M E AS FACT FINDER

This popped up on the Vet’s law library site a few weeks ago and it caught my eye. If you are reasonably good at digesting legal theory, this baby will give you cites and precedence to quote until you win. There’s no way VA can sand bag you when you delve down into the intricacies of credible testimony, negative evidence, absence of evidence etc.

Every major decision that touches on a nexus, why it’s probative, and the rationale for it from VA’s perspective is analyzed. Afterwards, everything that’s wrong or illegal about it as determined by the CAVC is then reviewed. The thesis goes on to investigate why, how, when and who is responsible, prohibited by or forbidden to do something. If you can’t find it here, you won’t or it doesn’t exist.

Medical Examiner Dos and Don’ts

This belongs next to your Nexus bible.

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PICTURE=1K WORDS

Member Jim sends me this in the morning’s inbox. I have no comments on the appropriateness or political aspersions this might engender. I see it as no more than a natural progression of a governmental snafu that wasn’t handled very well. We don’t live in the sixties anymore.

Posted in General Messages, Humor | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

VSOs–Their Role In Your Claim

Yesterday the House Veterans Affairs Committee got together for a martini and Morel mushrooms on  toastpoints après dejuner thing. Oh, and yes- they did discuss Veterans. I attach the link to the moaners and groaners. After the GSA debacle, I can’t believe these people don’t brown bag it.

VSOs <veteranszoom.com

I got as far as the blue line being over the pause/play button. I’m sorry. I’ve never heard such a well-polished Dog and Pony show in the last several years. The one I liked was the VFW gentleman telling us his outfit won 30% of their claims before the BVA. Really? 30%? And they are proud of that? They even crowed that that they had a better percentage of wins than lawyers. If they’ve been monkeying around with the claim for 5 years, I hope to smile that they would win 70% of them.

When asked if VA was now hiring more Vets, the DAV guy piped up and observed that they definitely were-why he even knew of a couple himself- an electrician and an orderly at a VAMC-so this was proof-positive that the process was working! They unfortunately didn’t think many were qualified or trainable as claims processors…

All in all, it seemed like the three stooges explaining why the VA was having so much trouble  and these guys are ostensibly their antagonists. The 125-day flying Unicorn was mentioned as was the eventual conquering of the mythic backlog. Louisville was commended and Oakland was besmirched. In sum? Nothing new. Everything is slowly coming together. Errors are few and far between. Communication between everyone (VA and VSOs) is  approaching 100%. What this doesn’t explain is why you and I cannot get them on the phone or to even return the call.

Posted in All about Veterans, General Messages, VA BACKLOG, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The Alchemy Of Turning Baht Into Greenbacks

Back in January of this year I posted an entertaining blurb about fishing with hand grenades. It’s far easier that it sounds if one is careful.

https://asknod.wordpress.com/2012/01/24/dupont-spinners/

At the end I mentioned the irascible problem of converting local currencies (Kip or Baht) into greenbacks. Simply put, you couldn’t. The military was well aware that they had to control the black market, if for no other reason than to prevent GIs from stealing everything that wasn’t nailed down.

Being the entrepreneur that I was, I tried to convert baht for greenbacks at a bank off base at Udorn and almost landed in jail over it. I avoided an Article 15 by testifying that the currency was obtained by gambling on Beta (fighting fish). When I got my orders for Laos, I started piling up Baht (and then Kip) in alarmingly large amounts. My deliverance came quite by accident. Several AirAm pilots had “off the books enterprises” and readily told me how to cure the problem. I had to laugh at how easy it was. On one of our resupply missions which I always volunteered for, I hopped the embassy C-46 (with air-conditioning, no less) and headed south . I caught the C-130 Klong flight that went down to Bangkok daily.

A short taxi ride over to the Swiss Embassy for 12 Baht (60¢) and all my troubles were over. I walked in with about $650.00 the first trip. Thai currency’s largest denomination was a 100 Baht note ($5.00 US) so I was carrying a big wad of currency. The Swiss were more than willing to accept my deposits of both Kip and Baht at par and charged me nothing for the new numbered account.

