Posts Tagged ‘Military’

Alone in death, vets receive brotherly salute

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Unclaimed remains of 3 ex-soldiers to be laid to rest at national cemetery
By DENNIS YUSKO, Staff writer
First published in print: Tuesday, June 8, 2010

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The cremated remains of World War II veteran Hans F. Hanson have sat unclaimed in the William J. Burke & Sons Funeral Home for 15 years. But on Friday, area veterans and motorcyclists will escort his ashes, and the onetime Army technician — who likely fell on hard times — will finally be laid to rest with full military honors.

Hanson is one of at least three U.S. soldiers from World War II who died years ago and will be honored Friday in a special ceremony at the Gerald B.H. Solomon Saratoga National Cemetery.
The service is coordinated by members of the Missing in America Project, who work with funeral directors to identify and bury the unclaimed remains of veterans. The Veterans Recovery Program in New York is run by Bill Schaaf, an Army veteran from Troy, and motorcyclists with the Patriot Guard Riders.

Tens of thousands of veterans nationwide have been cremated and their remains kept on shelves because no family members claimed them, Schaaf said. Some have stayed in New York funeral homes for more than 40 years.

“Some veterans die without families, some may be estranged” or remote from any kin, Schaaf said.

On Friday, motorcyclists will escort donated urns containing the remains of Hanson and at least two others from Saratoga County funeral homes to the cemetery. Hundreds are expected to witness the 10 a.m. ceremony, which will include gun salutes, the playing of taps and an honor guard procession. The urns will be placed in a granite wall and plaques will identify them.

Under state law, funeral home directors can bury unclaimed human remains in their own plots or store them in a designated room if family members don’t claim them within 120 days of a death. Hanson is one of 35 such people at the Burke funeral home, including about six veterans, funeral home Director Mark Phillips said.

“We always held onto remains hoping a long lost relative would come,” Phillips said.

Not much is known of the vets — Hanson, B. Kimber Rhoads of Putnam County and Warren Anger — who are to be buried Friday other than that they served in the Army in World War II and died in New York without known family.

Another World War II soldier from Saratoga County, Eugene Conmy, could join them, pending a check with a possible relative in Queensbury. Officials are checking records of another two deceased veterans in area funeral homes to determine if they qualify for a federally paid interment, Schaaf said.

Hanson was born on Jan. 30, 1921. He enlisted in the Army in the Bronx and died at the age of 74 in 1995, said Daniel Cassidy, Saratoga national cemetery director. Hanson had no known survivors at the time of his cremation, which was paid for by social services and performed by the Burke funeral home.

“I imagine he could have been indigent,” Phillips said.

Anger also was born in January 1921, but nothing else is known about him. Rhoads died in 1969 at the age of 59, Cassidy said. The former first lieutenant was originally from Chicago. His remains arrived at the Flynn Brothers Funeral Home in Schuylerville last year but were not cleared for burial until recently.

Conmy was born in 1918 and died in 2004. The program in New York started last year. It’s helped release the remains of nine New York veterans from funeral homes for burial in national cemeteries, including three in a ceremony last June in Saratoga. Placed in the wall at that time were the remains of Frank Schanel, Richard Veres and Herman Samotin. Last year’s ceremony attracted more than 200 people, Cassidy said. This year’s is being advertised around Lake George, where thousands of motorcyclists this week are gathered for Americade, so the crowds should be larger, Schaaf said.

Missouri – Donald Wylie Honors

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

After almost two and one half years of searching, Donald Gordon Wylie finally received the honors due him.
According to his Canadian Attestation Papers, he was in the US Army during the Spanish American War. When WW1 started, the US was not in the fight. Sgt Wylie left the US Army and joined the Canadian Expeditionary forces to be a part of the conflict.
When Sgt Wylie died in 1928, his cremains were left stored at the funeral home. No one knows why but it happens.
The MIAP in Missouri finally identified his military service with the aid of the Veterans Commission and his service was scheduled.
Linda picked Sgt Wylie up at the funeral home in Fulton, MO. He was escorted from there to the Jacksonville, MO Veterans Cemetery, approximately 80 miles away. The escort was assisted by several different police troops, each picking up the ride in different cities. We made better time than we thought so a 15 minute break was required so as not to arrive at the cemetery too early. When we arrived, PGR stood an avenue of flags. There were five different TV stations, one radio station and several newspaper reporters. The interest in Sgt Wylie was heartwarming. His military service, life and the fact that he sit on a shelf for 82 years was of tremendous interest to all that attended.
Before the ceremony, the cemetery provided a singer to perform the National Anthem. General Larry Kay, Executive Director of the Veterans Commission then presented Sgt Wylie with a WWI Service Medal, the last one in the state of Missouri. The medal was found in the National Guard archives. It was in a faded box, leaving the feeling that it had waited for Sgt Wyle for all of these years.
Sgt Wylie was laid to rest with full military honors. Rest in Peace.

