Police “Gang”…LA County Officers are Members of a “Secret Gang” with Tattoos to Celebrate Shooting Civilians…

Deputy tattooThe investigation into a secret clique within the Los Angeles County sheriff’s elite gang unit has uncovered allegations that members had matching tattoos of a gun-toting skeleton, which deputies would modify to celebrate their involvement in a shooting, according to sources close to the internal probe.

One deputy, who has admitted belonging to a clique called the “Jump Out Boys,” has identified about half a dozen other deputies as members, one source confirmed. Those men are expected to be summoned for interviews with internal affairs investigators, the source said.

Suspicion about the group’s existence was sparked several weeks ago when a supervisor discovered a pamphlet laying out the group’s creed, which promoted aggressive policing and portrayed officer shootings in a positive light.

The pamphlet was found in the vehicle used by the deputy who acknowledged his association with the clique, according to sources who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the ongoing investigation.

 Days after The Times reported on the discovery of the pamphlet, the captain of the division gathered his deputies for a private briefing, during which he told them they had shamed the department by forming the group and urged those responsible to identify themselves, a source with knowledge of the unit’s inner workings said.

At some point, one deputy came forward, and he has since named about six others, the source said.

Internal affairs investigators are trying to determine whether the deputies violated Sheriff’s Department rules or committed serious misconduct.

The deputies under scrutiny all work on the Gang Enforcement Team, a unit divided into two platoons of relatively autonomous deputies whose job is to target neighborhoods where gang violence is high, locate armed gang members and take their guns away.

The design of the tattoo, confirmed by two sources, includes an oversize skull with a wide, toothy grimace and glowing red eyes. A bandanna wraps around the skull, imprinted with the letters “OSS” — representing Operation Safe Streets, the name of the larger unit that the Gang Enforcement Team is part of. A bony hand clasps a revolver. Investigators suspect that smoke is tattooed over the gun’s barrel after a member is involved in a shooting.

To the left of the skull are two playing cards — an ace and an eight — apparently an allusion to the “dead man’s hand” in poker, sources said.

One source compared the notion of modifying the tattoo after a shooting to a celebratory “high five.”

Celebrating shootings and sporting matching tattoos were hallmarks of anti-gang officers in the LAPD‘s troubled Rampart Division in the late 1990s.

A corruption scandal erupted after one disgraced officer implicated himself and others in covering up bad shootings, planting evidence, falsifying reports and perjuring themselves to rid the streets of gang members and drug dealers.

In fact, the tattoo allegedly embraced by the Jump Out Boys is reminiscent of the one inked on Rampart officers, which consisted of a grinning skull in a cowboy hat with pairs of aces and eights fanned out in the background.

Sources say there is no evidence that deputies alleged to be in the clique have been involved in improper shootings or other misconduct. But the new revelations have heightened concerns.

The modified tattoos could also pose problems for the department in future litigation, making it more difficult for county attorneys to argue against lawsuits alleging bad shootings.

Sheriff Lee Baca‘s spokesman, Steve Whitmore, declined to discuss details of the investigation because it is ongoing. “We take this very seriously,” he said. “This is absolutely no joke whatsoever.”

The original post of this article can be seen here…

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/05/sheriffs-clique-may-have-celebrated-shootings-with-tattoo-sources-say-.html

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Federal Court Rejects Veterans Pleas for Help…

SAN FRANCISCO — In a major setback for suffering combat veterans, a federal appeals court on Monday found that Congress, not the courts, is responsible for fixing the VA’s troubled mental health care system, overturning a previous court that found the program riddled with “unchecked incompetence.”

In a 10-1 decision, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a lawsuit that sought to force the Department of Veterans Affairs to overhaul the treatment program and reversed an earlier ruling that would have forced the government to speed up treatment requests and benefit claims.

The decision came in a lawsuit filed in 2007 by a veterans’ group that alleged the VA’s system could be blamed for suicides and other suffering because of its slow approach to treating returning soldiers.

