STARDUST KISS AND TELL

So, for all you lucky listeners, you now know who’s behind the curtain. Please, I beg of you, do not use my name here. There will be a time and a place for my coming out party but now is most definitely not a propitious  time . I have no desire to queer the deal being fashioned at the CAVC between counsel for the appellant (moi) and the Appellee (Eric the Red)

Thank you very much to the callers who asked us the questions about my parrot Buddy (Budette?) and the interesting one about keeping your hand in at the VAMC.

Mr. Bird

I have a rather jaded view of the medical system there. My Personal Care Physician (PCP) is very dedicated to his job. He moved here from Louisiana and loves the Northwest. Who couldn’t love it? In addition, Dr. Scott Daigle is kind and caring. What he isn’t is able to remember me when he sees me and say, “Yo-bubba. How they hanging?” I get the same glassy-eyed stare with a final recognition several minutes into it with the “Shoot! Now I remember you. Two years in-country. AO Porphyria. GSW right leg. Right? Got it.” Usually that’s followed by ” So what can I do for you today?” Well, seeing’s how the VA asks me to come in every once in a while, piss in a bottle to make sure I’m not a crackhead and takes a few blood samples, my guess is you’re going to tell me, Doctor. He forgets 100% disabled folk like us are entitled -nay- encouraged to come in frequently as the caller stated. It does give VA an eyes-on moment to make sure you’re not going to fly to New York for the 25 K Marathon and Fun run. Make no mistake about it. VA has gone dumpster diving in Veterans’ c-files who are six months away from a truly protected rating (twenty years) and taken back something to prevent them from keeping a 100%er. Vindictive is too mild a word to describe it. Look at all your VISTA Consult notes and at the beginning they start out with W/A (well attired) and NAD (no apparent distress). Some are obnoxious and say things like Veteran appears to be well-tanned and fit. You could look like Cousin Fester and they’d say that.

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Lastly, I wish I’d had a chance to interject this at the end of the hour. When Undersecretary For Excuses Allison Hickey was busy moonwalking the backlog argument past the Congressmen, I had one of those “moments” and busted out laughing. It would be the same if Col. Sanders was giving a speech to a Colosseum full of chickens. I honestly think she expected them to give her a standing ovation at the end, too.

I googled her name on Google Images and came up with every picture ever taken of her from the Academy through to now. I think she looks more authoritarian with the original auburn hair. You just know she’s the brunt of every blonde joke that comes down the pike.

You be the judge:

I wouldn't trust her in my cockpit but at least she looks natural here

I wouldn’t trust her in my cockpit but at least she looks natural here

Workable but we know redheads can be unreasonable

Workable but we know redheads can be unreasonable

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Did you hear the one about the blonde Undersecretary for Benefits…

I’m wondering how I’m going to explain this to Cupcake. Fortunately she’s in her Mediterranean mode (black hair) so I get to dodge that bullet for now. Mark this page. You heard it here. If Brig. Gen. Hickey suddenly goes back to auburn soon, you’ll know she’s reading this. Either that or she’s going to do it to be incognito at the next HVAC barbecue up on Capitol Hill.

 

 

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HAL–OPEN THE POD BAY DOOR

Of course, when you ask HAL, You have to more specific about which pod bay- especially if you’re talking 296 pod bays. Space, as usual. is at a premium due to VA’s recalcitrance on the ILP front. And yes, there is still no room to sit down and turn around in. I’m working on that.

garden stuff 024

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BVA–ANOTHER TIM POE COMES TO LIGHT

FROM THE JOHN WAYNE

 MEMORIAL VARO IN LA

This is becoming distressingly familiar as Vets grow old and die. The spouse, based on what the Vet has told her, decides to file for the panoply of Agent Orange presumptives and the VA has the unenviable task of telling her he was lying. Mr. Poe had to sit and admit it while alive. This poor lady has to hear he was a cook at Fort Polk during his whole enlistment.

Of course, what he told her was something entirely different…

The appellant submitted her notice of disagreement in November 2007. She said the Veteran told her on many occasions that he was medivaced from Vietnam. She submitted a statement from the Veteran’s sister, B.R., in January 2008. The Veteran’s sister said she remembered when the Veteran left the country and was medivaced home from Vietnam. He was in bad condition and had problems adjusting to a normal life. She did not provide any dates for the Veteran’s service in her statement. She did not say why the Veteran was medivaced back from Vietnam. The appellant submitted her own statement reiterating her belief that the Veteran served in Vietnam and that she should receive benefits.

