HADIT.COM RADIO SHOW THIS MORNING @ 0800 ON THE LEFT COAST

haditlogo2007Jerrel and the boys over at our sister site at Hadit.com are having their radio show this morning. I got a last minute invite to attend yesterday afternoon. We’ll be discussing the ins and outs of the perfect Extraordinary Writ and what you need to succeed.

Everything you ever wondered about one -the history, the requirements and the relative paucity of  winning it will be discussed. Be there or listen to it after it’s archived.

The call in number is 347-237-4819. Wait for the prompt and press 1.

To get an idea of the process, take a gander at the progression of mine currently at the Court here. It’s a multipart series beginning with

https://asknod.wordpress.com/2015/01/04/cavc-the-birth-of-a-writ/

To listen to the show if you missed it, go to hadit.com and look on the right hand side down to here and click on 2/11 Blog.

Capture Hadit.com blog

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A few positive VA things to report

dog houseSorry for my recent silence but “life” has interrupted my online activities.  I would like to share that we had some good news from the VA all within two weeks.  #1 The most important event was that the NOD we filed for spousal support was granted without making us jump through hoops. We had a call from the RO asking for clarification on one date, was told that the BVA was granting it and to expect a letter within a week. Four days later, my old Marine was paid a small amount to take care of me within days (including back support).  I joked that he can afford to buy a nice dog house and chow with the extra funds but we do appreciate it nonetheless.

# 2.  My spouse received a paper “Veterans Choice Card” but with orders not to use it since he may not really be eligible!   He has to call first.  This was a surprise since we live about 34 miles from the VHA and not over 40 miles away.  He doesn’t expect to use it because here in the land of A Prairie Home Companion, the schedulers are efficient.  Still, it’s nice to have as a back up, especially when travelling.

#3.  He switched to the Met Life High Dental plan offered through the VA.  Unable to find a comparable plan for myself, I called them and was allowed to be added on to his with no hassle.  The premium is higher than the Delta plans but this one offers more value in the long run.

snoopy

“Do I look like a bug?” VA provides basic frames, not vanity fashion ones. UV shades clip on and fit well.

#4.  My spouse had a VA eye appointment was was told that he could get a new pair of glasses each year since he’s SC.  We had just purchased new lenses ($200) for an older frame he had so now he’ll always have decent eyewear and a back-up pair.  His eyesight went downhill after HCV treatment and ignoring his eyesight is not an option.

Meanwhile, I just found out that a surgical repair for a hiatal hernia I had five years ago has failed. I wasn’t expecting that news.  And my endoscopy itself was a nightmare because the meds didn’t put me to sleep and I gagged through the entire procedure.  I don’t know why the IV meds didn’t work this time or if this is typical.  Still, I’m glad I had the follow-up because everything looks good except the hernia.  I mention this common condition only because HCV can cause a wide range of digestive problems but hiatal hernias are sometimes the cause.  It’s something to ask about if digestive problems persist.

 

Posted in Guest authors, HCV Health, HCV Risks (documented), Medical News, VA Health Care | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

NBC ROTORHEAD FAN CLUB–(NOT BRIAN’S CHOPPER)

imagesAfter watching an exposé on the history of Brian William’s mouth muscles misbehaving last evening, it seems his story has evolved like Neanderthal Man into Homo Sapiens. Predictably, from the progressive side of the aisle, his fellow newsmen are showing their solidarity with new bumper stickers that boldly assert Conflation Happens.

Well, we know this and this is why I feel Mr. Williams is getting a bum rap. The poor man is up at all hours of the day and night in different time zones all year long. I’d like to see any of you maintain a coherent diary of all that mental baggage. Besides, the horror of constantly being exposed to close quarters combat is extremely deleterious to his mental health. Twenty or thirty  three-day deployments is eventually going to take it’s toll. Army Psychiatrists even know this.

Which is why I propose we honor our downtrodden hero and begin a Fan club in his honor. Fortunately we can borrow from The National Broadcasting Company and utilize NBC to conflate with Not Brian’s Chopper. Since Brian is also such a knowledgeable reporter on small arms and RPGs, he’s a natural for a real rotorhead.