“(The lawsuit) sounds a plaintive cry for help, but it has been misdirected to us,” Judge Jay Bybee wrote for the court. “As much as we may wish for expeditious improvement in the way the VA handles mental health care and service-related disability compensation, we cannot exceed our jurisdiction to accomplish it.”

The ruling marks the latest turn in a case that impacts the VA’s handling of mental health care for hundreds of thousands of returning war veterans, many suffering from PTSD, depression and other fallout from combat in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

San Francisco U.S. District Judge Samuel Conti held a seven-day trial in the case in 2008, determining that the federal courts do not have the power to order the VA to overhaul its mental health care system.

A divided three-judge 9th Circuit panel disagreed last year, saying, “The VA’s unchecked incompetence has gone on long enough; no more veterans should be compelled to agonize or perish while the government fails to perform its obligations.”

The Obama administration appealed, persuading the 9th Circuit to overturn that decision. Only 9th Circuit Judge Mary Schroeder dissented, expressing concern it leaves veterans in a “Catch-22” position because they can’t turn to the courts if the VA fails to respond to their cases.

Gordon Erspamer, the attorney for the veterans rights group, said he believes there are strong arguments to appeal the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, warning that the 9th Circuit had “given the VA carte blanche to do anything it wants to veterans.”

“These groups have been going to Congress with these problems for years,” Erspamer said. “This opinion basically closes the door to federal (court) to any claims by veterans.”

This article was originally posted by Stars and Stripes.  It can be seen here:

http://www.stripes.com/news/veterans/federal-court-reverses-order-to-overhaul-va-treatment-system-1.176603

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New Hampshire Has a Service Dog Program for Vets!…(ACTS)

Check out our new partner ACTS.  Assistance Canine Training Services.  Their website is www.assistancecanine.org

About ACTS:
 
Dorothy Hyde-Williams, founder of the Nathaniel J. Williams Foundation, started breeding Golden Retrievers in 1994 and has built an outstanding reputation for producing puppies that are smart and calm. In 2001, she donated one of her puppies, named BuddyBoy, to a service dog organization in Massachusetts. She raised BuddyBoy and he successfully graduated in 2003. In the years following, she trained many more dogs for that same organization, building a reputation for taking on dogs with behavioral problems and training successful service dogs.

Dorothy also started obedience training classes for the public and has been a successful trainer locally for seven years with local vets and shelters recommending her for her practical approach to dog training.
 
Taking her experience in these various areas, Dorothy started contemplating how she could take things to the next level and thought of starting her own assistance organization. The idea was in its initial stages when her 23 year old son, Nathaniel (or Nate), was killed in an accident. Dorothy and her family then decided to start the organization in his name and memory.

The Nathaniel J Williams Foundation does business under the name Assistance Canine Training Services, or ACTS for short. ACTS is an entirely volunteer based organization with puppy raisers and breeder caretakers in seven towns in the Lakes Region and White Mountains of New Hampshire.

 

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My Heart it Sank…(a poem)

My Heart, It Sank…- a poem by Iraq Veteran Eli Israel

 

Sounds of War?

Not of this world

Bombs and bullets do not

Whistles and bird calls make

These sounds?

Not from here

They are from before

Before we forgot

Who our mother was

Before our Fathers drank

Before the Captain, “Curtain!” called

Before my heart

It sank

 

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Court Rejects Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans’ Demand for Better VA Care…by Jamie Reno

“Shhh!” began a Feb. 13, 2008, email from Dr. Ira Katz, a VA deputy chief. “Our suicide prevention coordinators are identifying about 1,000 suicide attempts per month among the veterans we see in our medical facilities. Is this something we should (carefully) address ourselves in some sort of release before someone stumbles on it?”

The plaintiffs in the case of Veterans for Common Sense v. Eric K. Shinseki thought they had a sure winner on their hands. Filed by veterans’ rights groups in 2007 against the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), the lawsuit, which demanded that the department fix its mental-health-care system, seemed to have public sentiment, the law, and the truth on its side.

But on Monday a federal appeals court in California voted 10–1 to dismiss the case, ruling that only Congress or the president has the authority to direct changes on how veterans are treated.