The appellant perfected her appeal in April 2009. She again maintained that the Veteran’s family said he had served in Vietnam. She also said he died from service-connected causes.

The appellant testified at a Travel Board hearing in January 2011. At that time she asked that the hearing record be kept open for 30 or 60 days to allow her to obtain additional medical evidence and to attempt to obtain the Veteran’s service records if VA was unable to get them. The record was held open for 60 days for the appellant to submit additional medical evidence; however, the appellant did not submit any additional evidence.

In her testimony the appellant said the Veteran told her he was a tunnel rat in Vietnam. He was given the assignment because of his small size. She said he would have nightmares at night and cold sweats. It was acknowledged that the Veteran’s DD 214 did not reflect any foreign service. The Veterans Law Judge agreed that additional military records would be sought in the case to determine if the Veteran did have service in Vietnam. It was also noted that the sister who gave the prior statement was now deceased.  

The Board remanded the case to obtain the Veteran’s military records to show his assignments in service in July 2011. The remand instructed that the Veteran’s military personnel records should be requested. The Appeals Management Center (AMC) conducted the required development.

The Veteran’s DA Form 20, Enlisted Qualification Record, was received in August 2011. The records show the Veteran’s period of service as from June 1972 to June 1974. He received his basic training and training as a cook at Fort Polk and was assigned to that base for the entirety of his military service. This evidence is supportive of the STR record that noted, as of April 1974, the Veteran had been stationed at Fort Polk for 22 months.

I find this sad for all concerned. Everyone would like to think of their loved one as honest and truthful in all things. Occasionally that isn’t enough to satisfy one’s ego and they feel compelled to embellish. That’s okay if the military record can support it. This old boy led his wife to believe he was entitled and thus she was too. She had to find out the hard way that he misrepresented himself.

An ounce of preparation might have prevented this. A perusal of a DD 214 or the military records would have put paid to it before an extended and massive investment of time was squandered. This lady took it upon herself to file in March of 2007 to right a wrong. Six long years later she gets the bitchslap from the grave. Gee. Thanks, guy. I believed you and now this? I hate to think how many of these happen every year.

Son of Tunnel Rat

Son of Tunnel Rat

Trust, but verify. Ask yourself: Where’s the medals? Why no claim while he was alive? What was he waiting for? All these queshuns.

Posted in BvA HCV decisions, Vietnam Disease Issues, Vietnam War history | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

BVA– NO HCV IN SERVICE/ GONORRHEA? YOU DIDN’T ASK US TO LOOK AT IT

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Brilliant work on the AMLeg’s part. Here  Johnny Rebel files for hep and claims he had it in service. The records are blank. He also filed for “infertility”  due to a case of the clap in Korea.

AMLEG fails to help him build the hep in service= hep today Shedden#3  connection. And then they leave him hanging on the gonorrhea as an infertility issue. What no one does is connect the gonorrhea to the hepatitis and say “Risk Factor!” The blind leading the blind is an apt metaphor.

Here Johnny is  clearly able to prove he had the clap and no one takes the direct path to connect it. The old Field Of Claims adage I recite is “If you don’t build it, they won’t come.  AmLeg left this one on the table without even looking at the correlation. Smooth move, Mr. Exlax. In an effort to save 20% of his claim from a scurrilous lawyer, he utilized cheapo depot lawhelpdot com and got what he didn’t pay for-no justice.

This is why we use lawdogs if we are not suitably educated on this. Johhny’s failure to make any effort to research exactly what can cause HCV was a mistake of untold financial implications. Hiring the AMLEG chucklehead put paid to any hope of SC for anything here. So close but yet so far. He had it in his hands and managed to put the eggs in two separate baskets. Add no preparation and no doctor; neglect a nexus and shake well. Serve chilled outside the SSI office.

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Dream on

After reading about the sorry performance of the ILP, I can’t help but be skeptical about the lofty goals in VA pamphlet 26-13:

Title:  Handbook for Design: Specially Adapted Housing for Wheelchair Users

wheelchair

for severely disabled veterans

More info:  Part A and Part B.

Maybe the VA readily approves grants for severely handicapped veterans if they really need an elevator to get to the second floor of their homes?  But I doubt it.    

