Tag: fort hood
Louisiana, Mississippi Areas Under Flood Watch As Texas Floods Spread

Louisiana, Mississippi Areas Under Flood Watch As Texas Floods Spread

By Alex Dobuzinskis

Torrential rains in Texas which caused flooding that killed 16 people this week have spread to southern Louisiana, leaving parts of that state and Mississippi under a flash flood watch through Sunday morning, according to the National Weather Service.

Heavy rains could strike the Florida panhandle early next week, but not as intensely as in Texas, Daniel Petersen, a meteorologist at the Weather Prediction Center in Maryland, said in a phone interview on Saturday.

Small streams in southern Louisiana have overflowed their banks, causing localized flooding, he added.

At least 16 people have died in Texas in the past week as some rivers swelled to levels not seen in more than 100 years, forcing thousands of people to evacuate their homes in low-lying areas.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott has declared a state of disaster in more than 30 counties, the Texas Department of Public Safety said in a statement on Saturday. In Bastrop County, southwest of the state capital of Austin, flooding damaged nearly 300 homes, it added.

Heavy rainfall was forecast to continue on Saturday along the Texas coast and potentially trigger more flooding there, state and federal officials said.

National Weather Service hydrologist Gregory Waller said in a phone interview on Saturday that the Brazos River was expected to crest this weekend near Rosharon, a community south of Houston that is home to more than 1,500 people.

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice began evacuating on Friday about 1,700 inmates at its Ramsey Unit in Rosharon, due to flooding along the Brazos.

Flooding struck Richmond, upriver from Rosharon, earlier this week when the Brazos overflowed its banks and according to state officials damaged nearly 80 homes.

Forecasters said that on Sunday the threat of flash floods in Texas would decrease as rains become less intense.

“We think that tomorrow, the lower rain totals are going to give them a chance to dry out,” Petersen said.

Even after the rains stop, parts of the state are likely to have a challenging path to recovery.

Gov. Abbott on Friday toured flooded areas south of Houston and told reporters some neighborhoods were “literally islands, completely surrounded by water.”

Nine soldiers died on Thursday when their troop carrier overturned during a training exercise at the U.S. Army base of Food Hood in the central part of the state, in a region where torrential rains caused flash flooding.

 

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Richard Chang)

Photo: An alligator crosses Sawmill Road near Brazos Bend State Park in flood waters in Fort Bend County after heavy rainfall caused the Brazos River to surge to its highest level causing flooding outside Houston, Texas, in this picture taken June 1, 2016, courtesy of the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office.  Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office/Handout via REUTERS

4 Crew Members Dead After Helicopter Crash At Fort Hood

4 Crew Members Dead After Helicopter Crash At Fort Hood

By Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Los Angeles Times (TNS)

HOUSTON — Four crew members on an Army helicopter were killed when it crashed Monday evening at Fort Hood in central Texas, officials said.

The UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter went down sometime after 5:49 p.m. in the northeastern part of the massive Army post.

Emergency crews conducted “an extensive search” and reported that all four crew members were found dead.

A statement released early Tuesday said the crew had been assigned to Division West, First Army and were on a routine training mission. The names of the crew members will be released after their families have been notified, the statement said.

The cause of the crash remained unknown.

Located between Dallas and San Antonio, Fort Hood is one of the Army’s largest posts, with a population of about 218,000 and its own businesses, parks, schools and churches. It is home to the 1st Cavalry Division and the West Division of the First Army as well as other units, including the Headquarters Command III Corps, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment and 3rd Air Support Operations Group.

Monday’s incident was the latest crash this year at U.S. military installations.

In May, two Marines aboard a MV-22 Osprey died after it experienced a “hard landing mishap” at Hawaii’s Bellows Air Force Station. In March, 11 service members were killed when their Black Hawk helicopter aborted its training mission due to bad weather and then crashed off the coast of the Florida Panhandle.

Photo: Texas Military Forces fly over Fort Hood. Texas Military Forces/Flickr

Obama At Fort Hood Memorial: ‘Tragedy Brings Us Together Again’

Obama At Fort Hood Memorial: ‘Tragedy Brings Us Together Again’

By Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Los Angeles Times

FORT HOOD, Texas — Five years after he sought to comfort soldiers devastated by the deadliest attack on a U.S. military base, President Barack Obama returned to Fort Hood on Wednesday to once more offer condolences and pledges of support, repeatedly invoking Scripture and its stirring words on the power of love to heal.

Obama, citing 1 Corinthians, said, “With God’s amazing grace we somehow bear what seems unbearable. Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never ends.”

Love was the running theme of the president’s remarks, delivered under a sunny sky before thousands of soldiers and dignitaries.