Fan clubs are a way to honor our heroes and show our continued appreciation for Ars Gratia Artis. Because news is such a dry subject, Brian has simply injected more pizazz and an element of perceived personal danger that gives it more relevance. I don’t think it personally detracts from his persona. Brian is such a giant among his contemporaries, it compliments him to lie. Few can get away with this and inadvertently end up enhancing their charisma.

Brian Williams, a loyal contingent of Veterans feels your pain. Therefore we officially commission a Fan Club in your honor. Official certificates for the Founding Members can be had for a small tithe.Here’s a preview of the official Certificate of Original Founding.

NBC Rotorhead Fan club

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EXTRAORDINARY WRITS OF MANDAMUS–ADVERSARIAL DENIALS

images Successful Extraordinary Writs are like Boo Radley. Their existence is hypothesized like a Muon particle in negative space and perhaps even discussed at Leagle Beagle Happy Hours but the success rate can almost be counted on one hand in VAland.  If you thought CUE (Clear and Unmistakable Error ) claims were a bitch, you haven’t even gotten writer’s cramp yet.

The Court limits your bitch to twenty pages but most can accomplish it in two or three. Here are several examples of two things. The first is the horribly adversarial bent of Judge Hagel in all but kissing the Office of General Counsel’s Amy F. Gordon sent up to 625 Wagonburner Lane NW for this exercise in futility. The second, by Judge Kasold, is equally “non-veteran friendly” and dismisses the three and one half year delay with a wave of the hand. Much like Pontius Pilate, the matter is no longer in his bailiwick as the BVA has finally been forced to act or be held in contempt. Let’s take a peek at justice at it’s worst.

We realize that when we go off the VA reservation and enter the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims, we are no longer accorded all the niceties we enjoy at  our Rancho Victor Alphas and the Board of Veterans Appeals. Our claims rise and fall on what has accrued in the c-file and no more can be added. An Extraordinary Writ, however, is a bird of a different feather. You can dump equal parts of odd,  old and new material in to your heart’s delight and the CAVC is obligated to weight it in the first instance. This is a unique facet that many overlook-including our Mr. Ronald Davis. Judge Kasold is quick to cut him to the bone and accuse him of either lying or failing to provide even a glimmer of proof that his contentions have merit.

Mr. Kenneth W. Chaky suffers a slightly different path to denial. A bit of history. The Kenster filed a CUE claim at the BVA way back in history in June 2011. They acknowledged receipt of his claim in July 2011 and there it sat. Krazy Kasold was blatant and listed Chandler v. Brown to cite what delay is in Mr. Davis’ Writ above and it certainly applies here. Chandler stood for the proposition that two and a half years  wasn’t unreasonable and consistent with an “acceptable delay”. We presume that means thirty months is the outside edge of polite neglect. Mr. Chakey’s lay mouldering in the basement for three years and five months until he inflated his trusted Zodiac USS Pro Se and set sail up the Potomac River. Miraculously, at the same time, in the same time zone, his zombie CUE claim rose from the dead and began it’s rocket docket ascent to the front office under the expert tutelage of Laura “SS” Eskinazi. When the OGC speaks, the BVA listens.

Chaky EWOM

Here’s a glance at the timeline of Chaky’s filing. It explains everything.

June 8, 2011– File CUE claim at 810 Vermin Ave. NW

July 22, 2011– BVA acknowledgement of receipt and docketing number

Nov. 17, 2014–  Forty one months later, Mr. Chaky files his Writ.

Dec. 15, 2014–Court issues 30 day letter to explain unconscionable delay.

Dec. 18, 2014– BVA promptly begins the repair order and sends the Kenmeister a letter telling him he “is now free to resubmit” his CUE motion which is Lauraspeak for “We lost it”.

Jan. 13, 2015– BVA calls Kenny and says “Roger, We have Motion. You have 30 days to submit evidence before wheels up.

Jan. 14, 2014– Amy Gordon rides in with:

On January 14, 2105, the Secretary filed his response, explaining that the Board misplaced Mr. Chaky’s June 2011 motion to revise a July 1987 Board decision based on clear and unmistakable error. The Secretary further explained that, on December 18, 2014, the Board provided Mr. Chaky with the opportunity to resubmit that motion and, on January 13, 2015, “the Board forwarded correspondence to [Mr. Chaky] acknowledging receipt of his [motion to revise the July 1987 Board decision based on clear and unmistakable error],” and informing him that he had 30 days to file a response.