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NEW VETERANS POLL ON VBMS

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FED. CIR– NOVA v. SHINSEKI–THE FEDS ARE FED UP

Remember the good old days when there was no review  The BVA could simply speak and you would listen. That was the end of it and your options as well. After creation of the COVA, VASECs pretended nothing had changed and enmity slowly began to build with the Court. Every once in a while they had to take him into the back room and explain elementary Black’s Law to him. Remedial education didn’t take. Hooked on Phonics was ignored and the VASEC continued to mispronounce law. No smooth transition was going to occur so the Court proceeded to disassemble everything that arrived and remand, vacate and reverse a lot of it. Over 60% of it. They still do. You can see the invisible effect that it has on jurisprudence today but unfortunately the Court all too often does the bidding of the Government, too.  They are not above sticking their finger up and trying to assay the wind direction. The shellacking Keith Roberts got is classic proof that he and Vets like Leroy Macklem are never going to get a fair shake.

Every once in a while VASEC, and by extension, his stable of toadies do an incredible faceplant and either create a new interpretation of law or just go in the back room and build it from scratch. They get that “Laws? We don’ need no stinkin’ laws.” mentality and come up with some really funny ideas. They usually don’t get away with it for very long either. They smoked Jean Erspamer for a while back in the early days over a Writ of Mandamus but nothing of import has really hit the wall like Harvey v. Shinseki in recent memory.  Uncle Eric dawdled and fiddled so long  he actually earned the VA a fine. Nothing big but the bitchslap was to get their attention- not cause irreparable harm to the Orlando Karaoke Fund.

And then along comes another one of those Excessive Awards Program (EAP) deals where they just up and start doing things a different way one day with no discussion and no cooling off period to see if it’s even street legal. This is what caused this whole problem. VA opted to give a little haircut to 38 CFR §3.103 and made the changes effective immediately on August 23rd, 2011.

 The veterans’ benefits system has been calibrated with uniquely pro-claimant principles. Hodge v. West, 155  F.3d 1356, 1362 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (“This court and the Supreme Court both have long recognized that the character of the veterans’ benefits statutes is strongly and uniquely pro-claimant.”). Consistent with these proclaimant principles, and pursuant to statute, the VA regulations in 38 C.F.R. § 3.103 provide for certain procedural due process and appellate rights for veterans involved in VA adjudications.

These procedural and appellate rights require VA officials to “explain fully the issues and suggest the submission of evidence which the claimant may have overlooked and which would be of advantage to the claimant’s position.” § 3.103(c)(2). They also require the VA “to assist a claimant in developing the facts pertinent to [his or her] claim” and “to render a decision which grants every benefit that can be supported in law while protecting the interests of the Government.” § 3.103(a). Importantly, the VA has consistently applied the § 3.103 rights both to hearings conducted at the regional offices level and in appellate hearings conducted before the Board of Veterans’ Appeals…On August 23, 2011, VA issued an immediately effective new rule (the “2011 Rule”) that eliminated some of the rights previously provided under § 3.103. See Rules Governing Hearings Before the Agency of Original Jurisdiction and the Board of Veterans’ Appeals, Clarification, 76 Fed. Reg. 52,572-01 (Aug. 23, 2011). The 2011 Rule limited the provisions governing hearings under § 3.103 so that they applied “only to hearings conducted before the VA office having original jurisdiction over the claim.” Id. at 52,574 (emphasis added). In other words, veterans would no longer have the previously available procedural due process and appellate rights during board appeals. Despite this significant departure from the pro-claimant procedures espoused by § 3.103, VA stated that the change “merely clarifie[d] current procedures” and therefore was excepted from the notice-and-comment and delayed effective date requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act.

NOVA, the National Organization of Veterans Advocates, jumped in on December 22nd, 2011 with both feet and said hold the phone, Mr. Bell. That’s not permissible in the lower 48 states. VA promptly was given 30 days time to provide the Court with a brief  Several days before they were supposed to cough up an excuse, they asked for even more time (90 days) and the Court  acquiesced but said not to expect any more time. It was showtime at the OK Corral but VA wanted to keep taking a flyer on it. Meanwhile their little haircut to  §3.103 was still rolling downhill unattended and hitting innocent Vets.

Come March 5th 2012, they asked for another 30 days and NOVA was willing to play ball if they unplugged the new, improved regulation and put it on hold. VA’s finest nodded like baseball bobblehead dolls and put on one of those braindead grins of agreement- or so it seemed.