It was love of country, Obama said, that inspired the three soldiers killed in last week’s shooting rampage to join the greatest army the world has ever known. “It was love for their comrades, for all of you, that defined their last moments,” Obama said.

A week ago, Spc. Ivan Lopez opened fire in a building at the post, the start of an eight-minute rampage that killed three soldiers and wounded 16 others. Lopez, 34, fired more than 35 rounds before he was confronted by a military police officer and shot himself in the head.

Army investigators have said the shooter’s motive remains a mystery. But officials told the Los Angeles Times that Lopez had recently that learned his request for a leave of absence after the death of his mother had been rejected, infuriating him.

Killed in the attack were three sergeants: Danny Ferguson, 39, of Mulberry, Fla.; Timothy Owens, 37, of Effingham, Ill., and Carlos Lazaney-Rodriguez, 38, of Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. Their bodies were being transported home this week, a military official said. Lopez’s family plans to bury him Saturday in his hometown of Guayanilla, Puerto Rico.

Five of the injured remained hospitalized this week, three at a military hospital on the post where an official said they were improving and two at a hospital off post where a spokesman said they were in fair condition.

The rest of the injured have returned to duty at Fort Hood.

The last time Obama visited the Army post, among the largest military installations in the world, was for another mass shooting memorial.

“Tragedy brings us together again,” Obama said.

The president recited the names of the three sergeants killed, just as other speakers also repeated the names — Ferguson, Owens and Lazaney-Rodriguez — again and again. The three men, Obama said, had racked up a total of nine deployments. Each served in Iraq, and one had returned from Afghanistan just last week.

Obama vowed to continue efforts to help soldiers and veterans struggling with mental illness, and urged the nation to support troops once they return.

“When we truly welcome our veterans home, we show them we need them not just to fight in other countries, but to build up our own,” he said.

Five years ago, an Army psychiatrist opened fire, killing 13 and wounding more than 30. Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan was later convicted and sentenced to death for the attack, which he called an effort to protect the Taliban.

Before that memorial, soldiers erected a protective barrier around the field, stacking shipping containers to form a massive wall — just as they did this week.

The president stood at the same field in front of 13 sets of boots, rifles, helmets and photographs, listing the names of the dead and vowing that their memory would “endure through the life of our nation.”

Again on Wednesday, Obama stood before a crowd of thousands of uniformed soldiers.

Again, he promised that the dead would not be forgotten.

“Know this,” Obama said, addressing the Fort Hood community as a whole. “We also draw strength from you, for even in your grief, even as your heart breaks, we see in you that eternal truth: Love never ends.”

AFP Photo/Saul Loeb

Fort Hood Shooting Focuses Attention On Military Mental Health

Fort Hood Shooting Focuses Attention On Military Mental Health

By Jeremy Schwartz, Austin American-Statesman

AUSTIN, Texas — As the second-highest-ranking officer in the U.S. Army, retired Gen. Peter Chiarelli was briefed on all soldiers who killed themselves during the military’s burgeoning suicide crisis between 2008 and 2012.

With numbing regularity, mental health professionals made notes indicating that the troubled soldiers weren’t a threat to themselves or others — judgments often made just days before the suicide.

“The diagnostic tools we have are so crude that even the best-trained providers made (erroneous) determinations,” the former vice chief of staff of the Army said in an interview with the Austin American-Statesman. “It should be sobering.”

That scenario played out with tragic results last week in the case of Spc. Ivan Lopez, the Fort Hood soldier who killed three of his fellow soldiers, wounded 16 others and killed himself. A month before the rampage, a psychiatrist examined Lopez and concluded he showed “no sign of likely violence,” according to Secretary of the Army John McHugh.

In the wake of the killings, the second mass shooting to rock the post in five years, Fort Hood officials have once again promised a thorough review of the post’s mental health system and fixes if outside investigators find gaps. But Lopez’s case suggests that the underlying problem goes deeper than any shortages of mental health professionals or shortcomings in prevention efforts.

Despite unprecedented investment in its mental health program, military and medical leaders still lack a basic understanding of what causes individual soldiers to kill themselves and, far less commonly, others.

The scale of the problem is potentially vast. In 2011, there were nearly one million service members or veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan who had been diagnosed with a psychological condition and nearly half had received diagnoses for multiple conditions ranging from major depression to anxiety to post-traumatic stress disorder.

Young veterans are particularly vulnerable to fatal mental health outcomes and, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs, are killing themselves at rates four times higher than the overall U.S. population of the same age.

But Chiarelli, who now heads the One Mind for Research nonprofit, said medical experts have a hard time accurately diagnosing post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injury, the two signature wounds of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“I hate to say it, but it’s almost a crapshoot, even for the best-trained (providers),” said Chiarelli, whose nonprofit is seeking to develop more scientific diagnostic methods such as biological markers for brain and psychological trauma.