Post-traumatic stress diagnosed using magnetism

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

brain3-nih
Jan. 21, 2010
Courtesy Institute of Physics
and World Science staff

The thick­et of anx­i­e­ty, re­cur­ring night­mares and related prob­lems that en­velops some war vet­er­ans and oth­er trau­ma sur­vivors has been di­ag­nosed us­ing a phys­i­cal test for the first time, re­search­ers say.

The find­ings are being called a major ad­vance in stu­dy­ing the condition—post-trau­matic stress dis­or­der (PTSD)—which in the past was de­tect­a­ble only through psy­cho­log­i­cal screen­ing.

U.S. war vet­er­ans were in­volved in clin­i­cal tri­als that sci­en­tists say ap­pear to have di­ag­nosed post-trau­matic stress dis­or­der us­ing mag­ne­toen­ceph­al­o­graphy, a non-in­vas­ive meas­ure­ment of mag­net­ic fields in the brain. (Image courtesy U.S. NIH)

This se­vere anx­i­e­ty dis­or­der, en­shrined in pop­ular cons­cious­ness through films such as the Ram­bo se­ries about a tor­m­ented Viet­nam veteran, of­ten stems from war but can re­sult from any trau­matic event. The dis­or­der can man­i­fest it­self in flash­backs, re­cur­ring night­mares, an­ger or hy­per­vi­gil­ance.

U.S. war vet­er­ans were in­volved in clin­i­cal tri­als that sci­en­tists say ap­pear to have di­ag­nosed the dis­or­der us­ing mag­ne­toen­ceph­al­o­graphy, a non-in­vas­ive mea­s­ure­ment of mag­net­ic fields in the brain.

Con­ven­tion­al brain scans had failed to de­tect the dis­or­der, said the re­search­ers, whose work ap­peared Jan. 20 in the Jour­nal of Neu­ral En­gi­neer­ing.

The re­search­ers from the Min­ne­ap­o­lis Vet­er­an Af­fairs Med­i­cal Cen­ter and the Univers­ity of Min­ne­so­ta, led by Apos­to­los P Geor­go­pou­los and Bri­an En­g­dahl, worked with the 74 vet­er­ans who had served in World War II, Vi­et­nam, Af­ghan­i­stan or Iraq, and had been di­ag­nosed with be­hav­iour­al symp­toms of PTSD. Al­so par­ti­ci­pat­ing in the study were a group of peo­ple with­out the dis­or­der.

With more than 90 percent ac­cu­ra­cy, the re­search­ers said, they were able to tell apart PTSD pa­tients from healthy sub­jects us­ing a “syn­chronous neu­ral in­ter­ac­tions test.” This in­volves an­a­lys­ing the mag­net­ic charges re­leased when popula­t­ions of brain cells con­nect or “cou­ple.”

The abil­ity to ob­jec­tively di­ag­nose PTSD is seen as a first step to­wards help­ing those af­flicted with the dis­or­der.

“The ex­cel­lent re­sults ob­tained of­fer ma­jor prom­ise for the use­ful­ness of the syn­chro­nous neu­ral in­ter­ac­tions test for dif­fer­en­tial di­ag­no­sis as well as for mon­i­tor­ing dis­ease pro­gres­sion and for eval­u­at­ing the ef­fects of psy­cho­log­i­cal and/or drug treat­ments,” the re­search­ers wrote.

This work fol­lows suc­cess in de­tecting oth­er brain dis­eases, such as Alzheimer’s and mul­ti­ple scle­ro­sis, us­ing the mag­net­ic tech­nique, sci­en­tists said. The meth­od was in­vented by Geor­go­pou­los and the lat­est re­search was funded by the U.S. De­part­ment of Vet­er­ans Af­fairs.

Soldier guilty of cruelty and maltreatment in Irag

Monday, January 18th, 2010

JoANNE VIVIANO
From Associated Press
January 18, 2010 4:38 PM EST

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A military panel in Kuwait convicted a U.S. soldier of being cruel and mistreating fellow soldiers, a case undertaken after an Army private from Ohio committed suicide in Iraq.