No flies on Amy and Leigh Bradley. No siree Bob.

Feb. 3, 2015– Hagel pronounces Extreme Unction and the Writ is denied. What the hey? The BVA and OGC graciously complied once prompted to. All’s well that ends well. Next?

Because it appears that VA is now actively processing Mr. Chaky’s motion, the Court concludes that Mr. Chaky has failed to demonstrate that the alleged delay is so extraordinary that it amounts to the Secretary’s arbitrary refusal to act, and will therefore deny Mr. Chaky’s petition.

downloadBut for the Writ, Ken would still be counting those six more weeks of Winter hypothesized by Punxsutawney Phil. Perhaps more. This constituted an arbitrary refusal to act a la Chandler so why is it suddenly given a bye under the Hagel Doctrine? In short, Mr. Chaky’s docket was ignored for an interminable time. In BVA vernacular, “misplaced” is akin to forgetting where you parked your car at Walmart for 41 months. Once asked, the Security personnel found it in short order and all is forgiven. Walmart magnanimously agrees it  won’t charge you parking fees for that time but hey-you have thirty days to get it towed. Pronto, Ken. Time is of the essence here.

Judge Kasold is even more abrupt. Ronnie shows up and has a gripe. He wants this over as we all do and he feels he’s waited long enough. He’s pestered the RO and they won’t even respond. Filing the Writ is obviously something someone probably ventured as a repair order after thirty fingers of Jack Daniels at the VFW bar.

Davis EWOM

 

The coup d’ grace is quite the riposte:

 He states that he has contacted the regional office (RO) several times with no response, but he did not provide copies of any such correspondence or evidence of attempted contact; he does not even state whether the contacts were made before or after the March 2013 [C&P] examination.

A more caring Judge might be inclined to ask Mr. Davis if he could (and would) kindly supplement the record with some documentation backing up these insinuations. Seems like a neighborly thing to do.

For example, he has not provided documentation of contact with the RO or even stated whether he has attempted to contact the RO since the March 2013 examination. Even accepting his statements of contact and assuming they were made after the March 2013 examination, he has not indicated any effort to secure assistance from superior VA officials, such as the Under Secretary for Benefits or the Secretary.

CJKIt appears Brutal Bruce has been reading our “Call me Bob” posts. He now just assumes we’re going to parlay our futile entreaties at the Regional Venues into personal calls and emails to Bob and Alice(son). Pretty soon, this  type of intervention directly to the senior executive service will become de rigeur and VA will publish the contact info. This is a new personal best for Bruce. What? “You haven’t touched bases with Bob yet? Writ denied! Next?”

The teaching moment is simple. Make sure the seat belts are fastened and you have GPS route guidance before pushing print. Messieurs Davis and Chaky just got punked and they probably still don’t know what hit them. Fortunately they didn’t have to pay $50 dollars to get their tickets punched or it would have really stung. Writs are like bottle rockets. You know they’ll go off but in which direction?

 

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NBC’S BRIAN WILLIAMS–STOLEN VALOR

downloadIn what never ceases to amaze, yet another glitterati of the Progressive persuasion steps on his necktie. I find it incongruous to even conceive of trying to hoodwink the public into believing something so easily disproved. The 159th Dragonmasters on that chopper that took the B40 can readily remember that sinking feeling in their bellies as the rotors slowly quit pulling pitch and the aircraft sank.  I’m sure they can remember exactly who auto rotated to earth that day with them. As for our trusty news anchor, Brian, this would be like disremembering where you were as the 757s were splatting into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center.

When you keep repeating the lie, it grows.  Eventually, someone stops and says ” Wait a minute. That’s not the way it happened”. Mr. Williams was not caught out so much as he was shown to be one of the elite wannabes of dangerous journalism. Surely you remember Hillary Clinton’s harrowing landing at Kosovo with mortars cratering the runway as she landed? Her bravado and presence galvanized the defenders to beat back the attack by the rag heads. Later, she said she was told the bombs bursting in air had been several hours before her appearance. Sorry for the misconception these three years. Why, everyone knew that.

Brian’s bold braggadocio went on for eleven years before someone called him on it. He chose the verb “misremember” but it’s six of one and half a dozen of another:

 “I would not have chosen to make this mistake,” Williams said. “I don’t know what screwed up in my mind that caused me to conflate one aircraft with another.”

