First came reports of shoddy conditions and allegations of second-rate
outpatient treatment at Walter Reed Army Hospital. Then complaints of
excessive medical red tape at Fort Lewis.
Now, the KOMO 4 Problems Solvers have learned the Pentagon has its hands
full with soldiers across the country and at Fort Lewis insisting
they've been short-changed by the military.
They claim the military is discounting their medical retirement benefits
to save money.
On October 9, 2006 a bomb blast tossed a five-ton Humvee into the air on
a road somewhere in Iraq.
A soldier had a camera rolling when they were hit without warning. "You
want to say anything Bruce?" asks a soldier off camera. Stunned and
looking into the lens, the soldier says, "Thank God we're still alive."
They are pictures we don't normally see, taken by soldiers moments after
surviving a roadside bomb blast last October. "As you can see not a good
day," says an unidentified soldier on the tape. "We're all alive, that's
what matters."
Alive, but broken, said Army National Guard Sergeant Chad Miller.
He was in the Humvee's gun turret when the blast hit.
"I'm leaning down the turret and telling the guys 'Get out. It's gonna
blow! It's gonna blow!' "
No medical retirement
Miller said his head injuries are so bad that the Army deemed him
disabled and unfit for duty.
He got an honorable discharge and a lump sum of cash -- about $45,000 to
retire on, and no health insurance for his family. "I fought two wars
for you, I put 20 years of my life on the line and that's all I'm gonna
get?" asks a incensed Miller.
Miller insists he should have earned a medical retirement, which would
come with full health benefits for him and his family and a percentage
of his base pay for life. And we found that Miller isn't the only Fort
Lewis soldier who feels short changed.
War wounds put Sgt. Jane Sullivan in a wheelchair. Like Miller, Army
doctors said Sullivan's injuries made her unfit for duty. The Army tried
to give her a lump payment of $21,000, after taxes.
And, like Miller, she believes her injuries -- surviving an IED blast --
qualify her for much more. "About $21,000, that's like a slap in the
face, what they're telling me is that's all you're worth. No I'm not!
I'm a human being," said Sullivan.
We took Miller and Sullivan's complaints to U.S. Senator Patty Murray.
"They come home broken and we hand them back to their families and say
thanks, that doesn't cut it for me," said Murray.
The senator can't comment on specific soldiers, but told me she's heard
similar complaints from other military members, and in March she took up
the problems at Fort Lewis with Army Surgeon General Kevin Kiley.
Asked how she plans to hold military officials accountable, Murray
replied: "I'm gonna say 'what have you done? Are you on top of this?
What orders have you given?' "
We contacted Brigadier General Reuben Jones, who oversees the Army's
medical retirements for disabled soldiers, and asked if he thinks the
compensation for soldiers deemed unfit for duty is fair.
"Based on the rules we follow, I want the soldier to get every benefit
available to them," he said.
He said soldier payouts are based on medical reports and other solid
evidence. Even before the Walter Reed Scandal broke, Jones said he
issued a "prime directive" to always use the regulations to the
soldier's advantage. He insists the majority of wounded soldiers are
happy with what they get.
"When I talk to soldiers who finish up their processing, they say to me,
'Sir, the process was fair and unbiased, I got a fair shake,' " Jones
said.
Try telling that to Chad Miller's wife.
"We're getting nothing, we're living off my income," said Chris Miller,
"and probably won't be able to make our house payment."
Ongoing struggle
And it's not just about the money. Miller says he husband has long-term
neurological damage. He has daily headaches, trouble with his short term
memory, and is often confused and irritable.
She feels he's not the same man. "He's not really back. I lost him on
that last blast. I lost the person I knew that last blast," Chris said
through tears. She thinks her husband has post traumatic stress
disorder, a condition that would qualify him for full pay and benefits.
"It hurts," she said.
National Guard Major Bill Morisette says it only gets worse. "I feel
I've been shamed, I feel I've been spit on," said Morisette.
For 17 months, Morisette thought he had multiple sclerosis. We examined
his lengthy medical file and it shows the Army diagnosed him with
demyelinating disease, which is a common form of multiple sclerosis.
"It took so long to accept MS, it took over a year for him to say this
is what I have, I accept it," said Bill's wife, Katie.
The condition guaranteed Morisette that full medical retirement. But, a
year later, Morisette claims the Army downgraded his diagnosis to
Fibromyalgia, a less serious disease that comes with a one-time cash
buyout.
Morisette believes the Army did a deliberate about face. "Generally,
most people are not getting retirement disability. They're getting the
cash out," he said. And the reason is because it's cheaper."
The Army won't comment on any specific cases, but says the disability
ratings are based on the severity of a condition.
The Morisettes say they're now caught in an endless cycle of appeals.
It's been a three-year ordeal -- the longest of any Army reservist at
Fort Lewis.
They know they won't be able to survive financially if they lose their
appeal. Bill's disease and scores of medication make it difficult to
hold down a job. "This affects not today, but the rest of our lives," he
said. "It's our own people that are spitting on us, the U.S. Army."
General Jones did admit that the Army needs to "take a deeper look" when
diagnosing post traumatic stress disorder. He says if soldiers didn't
get the right diagnosis the Army will find them and fix it.
We learned the Army has responded to some soldiers' complaints with a
30-page pocket guide that explains the evaluation process, outlines a
soldier's rights and answers possible-scenario questions. It just became
available to Fort Lewis soldiers last week.
We will continue to follow these soldiers to find out if they are
re-evaluated and if their retirement ratings change.
---------------
Larry Scott --
Don't forget to read all of today's VA
News Flashes
(click here)
If
you're military, you need to know VA Joe. Active
military forum and comedy
contests along with updates on VA benefits through the
GI Bill program, all from
Joe -- Sign up today.
Be sure to get all four
VA Watchdog dot Org
RSS feeds --
Daily VA
News Flashes
House CVA
Veterans' News
Senate CVA
Veterans' News
VA Press
Releases
FAIR USE NOTICE: This site contains copyrighted material the use of which
has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are
making such materials available in an effort to advance understanding of veterans' issues. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such
copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright
Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this
site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed an interest
in receiving the included information for educational purposes. For more
information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml If you wish
to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that
go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.