Staff Sgt. Enoch Chatman, of West Covina, Calif., was convicted Wednesday on two violations of the cruelty and maltreatment article of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, said Lt. Col. Kevin Olson, a military spokesman in Iraq.

Chatman was one of four soldiers accused of mistreating others in their platoon in Iraq through verbal abuse, physical punishment and ridicule of other soldiers.

The investigation was prompted by the August death of Pvt. Keiffer Wilhelm, who grew up in Willard in northwest Ohio.

Wilhelm, 19, was in Iraq with his new platoon for just 10 days before he killed himself. His family believes he was treated so badly that he took his own life, but the military has determined there was no direct evidence the four soldiers’ misconduct caused the death.

His father, Shane Wilhelm, attended the trial and said he was glad Chatman “got something” but is not completely satisfied with the outcome.

“We’re glad that he was found guilty because he was there for most of the occurrences that took place to our son,” he said. “He was in a position to prevent this from happening, and he didn’t.”

Wilhelm’s mother has said he called her twice from Iraq and told her he was being targeted in his new unit and forced to run for miles with rocks in his pockets that smashed against his knees. He also told his mother that he was being forced to exercise for hours and that his personal items were disappearing, she said.

Chatman was sentenced Thursday to three months’ confinement, a reduction in rank and a reprimand, Olson said. He had faced up to 10 years in prison.

Sgt. Jarrett Taylor of Edmond, Okla., was found guilty in November and was sentenced to confinement for six months, reduction in rank and forfeiture of two-thirds pay for six months, Olson said.

Staff Sgt. Bob Clements of Eastland, Texas, is scheduled to face trial Feb. 14. He faces charges of cruelty and maltreatment, making a false statement, impeding an investigation and reckless endangerment. If convicted of all counts, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

Charges were dropped against Spc. Daniel Weber of Frankenmuth, Mich., who resigned from the Army.

Shane Wilhelm said Army officials told him that other platoons have taken notice of the case and are taking steps to improve the way officers treat subordinates.

“Hopefully, all four branches of the service make some changes so this doesn’t happen again,” he said.

___

Associated Press Writer Matt Leingang contributed to this report.

women’s scars of war

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

Scars of War
Zen Hernandez, 12, proudly wears a “My Mommy Wears Combat Boots” shirt while posing with his mom

By Jessica Yadegaran
Contra Costa Times

When retired Army Staff Sgt. June Moss returned from Iraq, she had to explain to her children why she couldn’t hug them. Any embrace longer than two seconds made her skin feel like it was on fire.

“When I got back, my kids were really clingy,” Moss says. “They wanted affection. But, what do you say to a child?”

At night, sleep never came. Instead, Moss baked cupcakes until dawn. At playgrounds, surrounded by the noise and chaos of crowds, Moss felt like her chest was going to explode. Worse, she was afraid she’d hurt someone.

“I wasn’t the same person when I came home,” says Moss, who returned from Iraq in August 2003 and now lives in East Palo Alto. “I was different. I was cold.”

When imagining a struggling war veteran, it’s likely few people picture a young woman such as Moss, who was eventually diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. But women make up 15 percent of active-duty military members, and the Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that by the end of 2020, women will represent 10 percent of the nation’s veteran population.

And though military and congressional policy says women can’t participate in direct ground combat, women carry guns, and use them. They drive Humvees hit by improvised explosive devices. They interrogate, and witness bloodshed. But for women, there is a major difference. They come home to a society that for the most part doesn’t understand — or accept — that they’re serving in the line of fire.

As a result, the feelings of isolation can be even more overwhelming, especially since a woman is often one of few in her unit, says Natara Garovoy, program director of the Women’s Prevention, Outreach and Education Center for the VA Palo Alto Health Care System.

Fear of assault

Complicating matters, some female soldiers live in fear of being attacked by one of their own. In 2008, the VA reported that one in five women screened for military sexual trauma had been sexually harassed or assaulted by a fellow soldier.

Moss did little alone, whether it was burning confidential papers or taking out the trash. But she still feared for her safety, especially at night. “You already feared for your life,” Moss says, “but the thought of a soldier attacking another soldier?”

The mother of two spent eight months in 2003 as a light-wheel vehicle mechanic with the Third Infantry Division. As she drove through bustling marketplaces, often under aerial or ground fire, she clutched the steering wheel, scanning for suicide bombers. To get through those drives, she prayed.

