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COMING HOME: SOLDIERS AND DRUGS -- Special five-part
investigative series by Brian Ross of ABC News.

This is a great five-part series from ABC News.
You can view the videos at the link below.
Complete listing of stories here...
http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/2020/
Text of part one is below:
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-------------------------
They were prepared for war. They were prepared to
die for their country. But Fort Carson soldiers say they weren't prepared
to come home and fight a different battle -- addiction to illegal drugs.
Many of this country's bravest men and women who volunteered to defend
America in a time of war have come home wounded -- physically and mentally
-- and are turning to illicit drugs as they adjust to normal life,
according to soldiers, health experts and advocates.
"Lots of soldiers coming back from Iraq have been using drugs," said Spc.
William Swenson, who was deployed to Iraq from Fort Carson. "Right when we
got back, there were people using cocaine in the barracks; there were
people smoking marijuana at strip clubs; one guy started shooting up," he
said.
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Fort Carson, just outside Colorado Springs, is
home to 17,500 active duty personnel. Four thousand eight hundred service
members are currently deployed in the "sand box," as soldiers call Iraq
and Afghanistan.
ABC News spoke to more than a dozen soldiers who described widespread
abuse of illegal drugs at Fort Carson by service members back from the
war.
Spc. Alan Hartmann was a gunner on a Chinook helicopter flying missions
from Kuwait into Iraq in 2003. He described the high of flying and the
feeling that "nothing can touch you" as well as the terror of being shot
at.
After sustaining a neck injury in Iraq, Hartmann returned to Fort Carson.
Having regularly ferried the bodies of American soldiers killed in combat
-- with the helicopter exhaust blowing warm air and the smell of death
through the craft -- Hartmann said he had trouble sleeping. The nightmares
were too bad, he said.
To help Hartmann deal with his physical and emotional pain, Army doctors
prescribed painkillers and anti-depressants -- two typewritten pages'
worth since he's been back. But Hartmann said he didn't like how the drugs
made him feel, and instead he turned to self-medication with
methamphetamines.
"The nightmares were killing me from being over there. The pain was so bad
I didn't want to deal with it. Well, amphetamines is a real quick way to
get rid of it," Hartmann said. "I was snorting it, and I was smoking it,
and then I was hot railing it, and then I got to the point where I was
actually injecting it in my arms," said Hartmann, who eventually checked
himself into rehab and is now clean.
"[Soldiers are] coming back, drinking, fighting, putting $1,000 tabs down
at a bar and drinking four to five hours, getting to the point where you
don't give a crap about anything anymore [or] anybody, don't care if you
live or die&the point where you do drugs," Hartmann said. "[Drugs] have
been in Fort Carson like crazy."
Another former Fort Carson soldier, Michael Bailey, said he was discharged
from the Army after testing positive for cocaine.
Bailey served two tours, one in Iraq and another in Kuwait. The stress of
his deployment combined with marital problems overwhelmed Bailey who said
he twice tried to commit suicide.
"The dose [of anti-depressants] I was on wasn't working, so I was trying
an extra one and that wasn't working," Bailey said. "So I started
drinking, and at one point I did cocaine."
Baily said he failed a drug test the very next day. Even though he was in
the process of receiving mental health counseling from the Army, Bailey
said he was discharged over his drug use. At the time of his interview
with ABC News, Bailey was unemployed and still grappling with feelings of
depression and anxiety.
And then there's combat engineer William Swenson who was injured on what
was to be his final mission in Iraq when his vehicle drove over a
200-pound improvised explosive device. The blast injured Swenson's spine,
and he developed syringomyelia -- a condition in which cysts form on the
spinal cord.
Swenson said a laundry list of prescribed painkillers was ineffective so
he turned to marijuana, the only substance that he said would numb his
physical and emotional pain. Swenson failed a drug test after testing
positive for marijuana as well as cocaine.
"I think a lot of people using drugs, soldiers mainly, coming back from
Iraq, it's just to get an escape from&all those horrible things that came
into their mind when they were over there," Swenson said.
Army Denies Growing Drug Abuse Problem
Fort Carson's leadership declined to discuss substance abuse issues with
ABC News despite numerous interview requests. Fort Carson also said it
could not comment on the individual cases of the soldiers we interviewed,
citing privacy concerns.
In interviews with ABC News at the Pentagon, however, the U.S. Army
strongly denied there was an increase in drug abuse among soldiers
deployed to Iraq.
According to Dr. Ian McFarling, acting director of the Army Center for
Substance Abuse Programs, less than one half of one percent of soldiers in
Iraq have tested positive for illegal drugs.
"That's a testament to the kind of leadership we have is that they believe
that that's not the place that they should be doing drugs," said Dr.
McFarling.
But Dr. McFarling said that once soldiers return from Iraq, the positive
rate for drug tests doubles to more than one percent. In addition, Dr.
McFarling said five percent of soldiers back from Iraq seek help for
substance abuse issues from clinical providers.
The U.S. Army does offer treatment for soldiers dealing with drug abuse,
and Fort Carson has a busy Army Substance Abuse Program.
But some soldiers are forced off post because Fort Carson offers no
inpatient services; others get treatment in the community to avoid the
stigma associated with seeking help, soldiers and advocates said.
Since the Iraq war started in 2003, Colorado Springs hospitals and
counseling services have seen a dramatic increase in active duty soldiers
seeking treatment for substance abuse. Penrose-St. Francis Health Services
went from treating no active duty soldiers for substance abuse before the
war to between 30 and 40 now, said Phillip Ballard, the hospital's
inpatient psychiatrist.
According to Ballard, "Now that we have larger numbers than the military
facilities can treat&it falls upon the civilian community to treat those
patients."
Veterans' advocacy groups charge that the problem of substance abuse is
much greater than the Army wants to publicly acknowledge, and it's
growing.
"I've met with veterans from coast to coast, and I will tell you that
there is a catastrophe on the horizon," said Paul Sullivan, director of
Veterans for Common Sense.
Three thousand fifty-seven veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars were
potentially diagnosed with a drug dependency from fiscal year 2005 through
March 2007, according to figures provided to ABC News from the Veterans
Health Administration. From 2002 through 2004, only a total of 277
veterans were diagnosed with drug dependency, the numbers show.
"The military right now can say whatever they want, but the truth on the
ground is that the soldiers are in a lot of pain, emotional and physical
pain, and they're turning to drugs in order to alleviate that," said
Sullivan.
For the other four parts of this series...click
here...
http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/2020/
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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