The decision overturns a 2–1 ruling last year by the same court, which said that the department’s “unchecked incompetence has gone on long enough,” and permitted the plaintiffs to ask a federal judge to order changes in the VA. The VA appealed that ruling to a larger panel.

Veterans’ advocates expressed extreme disappointment with Monday’s ruling. “It just shows that our veterans are not being served by the VA or by the courts,” said Paul Sullivan, a Gulf War vet and former executive director of Veterans for Common Sense (VCS) who currently works at Bergmann & Moore, a law firm that represents veterans. “There is a crisis at the VA—care is getting worse, not better, but they don’t want you to know about it. And now our veterans know that not even the courts are here to help them.”

Richard Eldridge, 64, who lives outside Toledo, Ohio, is a Vietnam War veteran who served in the Air Force from 1968 to 1990. He was diagnosed with PTSD, but “I’ve been fighting the VA to get my claim processed for 22 years,” he said. “It remains unresolved. I really believe they are incompetent. If I had a moment to talk with the secretary of the VA, I would tell him to please fix this claims process before we all die.”

The sole dissenter in Monday’s ruling, Circuit Judge Mary Schroeder, wrote that the dismissal “leaves millions of veterans without any available redress for claims…No one could think this is just or what Congress intended.”

Documents the plaintiffs presented during the original two-week non-jury trial in 2008 showed that it took the VA an average of nearly four and a half years to review veterans’ health-care claims, that more than 1,400 veterans who’d been denied coverage died in one six-month period while waiting for their claims to conclude, and that 18 veterans per day were committing suicide.

The plaintiffs—VCS, along with Veterans United for Truth—also submitted emails between VA executives that they said confirmed the agency’s plan to suppress the number of attempted suicides by vets under VA care.

“Shhh!” began a Feb. 13, 2008, email from Dr. Ira Katz, a VA deputy chief. “Our suicide prevention coordinators are identifying about 1,000 suicide attempts per month among the veterans we see in our medical facilities. Is this something we should (carefully) address ourselves in some sort of release before someone stumbles on it?”

“There is a crisis at the VA,” one veterans’-rights advocate said. “Care is getting worse, not better, but they don’t want you to know about it.”

A year before that email, Newsweek reported on the VA’s failure to properly treat ailing veterans because of a massive backlog of claims, lack of staff, and a bureaucracy that increased the stress many former troops already felt. Five years on, despite the VA’s claims to the contrary, the situation for Iraq and Afghanistan veterans has apparently gotten worse in a number of vital areas.

According to the VA’s own numbers, the backlog of compensation claims, which was about 500,000 in 2007, now stands at more than 1.1 million. Waiting times are longer, too, according to court documents. And 10,000 new patients come into the VA every month, half of whom are mental-health patients, according to Sullivan.

Despite the efforts by the VA secretary, Eric Shinseki, to address the department’s problems—including hiring more staff and updating its computer system—and despite the fact that President Obama has increased the agency’s budget by 10.5 percent, to $140 billion, critics say the VA’s problems are not getting any better.

“Veterans now wait an average of seven months for an initial VA claim decision, and we’re going to see as many as 500,000 to 600,000 more veterans enter the system in the next several years,” Sullivan said. “We hear complaints from our clients every day, and it’s happening across the country, from Tampa Bay to Houston to San Diego.”

Shinseki, who rode into the VA on a wave of promised reforms, told Congress in March that the agency has seen a 48-percent increase in compensation claims filed since 2008, and that he expects the volume to increase in 2013 to 1.25 million claims. Shinseki said the VA has reached a “tipping point” as far as dealing with the claims backlog.

“In 2013, our goal is to ensure that no more than 40 percent of the compensation and pension claims in the pending inventory are more than 125 days old,” Shinseki said in congressional testimony.

To help address the backlog, the VA announced last week that it was adding 1,900 mental-health clinicians and support staff to its existing staff of more than 20,000.