“I was calling to God really heavily,” Moss says. “I was scared for my life every day, not knowing if I was going to come home to my children and what loss they would have to bear. So I just had to have my wits about me and believe in my training.”

Back at the base, Moss struggled with her identity. She was a soldier, wife to a soldier (her now ex-husband, who was also in the Army), her family’s primary caregiver and a mechanic. Still, she tried to blend in, especially since she was the only woman in her unit. She cut her hair short. She wore boxer shorts and big T-shirts to hide her figure. She tried to be overly tough and stand up for herself, she says, particularly when male soldiers made off-color remarks or unwanted gestures.

“You just have to know when to say, ‘Stop. I don’t appreciate that,’ ” Moss says.

Reconciling identity is among the biggest issues Tia Christopher sees in her work with female veterans. As the women veterans coordinator for Swords to Plowshares’ Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans Project, Christopher helps homeless and low-income women obtain medical care, housing and job training upon returning from war.

“So many of my female clients who were in Iraq put up with things, even injuries, because they don’t want to be that girl (who complains),” she says. “They soldier on and silently bear that burden. But you can lose a certain amount of your femininity.”

On the upside, the military has recognized and is beginning to rectify the lack of postwar support for women. Historically, female veterans have had a hard time gaining access to services because facilities aren’t welcoming or because they didn’t know the VA served them, says Garovoy, a clinical psychologist. Due to the increase of women in the military — 20 percent of new recruits are female — programs tailored for women are increasing. Still, there are barriers. Even diagnosing post-traumatic stress disorder is a major issue.

“Because women serving in Iraq are often performing duties not in their job title, and because of the nature of the warfare, they are coming back with symptoms of the disorder and having to deal with the burden of proof,” Christopher says.

Returning to the states, Moss, then 32, was at first misdiagnosed. Had she been a man, the diagnosis might have been swifter, Moss says.

“They probably thought, ‘Oh you’re a woman. You must have depression,’ ” she says.

Many don’t seek help

Treatment is equally challenging. “If you’re the only woman in a support group, you might not feel comfortable and are less likely to go back,” Christopher says. At groups for women dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder, the focus is often on sexual trauma, which further alienates those who are there for combat-related traumas, Christopher adds.

Sgt. Myrna Hernandez, of Concord, wasn’t diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder for years. She didn’t seek help because she didn’t want to admit something was wrong. When Hernandez, who served as maintenance support for Pittsburg’s 870th Military Police Company, returned from Iraq in 2004, her mood was sour. She was anti-social, she says, and turned to drinking. On good nights, she got three hours of sleep.

She was also nervous about reuniting with her 6-year-old son, Zen. Hernandez had two opportunities to come home — including vacation time while she was in Iraq — but she chose to stay away.

“It was pretty rough,” recalls Hernandez, who was 26 at the time and one of six women in her company. “But I thought it would be too difficult for him to see me and have to say goodbye again.”

Meanwhile, at the base, Hernandez was dealing with more difficulties. She was one of three women who accused their commanding captain, Leo Merck, of peering beneath a shower wall and snapping nude photographs of them at Abu Ghraib. In a deal to avoid a court-martial, Merck resigned from the National Guard in November 2003. In May 2004, Hernandez told the Bay Area News Group that she saw Merck taking the photos.

Still, she’s not bitter.

“For most people, (the experience) would turn them against the military,” says Hernandez, who did prisoner processing and other duties similar to military police. “But I can’t let the actions of a few people ultimately change how I feel about my service.”

Today, Hernandez works as a technician in the Army Reserves. She attends support groups at the Concord Vet Center but is usually the only woman.

As President Barack Obama prepares to send more troops to Afghanistan, Hernandez braces herself for the possibility of another deployment.

“If I’m told I have to go, I will,” she says. “At the same time, it’s pretty scary. I guess knowing you have a job to do kind of overshadows that.”

Ultimately, she is proud of the contribution she and all women are making in the military. “We don’t do infantry jobs, but I think we’ve come a long way since the image of the nurse in heels,” she says.

Moss feels similar pride. Last month, after 12 years of service, she permanently retired from the military, and she works as an assistant in chaplain services for the VA Palo Alto Health Care System. She still struggles with her symptoms, but because she knows her triggers, she avoids them.