Williams told his Nightly News audience that the erroneous claim was part of a “bungled attempt” to thank soldiers who helped protect him in Iraq in 2003. “I made a mistake in recalling the events of 12 years ago,” Williams said. “I want to apologize.”

Late Wednesday, Williams’ Twitter account, with 212,000 followers, appeared to have been wiped clean.

Smart move, Brian. Erase the evidence. Wipe the hard drive. Shred the evidence. Crash the computer-literally- on the floor. Throw it in the ocean.

Thus we award Brian the Asknod Scarlet Letter of Stolen Valor. It is fittingly red so as to represent the blood of true Patriots. The moral of this story is Don’t try to lay no boogie woogie on the 159th Aviation Regiment, Brian. If you cannot remember which aircraft you were on, perhaps NBC should be drug-testing you. That’s some serious misconflating, dude.

stolen V

Colonel (Brevet Maj. General) Brian Williams sporting his               belated Stolen V for combat valor medal

P.S. This just in. A rare photograph of Mr. Williams archived at the Smithsonian. This was taken at Flanders in Belgium (1918) just before the charge that earned him his first Silver Star.

B9DD-T1CUAA-kG_

 

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Williams with fellow astronauts Aldrin and Collins- July 1969

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Bush Lied! Williams almost died!

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CAVC–WAGES V McDONALD–READ ‘EM AND WEEP.

imagesIn what Law dogs from NOVA Sea to Shining NVLSP Sea have hoped for years, the long-ignored  38 USC §511’s codicil about how only the Board(s) could make the final decision on an appeal from the Agency of Original Jurisdiction was finally “discovered” by the Court. One decision on appeal suddenly has to mean what Congress intended. You can’t insert the Director of Compensation and Pension into the lineup like a designated hitter. What’s funny is the enlightened folks up at the OGC just couldn’t digest that.

This has to be as unsettling as Walker v Shinseki was for Vets. Here VA has had a path to denial on extraschedular in effect for almost fifty years and suddenly the Court up and reads 38 CFR §4.16(b) literally. And it conflicts (or shall we say collides) with 38 USC §511. VA maintains that it only conflicts if you read it wrong. Ergo, if you read it in the light most favorable to VA, then it’s peachy keen. Unfortunately, Congress wrote it and VA merely is tasked with interpreting it into a regulation. Watch as the Word Wizards at the Court tie the VA up in knots with their own semantics.

Willie C. Wages filed at the Drew Carey Memorial VARO in Columbus Ohio back in the early 80’s and got a few 0% ratings. He finally came back and began building his TDIU in 2000-2010. He was out of work, unemployable and had a rat’s nest of 30%rs, 20%rs and a lot of 10s and 0s. No singular disease was enough to create the benchmark of 40% to add up to a combined 70% nor did he have a singular one of 60%. By 2009 he had enough to do so and applied. VA and the BVA refused to budge. In a showing of what we all know is pure dog and pony show, the BVA judge made a grand gesture of sending out for the Director of Compensation and Pension to wave his magic wand over it and make an informed decision. No dice.

Wages13-2694

The big error here, for all these years, was to involve the Director in it at all. He became a de facto judge in his own right and Vets didn’t get a “hearing” or an opportunity to rebut his findings. He became a third wheel in what was supposed to be a two step process. Anything he said could not be evidence against you because he wasn’t part of the BVA/VARO adjudication scheme.

Willie’s predicament has been suffered by so many as to be joke. Nobody gets extraschedular unless he/she is related to the VASEC or Laura Eskinazi. The Court decided to disassemble §4.16(b) and look at the component pieces. All was well until you insert the Dir. of Comp/Pen into it. The Court takes the magnanimous position that if you want to write goofy regulations, that’s your business but don’t let them conflict with the USC’s tenets.

Although the Secretary initially argued that the Director’s decision was indeed evidence upon which the Board could rely, the Secretary now contends, in response to the above-mentioned order, that the Director’s decision is not evidence. Rather, the Secretary now argues that, although the Board may review the factual basis of the Director’s decision to ensure that it is accurate and complete, § 4.16(b) operates to divest the Board of the authority to overturn a Director’s decision because determinations under § 4.16(b) are policy decisions committed to the Director’s sole discretion. A contrary view, the Secretary argues, would render the referral process in §4.16(b) meaningless, time consuming, and unnecessary.

