinseki, who was Army chief of staff until he retired, had been wounded in Vietnam. Duckworth, who was confirmed to her post only recently, was a helicopter pilot who lost both her legs when she was shot down in Iraq.
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WH Kicks off Wounded Warrior Ride

Heroic School Nurse Dies After Helping Fallen Coach


Heroic School Nurse Dies After Helping Fallen Coach
Posted: 10:38 pm PDT April 30, 2009
Updated: 7:27 am PDT May 1, 2009

SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Santa Clara High School is mourning the loss this week of a school nurse who likely helped save the life of the school's softball coach suffering from a heart attack just moments before collapsing herself. She later died.

On Tuesday, 59-year-old Eileen Bowden gave John Rahbar CPR minutes after he collapsed with no pulse while collecting foul balls following a team practice.

Bowden's actions kept Rahbar alive until paramedics arrived, but then Bowden collapsed.

"After that, Ms. Bowden kind of got up, in just a brief moment, she fell down and seemed to need medical assistance," said Santa Clara School District spokeswoman Tabitha Kappler-Hurley. "So she was taken to Valley Medical Center and unfortunately died en route."
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Heroic School Nurse Dies After Helping Fallen Coach
linked from CNN

Military using Facebook and Twitter to recruit

Services turn attention to Facebook, Twitter

By Sagar Meghani - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday May 1, 2009 14:10:45 EDT

FORT MONROE, Va. — You don’t often hear a three-star general using the word “friend” as a verb.

But for Lt. Gen. Benjamin Freakley and other Army brass, a new era has brought a new language — and new tools like online social networks Twitter and Facebook — for seeking out young recruits and spreading the military’s message.

Freakley, who heads the Army command that oversees recruiting, says social networking sites offer another way to reach tomorrow’s soldiers.

“They live in the virtual world,” Freakley said. He cited Facebook as a key component in targeting 18- to 24-year-olds. “You could friend your recruiter, and then he could talk to your friends.”

Even Gen. Raymond Odierno, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, has a new Facebook page to answer questions about the mission in Iraq and spread the word about what the troops are accomplishing there.

The Army isn’t the only branch of the military with Facebook friends or that has a following on Twitter. The Air Force has also established a Facebook page, Twitter feeds and a blog, while the Marine Corps is using various networking sites mainly for recruiting purposes. The Navy is “experimenting” with several forms of online media, and some of its commands are using Twitter, a spokesman said. Even the Coast Guard commandant regularly updates his Facebook status while traveling.
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Services turn attention to Facebook, Twitter

Sen. Russell Feingold's Bill would add support for injured reservists

Bill would add support for injured reservists

By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Friday May 1, 2009 14:24:20 EDT

Legislation aimed at ensuring wounded National Guard and reserve members don’t fall through the cracks and end up waiting for months for disability benefits was introduced Thursday by Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis.

The bill, S 944, requires wounded reservists to be kept on active duty until they are fully evaluated or at least have time to consult with a military lawyer about their eligibility for benefits. If they remain on active duty, the bill requires them to be returned to their homes, if medically feasible, to await the outcome of their evaluations.

If someone is discharged and cannot work because of their service-connected injury, the bill calls for them to be returned to active duty at full pay until they can access benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The idea, said Feingold, is to prevent a gap in income if a person leaves active duty without being eligible for military benefits — or not knowing about military benefits for which they may be eligible — and ends up with financial problems while waiting for veterans disability benefits to kick in.

“The armed forces have come a long way in addressing the bureaucratic hurdles that have long plagued wounded service members transitioning out of the services,” Feingold said. “However, much more remains to be done to ensure that wounded service members do not go without income due to injuries sustained in the line of duty.”

He said many injured troops are going “without compensation of any kind because they are never told about the patchwork of programs designed to care for them as they transition back to civilian life and into VA.”
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Bill would add support for injured reservists

PTSD? Why wait until it's too late?