At restaurants, she sits in a corner booth that allows her an unobstructed view, should there be a sudden or loud noise. When she picks up her children up at school, she calls the school secretary to send them outside. She can’t wait in the busy parking lot with the other parents.

In the end, though, Moss measures her progress by the duration of her embraces. When her children need a hug, they can now linger in her arms for a full 10 seconds.

Women represent 15 percent of active-duty military members and 17.5 percent of National Guard and Reserves Forces.

20 percent of new military recruits are women. 38 percent of female troops are mothers.

California has 167,000 female veterans, the highest number of any state.

Women represent 220,000 of the 1.8 million troops serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom.

The average age of a female veteran is 48; average male veteran is 61.

The VA estimates that the percentage of female veterans it serves will double by the end of 2010.

Women have been volunteering in the military since the American Revolution, but it wasn”t until the 1980 census that they were asked if they had served in the U.S. Armed Forces; 1.2 million answered that they had.

“Lioness”: This 2008 documentary by Meg McLagan and Dara Summers makes public the stories of female Army support soldiers who were part of the first program in American history to send women into direct ground combat, despite congressional and military law that states women are not allowed to do so. Without the same training as their male counterparts, these young women fought in some of the bloodiest counterinsurgency battles alongside Marine combat units in Iraq and returned home with the same physical and psychological issues. http://lionessthefilm.com.

“Women of the Military”: Santa Clara-based W.J. Parolini”s recent documentary following Kate Hoit, a young U.S. Army specialist who returns home from Iraq and attempts to enlighten and educate Americans about the roles of women in the military. www.womenofthemilitary.com.

“Love My Rifle More Than You “” Young and Female in the U.S. Army” (W.W. Norton, 2005): Kayla Williams” memoir about serving as a sergeant in a military intelligence company and understanding her identity in “an ocean of testosterone.” Williams went to Iraq in 2003 and participated in signal intelligence and direction finding of enemy communication in Baghdad. She also accompanied infantry troops on missions, which isn”t common for a female soldier.

“” Jessica Yadegaran

Suicide Claims more US military lives than Afghan war!

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

By James Cogan
6 January 2010
American military personnel are continuing to take their own lives in unprecedented numbers, as the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq wars drag on. By late November, at least 334 members of the armed forces had committed suicide in 2009, more than the 319 who were killed in Afghanistan or the 150 who died in Iraq. While a final figure is not available, the toll of military suicides last year was the worst since records began to be kept in 1980.

The Army, National Guard and Army Reserve lost at least 211 personnel to suicide. More than half of those who took their lives had served in either Iraq or Afghanistan. The Army suicide rate of 20.2 per 100,000 personnel is higher than that registered among males aged 19 to 29, the gender age bracket with the highest rate among the general population. Before 2001, the Army rarely suffered 10 suicides per 100,000 soldiers.

The Navy lost at least 47 active duty personnel in 2009, the Air Force 34 and the Marine Corp, which has been flung into some of the bloodiest fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, 42. The Marine suicide rate has soared since 2001 from 12 to at least 19.5 per 100,000.

For every death, at least five members of the armed forces were hospitalised for attempting to take their life. According to the Navy Times, 2 percent of Army; 2.3 percent of Marines and 3 percent of Navy respondents to the military’s own survey of 28,536 members from all branches reported they had attempted suicide at some point. The “Defense Survey of Health-Related Behaviors” also found “dangerous levels” of alcohol abuse and the illicit use of drugs such as pain killers by 12 percent of personnel.

The trigger for a suicide attempt varied from case to case: relationship breakdowns, financial problems, substance abuse, tensions with other members of their unit, a traumatic event. What is clear, however, is that military service has seriously impacted on the physical and mental health of the victims.

The suicide figures for serving personnel are only one indication. The most alarming statistics are those on mental illness related to the hundreds of thousands of veterans of the two wars who have left the military and sought to reintegrate into civilian life.

While there is no exact figure, studies estimate that as many as 20 to 30 percent of veterans suffer some degree of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), hindering their ability to hold down jobs, maintain relationships, overcome substance abuse and, in some cases, maintain their will to live. The worsening economic conditions facing working people in the US are aggravating the difficulties.

A survey last year found that at least 15 percent of former soldiers in the 20 to 24 age bracket were unemployed. An article by the Florida Today site on January 3 reported that 450 of the 800 homeless in Brevard County were Iraq or Afghanistan veterans. Shelters in California are reporting twice as many requests for assistance from new veterans compared with 2007. At the current rate, they will eventually outnumber the more than 100,000 homeless Vietnam vets.