You can see the battle lines being drawn here.  Rule #1 is: My regulations make sense because I wrote them. Rule #2 is: If they don’t make sense go back to rule #1. The Court is getting ready to take the OGC acolytes on a wild ride and disabuse them of this misconception. Here’s the first shot across the USS OGC’s bow:

Although the Board is required to obtain the Director’s decision before the Board may award extraschedular TDIU, we find no merit in the Secretary’s contention that the Board is limited to ensuring that the Director had the correct and full facts when rendering his decision, or that the Board otherwise is bound by the Director’s decision. Such a contention creates a direct conflict with the statutory mandate that the Board render the final decision for the Secretary on all questions arising under 38 U.S.C. § 511(a), which, as discussed below, indisputably includes an award of TDIU. See 38 U.S.C. § 7104(a) (“Final decisions on [section 511(a)] appeals shall be made by the Board.”)

The Court slowly dismembers the OGC in bits and pieces by cherry picking the proper language the VA has already incorporated into other regulations: The OGC argued above that misreading 4.16 would render the job of Director of Comp/pen superfluous. The Court disagrees subtly:

On its face, the regulatory scheme created by § 4.16(b) merely withholds from rating boards the authority to grant extraschedular TDIU in the first instance. Indeed, nothing in the language of § 4.16(b) purports to limit the Board’s scope of review of the Director’s decision.

And:

Moreover, even if the plain language of the regulation could be interpreted as limiting the Board’s scope of review and precluding a final Board decision that was contrary to the Director’s § 4.16(b) determination, such an interpretation would contravene the clear congressional intent expressed in 38 U.S.C. § 7104(a) that the Board shall be the final authority on all benefits decisions.

Ruh-oh, Rorge rote it rong.

“It is the established policy . . . that all veterans who are unable to secure and follow a substantially gainful occupation by reason of service-connected disabilities shall be rated totally disabled”.        “[T]he mandatory ‘shall ‘ normally creates an obligation impervious to  discretion.”

In short, the Director’s decision is no different than an RO’s decision in terms of its effect on the Board’s statutory jurisdiction and the Board’s standard of review.

download (1)The judges just keep digging the pit deeper and deeper. Lord knows, the OGC gave them a wealth of shovels to do so. Here’ the clothesline  moment.  Hizzoner the Secretary  is free to write them regulations up any old way he wants to. We don’t see any conflict. If he wants to drive to Boston via Denver, why, by all means have at it.

As to the Secretary’s argument that de novo review of the Director’s decision by the Board renders the referral process in § 4.16(b) meaningless, we note that such a referral is the Secretary’s chosen procedure under § 4.16(b). Withholding the authority of granting extraschedular TDIU from the numerous and various ROs can provide a degree of uniformity over such decisions that would be difficult to maintain if each RO were permitted to award extraschedular TDIU.

The upside to this decision is long overdue. For years, the Director of Comp/Pen has wielded unparalleled power over all extraschedular decisions and rarely awarded any- even in the face of judges inclined to do so. Many are the Vets who ended up on the losing end of this logic-especially on appeal. From here on out the VA is put on notice that the Board has to be the bad guy and deny the extraschedular instead of making the Director the bad guy. Willie’s TDIU gets remanded back for a do over and the Director’s testimony gets tossed. It’s a win-win for us and one more positive step towards what is legitimately ours via §511.

2015 promises a wealth of these Veteran-friendly decisions. Willie might have to appeal all over again but I don’t think he will have to, personally. The writing on the wall for extraschedular is out of the closet. BVA judges are going to have a tough time finding good reasons and bases for denial with this precedent hanging over them.

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Posted in CAVC Knowledge, TDIU, Tips and Tricks | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

LZ CORK–BOB LOCKETT’S LP AT THE BOTTOM OF THE LZ.

LZ Cork lpLZ Cork was a zit on Charlie’s ass from the moment they built it in early fall 1968. It’s artillery covered a wide swath of land from it’s high perch. The Viet Cong began an eradication plan in earnest when the dry season began in January. Probing gently for the soft spots every night, they eventually landed on a frontal assault on the listening post down at the bottom at the south end of the LZ.