April 27th, 2012 dawned clear and sunny. VA marched into Court and pulled out their pockets indicating they didn’t have a brief to file. Feeling rather full of themselves, they started doing the Michael Jackson moon walk and promised all manner of wonderful things if only they could ignore the tolling on this brief. Damn if the 3rd Circus didn’t bite and believe them again.

The resounding sound of the judicial door slamming into about 66 Vets woke the Feds up. All this time Vets were getting hosed while VA insisted they weren’t.

Having already received two extensions of time, on April 27, 2012, VA petitioned for a third enlargement of time. VA stated that it wanted to allow the then published repeal to become effective prior to submitting its brief. VA’s third petition was prefaced upon and reconfirmed the Government’s commitment not to apply the provisions of the 2011 Rule—which VA by that point had publicly admitted was a violation of the APA. NOVA opposed the extension of time with well-founded concerns that any additional delay would result in more cases becoming final—making it significantly harder, and perhaps impossible, for some veterans harmed by the invalid rule to obtain relief. In response, VA stated that it was not aware of “any instances” in which the 2011 Rule was applied after March 5, 2012, but if NOVA identified any cases, the cases would be “investigated and dealt with by the VA Office of the General Counsel.”

The old ‘Ne Problemo, Senor’ line .And then the Court got the VA-equivalent of a bitchslap;

Despite VA’s repeated commitment not to apply the invalid 2011 Rule, NOVA has submitted papers to this court indicating that the Board relied upon the 2011 Rule in a substantial number of cases after March 5, 2012. NOVA provided a list of the cases to VA in hopes that the VA would live up to its word to investigate and deal with the cases; VA has declined to do so.

Shocked. I am shocked. The Court was shocked. Hell, the only two who weren’t were NOVA and VASEC. NOVA knows these Bozos and worse, VA marches to the beat of a drummer no one can hear- including themselves. When faced with equitable tolling strictures like mortal men, they just lied and blew the Big Guys off. The Feds are speechless. There are three dents in the hardwood floor up there in their Court where their chins hit.

The issue remaining before us is what action we
should take in response to VA’s conduct, including its
failure to abide by its commitments. We first address why
we believe that action on our part is appropriate.

Additionally, VA’s conduct and written communications refute its assertions that its violations were unintentional. For example, VA effectively stated that it would not investigate and deal with illegal application of the 2011 Rule because it would burdensome.In other words, VA was well aware of this commitment and intentionally elected not to fulfill it.

The VA’s conduct in this matter troubles the court on multiple levels. First, VA’s conduct did not involve an isolated mistake. Starting on March 5, 2012, VA began representing in court filings and in other communications with NOVA that it would immediately stop applying the 2011 Rule. VA also made various representations implying that the Board was not applying the Rule. In spite of these representations, NOVA identified sixty cases in which the invalid 2011 Rule may have been applied—and that was just in the month of March. Thirty of these cases expressly refer to the invalid 2011 Rule, and many if not all of these thirty cases declare that the Rule renders § 3.103 inapplicable.

Finally, VA’s conduct troubles the court because, rather than remedy harm caused by its broken promises, VA attempted to shift the burden to others such as NOVA, attorneys assisting veterans (oftentimes on a pro bono basis), or to the harmed veterans themselves. In particular, VA indicated in a letter to NOVA dated November 5, 2012,4 that the routine appellate (or postdecisional, in the case of Board reconsiderations) process was the most appropriate venue for resolving affected cases.

You see the enormity of the problem by now. This isn’t ‘liar, liar, pants on fire’. It isn’t even ‘the dog ate my brief’. It’s more nuanced like Harvey with a cavalier ‘let them eat cake’ undertone.

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VA, and by extension the Government attorneys repping them, all acknowledge there’s dog shit on their chukka boots but pretend the smell is  eau de parfum. The VA consensus is “Chill out, dude. We’ll fix it this year. We have so much to do and this is just a minor hiccup in the VBMS scheme of things”.

The Feds are fed up. They don’t want to hear about mitigation and ‘everyone will live happily ever after’. They are no longer listening at all. They are sharpening the punji sticks and trying to decide which animal feces to dip them in. NOVA is in the catbird seat and can pretty much tell VA that all the King’s men and all the King’s horses are not going to put this Pandora back in the box. This is going to involve what my Dad used to call some serious walking-around money. Obviously Harvey didn’t get their attention. This time there will be a lot of teeth in it and they’ll keep the mandate leash short with a choke collar attached to it. One woof. One growl or one attempt to be uncivilized and VASEC is going to find himself with a GPS ankle bracelet on and a two-mile perimeter.