A study of veterans with PTSD published last August by the Journal of Traumatic Stress found that 47 percent had had suicidal thoughts before seeking treatment and 3 percent had attempted to kill themselves. The US Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) has been compelled to substantially upgrade its services. Since its 24-hour, seven-days a week suicide hotline was belatedly established in July 2007, it has counselled over 185,000 veterans or their families and claims to have prevented at least 5,000 suicides. It now has 400 counselors dedicated to suicide prevention though even the Pentagon admits far more are needed.

People who served in either Iraq or Afghanistan make up a growing proportion of the 6,400 veterans that VA estimates take their own lives each year. A 2007 CBS study put the rate among male veterans aged 20 to 24 at four times the national average—more than 40 per 100,000 per year.

The suicide estimates do not include the hundreds of young veterans who die each year in auto accidents, many of which are linked with excessive speed or driving under the influence and kill or injure others as well. In 2008, veterans who served in Iraq or Afghanistan were 75 percent more likely to die in an auto accident than non-veterans and 148 percent more likely to die in a motorcycle crash. Suicide statistics also do not count deaths that are classified as accidental drug-related overdoses.

American society will continue to pay for the harm caused by the Iraq and Afghan wars for decades to come. There is a growing medical consensus that a significant factor in PTSD is actual physical damage to the brain. Developments in vehicle and body armour, combined with advances in medical treatment, have enabled thousands of soldiers to survive bomb blasts that might have taken their lives in earlier conflicts. They survive with trauma to their brain however.

The Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury estimated in early 2009 that between 45,000 to 90,000 veterans of the two wars had been left with “severe and lasting symptoms” of brain injury. Overall, the Defense Department estimates that as many as 20 percent of veterans had suffered some degree of brain injury due to bomb blasts while in Iraq or Afghanistan—a staggering 360,000 men and women.

Handling of Unclaimed Remains in MA

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

DEVAL L. PATRICK
Governor
TIMOTHY P. MURRAY
Lieutenant Governor
December 02, 2009 – For immediate release:
Patrick-Murray Administration Announces Agreement on Handling of Unclaimed Remains of Veterans
BOSTON — The Patrick-Murray Administration today announced that the Massachusetts Department of Veterans’ Services (DVS) has entered into an agreement with the Massachusetts Funeral Directors Association (MFDA) and the Missing in America Project (MIAP) to inter unclaimed cremated remains of eligible veterans, their spouses and dependents. Under the agreement, unclaimed cremated remains that have been identified as an eligible veteran or an eligible family member of a veteran will be interred at one of the two Massachusetts Veterans’ Memorial Cemeteries.
“Every man and woman who has worn the uniform of our armed services deserves the privilege to receive proper military funeral honors,” said Governor Deval Patrick. “Working together, the Massachusetts Department of Veterans’ Services, Massachusetts Funeral Directors Association, and the Missing in America Project will ensure that no Massachusetts veteran is left behind and that each of them will receive the distinct honors they have earned.”
Under current Massachusetts Law, funeral home directors seeking to inter the unclaimed remains of a veteran are required to notify the Massachusetts Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery, to schedule an interment. However, in the past, identification of veteran status and transportation issues have, in certain cases, made this process difficult. Under today’s agreement, DVS, MFDA and MIAP will coordinate resources to ensure that these veterans are provided a proper military internment.
“Massachusetts remains committed to its tradition of providing and caring for our Veterans. We have worked hard to assure that Veterans are properly honored and cared for, and with this collaboration we will continue this tradition offering them respect, honor, and perpetual care,” said Lieutenant Governor Tim Murray, Chair of the Governor’s Advisory Council on Veterans’ Services.
“Massachusetts has a long and proud history of honoring veterans both living and deceased. The Massachusetts Veterans’ Memorial Cemeteries, which are located in Agawam and Winchendon, offer all Massachusetts veterans a solemn, dignified and appropriate place of rest; and also provides a setting of honor and dignity befitting their service to our nation,” said Secretary of Veterans’ Services Tom Kelley. “The Department is pleased to enter into this unique agreement, which ensures that unclaimed cremated remains of veterans are interred with full military honors and that the veterans’ spouse and eligible dependents also receive burial rights in one of these locations.”
“Veterans in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and across the country have sacrificed and served our country with honor. This outstanding agreement will ensure our commitment to honor theses heroes and their families. Our veterans deserve to rest in peace in a place fitting to their valor and dignity,” said Representative Harold P. Naughton, Jr., Chairman of the Joint Committee on Veterans’ and Federal Affairs.
“This is a valuable continuation of Massachusetts’ tradition of honoring the service of veterans,” said Senator Kenneth Donnelly, Chairman of the Joint Committee on Veterans’ and Federal Affairs. “I thank the Department of Veterans Services, the Massachusetts Funeral Directors Association, and the Missing in America Project for making this a priority, so that we can extend one final dignity to our brave men and women.”
The Missing in America Project is a registered non-profit organization whose goal is to locate, identify and inter the unclaimed cremated remains of American veterans through the joint efforts of private, state and federal organizations. The MIAP maintains a national network of individuals who work with local Funeral Homes, State, and National Agencies to ensure that, from now on, the cremated remains of any unclaimed veteran will be identified, claimed and interred in a timely manner. Under this agreement, MIAP will help assist in the research and transportation of remains to Massachusetts Veterans’ Memorial Cemeteries.
“The Missing in America Project proudly enters into an agreement with the Massachusetts Funeral Directors and the Department Of Veterans Services to insure the proper internment of the remains of our unclaimed veterans, their spouses, and eligible children in our state and national cemeteries,” said Don MacNeill, MIAP’s State Operations Coordinator for Massachusetts and New England. “Coming from Native American decent, I believe that no soul is at peace till it is at rest. Together I believe we can accomplish this great task.”
The MFDA is the recognized voice and resource for information, expertise and opinion on issues affecting the funeral service profession. “We believe that by working in conjunction with the Massachusetts Department of Veterans’ Services and the Missing in America Project we have successfully developed a system to provide our members with a dignified and suitable way to allow for the unclaimed cremated remains of veterans’ and their family members to be laid to rest, said Margaret Nolan, Executive Director of the MFDA. “Our primary concern is always the respectful and dignified treatment of all those we serve both living and dead.”
# # #