This was A Company 3/21’s LP and manned by  Sgt. Plummer,  PFCs Bob Lockett, David Balzarini, Dennis Johnstonbough and Bernard “Ducky” Duran. A 60mm mortar round landed right in the middle of them that night about 2325 Hrs. Butch got clobbered in his bunker further up the hill moments later. Bob didn’t mention where the 90-day wonder Lt. Kellenbenz was. He perished as well above in the TOC.

That day, Gypsy Rose Lee, now a spry 58, arrived for a USO morale booster. Bob Lockett had his picture taken with her that afternoon. Right behind her in the picture, wearing a dark t-shirt was Butch, waiting for his autographed photo.No one could know that the future was going to change and dramatically alter 13 lives- 3 permanently.

GL Rose and Lockett

Bob Locket with Gypsy Rose Lee January 16th, 1969

I really appreciate Bob’s allowing me to tell this as so few can comprehend the grit of real conflict. Many of you are planning to see or have seen American Sniper by now. It conveys the same concept of eternal vigilance and angst but it’s still a Hollywood reenactment. The stunt men all get up and dust themselves off and go home. At LZ Cork the poker game was for keeps.

In Bob’s words:

If you look at the geography of LZ Cork, our squad (Plummer/Lockett/Balzarini/Johnstonbaugh/Ducky (can’t remember his real last name) were on the LP down stream from the top of the hill. I have some pictures that can give you some perspective). One of the first mortar rounds that hit was a direct hit of the bunker I was in with Balzarini and Johnstonbaugh(I use that term loosely). I attached a picture of the bunker and I humbly apologize for the “John Wayne” shot. What can I say, I was 20 and assumed I was invincible.

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That round cut Balzarini in half and took both of Dennis’ legs. I was so very fortunate, I took shrapnel to the head, cheek and arms, but the wounds were not all that bad. David lived for about 10 minutes after he was hit; I don’t know how. He basically was disintegrated from the waist down. I dragged Dennis to a bunker about 20 yards away, then went back and dragged David to the same spot. Everyone on the LP was wounded to some degree. Ducky had shrapnel to the stomach, I can’t remember what wounds Plummer had.

081It was pretty chaotic as you can imagine, the VC were trying to overrun the LP, Plummer, Ducky and I were laying down M16 rounds to keep them pinned down. At some point we ran out of ammo and the VC starting advancing again. I was looking for ammo when I tripped over a case of grenades (see picture where I am writing a letter – I am sitting on it. I dragged that back to our position and we started lobbing grenades down the hill and the VC retreated. About that time some guys from the hill arrived in our LP with ammo and that was the end of the fight. I do remember that ‘Doc Campanelo (I may not have the name correct) was one of the guys that came down and he bandaged me up and put tourniquets on Dennis’ legs. It is pretty much blurry after that (they shot me up with morphine) and I got on the chopper for the 312th Evac in Chu Lai. I was there for about 3-4 days, and was transferred to Cam Rhan Bay. I was there about a week (Fagan was there too), then to the 249th in Japan. From there I went to Fitzsimmions in Denver and had several operation. After I was discharged from the hospital, I spent my remaining time at Ft. Campbell.

I have never told this story to anyone – but if this helps Butch at all………I hope he gets his overdue accolades.

As a side note, I thought Post Traumatic Stress was for wimps. About 15 years ago I was in church and started crying for no reason. My wife asked me what was wrong – I didn’t have a clue. Turns out I was going to DC for a convention and one of my ‘side trips’ was to the Vietnam memorial. I wanted to find David’s name. It all came crashing down around me – emotions I did not know just poured out. After I visited the memorial, I tracked down David’s mother in Jeanette PA. I called and told her who I was and I was the last person to see David alive. We both cried and I agreed to meet David’s younger brother in Houston about a week later and gave him copies of the last pictures of David. It was like a burden had been lifted.

Balzarini and Johnstonbaugh looking down the hill toward the LP with M-60 on top of bunker

David Balzarini above the LP in the LZ bunker area.

As one Veterans site put it “This ain’t Hell but you can sure see it from here.” I thought we in the Air Force suffered the deprivations of war over there but Bob Lockett’s testimony and pictures speak volumes more than any Hollywood portrayals of that era.