Rep. Jeff Miller (R-Fla.), chairman of the House committee with jurisdiction over veterans’ issues, told the AP that the VA’s plan looked like a knee-jerk reaction to the recent inspector general’s investigation of the VA, which the plaintiffs submitted to the court last week. That investigation found that nearly half of the veterans seeking mental-health care for the first time waited about 50 days before getting a full evaluation. The VA had said that the majority of evaluations were being conducted within 14 days.

A spokesperson for the VA told The Daily Beast that the agency is doing its best with the resources it has. “The VA places the highest priority on providing veterans living with mental-health issues and posttraumatic stress disorder with timely, responsive, high-quality care,” said Josh Taylor, press secretary for the VA. “While we have made progress, we fully recognize there is more work to be done.”

The bottom line, Sullivan said, is that the VA remains unequipped to handle the onslaught of veterans leaving active duty and entering the system, and as a result America continues to fail our wounded.

Jamie Reno, an award-winning correspondent for Newsweek for 17 years, has also written for The New York Times, Sports Illustrated, Rolling Stone, People, Men’s Journal, ESPN, Los Angeles Times, TV Guide, MSNBC, Newsmax, Entertainment Weekly, and USA Today. Reno, who’s won more than 85 writing awards, was the lead reporter on a Newsweek series on the 9/11 terrorist attacks that earned him and his colleagues the National Magazine Award for General Excellence, the highest award in magazine journalism. Reno, who’s also an acclaimed author, singer-songwriter, and 15-year cancer survivor, lives in San Diego with his wife, Gabriela, and their daughter, Mandy.

 This article was originally posted by The Daily Beast.  It can be seen here…

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/05/09/court-rejects-iraq-afghanistan-veterans-demand-for-better-va-care.html

For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.

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In memory of Kelly Thomas…(homeless man beaten to death by police, caught on camera)

This article was written by CNN.  The video can be seen here..

http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/08/us/california-police-beating/index.html

 

(CNN) — A graphic video played at a hearing Monday to determine whether two California police officers should stand trial in the beating death of a homeless man showed them kicking and punching the mentally ill man as he lay on the ground — screaming in pain and begging for help.

The victim, Kelly Thomas, died five days after the beating on July 5.

Manuel Ramos, a 10-year veteran of the Fullerton, California, police department, is charged with second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter, while Cpl. Jay Patrick Cicinelli faces charges of involuntary manslaughter and felony use of excessive force in the same case.

Both have pleaded not guilty.

The black-and-white video was played during a preliminary hearing for the two officers.

It begins with Thomas — a 37-year-old homeless man with schizophrenia — sitting and being told by Ramos to put his feet out and hands on his knees.

The officers were responding to a call about a homeless man looking into car windows and pulling on handles of parked cars.

In the video, Thomas is slow to cooperate.

Ramos then tells him: “You see my fists? They’re getting ready to f— you up.”

Thomas, who is unarmed and shirtless, stands and another officer walks over. They hit him with their batons and hold him on the ground as he begs for help.

“Ok, I’m sorry, dude. I’m sorry!” he screams. At one point, Thomas says he can’t breathe. The officers tell him to lie on his stomach, put his hands behind his back and relax.

“Ok, here, here, dude, please!” he says.

Other officers arrive.

At times, trees block the view of the camera and it’s not always clear who is doing what as officers pile on top of Thomas.

One uses a Taser stun gun.

Thomas cries out for help and. toward the end of the beating, for his father: “Dad! Help me. Help me. Help me, dad.”

His voice gets softer and trails off.

By the end of the video, he is lying in a pool of blood as the officers wonder out loud what to do next.

One can be heard saying: “We ran out of options so I got to the end of my Taser and I … smashed his face to hell.”

Thomas suffered brain injuries, facial fractures, rib fractures, and extensive bruising and abrasions, according to prosecutors.

The Orange County coroner listed his manner of death as a homicide and said he died after having his chest compressed, leaving him unable to breathe.

The FBI is investigating possible civil rights violations in his case.