Former Police Officer sentenced for Falsely claiming Silver Star Military Decoration

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

SACRAMENTO, CA-United States Attorney Benjamin B. Wagner announced today that ERIC GENE PIOTROWSKI, 41, of Elk Grove, was sentenced this morning by United States Magistrate Judge Gregory G. Hollows to 12 months probation and 200 hours of community service for falsely claiming that he was awarded a Silver Star Military decoration during Operation Desert Storm.

(Media-Newswire.com) – SACRAMENTO, CA—United States Attorney Benjamin B. Wagner announced today that ERIC GENE PIOTROWSKI, 41, of Elk Grove, was sentenced this morning by United States Magistrate Judge Gregory G. Hollows to 12 months probation and 200 hours of community service for falsely claiming that he was awarded a Silver Star Military decoration during Operation Desert Storm. He pleaded guilty on September 15, 2009. Under the Stolen Valor Act, which was enacted in late 2006, it is a misdemeanor offense to wear military medals that were not in fact awarded, or to falsely claim to have been awarded such medals.

This case was investigated by the FBI and the California Department of Veterans Affairs.

According to Assistant United States Attorney Michelle Rodriguez, who prosecuted the case, PIOTROWSKI falsely claimed that he was awarded a Silver Star for gallantry and intrepidity in action against hostile forces in Operation Desert Storm. The Silver Star is the third highest decoration awarded by the U.S. Military. He falsely claimed that in 1991 during an Iraqi counterattack in Operation Desert Storm “he exposed himself to direct enemy fire while providing suppressive fires to cover an antitank team, which was maneuvering to destroy an Iraqi T-62 tank.”

In fact, PIOTROWSKI did not see military action in Operation Desert Storm, and he purchased the Silver Star Citation and medal via the Internet. Under false pretenses, on December 1, 2007, PIOTROWSKI was formally recognized for the Silver Star by the Undersecretary for the California Department of Veteran Affairs. During the time PIOTROWSKI made his false claim of valor, he was employed by the California Exposition Center Police Department.

In imposing the 200-hour community service to be performed at a Veteran’s Hospital or similar facility for United States Veterans, Judge Hollows stated that such service was an opportunity for PIOTROWSKI to learn from his mistakes. He was ordered to abdicate his peace officer’s certification from the state of California and is under a lifetime prohibition from law enforcement employment for lack of good moral character.