As if all this wasn’t a coincidence that Bob would find his way here now, 45 years later, one of our fellow members of the WIN or DIE VA Claims Club  “Doc”Jules wrote me yesterday. He offered his help in doing an Independent Medical Opinion (IMO) for Butch on his muscle injuries from the retained metal fragments. Turns out, one of his medical acquaintances there was a fellow named Mike Balzarini-yep- you guessed it- David’s cousin.  And in his own words:

Yup, its a small Army but I would hate to have to paint it all.  I showed Mike your posting about Butch and Dave’s last stand and he was quite touched that anyone remembered after all these years. Mike was a medic in the 82nd’s Engineer Bn during the Grenada fun run and went on to become an SF medic. Lately he has been a surgical NP for the past 20 or so years in these parts. He has been helpful to me in pursuing my claims by providing me with orders for MRIs and other objective tests.

When I set out to help Butch, I had no idea this was going to balloon into a family reunion of 3/21’s A Company. Bob’s photos and history fill in a few blanks for some and create more for others but they are real and not concocted by reenactments. The photography accentuates the stark reality of life at LZ Cork- but only the prelude. Here’s a shot of Butch’s infamous bunker up the hill from the LP. The VC mortar round landed exactly  in between the two covers. A direct hit on the one to the right would have put Butch in a heavenly zip code along with Balzarini and Kellenbenz.

Butch bunker

Thank you Bob for opening up. Many would find it difficult, no matter how many years pass, to revisit these memories.

PS— Bob enlightened me later to say Lt. Kellenbenz was killed inside the TOC from the satchel charge. It collapsed the roof which crushed him when it fell.  Best to let history be. If the army knew he wasn’t busy fighting, he technically wouldn’t be entitled to a CIB. But we know every officer’s Silver Star was paid for with enlisted troops who were lucky to get a Bronze. Amen

Posted in Food for the soul, From the footlocker, Inspirational Veterans | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

CAVC BIRTH OF A WRIT–ACT II SCENE 6-THE 30 DAY LETTER

imagesThis is what we have been waiting for with parted lips, bated breath and straining eyes for fifteen days. Obviously Judge Davis is giving the VA lots of room to maneuvre their post-hoc rationalizations into place. Much like artillery emplaced at a strategic high point, it gives the OGC more breathing room to assimilate this Writ and develop a firing solution.

The thirty day letter is a Stand and Deliver Notice from the Judge asking the VA Secretary, in the guise of some young staff attorney out of the OGC’s office, to describe their side of the story as every story is multi-faceted. It could be that the Petitioner (me) is full of hot and air and lies and merely trying to besmirch the Secretary’s good name.

Judge Denied Davis

Judge Denied Davis

Dawdling this long ensures the OGC got another 15 days to fabricate a fanciful tale of demons and dragons inside computers that ate, swallowed, shredded or discombobulated justice in some never before seen scenario. The story may evolve into the fact that because of this, appropriate safeguards are going to be installed at the BVA to make sure this never happens ever again. Mercy for the transgressions will be begged for and a remand to make it all better will be expected.

On the heels of Gene Groves’ debacle, we pray Davis assumes the mantle of umbrage that the BVA would have the temerity to pointedly ignore the mandate and order of the Court. This is the chord we seek to strike. Bold- but not brash.

This is a series of articles on filing a Writ. To view the next installment, please follow this link: https://asknod.wordpress.com/2015/02/22/cavc-birth-of-a-writ-act-3-scene-1-the-ebennies-mad-scramble/

30 day letter

Posted in CAVC Knowledge, Extraordinary Writs of Mandamus, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

CAVC–BIRTH OF A WRIT–ACT II SCENE 5-THE BITCHSLAP BACK

imagesAs somewhat expected, but so inartfully done, Judge Davis has decided there will be no Oral Roberts speaking at the CAVC regarding my request for an oral briefing. Judge Davis is not “Veteran friendly” in most cases and could have held this request in abeyance until he sees what kind of cards the Secretary is holding. Remember, this is a poker game with hole cards. The Secretary will be bluffing and betting like he has a three of a kind and drawing for a Full House.

Judge hang 'em High Davis

Judge Hang ’em High Davis

The important thing would be to see and call this hand and then begin a new gambit. To refuse an oral before the case has even been dissected is very nearsighted judicially. Well, we didn’t expect much more from Judge “Deny” Davis.

