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FRAUD BUSTERS ON RISE AGAINST FAKE VETERANS --
The Internet and federal law enforcement help
to expose
military charlatans looking for respect and VA
benefits.

For more about frauds and wannabes, use the VA Watchdog search
engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/
sessearch.php?q=phony
+wannabe&op=or
Story here...
http://www.chicago
tribune.com/news/local/chi-fake
vets_08oct08,1,64514.story
?ctrack=1&cset=true
Story below:
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Fraud busters on rise against fake veterans
Web, federal law help to expose military
charlatans
By Russell Working Tribune staff reporter
Freelancer Matt Baron contributed to this report
When Douglas E. Robinson showed up in Yorkville saying he was a homeless
Vietnam veteran who had lost everything in Hurricane Katrina, the
American Legion post took pity on a former comrade in arms, giving him
nearly $400 and paying for a few nights' lodging.
But Robinson and his wife's aggressive demands for money and slip-ups in
his story led Kendall County sheriff's deputies to investigate. It
turned out he had never served in the military, officials allege.
Robinson was lodged in Kendall County Jail last week on charges of
stealing government-supported property and fraud in seeking veterans'
benefits. The allegations, if true, are part of a rising flood of cases
nationwide in which officials and private sleuths -- aided by the
Internet and a new federal law -- are exposing hustlers and charlatans
who claim benefits or honors that aren't theirs.
Fraud busters, many of them infuriated veterans, could get a boost in
their efforts under a bill introduced Wednesday in Congress that would
create a publicly searchable database of the nation's top medals, making
it easier for police, reporters and officials to verify claims.
The bill, sponsored by U.S. Rep. John Salazar (D-Colo.), follows up on
December's Stolen Valor Act, which expanded federal authority to
prosecute those who falsely claim or display military honors.
The crimes are not victimless, say the determined sleuths who spend
hours scanning the Internet and filing Freedom of Information Act
requests to expose glory hogs. Phonies warp the historical record, scam
taxpayers of millions of dollars and in some cases even put troops in
the field at risk.
Non-profit investigators
The P.O.W. Network in Skidmore, Mo., which investigates claims to
military honors or prisoner status, has seen fraud complaints grow from
22 when it first went online in 1998 to more than 9,000 so far in 2007.
Chuck and Mary Schantag, who created the non-profit group, file as many
as 24 requests a week for military records.
"The problem is so broad," said Mary Schantag. "They claim everything
under the sun. They are from every walk of life. We have seen pastors
and ministers and police officers and attorneys -- all of them making
the claims. There's nothing sacred anymore."
The cases have continued to mushroom even in recent weeks. In Atlantic
City, Mayor Bob Levy stopped showing up at work last week amid a
reported federal probe into his false claims about his Vietnam military
service.
In Massachusetts, the leader of the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe on Cape Cod,
which is seeking to build a billion-dollar casino, stepped aside
recently and apologized for lying about his military record. He falsely
claimed to have received a Silver Star and five Purple Hearts.
In Seattle, U.S. officials recently announced they were pressing cases
against eight men who allegedly faked their military service in
conflicts stretching back to World War II. Another four cases are
pending. All told, the fraud allegedly cost the U.S. Department of
Veterans Affairs more than $1.4 million.
In one of those cases, a Tacoma man named Jesse Macbeth was embraced by
peace activists eager to discredit the Iraq war after he claimed to have
joined other Army Rangers in slaughtering hundreds of unarmed civilians
in Iraq. In fact, his service was limited to a few weeks in Army boot
camp before he was kicked out, the U.S. attorney's office in Seattle
reported.
"That guy made a 40-minute DVD that the anti-war movement was using,"
said B.G. Burkett, a Texas Vietnam veteran and co-author of "Stolen
Valor," a 1998 book that exposed frauds even in the leadership of
national veterans groups.
"And he's very graphic about how he killed people, how he tortured them,
how he shot the baby, dragged the mother out and blew her brains out --
on and on and on. It's been translated into Arabic and it's now being
used as a recruiting tool for suicide bombers."
When he was sentenced to 5 months in federal prison Sept. 21, Macbeth
apologized to troops whose reputations he trashed and to the peace
groups who embraced his tales.
But even as the Internet allows lies to spread, it also has
revolutionized the ability of fact-checkers to expose phonies. Doug
Sterner, a Pueblo, Colo., veteran who checks out false claims, has set
up a database of 140,000 recipients of the top three levels of military
awards.
He has created "Google alerts" that e-mail him whenever a newspaper or
Web site mentions the Medal of Honor, Navy Cross or Silver Star, among
other topics. And often veterans and others e-mail him stories they find
fishy. If he finds fraud, he calls the FBI; it was he who exposed the
Massachusetts tribal leader.
Newspaper retracts story
Recently, Sterner helped uncover a case in which the Odon Journal, an
Indiana weekly southeast of Terre Haute, reported that a local man had
won two Silver Stars in combat in Iraq, only to retract the story this
week under the headline "Shame."
"Ten years ago, that story would only have been seen in that little
local weekly newspaper," Sterner said.
An Oak Park man named John Dietz was asked to lead the 4th of July
parade this year based on a Wednesday Journal newspaper account of
repeatedly being wounded in combat. (He also claimed to have played
linebacker at the University of Michigan). The paper later had to back
down, admitting it had not checked out his claims.
Watchdogs say they have no interest in prosecuting loudmouths who blab
about combat heroics over a beer at the corner tavern.
But poseurs have used their fake Silver Stars and Purple Hearts to win
the trust of loan officers, earn leniency in criminal sentencing and
defer child-care payments, said Mary Schantag of the P.O.W. Network.
People forgive a lot to vets who claim they are suffering from
post-traumatic stress.
Chester Arthur Stiles, the subject of a nationwide police manhunt after
he allegedly videotaped himself raping a 3-year old girl, falsely
claimed to be a former Navy SEAL, the Navy Times reported Thursday. In
fact, he had spent less than a year in the Navy and wasn't in the elite
unit.
In Veterans Affairs, 30 benefit seekers were arrested on charges of
fraudulent claims in fiscal 2007, and there are 60 open investigations
of fraud, said Jim O'Neill, an assistant inspector general for the
department.
Matters of trust
The Yorkville case angered Gary Bullock, commander of American Legion
Post 489. In late August, Robinson and his wife allegedly talked Bullock
and the post into giving him their own money, along with cash raised to
send care packages to troops abroad and to aid needy veterans.
"If a veteran comes to our post and he's homeless and he tells me he
doesn't have his discharge papers ... that it got lost or got burnt up
in Kansas City or St. Louis or whatever, I'd like to think this guy's
telling me the truth," Bullock said.
Burkett, the author, said he always is suspicious when he hears someone
boasting of battlefield glory. The real heroes, he said, tend to feel
guilty about their medals.
"Your buddies are dead and you're second-guessing yourself: 'I should've
fired sooner, I should've thrown the grenade farther,'" Burkett said.
"'Why the hell am I getting something?'
"And typically his buddies say, 'Hey, you're doing it for all of us.' He
takes the medal, but he takes it in custody. It's not his. It's
collective. And he never talks about it."
rworking@tribune.com
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Larry Scott --