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SOLDIER RECOUNTS ABUSE AT WALTER REED --
Man who pleaded guilty to molesting Iraq
veteran
had conviction for fondling police officer.

Mario Echeverri
Story here...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/06/AR
2007040601991.html?hpid=topnews
Story below:
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Soldier Recounts Abuse at Walter Reed
Man Who Pleaded Guilty to Molesting Iraq
Veteran Had Conviction for Fondling Police Officer
By Steve Vogel
Washington Post Staff Writer
Two months before Mario Alberto Echeverri administered a sleep disorder
test to an Army corporal at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the medical
technician had been arrested for fondling the groin of a U.S. Park
Police officer.
Seventeen months before, Echeverri had been observed touching a Walter
Reed patient inappropriately and was warned against such behavior. Two
years before, he had been accused of improperly touching a patient at a
private sleep center in Gaithersburg.
Cpl. Matthew Burgess knew none of this when he went to the Army hospital
the evening of April 21, 2004. Echeverri gave the soldier sleep
medication, asked him strip to his shorts, connected him by wire to
monitoring equipment and had him lie down. The test was part of a study
of whether Burgess's headaches, fatigue and diarrhea were connected to
the anthrax vaccine he received when he was deployed to Iraq in 2003.
While the machine monitored Burgess, a surveillance camera captured
Echeverri fondling the drugged soldier while he was helpless to respond,
court records reflect. Tapes show the technician engaging in similar
conduct with two other male patients, one an active-duty soldier and the
other a 16-year-old boy, according to records and interviews.
Echeverri, who worked for a private contractor hired by Walter Reed,
pleaded guilty in 2005 to second-degree sexual abuse of Burgess, court
records indicate. He was not charged in the other two cases as part of
his plea agreement, said a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in
Washington.
For Burgess, 34, his experience at Walter Reed is an unforgivable
betrayal that points to a failure by the Army to take care of soldiers
returning from Iraq.
"I had already lost my health because of the anthrax vaccine, and this
on top of it," said Burgess, whose illness was ultimately determined by
the Army to have been caused by the vaccine, medical records show.
"The Army always tells you all the way from basic training that we're a
family, and if you do the right thing, we'll take care of you," Burgess
said. "You believe that. You want to believe that, but then you find out
they don't."
Walter Reed officials said they were unaware of Echeverri's arrest by
U.S. Park Police or the allegations in Montgomery County. Once they
discovered he had abused patients, Walter Reed removed him from his job
and reported him to authorities.
"We reported everything very honestly as we knew it at the time," said
Col. David Kristo, then-commander of the sleep center.
The Washington Post does not typically name victims of sexual abuse, but
Burgess said he wanted his story told publicly because he thinks it
demonstrates the Army's neglect of Iraq war veterans and raises
questions about Walter Reed's oversight of contractors.
Burgess and his wife, Robyn, said his experience should be considered as
Congress, the Army and various commissions explore how to fix the
system. "We want to expose the way our heroes are treated and help our
future veterans," Robyn Burgess said.
The Burgesses say they are further outraged by court records showing
that Echeverri had been previously accused of similar behavior. "Just
when we think we couldn't be angrier at the Army, we are now at a new,
all-time level," Robyn Burgess said. "We are shocked at how this was
mishandled way back to 2002, when he was accused the first time."
Echeverri, 53, who lived in Columbia at the time of the April 2004
incident and now lives in the District, was accused of touching a
patient inappropriately in February 2002 during a sleep study at the
Gaithersburg facility of Sleep Services of America, according to a
report in his criminal file.
A male patient who said he was touched inappropriately at least twice
during the overnight study reported the incident to Montgomery police,
and Echeverri was fired by the company, court papers reflect. Police
investigated but did not find sufficient evidence to charge him, a
police spokeswoman said.
While working on a sleep study at Walter Reed in November 2002,
Echeverri was seen passing a leg wire through a patient's shorts to the
chest, officials say. Echeverri was warned that such conduct was
inappropriate and that he would be fired if he did it again. Kristo said
Echeverri was watched more closely after the episode, but there were no
further incidents until Burgess was abused in April 2004.
Echeverri was arrested by U.S. Park Police on Feb. 13, 2004, and later
convicted of disorderly conduct for fondling the genitals of a law
enforcement officer, according to court papers.
"I can't believe the Army doesn't do a better job of researching its
employees and contractors," Matthew Burgess said.
When Burgess was abused, Echeverri was employed by Dale M. Carafa, a
medical industry contractor. Carafa, of Sterling, said she had no
comment. The sleep center no longer uses Carafa's service, Kristo said.
Walter Reed contractors are required to perform background checks and
urinalysis for all new hires, but officials could not say whether that
policy was in effect in 2002, when Echeverri began working at Walter
Reed. "The case certainly indicates the need for a background check,"
Kristo said.
Burgess joined the Georgia Army National Guard after the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
During the build-up to the war in Iraq, his unit, the 190th Military
Police Company, was called up. Burgess fell ill immediately upon
arriving in the theater in May 2003.
He was evacuated home in June 2003, but Army doctors in Georgia were
unable to diagnose his illness. After researching her husband's
symptoms, Robyn Burgess said she pressed the doctors to consider the
anthrax vaccine as a possible cause.
Burgess was sent to Walter Reed in April 2004 for evaluation at the
hospital's National Vaccine Healthcare Center and was asked to take a
sleep test.
Burgess reported to the sleep disorder center about 7 p.m. He said he
found Echeverri's behavior unsettling. "I thought maybe he was
super-friendly. I tried to give him the benefit of the doubt."
Burgess said the Ambien he was given left him extremely groggy and
fading in and out of consciousness. But he was aware that Echeverri was
fondling him. "I remember at least twice his hands being in places they
didn't need to be," Burgess said. "The last time, I wanted to say
something, to physically react, but I wasn't able to."
The surveillance film shows Echeverri repeatedly touching Burgess's
genitals, at one point for 25 seconds, according to court papers.
Burgess called his wife after the test and told her that he suspected he
had been molested. She urged him to report it.
The next day, Burgess reported the incident to a nurse, and they took
the matter to Kristo, the sleep center commander.
After reviewing the tape, Kristo said, he met with Carafa and Echeverri,
and Echeverri denied any inappropriate touching, saying that the contact
was accidental.
Kristo fired Echeverri and reported the incident for criminal
investigation. "There was a very big concern," Kristo said. "We weren't
going to leave someone like that seeing patients."
Echeverri plead guilty and in June 2005 was sentenced to 75 days in jail
with two years' supervised probation. He is listed by District police as
a sexual offender. He could not be located for comment, and the public
defender who represented him did not return phone calls.
Burgess has been retired from service, but he said the Army has told him
that he risks losing his disability pay unless he reports for further
medical evaluation.
"I never thought I would be treated like this as an Iraq veteran, and
they wonder why I really fear going back to be treated again," he said.
Staff news researchers Meg Smith and Rena Kirsch contributed to this
report.
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Larry Scott --