Six Fullerton officers, including Ramos and Cicinelli, were put on paid leave after his death. The case drew widespread attention to the police department of Fullerton, located about 25 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles.

http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/08/us/california-police-beating/index.html

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Huntington man sentenced for theft of government benefits and military fraud…

By April Kaull, Anchor – email

 
Darryl J. Hodgkinson, 61, of Huntington was sentenced Thursday to one year and one day in prison by U.S. District Judge Robert C. Chambers. Hodgkinson pleaded guilty to theft of public money.

He applied for Veterans Affairs Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) benefits. But Hodgkinson admitted that he knowingly and intentionally submitted false and fictitious documents to the VA in order to qualify. Hodgkinson also admitted to presenting numerous combat awards, citations and experiences that he did not earn, was not awarded and did not experience.

http://www.wowktv.com/story/18113796/huntington-man-sentenced-for-theft-of-government-benefits-and-military-fraud

“Often all we can give veterans who have fought and shed blood for our nation is recognition through citations and awards. Lying about one’s service record for any reason is therefore reprehensible. But to fake service records to receive hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional benefits you’re not entitled to is about as low as it gets,” said U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin in a news release.

During his sentencing, the judge said that Hodgkinson’s conduct was “offensive” and that it “deprived veterans of money they need.”

The Court also ordered the defendant to pay restitution in the amount of $324,800.

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IVAW Right to Heal Tour 2012 Fighting for service members and veterans right to heal…

The Right to Heal Tour has already jumped of to a great start in Bellingham, WA, Portland, OR, and Atlanta, GA. Please come out to partisipate in our tour as we pass through your area. You can follow the tour at www.righttoheal.org

The right to heal tour will take Iraq Veterans Against the War’s Operation Recovery Campaign message that service members and veterans have a right to heal around the country. At each stop veterans will share their experiences in the military and lead a teach-in on the military’s mental health crises and related suicide epidemic. 

Large portions of our military members and veterans are suffering from Military Sexual Trauma (MST), Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and/or Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) yet their right to heal is violated on a mass scale. While traumatized service members have been forced to deploy against the best interest of their health and well being throughout the Global War on Terror now with the return of troops from Iraq the military is trying to skirt it’s responsibilities to care for service members. Military leaders and service providers are giving inadequate care, pushing improper diagnoses,  and forcing thousands of service members to leave the military with no care or benefits by pursuing punitive discharges for troops who really need medical and mental health care.

Fort Hood. Texas, the Army’s largest base has been hit especially hard with trauma. Regular and repeated deployments over the past 10 years have left soldiers there particularly vulnerable to traumatic injuries leading Fort Hood to have the highest suicide rate.

Veteran Organizers who have worked with active duty troops at Fort Hood as well as former Fort Hood soldiers will embark on the Right to Heal Tour, sharing the stories of the work happening at Fort Hood and our upcoming Summer Outreach Drive. Operation Recovery organizers will be out at Fort Hood all summer long meeting active duty troops, collecting testimonies, and building power to take on Fort Hood’s General Campbell and stop the violation of service members right to heal.

Public support is essential; through supporters bombarding General Campbell with thousands of emails and postcards we were able to win a “virtual town hall meeting” in January. Now we need to take this further to insure General Campbell not only hears what his soldiers need but also does something about it. Stand with us for soldiers’ right to heal.

All are encouraged to attend and ask questions.

 

Tour Dates

Bellingham, WA 4/21

Portland, OR 4/23/24

Atlanta, GA 4/25 

San Francisco, CA 4/26 

  • Time – Thursday April 26th 7PM
  • Location – RM 207 SF War Memorial Veterans’ Building, 401 Van Ness Ave. SF, CA

Oakland, CA 4/27 

  • Time – Friday April 27th 730PM
  • Location – Contact Siri Margerin <sirism@mac.com>

Los Angeles, CA 4/28 

  • Time – Saturday April 28 4-7PM
  • Location – 3917 Linden Ave., Long Beach, CA 90807

Santa Monica, CA 4/29 

  • Time – Sunday, April 29th 11-3PM
  • Location – Santa Monica Pier (Arlington West), CA

Tacoma, WA 5/1 

  • Time – Tuesday, May 1 6PM
  • Location – Wheelock Student Center Rotunda University of Pug Sound N 15th St, Tacoma, WA 98406

