Home
Archive
Columnists
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
100 words for 100 days: submit your 100 word essay and get published on AlterNet
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Young Marine Dies Of PTSD - And Neglect

Posted by Bob Geiger at 7:34 AM on January 31, 2007.


In Minnesota.
jonathanschulze
marine

Share and save this post:
Digg iconDelicious iconReddit iconFark iconYahoo! iconNewsvine! iconFacebook iconNewsTrust icon

Got a tip for a post?:
Email us | Anonymous form

Get PEEK in your
mailbox!

 

He died earlier this month at the age of 25 -- not in Iraq, but back home, in Minnesota.

He died of wounds received during his seven-month tour of duty in Iraq, wounds different from the ones that earned Schulze two purple hearts. This young man died of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, of wounds to the soul and not the flesh. He died because the government that was there to send him far away to fight in 2004 wasn't there for him when he got home.

Schulze had a harrowing time in Iraq, spending time in the heated battles of Ramadi in April, 2004. While he was there, 35 Marines in his unit were killed, including 17 of them in just 48 hours of combat.

The young Marine was wounded twice in battle but returned home to...

rebuild his life and to cope with the things he had seen, things he had done and friends he had lost. But, by the time he was discharged from the Marines in late 2005, he was deeply troubled with images of combat and violence that he could not get out of his mind.

According to Minnesota press reports, Schulze went to the Veterans Administration (VA) center in Minneapolis on December 14, 2006, met with a psychiatrist and was told that he could only be admitted for treatment four months later, in March.

On January 11, 2007, accompanied by his parents, he went to the VA hospital in St. Cloud, Minnesota and told people at that VA facility that he was thinking of killing himself. They told Schulze that they could not admit him as a patient and sent him on his way.

The next day, January 12, Schulze called the VA, reiterating that he was feeling suicidal. He was told that he was number 26 on the waiting list.

A man who had risked his life in Iraq and done everything that was asked of him by the United States government, was told by that same government that his sacrifice would be repaid by being 26th on a list of Veterans similarly crying out for help.

"Jonathan wanted help so bad," said Marianne Schulze, Jonathan's stepmother. "At the end of the conversation, Jonathan got off the phone so distressed."

On January 16, Schulze called his family and told them that he was going to do it -- he was going to kill himself. His family called the local police, who raced to his house, kicked in his door and found him hanging from an electrical cord.

Attempts to resuscitate him were unsuccessful.

Having read about Schulze while on a trip to Minnesota, Senator Byron Dorgan (D-ND) brought the story to the floor of the Senate and read it into the record on Monday.

"The story is nearly unbelievable to me," said Dorgan in a speech on the Senate floor. "The newspaper description of the flag-draped coffin of this young marine who earned two Purple Hearts fighting for his country in Iraq contains a sad, sad story of a young marine who should have gotten medical help for serious psychological problems that were the result of his wartime experience."

The Marine's family says that he couldn't sleep, would have nightmares reliving the combat he had experienced and suffered from vivid flashbacks when awake.

"He was a delayed casualty of the Iraq war," his father, Jim Schulze, a Vietnam Veteran, said of Jonathan.

Jonathan Schulze, who leaves behind his fianceé, a 6-month-old daughter and who had another baby on the way, was a machine gunner who wrote often to his parents about what he was experiencing in Iraq, the firefights, the bombings and dismembered bodies blown apart by Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs).

"I pray so much over here and ask God to keep me out of harm's way and to make it back home alive and in one piece," he wrote to his parents in 2004. "I bet I easily pray over a dozen times a day and I always pray while I am on patrol as I am terrified of getting hit by an IED aka a bomb. Our vehicle elements and Marines on patrols are getting hit hard by these bombs the Iraqis plant all over and hide on the ground."

He survived all of that only to come home and find neglect, the results of an administration big on tax cuts for the wealthy, but not real strong on taking care of Veterans returning home from the war created by the George W. Bush and, until this month, left unchecked by the do-nothing Republican Congress.

As is often the case when things like this happen, the VA is citing privacy laws and won't talk about the Schulze family's account of what happened to Jonathan or issue any comment at all.

But Senator Dorgan says he's going to press for answers.

"I am going to ask the inspector general to investigate what happened in this case," said Dorgan on the Senate floor. "What happened that a young man who was a marine veteran with two Purple Hearts turns up at a VA center and says: I am thinking of committing suicide, can you help me, can you admit me, and he is told: No, the list is 26 long in front of you?"

"Are there others who show up at a VA center and say: I need help, only to be told no help is available? I hope that is not the case. It is the unbelievable cost of war."

Digg!

Tagged as: iraq, troops, ptsd

Bob Geiger is a writer, activist and Democratic operative in Westchester County, NY. You can reach Bob at geiger.bob@gmail.com and read more from him at BobGeiger.com.


Blago: It Just Keeps Getting Stranger
Have you noticed that Blagojevich appears to be stark raving mad?
Post by Steve Benen. January 9, 2009.
Obama: 'If Paul Krugman Has a Good Idea … Then We're Going to Do It'
Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman has been a frequent critic of President-elect Obama.
Post by Amanda Terkel. January 9, 2009.
Kucinich Speaks Out Against Congress' Blind Support of Israel
"We must take a new direction in the Middle East.
Post by Staff. January 9, 2009.
Advertisement
Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
What a complete outrage. That is reason enough for soldiers to ....
Posted by: Prophit on Jan 31, 2007 8:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... refuse to serve in this war of greed, oil, military industrial complex, banking interests. This is way beyond understanding and a complete crime against humanity for what this administration is doing.