By the time I left in May 1972 I had amassed in excess of $12K thanks to my local friends who were eager to purchase stereo, cigarettes and liquor. Similarly, I ended up with lots more from 30 round clips for M-16s which my sister sent me. The military had none then and they were a hot ticket. The canned spray cheese (needs no refrigeration) and Tabasco were also winners. As an example, a fifth of JW Black sold at the Class VI store for $12.00. I could sell it off base for $40 bucks all day long. A Sony or Teac reel to reel out of the PACEX catalog? $229.00. Offbase- $400.00. To avoid imperial entanglements, I had to have help ordering all this so I took a small hit for “dealer prep., destination and handling fees”. I’d have the holder of the ration card buy the stereo with my money and take possession when it arrived.

When I arrived at my new duty station at Edwards AFB in the Mojave Desert, I checked in with the Swiss Consulate in Los Angeles and they were more than happy to make me whole again-for a small handling fee, naturally.

The teaching lesson here is elementary. Laws were made for the rank and file. In order to succeed in life, you need a plan. Mine fell into my lap quite by accident although I had considered mailing all the Baht and Kip back to my sister at one point. I prefer to think that what I did was perfectly legal. Were it not, I’m sure the Swiss Embassy personnel would have brought it to my attention.

 As a P.S. to this, I just received an email from WGM who obviously comprehends how an AF mind works. Someone even went to far as to summarize this wisdom…

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Happy Endings

Member Jim contributed this gem. As I know him personally, I know this fate did not befall him. Nevertheless, it’s food for thought if you get your walking papers…

On the first day, he sadly packed his belongings into boxes, crates and suitcases.

On the second day, he had the movers come and collect his things.

On the third day, he sat down for the last time at their beautiful dining-room table, by candle-light; he put on some soft background music on his Ipod, and feasted on a pound of shrimp, a jar of caviar, and a bottle of Dom Perignon.

When he’d finished, he went into each and every room and deposited a few half-eaten shrimps dipped in caviar into the hollow center of the curtain rods.

He then cleaned up the kitchen and left.

On the fourth day, the wife came back with her new boyfriend, and at first, all was bliss.

Then, slowly, the house began to smell.

They tried everything; cleaning, mopping, and airing-out the place.

Exterminators were called to check vents for dead rodents, and carpets were steam cleaned.

Air fresheners were hung everywhere. Exterminators were brought  in yet again to set off gas canisters, during which time the two had to move out for a few days. In the end, they even paid to replace the expensive wool carpeting. Nothing worked! People stopped coming over to visit.

Repairmen refused to work in the house.The maid quit.

Finally, they couldn’t take the stench any longer, and decided they had to move, but a month later – even though they’d cut their price in half – they couldn’t find a buyer for such a stinky house.

Word got out, and eventually even the local realtors refused to return their calls.

Finally, unable to wait any longer for a purchaser, they had to borrow a huge sum of money from the bank to purchase a new place.

Then the ex called the woman and asked how things were going. She told him the saga of the rotting house. He listened politely and said that he missed his old home terribly and would be willing to reduce his divorce settlement in exchange for having the house.

Knowing he could have no idea how bad the smell really was, she agreed on a price that was only a tenth of what the house had been worth … but only if he would sign the papers that very day.

He agreed, and within two hours her lawyers delivered the completed paperwork.

A week later the woman and her boyfriend stood smiling as they watched the moving company pack everything to take to their new home ……

and to spite her ex-husband, she took everything- lock, stock and barrel-even the curtain rods.

Posted in General Messages, Humor | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Growth Hormone Responsible For Liver Cancer

Patricia sends us this. She is the expert on all things HCV.

http://hepatitiscresearchandnewsupdates.blogspot.com/2012/04/liver-cancer-can-be-caused-by-excess.html

Posted in General Messages, HCV Health, Medical News, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Secret Service Poll

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VAfeasance

To coin a new term, I have chosen a contraction of VA and misfeasance. Alternately, it could be malfeasance. The jury is apparently still out until the cover up is completed. Our erstwhile Joe Vet, ever the sleuth extraordinaire, found this. Since none of us pay to subscribe to Arkansas Online, we are stymied until a paying member reveals the gist of the article.

That’s all folks.   The Little Rock VA honchess is accused of malfeasance by one of the underlings.  If this was a Veteran, there would be a whole page on how the Veteran ripped off the VA.  However, because this was an inside job, we wont make an example of it..we will pretend as if it never happened.   All this in an “open government” non adversarial Veteran friendly Va.   En espanol, “Va” means “go”, and No Va…means it wont go.  Some times we need to tell the VA, “No Va”…we are not buying this..it just “wont go”.

http://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2012/apr/18/head-lr-home-vets-leave-20120418/

We will serve no Vet

before  his Time.