Olympia, WA 5/2 

  • Time – Wednesday, May 2 6PM
  • Location – The Evergreen State College, Lecture Hall 3, 2700 Evergreen Parkway Northwest, Olympia, WA 98505

Seattle, WA 5/3 

  • Time – Thursday, May 3 6PM
  • Location – Keystone Congregational Church, 5019 Keystone Place North, Seattle, WA 98103

Milwaukee, WI 5/4 

  • Time – Friday May 4th 7PM
  • Location – University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Union Rm. 240, 2200 E Kenwood BLVD, Milwaukee, WI

Asheville, NC 5/10 

  • Time –  Thursday, May 10 5PM
  • Location – Firestorm Cafe, 48 Commerce St., Asheville, NC

Chesterton, IN 5/11

  • Time – TBA
  • Location – TBA

Madison, WI 5/12

  • Time – Saturday, May 12th 6-730PM
  • Location – Rainbow Bookstore Cooperative at 426 West Gilman St. Madison, WI

Columbus, OH 5/14 

  • Time – Monday, May 14th 7PM
  • Location – Columbus Mennonite Church, 35 Oakland Park Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 

Chicago, IL 5/14 

  • Time – Monday May 14th 7-830PM
  • Location – Jane Addams Hull-House Museum 800 S. Halsted, Chicago IL

Chicago, IL 5/19 (NATO Counter-Summit for Peace and Economic Justice?)

  • Time – TBA
  • Location – TBA

Lawrence, KS TBA

  • Time – TBA
  • Location – TBA

Omaha, NE TBA

  • Time – TBA
  • Location – TBA

Please visit this original posting here…

http://www.ivaw.org/blog/right-heal-tour-2012-fighting-service-members-and-veterans-right-heal

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Veterans hospital, police work together to combat PTSD…By Peter Rosen

 SALT LAKE CITY — Police paid a visit to Charles Johnson, a 50-year-old man with outstanding arrest warrants. Johnson was drunk and despondent over the death of a war buddy. During the visit, one of the officers looked at an album of war photos and then drops it back down on the table.

Reacting instantly to the loud sound, Johnson, in handcuffs, dropped to the floor.

“They’re shooting at us! They’re shooting at us!” he yelled. “Gotta get cover! Gotta get cover!”

Johnson is actually another police officer, pretending to be a veteran with post traumatic stress disorderwho is experiencing a flashback.

The scenario was played out in an empty office space in downtown Salt Lake City as part of the Crisis Intervention Team Academy, a training program that helps prepare police to deal with people with mental health issues.

 The PTSD police drama is based on a sobering reality of life after war. According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, as many as one out of five soldiers deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan since September 11, is returning with PTSD.

Local VA psychologist Steve Allen guestimates the number of vets stateside with PTSD will keep increasing over the next three to five years. During the week, on the local VA campus, he hosts a discussion about PTSD for the CIT trainees.

In one corner of the conference room, a large man with a baseball hat looks around nervously. His name is Anthony Johnson, a veteran who served in Afghanistan and now has PTSD. Johnson does not want to be at the training.

“My whole body’s telling me not to do it,” he said.

 Johnson was deployed to Afghanistan in 2003 as a forward observer and was eventually assigned to Task Force 121, to hunt “high value targets,” like Osama bin Laden. After injuring his back in a helicopter crash, he received a medical discharge. A week after he got home, he realized something else was wrong and was diagnosed with PTSD, an anxiety disorder triggered by a traumatic event.

As a result, Johnson said he is hypervigilant. “When I get into my car, I check the reflection in the windows to make sure nobody’s behind me.”

He even has trouble in large crowds and has had a flashback in a grocery store. “Turn down the frozen food aisle and suddenly I’m in a village in Afghanistan.”

During the Charles Johnson scenario, officers do learn how to reorient the veteran experiencing a flashback, but probably the more useful lesson is simply how to communicate with a veteran exhibiting symptoms of PTSD.

“I think it’s important to be patient and just listen to them,” Anthony Johnson said.