Time extensions? Sorry Mr. Charlie Tuna. You used all your time outs. From here on out, you’ll actually have to bring the typewriter down here and enter your briefs while we wait. Your credibility issues precede you. In a word-you lied so we will accord you the same trust we would a dog that isn’t house-broken yet.

We expect that the Government will choose to confer
with NOVA regarding its proposed plan so that any plan
submitted to the court fully addresses the harms caused
by the Government’s conduct and minimizes the need for
further orders by this court.

Minimizes the need but does not foreclose the need entirely, if you will note. VA will need a pretty fancy tutor-fancier than the one they’ve been using thus far (JOHN J. TODOR) to teach them subservience before the Court. Worse, they only have sixty days in which to learn this new trick.  VBMS and paperless claims are going to look like child’s play compared to this pretty soon. I’m sure you’ve seen the Third Circus logo?

ONCE DISSED

imagesTWICE FRIED

VA may have to learn how to moonwalk standing on their hands or…or the Circus may just let them off with a slap on the wrist. You would certainly think that they are sufficiently taken aback by this perfidy to exact a pound of flesh.

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FACEPAGE MUST HAVE

Diane Cauchi and Greg Wigren shared Riding With Empathy’s photo. From my facepage, one of my heroes.

wc

 

The original, quintessential British Veteran.

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BVA–VA “INSERTS” NEXUS INTO DBQ

From the David Koresh

Memorial VARO in Whacko

Yessirree, Bob. You heard it here. When the very first DBQ was put out for use in late 2011, I warned that it had no signature block for a nexus. In no place was there a designated area to record this important element to substantiate a relationship to the disease claimed. It took several years for one to make it back up the ladder, but nevertheless it has arrived with the same anticipated error.

The only VA examination report of record that has been prepared for the purpose of addressing this specific issue is a September 2012 VA examination report. That VA examination report finds that the Veteran’s chronic renal failure has not been caused by his hepatitis C. Within the Disability Benefits Questionnaire (DBQ) format, the September 2012 VA examiner checked the box to indicate that “The claimed condition is less likely than not (less than 50 percent probability) proximately due to or the result of the Veteran’s service connected condition.” The rationale, in pertinent part, explains that the specific history of the Veteran’s chronic renal failure “is consistent with an acute infection and dehydration etiology.” Significantly, neither the examiner’s DBQ response nor the examiner’s discussion of rationale addresses the critical question of whether the Veteran’s chronic renal failure may have been permanently aggravated in severity by the Veteran’s service-connected hepatitis C. For this reason, the September 2012 VA examination report is inadequate for the purposes of providing medical evidence addressing the theory of secondary service connection at issue.

When apprised of this during the memorable Filner/ Hickey tête à tête way back when in June of last year, the blonde General acknowledge that was a wee problem and promised to fix it. I guess some slipped through the cracks. So we have to guess that here, the Vet managed to get it filled out and submit it but that it had no place for the nexus by his doctor. Being electronic in nature, a new page can be inserted to fix that pesky nexus hole. Et. Voilà! A nexus is born in Texas.

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CAVC– VA 5, HARTSOX 0

Rest in Peace, Michael. They won this time and you didn’t live long enough for the payout. You just taught another Vet not to wait on submitting  his claims. Way to go, dude. He’ll thank you some day.

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR VETERANS CLAIMS
MICHAEL D. HARTSOX, )
)
Appellant, )
)
v. ) Vet. App. No. 12-2021
)
ERIC K. SHINSEKI, )
Secretary of Veterans Affairs, )
)
Appellee. )
NOTICE OF DEATH OF APPELLANT
Pursuant to Vet. App. R. 43(a)(2), the undersigned counsel files this Notice to
inform the Court that the appellant in the above-captioned case, Michael D. Hartsox, died
on November 1, 2012.
On January 24, 2013, undersigned counsel filed with this Court a Notice of
Inability to Verify Death, informing the Court that although she had received information
that Mr. Hartsox had passed away, she was unable to obtain any written verification of
his death. On March 6, 2013, counsel for the Secretary forwarded to the undersigned via
email a document entitled Social Security Administration Data documenting that Mr.
Hartsox passed away on November 1, 2012. The Social Security Administration Data
document is attached to this Notice as Exhibit A.
The undersigned has been unable to locate any next-of-kin or other potential
accrued benefits beneficiary and therefore does not intend to file a motion to substitute in
this case

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