And determining whether a troubled soldier will become violent is even more difficult, especially for soldiers without a history of incidents. “Our best predictor is still past violent behavior,” said John Klocek, director of the Baylor University Psychology Clinic who works with service members and veterans. “It’s a tough thing to predict.”

What’s clearer is that history has had a tendency to repeat itself at Fort Hood. Four years before Fort Hood Commander Lt. Gen. Mark Milley vowed to plug holes in the post’s mental health system, his predecessor, Lt. Gen. Robert Cone, similarly pledged to bolster behavioral health programs after the post’s first mass shooting in 2009. And indeed, the following years were marked by significant investments in mental health at the sprawling post, one of the nation’s largest.

At the time, the military was staggering under a devastating shortage of counselors — more than 1,000 were lacking, top officials said — and an escalating suicide epidemic that would only grow in later years.

The post was short about 50 mental health professionals before the Nov. 5, 2009, shooting, in which Army psychiatrist Nidal Hasan killed 13 people and wounded 30 in a paroxysm of jihadist violence. The shortage was blamed for Hasan’s continued promotions despite poor evaluations.

In the aftermath of that shooting, Fort Hood officials moved quickly to plug holes; within three weeks, the post had added 75 to 80 mental health providers. Militarywide, the number of behavioral health providers, most of them civilians, increased 43 percent between the end of 2009 and 2013, according to information the military provided to USA Today. Fort Hood officials didn’t respond to questions about staffing levels.

Since the 2009 shooting, Fort Hood has made other changes, including embedding behavioral health providers with units. The mental health officers, who wear uniforms and deploy with the units they serve, are meant to be more approachable for soldiers who might balk at seeking out help through the post’s medical center.

The post has also changed how it responds to suicides. In 2011, it began including deceased soldiers’ immediate supervisors in fatality review boards in an attempt to better understand what happened.

And, like the rest of the Army, Fort Hood instituted a slew of suicide prevention efforts, including interactive role-playing exercises and intensive classes in so-called “suicide first aid.”

Despite the improvements, Fort Hood has been rocked by periodic mental health crises since the Hasan shooting. A year afterward, the post suffered through a record-breaking year of suicides, in which 22 soldiers killed themselves, including four over a single summer weekend.

The spate of suicides spurred leaders to order home visits to all lower enlisted soldiers who lived off-post and a comprehensive review of all soldiers deemed at-risk by their commanders.

After declining in 2011, suicides surged again in 2012, with 20, including a troubling rash of self-killings by senior soldiers at the rank of sergeant and above.

Last year, suicides fell to their lowest level since 2007, though experts caution that it’s not clear whether the new prevention efforts deserve the credit. The Institute of Medicine said in February that there is “insufficient evidence” and a “lack of systemic evaluation” to determine if the myriad of Defense Department programs are working throughout the military.

Ryan Holleran, a former Fort Hood infantry soldier who served from 2010 to 2013, said the post’s mental health system remains difficult for lower enlisted soldiers to access. He said that, despite official directives urging soldiers to seek out mental health help, “any kind of weakness is frowned upon. You are immediately ostracized from the unit.”

Holleran, 28, said he also encountered difficulties getting diagnosed with PTSD, which prevented him from getting the treatment he needed after returning from a deployment to Iraq in 2011. He said that while he was diagnosed with many of the symptoms of post-traumatic stress, including anxiety and depression, it was only after he left the service that he received a PTSD diagnosis from the VA.

“It’s clear there is something wrong with the system,” Holleran said.

According to officials, Lopez was also being treated for depression and anxiety, and was under evaluation for PTSD, when he opened fire on his fellow soldiers.

A diagnosis of PTSD, however, wouldn’t necessarily lead providers to predict violent actions from Lopez. “There is not a real strong link,” said Klocek, adding that, while PTSD can increase aggressive behavior, it is nearly always expressed in less violent verbal outbursts or domestic altercations.

But Lopez also complained of a traumatic brain injury, which does affect impulse control and judgment. Texas authorities, concerned about the number of standoffs and shooting incidents involving combat veterans with traumatic brain injuries, have devised training materials for police aimed at de-escalating such tense situations.

Army officials have insisted that Lopez wasn’t wounded during his short, four-month stint in Iraq in 2011, and he apparently never received an official diagnosis, which might have opened the door to more intensive treatment.

Most military traumatic brain injuries, which are caused by concussive blasts to the head, don’t result from combat, despite that popular perception. According to the Defense Centers of Excellence, between 2000 and 2012, 244,217 service members suffered traumatic brain injuries, the majority of which occurred outside the war zone.

“It’s equally as daunting to diagnose TBI, if not more daunting,” Chiarelli said. “It’s a very sad situation, in my opinion.”

afp.com / Jim Watson