During the CIT session at the VA, Vietnam veteran Rick Miller recounts the time he was pulled over for doing 110 miles per hour down the freeway and the patrolman, approaching Miller, took off his sunglasses.

 ”The guy took off his sunglasses,” Miller said. “I saw a human being trying to do his job. For me, to see a cop doing his job, seeing his eyes, really helped center me.”

“I think veterans can be put in a corner and come out fighting,” Miller said. “And if you don’t put ‘em in a corner, if you make ‘em more at ease, things are gonna go a little smoother.”

Last January, CIT-trained Cedar City police officer Chris Garrison responded to a man on a fence on an interstate overpass. The man said he was a veteran and he was planning to kill himself, apparently by jumping into traffic. Officer Garrison said he used his CIT skills by talking to the man, giving him time and space, and eventually giving him a ride to Valley View Medical Center. The man was then transported to the VA Medical Center in Salt Lake where he got help.

“I think it takes some compassion on the cop’s part,” Miller said.

http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=20243449

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VA mental health system sharply denounced at hearing…

The Department of Veterans Affairs’ mental-health care system suffers from a culture where managers give more importance to meeting meaningless performance goals than helping veterans, according to testimony before a Senate committee Wednesday.

The hearing before the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs followed the release of an inspector general’s report Monday that found the VA has greatly overstated how quickly it provides mental-health care for veterans.

“They need a culture change,” Linda Halliday, the VA’s assistant inspector general for audits and evaluations, told the committee. “They need to hold facility directors accountable for integrity of the data.”

VA facilities used practices that “greatly distorted” the actual waiting time for appointments, Halliday said, enabling the department to make claims that 95 percent of first-time patients seeking mental-health care received an evaluation within 14 days when, in reality, fewer than half were seen in that time.

Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), chairman of the committee, described the findings as showing a “rampant gaming of the system.”

Nicholas Tolentino, a former mental health administrative officer at the VA Medical Center in Manchester, N.H., told the committee that managers at the facility pressed the staff to develop ways to see as many veterans as possible while providing the most minimal mental-health services possible.

“The plan that was ultimately developed gamed the system so that the facility met performance requirements but utterly failed our veterans,” said Tolentino, a former Navy corpsman who went to work at the Manchester facility in 2009.

One manager directed the staff to focus only on the immediate reason for an appointment and not to ask the veteran about any other problems because “we don’t want to know or we’ll have to treat it,” according to Tolentino.

“VA is failing to meet its own mandates for timeliness and instead is finding ways to make the data look like they are complying,” said Murray, who requested the report.

“It’s mind-boggling,” said Sen. Scott Brown, (R-Mass.), who raised concerns that the long waits that veterans seeking
mental-health services face leaves them at heightened risk for suicide.

“We fully embrace that our performance measures need to be revised,” William Schoenhard, deputy under secretary for health for operations and management, told the committee.

The data was often based on available appointments, rather than the patient’s clinical needs, according to the inspector general’s office. If the patient was given an appointment two months later because of a lack of openings, the veteran would still be recorded as having been seen within two weeks of the desired date.

The office issued reports in 2005 and 2007 raising similar concerns that the VA was using faulty data to calculate wait times.

“This has been an issue for many years and hasn’t been resolved,” John Daigh Jr., assistant inspector general for health-care inspections, told the committee.

Under pressure to reduce waiting times for veterans, the VA announced last week that it plans to hire 1,600 mental-health workers, an increase of more than 9 percent.

But the VA already has about 1,500 vacancies in mental-health specialties, positions that have been hard to fill given better pay in the private sector. “How are you going to ensure that 1,600 positions . . . don’t become 1,600 vacancies?” Murray asked.

Schoenhard said the department is studying ways to better recruit and retain mental-health professionals.

“In the interim, you have soldiers who are killing themselves,” Brown said.

Tolentino, who said his complaints “largely fell on deaf ears,” resigned from the Manchester facility in December.

“Ultimately, I could not continue to work at a facility where the well-being of our patients seemed secondary to making the numbers look good,” he said.

 

 

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