Time is terribly subjective, isn’t it?

But wait. There’s more. I didn’t scroll down far enough on my email to see this one.

The numbers dont add up.  How can 80,000 troops in Afghanastan, and 45,000 troops in Iraq, build up a 1.1 million VA claims backlog if many claims are processed in less than 125 days?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_in_Afghanistan_(2001%E2%80%93present)

http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Foreign-Policy/2011/0907/Iraq-withdrawal-How-many-US-troops-will-remain

Does anyone else smell “something fishy” about VASEC’s numbers?     VASEC says 1.25 million apply for benefits?    Does this mean the 125,000 troops apply for 10 conditions each?

http://vetlawyers.com/vetblog/index.php/2012/04/va-claims-backlog-hits-record-1-1-million-bergmann-moore-testify-at-april-18-congressional-hearing/?utm_source=feedburner&

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VARO–It’s A Lie

Member Mike writes me and tells of VA “misconstruing” his evidence.

DEAR Mr. Nod,

I just got my denail. I had hepatitis in service in Cu Chi in Nam. It’s in my medical reords. 1968. It says infectous hep. clay colored stools, schlera ictera  and other stuff. I was in the hospitel at Saigon for 3 weeks. VA says I didnt have any hep C in service and that was different hep. I filed in dec. 2010 and they just now denied. Oh yeah my VA office is Lincoln, Ne. Can they do that. How do they know? What should I do. I have a DAV officer but he is hard to find  he doesnt call me back.

This is what VA is permitted to do. They can announce a finding-right or wrong- and it stands for the truth until a new “finding” holds otherwise. Thus a mistruth or fact that is unsupported by records can exist until it is proven to be “no longer an operable statement”.  You sir, are a victim like WGM. As you may not be aware, WGM filed based on a jetgun defense. VA chose to ignore that and made a finding that he obtained it over the course of his enlistment from his cherchez les femmes forays. Having picked it up from the ladies, he was also denied compensation based on it being willful misconduct. That part of the decision was flawed but they did say it occurred in service. After a long tortured review, it was acknowledged that having a dose in the service was a case of poor judgement, but was not willful misconduct. Therefore, their “finding” had to change. Change it did and WGM joined the chosen 15%.

A finding is a fact of law. It cannot be overturned after the fact unless it can be proved that the decision process was flawed and the finding was clearly and unmistakably erroneous. Thus, VA has chosen to make a flawed (in my mind) decision on your claim because

a) they can

b) they usually do.

c) they are making a decision based on very incomplete medical information, and

d) I’m betting that you didn’t even get a C&P that could have proven your case one way or another.

VA has a policy of virtually automatic denials on HCV. Many’s the Vet who gets no exam and/or a cursory one if they do. That often consists of a blood test for HCV and sometimes another for liver functions test (LFT). Here’s the lowdown. A comprehensive exam would test for HAV, HBV and HCV. This can determine what you have had in the past and what you currently have. If  your hepatitis in 1968 was truly infectious, that is now called HAV. If it were true, you would have immunity to it and possess the antibodies. The same applies for viral hep. now called HBV. There was no testing for HAV/HBV until the advent of the Australian Antigens test of 1972. Any opinion of  what you had in service was pure conjecture in 1968. VA can and will declare those contemporary service records as being correct until proven wrong. On appeal, VA will give you a C&P and test you for the other flavors. What you need to watch out for is an appeal that goes to the BVA in D.C. without that C&P exam. The VLJ will just remand it back to Lincoln for the exam. It’s the law. This will add a year to your appeal. VA doesn’t care. If they did, they’d never send the appeal up without one.

Now- about the C&P. If it shows you never had HAV, they will have to change their story. The important thing is that they don’t have to act until forced to.  Chances are they will default to a finding of HBV in service if the blood tests show that.  There was no way to ascertain HCV until 1992 commercially. VA will continue to maintain that there is no evidence in your records of HCV infection and that it clearly mentions infectious. HAV is passed via poor hygiene and ingested through the mouth. HBV (and HCV) are blood born and cannot be transmitted any other way. Many Vets picked both of these up in RVN -some at the same time like me. Statistics reveal that Vietnam Vets are 60% more likely to have/had one or more of these viral infections.