Here’s the simplified denial in the CAVC EZ short form mode.

Oral Roberts denialThe Birth of a Writ Series continues here:

https://asknod.wordpress.com/2015/01/29/cavc-birth-of-a-writ-act-ii-scene-6-the-30-day-letter/

Posted in CAVC Knowledge, Extraordinary Writs of Mandamus | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

ROTTEN BUTTER AND HORSE TREATS

downloadYeppers. Just like the title suggests, this did not turn out well. I have an incurable appetite and considering how skinny I am, it’s a good thing. I get those 8 pound cheesecakes at Costco and that covers a week. Being that hungry, I sometimes eat something that wasn’t meant to be. I’m sure a lot of you guys have this problem, right?

I’m somewhat of a bohemian when it comes to eating. When I discovered the red piss ants in my Fig Newtons one night in the dark in Southeast Asia, I finally made peace with the idea that dining was never going to be perfect with tablecloths, real silver settings and the fine china every meal. From then on, it was easier to eat things that were “marginal” under adverse conditions. It had stood me in good stead until I married. That qualifies for  an “adverse condition” if I ever heard of one.

Cupcake has told this story a thousand times and it varies from a cup of butter to a whole pound depending on how many brewskies. It could never happen again in a thousand years. For the record, I’m positive it wasn’t more than a half a cup (a quarter stick). My neighbor died (an old Navy Vet) and his daughter gave us his refrigerator (1988). I briefly glanced inside after the wife cleaned it, unplugged it and put it outside in our garage.We moved to a new home out here in Gig Harbor about 10 months later. The house had no refer so I wheeled Bill’s inside and plugged it in. Several days later I toasted some English muffins and put some butter on them. Standard military procedure. Refer/Butter box/butter/English muffin/ Forward march to dining hall.

I should add that I was addicted to the demon weed tobacco and smoked about a pack and a half a day of Marb Reds. I couldn’t smell very well and it “impacted” me as Cupcake likes to sneer say. I ate them English muffins with some honey on them and they were good.

Cupcake entered the kitchen and asked what died. She couldn’t find the smell so she took the garbage out.  The next day the same thing occurred but she caught me about a millisecond before I ate ’em.  A much better nose than mine immediately figured it out. Turns out she hadn’t bought any butter lately. The box said “best if consumed before August 1987”.  Shooooo doggies we were way past that. Somehow that was my fault.

The laundry detergent on the kitchen counter that looked like powdered sugar when you’re not wearing your glasses should have cured me of this a few years later. Who ever heard of putting laundry detergent in the Kitchenaid to bust up the lumps? It’s not food. It has no business being in the kitchen.

DSC01092Fast Forward to 2015 and Christmas/ New Years. Lots of chocolates and cookies and candy are lying around and quite frankly, demanding to be eaten before they spoil. So what should my wandering eyes behold the other day but a baggie full of what looked like, well, some kind of nutritious crap Cupcake is always pestering me to eat. It didn’t have one of those Chinese names like Tofu or Yoplait on it so it had that going for it.

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DSC01094One bite of this dang near took off my brand new VA-paid for porcelain crown and I turned to Cupcake and told her as much. She started giggling and I foolishly continued that this trail mix had a wheat grass-like back taste to it. Sugar Pie swallowed her tongue.  We’re talking blue face- 911 here. She laughed so hard she got the vapors and, well nevermind. She laughed a lot harder when I asked her if she got it at Costco because, frankly, I thought the shit was inedible. When she recovered, she called Buckwheat Junior and told him. Shucks. I’d be plumb laughed out by then but she’d just got started. She told him I was eating “Images” food. I sure didn’t discern any apostrophe in that word.

Turns out that’s Image’s Horsey Christmas treats. It was labeled Images. No apostrophes. Yeah, we do have a horse named Image (singular) but that doesn’t mean anything. I’m pretty sure there are companies that sell horse treats named Images. I can see the S at the end. Any fool can. It’s false advertising under the best of circumstances and should be labeled as non-human food. I’ll bet it’s against the law in forty five states to sell unlabeled horse food. Besides, Image doesn’t have hands let alone an opposing thumb. So how was he supposed to open this bag and get the treats out? Horses don’t eat plastic. It’s bad for them. All these queshuns and noooobody has any answers. It’s really not that funny. I think she set me up.

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