PTSD? Why wait until it's too late?

by Chaplain Kathie

While it is never too late to seek help for PTSD, the damage being done to you and your life goes on until you do. Much like an infection stops getting worse with proper treatment, so does PTSD.

We have the Vietnam veterans as living proof PTSD is not the end of your ability to live a life worth living, achieving goals, having a successful family life, career and yes, even be happy. Consider the fact that these men and women did not receive treatment or therapy until 10, 20 or even 30 years after they came home. Some still have not sought treatment, and sadly so.

As the years ticked away between combat and therapy, the damage was being compounded by living their lives. PTSD got worse with more stress and their lives got worse because of PTSD. Marriages fell apart. Jobs were lost. Overall health was worsened. Back then, there were plenty of excuses to not receive help. The biggest one was that there wasn't any help available until the Vietnam veterans fought for it.

Now there is the excuse of an overwhelmed VA but that is being addressed. There are other ways of getting help from groups all over the nation offering to help veterans and support groups in many areas of the country but above all, support groups online. There are groups for the spouses as well.

This is just part of what is going on for PTSD

CTU-Online, the Clinician's Trauma Update, is an electronic newsletter produced by the VA National Center for PTSD. CTU-Online provides summaries of clinically relevant publications in the trauma field withlinks to published abstracts or full text articles when available.

For COMPLETE summaries, see this CTU-Online in html format on ourwebsite:

VA National Center for PTSD



Telehealth Promises and pitfalls in telehealth care for PTSD: Three recent papers illustrate the ways in which telehealth can be used to improve the care of people with PTSD. Methods such as video and computer-assisted delivery are being applied to clinical assessment and treatment. For theVA, increased use of these strategies promises evidence-based assessment and treatment for Veterans for whom distance from specialists remains abarrier to care. These new studies provide preliminary support forteleheath as a viable approach to care and offer information about limitations that need to be addressed in order to promote more widespread use of telehealth in clinical care.

Abstract
Telehealth, or health care via video conferencing, constitutes a clinical option that makes it possible to treat patients remotely. A growing number of studies have demonstrated that telehealth is a feasible and effective method for diagnostic interviews and psychiatric consultations. However, few studies have assessed the effectiveness of psychotherapy given by videoconference. This study examines the effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) administered by video conference for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Forty-eight participants with PTSD were recruited for the study: 16 in the video conferencing condition and 32 in a control face-to-face condition. Each participant received CBT for 16 to 25 weeks and completed various questionnaires before and after treatment. The results show a significant decline in the frequency and severity of posttraumatic symptoms after treatment in both conditions. A clinical improvement in overall functioning was also observed. No significant difference was observed in the effectiveness of the two therapeutic conditions. The examination of effect sizes supports these results. A number of clinical implications and certain avenues for future research are discussed.


To find the help you need all you have to do is Google it! Is it that hard? So why are you still hear reading this when you could be starting to heal?

Marine veteran murder: Gang member convicted of slaying

Marine veteran murder: Gang member convicted of slaying
Case of mistaken identity cost Marine veteran his life
By Matthew Walberg Tribune reporter
May 1, 2009
A reputed gang member was convicted Thursday of the 2006 murder of a Marine veteran of the Iraq War over a case of mistaken identity.

Steven Bryant, 23, of the 2800 block of North Milwaukee Avenue, Chicago, faces life imprisonment for the fatal shooting of Ricardo "Ricky" Martinez Jr. He is scheduled to be sentenced next month by Cook County Circuit Judge Bertina Lampkin.

Martinez, 23, was killed in April 2006 while he and his friends were on their way home from a Cubs game. When a quarrel broke out among his friends over a missing cell phone, Martinez stopped his car near Cicero Avenue and Addison Street and waited while his companions scuffled on the sidewalk.

At the same time, Bryant, a reputed member of the Insane Deuces street gang, was riding in a car with a fellow gang member who saw the group of men and mistook one of them for a member of a rival gang.
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Marine veteran murder: Gang member convicted of slaying