The medical records clearly describe known symptoms of hepatitis. Clay-coloured stools are a hallmark as are the jaundiced, yellow eyes (sclera ictera) mentioned. Somewhere there will be mention of SGOT and SGPT which are blood test measurements of the liver functions. Normal is 5-35ish for both. Abnormal is in the 50s or higher. With a hepatitis infection, readings into the 300-500 range are seen.

VA examiners are not doctors. They are advised by “medically trained doctors/nurses” at the VAROs who opine as to the etiology of the infection. Knowing the VA default setting is Deny, they start from there and try to work towards Grant. You see the problem? The record clearly states “Infectious” and infectious it will stay until a finding is issued that declares it  inoperable and substitutes a new “finding”. After a definitive blood test this finding may change to viral and they will continue the denial. HBV, except for rare cases, is acute like HAV.  VA will cling to this as proof until you get a doctor to say it is likely that the hep. in service is the same as what you have now.

I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that the DAV representative you  have representing you may have neglected to mention that you need a nexus letter. Please look to the right and click on blog labeled the same. This will give you a better grounding in the requirements for winning. When you arrive without a nexus, VA denies, saying you haven’t proved your claim. In the event you do show up with one later, they will find a way to denigrate it and issue their own nexus saying the exact opposite.

You now have 12 months to file your NOD contesting this. Fighting it is not difficult. Getting VA to look at your logic and evidence is going to be the problem. VA have made their minds up and changing the finding is the hurtle. Your evidence refuting it is the key to a win but it cannot be done without the nexus letter. Worse, they are stuck on the infectious word and feel no need to find out otherwise.

38 CFR  in earlier days permitted VA to forego a C&P if they felt the claim had no merit or chance of winning. After the laws on well-grounded claims were changed in 2001, if you had hep. in service it was a pretty good indicator that more testing should be done  to determine which one it was. With the advent of PCR testing, there is no grey area anymore. Tests will show what is present. Unless your representative pitches a bitch, VA will undoubtedly “forget” to give you one.

I don’t know what your capabilities are for going it alone on your claim so I will not suggest it. VSOs are the only avenue to legal representation other than doing it yourself. Now that you have been denied, you can legally seek an attorney to represent you. He is entitled to no more than 20% of your settlement if you win. Look in the phone book or on the internet for VA attorneys in your area. We can give you advice here as well. Depending on how much free time you have to devote to this and your willingness to learn what you need to win, you can conceivably do it yourself. Having lost the first battle is a setback but not the end of the road.

Read up about the process here and get a better understanding of it. If it seems overwhelming, I would suggest an attorney rather than your present arrangement which seems to be dysfunctional. From what we have seen and heard, VSOs are like children-seen but not heard. Best of luck with this and do not hesitate to ask for assistance. While I know it sounds repetitive and redundant, thank you for your service to America. It has come around full circle and bit you on the buttocks. No good deed goes unpunished. Welcome to the club.

Posted in C&P exams, General Messages, Introduction-Read these first, Nexus Information, Tips and Tricks, vARO Decisions, Vietnam Disease Issues | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

MSM “DISCOVERS” VA PROBLEM

This just in. The New York Times, in a major scoop on its competitors Sunday, unfurled a banner story about an apparent backlog of claims at the VA. It was even reported that the Oakland and Seattle Regional Offices were so backed up that a wait of over 125 days was becoming normal. The last time I checked, 125 days was three months and five days. It takes the SEARO 125 days to mail out an acknowledgement that they received your claim. WTF? Pardon my French, but what Gregorian calendar are they ascribing this phenomenon to? Mars or Jupiter’s? In 2008, it took  SEARO over five months to confirm that my wife and 21 year old son were indeed related to me and compensate me accordingly. They had this information from the filing of my VA Form 21-526 which was sent in to them in-ta da!- July, 1989. From just this, one can see the magnitude of the problem and it’s not just in Oakland and Seattle. It’s all-pervasive and endemic to the system. All the King’s men and all the King’s horses are not going to put this aright. Uncle Eric is dreaming.

Attached below is the burning knowledge that today this news will be revealed to our elected Representatives in Foggy Bottom. Where it will go from there is anyone’s guess. Perhaps Sen. Sneakers will stumble upon it and make it her cause du jour. As I have always tried to enunciate, they’ll see it only when they believe it up on the hill.

VA BACKLOG DISCOVERED

Posted in All about Veterans, General Messages, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments