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United States News Title: Watchdogs labor to expose liars about military exploits Army Capt. Joshua Howard, a physicians assistant at Fort Riley, Kan., ran across the newspaper story online about a Korean War veteran who was to be inducted into the Kansas National Guard Hall of Fame. In the accompanying photo, the veteran wore a khaki shirt covered with ribbons and medals, black bars and stripes. The story told how this veteran had received the militarys No. 2 and 3 awards for valor the Distinguished Service Cross and the Silver Star along with two Purple Hearts, one pinned on by Gen. Douglas MacArthur. And how he had been a prisoner of war in Korea for 5½ months. But the more Howard read, the more those medals and his account of it all didnt add up, he said. He called friends to ask about the different medals. He e-mailed the photo and story. He wanted to know. I work with guys here who have PTSD, soldiers who have lost legs and stuff, and they dont have these super-cool medals and badges, Howard said. Within days, the veterans face stared out from several websites, with other veterans questioning whether he was a real hero or a fake. It is a question that is being asked more and more these days. Its an epidemic of military fakers and liars out there, said Mary Schantag of Branson, who has made it her job to expose fake POWs. So far this year, Schantag and her retired Marine husband, Chuck, have received requests to check almost 8,000 names to verify POW claims. Last year, they ran more than 14,000 names. The Schantags, along with Vietnam veteran Doug Sterner of Virginia, are members of the 22-member Stolen Valor Task Force, a group of veterans and military researchers across the country who share information to expose military impostors. Self-taught experts, they collect tidbits of information every day from dozens of sources; file Freedom of Information requests; and gather notes from general orders, historical accounts and prisoner of war records. They scrutinize the material, cross-check it with other sources and build databases. Their goal is to have a searchable repository of all earned medals of valor. A place where the public can read stories about heroes who otherwise might be forgotten. Every one of the task force members knew a real hero who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country. And every one has vowed to stop those who would steal anothers valor. It was task force members who pushed Congress to approve the 2006 Stolen Valor Act, which strengthened existing laws covering the unauthorized wearing of or laying claim to military decorations. The act made it a crime to lie about ones military service. The law is being challenged on First Amendment free speech grounds in several states. It was upheld in California. But last week in Colorado, a federal judge dismissed a case against a man who falsely claimed he was a Marine captain who had been wounded while serving in Iraq and had received a Purple Heart and a Silver Star. U.S. District Judge Robert Blackburn said the law unconstitutionally punished speech based on its content without a compelling government interest to justify the restriction. The decision set precedent only in Colorado, but it may open up more challenges nationwide. Out of the thousands of people who have lied about or exaggerated their service, Sterner said, only about 55 have been prosecuted for false valor claims, and most have not received stiff punishments. Last month, federal prosecutors agreed to drop a Stolen Valor charge against Timothy J. Watkins of Kansas City, North, if he completed 18 months of pretrial supervision without a problem. As part of the diversion agreement, Watkins agreed that he had lied about his military history and receiving the Purple Heart and Silver Star. Some may look at these cases and ask: Whats the big deal? Who cares if the stories arent true? What harm is done? But many veterans are outraged every time a military faker is exposed. They see a crime against the honor of those who really did charge up hills, wipe out machine-gun positions, drag wounded buddies to safety and endure terrible wounds or even death. Every valor award comes at a very high cost, said John V. Lilyea, a retired Army sergeant first class in West Virginia who runs the website This Aint Hell, But You Can See It From Here. Were so tired of these guys who say theyre heroes and theyre really fakers, he said. Lilyea said he has had to tell grieving families that a loved one could not be buried with military honors because he had lied about his service. If we catch them while theyre alive, they have a chance to explain it and maybe redeem themselves, he said. The Schantags, who split their time between homes in Branson and Skidmore, Mo., founded the POW Network ( www.pownetwork.org). The nonprofit is not affiliated with the government, nor is it paid for its work. Mary Schantag said the operation functions solely on donations. It is a labor of love for the couple. And there is plenty of labor to do. Twenty years ago, the Schantags considered two dozen names a year to be a high number. Now they get about three dozen requests a day. On certain days of the year, the phone rings nearly nonstop. The three worst days for us are the days after Memorial Day, Fourth of July and Veterans Day, Mary Schantag said. Prime days for reminiscing about past glories real or not. When the Schantags started this work in 1989, their goal was only to find missing former POWs. But something happened along the way. We started finding out about a lot of phonies and fakers, she said. Sterner believes in heroes. He believes in their ability to inspire. He believes their stories should be told, remembered and treasured. But the military, while keeping miles of paper records, had never put them into a searchable online database. So Sterner set out to create his own. Over the past 16 years, he has compiled in one database all the information he could find on the recipients of the militarys top three awards for valor: the Medal of Honor, the Distinguished Service Cross (including the Navy Cross and Air Force Cross) and the Silver Star. It is slow, slogging work. Last year, with donations not keeping up with costs, he nearly had to close it down. But the Military Times newspaper saw its value and bought the database from him. Sterner is now its main curator. The database at www.militarytimes.com/hallofvalor is easily searchable, with every Medal of Honor and Distinguished Service Cross citation from every war the U.S. has fought in. (The compilation of Silver Stars is not yet complete.) The process of tracking down military records is daunting. Some information is buried in the files of an entire unit instead of those of individuals. Some records were lost in a 1973 fire in a military records center in St. Louis. But Sterner has made a home in cyberspace for the really big honors. Future generations can read what their loved ones did, Sterner said, so we wont forget. A few years ago, Sterner helped a Kansas City woman confirm her deceased fathers heroism. Twenty-three years after his death, the family received a funeral for him with full military honors in Arlington National Cemetery. But what Sterner started as a way to help the public remember military heroes has become the go-to resource for verifying or disproving accounts of valor. I have never found Dougs site to be inaccurate, said Tom Cottone Jr., a former FBI agent in Washington, D.C. Cottone, who retired two years ago, spent 14 years ferreting out military impostors, focusing mostly on those who falsely claimed to be Medal of Honor recipients. Sterner, he said, is extremely careful and diligent when he puts someones record on the site. And if someones name is not there, that says a lot, too. The Korean veterans story, published in April in a Kansas newspaper, illustrates how fast an account can spread, catching the eyes of veterans and watchdogs within days. The story told about the veterans pending induction into the Kansas National Guard Hall of Fame, an honor for which he had been nominated by city officials and others in his hometown. He is a local hero, representing veterans in parades and the honor guard, playing taps, folding the flag to present to widows at funerals. He also is in poor health, his family says. (The Kansas City Star is not publishing his name because he has not been charged under the Stolen Valor Act.) The story included, word for word, two sentences from the framed medal citations the veteran displayed in his office. Watchdog groups and other veterans pored over the photograph, scrutinizing the medals. Some filed Freedom of Information requests to corroborate or expose his claims, searching archives and the National Personnel Records Center and reports for general order numbers from the citations for his Distinguished Service Cross and Silver Star. No one found any evidence that the Kansan had received the awards he claimed, or been a POW, or even seen combat. His records indicated he was in Korea about a month. This guy
had so many red flags I couldnt believe that no one had questioned him before, Mary Schantag said. The first thing everybody noticed was that (he) refused to show proof of his records. Most guys, despite being reluctant, will show what they did because it means so much.
It costs so much in human terms to get these awards. He showed it only to his family and the friends who went into his office
until he was (to be) inducted into the hall of fame. Other veterans said they asked the Kansan to release his military records with his privacy sections redacted. It would still show his awards and honors. He refused, they said. Officials at the Guard Hall of Fame said the veteran told them that he had asked the military to not put his honors on his records because he did not deserve them. That made veterans doubt his story more. Meanwhile, in Topeka, Doug Jacobs, board president of the Guard Hall of Fame, started his own investigation, calling and writing military offices, trying to get the elusive records to prove this mans innocence, he said. Days later, Jacobs received a phone message from Arlington, Va. The voice was that of Sterner. The Star had asked Sterner to run through his database two sentences from the veterans Distinguished Service Cross, or DSC, citation. From the 812 DSC narratives from the Korean War, the computer made one hit: a word-for-word match with a passage describing one mans heroism. And it was not the Kansas veterans. It was that of Army Sgt. 1st Class Richard J. Hartnett, who had gone back to Pennsylvania after the war and died in 2003. The Star then called back the reporter who had written the original story. The reporter had taped the hourlong interview and had photocopied the medal citations from the nominees office wall. As The Star began to read Hartnetts entire citation, the other reporter gasped. Except for the name, date and location, they were identical. Sterner then ran the Kansans Silver Star citation through the same screening process. Again, just one hit. This one came from another DSC citation. The recipient: Army Cpl. Fabian Nieves-Laguer. He was a member of the famous Borinqueneers, the 65th Infantry Regiment from Puerto Rico. It took Sterners computer 14 seconds to make the match. Gosh, he didnt even bother to write his own wording, said Sterner. This shows so clearly the value in a database that documents these awards. Without it, this would have taken months or even years to find, and thats if we would have ever found it. The Star tried to talk to the Kansas veteran, but he did not return calls. In her home in Jonestown, Pa., Delores Hartnett, widow of Richard Hartnett, listened as The Star told her how another man appeared to have adopted her husbands medal citation as his own. She was speechless at first. Her husband rarely talked about his service in Korea, she said. But after the Korean War, he enlisted in the Pennsylvania National Guard, serving for 25 years. He once told her that he did what he had to do to serve his country. The couple had five children and seven grandchildren. She does not visit his grave on Memorial Day because hes in my heart every day, every moment, she said. But she can imagine what her husband would have said about a case of stolen valor. To steal someone elses heroics, what they fought for, and watched friends die for, this is absolutely pitiful
pitiful, pitiful, pitiful! Jacobs of the Guard Hall of Fame said recently that the Kansas veterans family has withdrawn his nomination. He will not be inducted into the hall. The hall has changed its rules regarding information that emerges after a nominees induction has been announced, Jacobs said. Before, there was no provision to prevent a nominee who had been accepted from being inducted. Mary Schantag said she has forwarded information about the veteran to the FBI. Not just his name, but a folder with everything the Schantags gathered. Thats standard for us. Its against the law to wear a medal that you didnt earn because they come at such a high human cost. You know, if these people told just one lie, they might get away with it. But theyve got to be better and more than everyone else. What they fail to understand is that just by serving and doing what they were told to do, whether they saw combat or sat behind the scenes in an office, is extraordinary. Thats good enough to be a hero. A harrowing narrative of bravery Here is an excerpt from Richard J. Hartnetts Distinguished Service Cross citation: Sergeant First Class Hartnett distinguished himself by extraordinary heroism in action against enemy aggressor forces in the vicinity of Chorwon, Korea, on 29 September 1951. On that date, Sergeant Hartnetts company was assigned the mission of attacking a numerically superior hostile force occupying well-fortified hill positions. Commanding the lead squad of this assault, Sergeant Hartnett had maneuvered his men to within a few yards of the enemy emplacements when a heavy volume of machine-gun fire halted their advance. Unhesitatingly, Sergeant Hartnett charged directly into the intense enemy fire, hurling grenades and firing his rifle. His aggressive action neutralized the hostile emplacement, but his attack also attracted the attention of the enemy troops occupying another bunker who immediately directed their fire against the friendly force. Sergeant Hartnett single-handedly assaulted the emplacement, this time destroying its weapon and killing the occupants. Observing another enemy position, he fearlessly charged a third time and eliminated it. His courageous actions were directly responsible for the collapse of the enemy defenses and enabled his company to take its objective with a minimum of casualties. To read Cpl. Fabian Nieves-Laguers citation, go to www.militarytimes.com/hallofvalor. The psychology of a great temptation embellishment We are all likely to embroider personal stories to make ourselves appear a bit brighter or funnier or more interesting than we think we are, said John Wisner, a psychiatrist at the University of Kansas Hospital. Thats human nature. Its a tremendous human temptation, he said. But people cross the line on deception when they cant understand the value of telling the truth, or they get caught up in living a story that isnt true, Wisner said. Oftentimes people do it for love or esteem from other people, he said. There are people who cant allow themselves to be perceived as who they are and have to make things up. They feel empty and hollow as who they are and have to embellish. Military service is a particularly attractive way to boost ones image, Wisner said. It implies machismo and bravery. For the average American, military service is the one way available to show valor. Wisner was on staff at the Kansas City VA Medical Center more than 20 years. He met many who acted heroically and were wounded in the line of duty. Rarely did he find someone who exaggerated what he had done. If they talk about it, they do it with a degree of humility and even reluctance, Wisner said. To reach Lee Hill Kavanaugh, call 816-234-4420 or send e-mail to lkavanaugh@kcstar.com. | Alan Bavley, abavley@kcstar.com Posted on Sat, Jul. 24, 2010 10:15 PM Read more: http://www.kansascity.com/2010/07/24/2104758/watchdogs-labor-to-expose-liars.html#ixzz0xU6DbPyh
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
#2. To: Ferret Mike (#0)
You mean people who claim to have personally shot down 3 Migs? People like that?
#4. To: Skip Intro (#2)
(Edited)
Exactly. I knew people who had done incredible things in the military. I even got to know a Medal of Honor winner who was still on active duty when I was in. The most consistently common trait the best of them had was humility and a dislike of talking about their exploits. I have also met the liar's club out there. One guy who claimed he was in the 82nd for example - in Vietnam no less - told me after a long long pause and some deflection that he had been in a unit part of the Eighty Duce's first Brigade. Which was odd to hear, and it was only the third brigade that went. Often you hear really mixed jumbles of cobbled together recollections that make no sense at all. For example, people who say they were tunnel clearing commandos who were in a Green Beret Marine Force Recon unit. ..... yeah, right. I was fascinated looking at Pound Puppy's first posts in el pee. He was all too quick to paint a killer combat pilot's wings onto the shirt about where one of his titties is. An addiction to stolen valor is like that. You want people to love you quickly if you are B.S.ing. It generally is revealed by friends or relatives and has to be drug out of you if you have trouble revealing this sort of thing. Allot of it has to do with a survivor's regret, knowing others that make them feels guilty at accepting awards for glory knowing they deserved recognition too and never got it. Personally, I feel Mr. Alaskan glory hound is too loud and crass to have done what he did. I would be shocked and amazed if the dirt bag even saw duty in Vietnam as a REMF, a Rear Echelon Mother F*cker. Vietnam had an incredibly big head to tail ratio. Which means that there were a whole lot of support people for each and every person who actually saw combat. Pound Puppy has incredibly little empathy for others. You can see in his posts at el pee he has little use for or love of women. He dearly loves Bush and considers him a war great. He is deplorable as a communicator. I doubt very much if he was in the military, and if he was, he at best got a brutal paper cut working a typewriter in S-3 or something like that.
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