Abandoned Urns

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Updated: 12/01/2009 09:20 pm

TAMPA – Staff Sgt. Delbert E. Hahn survived the invasion of Normandy. He was a two-time Purple Heart recipient, including one for his actions in the days immediately following D-Day.

But when it came to a final resting place, the war hero wasn’t treated with honor or respect.

Hahn’s cremated remains – along with those of his wife and a third person – were found in a pile of trash dumped behind a vacant college on Busch Boulevard.

“I kind of decided that he shouldn’t be out there in the trash,” said Mike Colt, 19, who found the three urns. “Really nobody should. For somebody to do that to a World War II vet is kind of ridiculous.”

Hahn was a five-time Bronze Star recipient, including one for valor in the Normandy invasion, police say.

It wasn’t immediately clear when he died, although Colt said he believes paperwork found along with the urns indicated Hahn retired in the 1960s and died in the early 1980s.

A newspaper clip found in the trash says Hahn received a Bronze Star and Purple Heart for “exemplary conduct in ground combat” while serving in the 26th Infantry Regiment in Europe in 1944, Tampa police spokeswoman Andrea Davis said.

A military spokeswoman said it would take at least a week to find any service records for Delbert Hahn.

On Saturday, Colt and his girlfriend, Carol Sturgell, were looking through dumped items when they found details on Hahn’s military retirement and medals inside a green folder bearing a military stamp.

When it got dark, they left with the folder and tried researching Hahn on the Internet – with no success. Colt and his girlfriend returned the next day.

“We moved this couch, and out from this couch fell this paint-can looking container, and it said, ‘temporary container,’” Colt said. “There was a note to the bottom, and it had a death certificate. It said Barbara K. Hahn on it.”

They then found a big bronze container that held Delbert Hahn’s remains.

“I don’t know why anybody would throw this out,” Colt said. “It’s kind of mind-blowing that anybody would treat anybody like that.”

Hahn’s wife, Barbara, died Aug. 1, 2003. She was cremated Aug. 12, 2003, at Southeastern Crematories in Clearwater. A Southeastern funeral director said Tuesday that Barbara Hahn’s paperwork wasn’t immediately available.

The urns and paperwork were found behind Remington College, 2410 E. Busch Blvd., an area sometimes used for illegal dumping. Bills found there show the Hahns had lived in Zephyrhills.

Nicki Sheran and her husband, Alan, of Tampa, befriended Barbara Hahn for 25 years. They regularly played canasta, had dinner, shared stories and admired Barbara Hahn’s oil paintings. They affectionately called her Betty, Nicki Sheran said.

When Barbara Hahn died, she willed the Sherans her mobile home in Zephyrhills. Property records on file with the Pasco County Property Appraiser’s office show the Sherans took ownership of the property for $10 from the Barbara Hahn Revocable Trust in 2004.

The Sherans lived there until 2008. They had mortgaged the property, but the economy got tight and they couldn’t make the payments and the house was foreclosed on, Nicki Sheran said.

She said they got some items out of the home but weren’t able to get all of it before they lost ownership of the mobile home. They left behind dishes and beds that belonged to them and the urns, an American flag, photos and oil paintings that belonged to the Hahns, Nicki Sheran said.

She said the third urn contains the remains of Barbara Hahn’s mother, Barbara Stahlhofen.

“I would rather have it returned to us rather than just have it trashed out there in the middle of a field,” Nicki Sheran said.

Police say a Department of Veterans Affairs liaison determined the Hahns had no next of kin. VA officials said they were arranging with a Tampa funeral home to have the remains transported to Florida National Cemetery in Bushnell.

Reporter Josh Poltilove can be reached at (813) 259-7691.

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Missing in America Project Honors 13 veterans – Boise, ID

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

BOISE — Thirteen deceased veterans whose cremated remains were missing or abandoned in a funeral home in north Idaho were given a proper military service in Boise.

The ceremony was held Friday at the Idaho State Veterans Cemetery. Each veteran was interred by a member of their branch of service.

The ceremony was part of a movement that started in Idaho called the Missing in America Project.

The Idaho Division of Veterans Services says all veterans deserve this honor.

“It’s important we don’t forget our soldiers, airmen, seamen and marines, and that we bring them home to a place of dignity and respect among their peers and other veterans in our veterans cemetery,” said David Brasuell, the administrator for the Idaho Division of Veterans Services.

Since the Missing in America Project began in 2005, 57 veterans have been given a military burial at the Idaho State Veterans Cemetery.
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