I think they make them wait hoping they either cure themselves or kill themselves and then they won't have to spend the money that they want to give to their friends.

Am I emotional over this??? You bet!!!! SOMEBODY ON THE HILL NEEDS TO START BEING AS OUTRAGED AS US OUT HERE. And damn quick too!!!! Our limit has almost been reached. I can feel it. I am not alone and this story is the ultimate end.

Does anyone have a link to the original story????

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Original Story Posted by: fanny666
Tip of a Very Big Iceberg
Posted by: hbw on Jan 31, 2007 8:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Military Families Speak Out representatives will tell you that the total figure of U.S. casualties from Iraq is closer to 10,000 than the accepted figure of 3,000. Official counts do not include those who died of their wounds, bodily and psychic, after their removal from Iraq. This Marine is just one.

If Schulze's story gets any play, perhaps it will shed light on the much bigger story of combat troops perishing or taking their own lives back in the States or in hospitals in Germany and Kuwait.

Also, the story of a VA Hospital system completely unprepared for the demands of this occupation, despite its best efforts, is a tragedy that the MSM shamefully overlooks.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Tip of a Very Big Iceberg Posted by: jbwestwood
Is there only one source of help?
Posted by: Suzen on Jan 31, 2007 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This story is horrible. We all know that the VA is not functioning at a pace which can take care of the mess being created in the lives of our troops. One would think after Viet Nam that they would have been alert to the terrible toll PTSD takes on the psyche of those who see war up close. They aren't.

Meanwhile these young people are coming home to struggle alone. How is it that there is no network in the civilian world to cover them till the VA can get around to them? Is it against some law that these people get help from the private sector? Couldn't they get some care somewhere in the emergency of their turmoil which would keep them from suicide? Who cares what help they get or from whom, as long as they can stay alive while the system lurches it's way to helping them?

I have worked in crisis intervention and at a certain poing it really doesn't matter what creates the crisis in a person's world, but what can be done quickly to halt the momentum of the experience once it has begun. One would think there are others out there who have suffered PTSD and who know what is needed by these patients ------ even something as simple as sitting with them till help comes. Are there no doctors outside the military who understand this situation or is the VA the only option for a suicidal soldier? What is going on that we sit on our collective butts and watch these young people die of emotional pain when we could be doing whatever we can to help fill the breach?. Something is terribly wrong with all of us when we just sit and wait, dying, while the political climate stops progress on the humanitarian level. Have we become such sheep that we actually think that only the VA can help the military people? Take away the 'military' part and what is left is 'people'. We all fall into that category and it is way bigger than the political climate.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

olliesmom
Posted by: olliesmom on Jan 31, 2007 9:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just read this morning that the government website for casualties had revised its numbers (another Bush "Snow" job) from 51,000 down to 21,000 injured because they had been "mistakenly" including numbers for soldiers incapacitated by stress or non-combat related injuries in Iraq. I don't know where they count the ones they send home emotionally crippled. . No matter how strongly we feel about this tragic war - and we do - we civilians sometimes overlook the thousands in the military who are losing their lives in ways less dramatic than death. If only a fraction of the wasted billions were being spent on taking care of them and their families!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Been going on for 40 years
Posted by: bettyn on Jan 31, 2007 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The government never did anything for the Vietnam vets, either. How many of them are wandering around with PTSD or some horrible form of cancer from Agent Orange?( I can think of three I know personally that are in this situation.)

The VA system is horrible and getting worse. All this just verifies my belief that Bush, Cheney and their beancounting corporate cronies are actually trying to get rid of these kids...and the rest of us who aren't their "base".

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Vets Begging?
Posted by: mom'z the word on Jan 31, 2007 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Senator Dorgan has to ask the question what happened then he is an idiot. What part of begging for help does he not understand? The very fact that soldiers are ordered to do a job no questions asked and then have to beg for help is the disgrace and shameful belligerence of this entire process. No soldier having served should ever have to re-qualify or wait one minute for whatever help or assistance is needed, especially here at home.

A soldier should be able to walk into any doctors office, hospital, dental office, burn clinic, psychiatrist, and get what he needs immediately, no questions asked. What would Senator Dorgan do if he needed to see a doctor? Would he wait 3 months for an appointment? I don’t think so. If we had one ounce of compassion or good sense the return policy for our soldiers would be bleedingly obvious. They get a blank check to do whatever, whenever, they need when they come home. Their dog tags give them carte blanc to whatever they need.

Forget the VA. If they can’t do it then the vets get what they need from whoever can give it to them right now. They can walk into any doctors office and get treated like every Congressman gets treated when they go to the doctors. Give the vets the same insurance plan that McCain, Bush, and Rice give themselves.

It is a question of priorities. We can pay Halliburton 4.5 million dollars a day to ‘reconstruct’ Iraq or we can give every penny of that money we are giving to Halliburton to our vets to reconstruct their lives. Do you want to compare loyalties and see who deserves to be treated like royalty? Compare Halliburton’s patriotism to the patriotism of our vets. Now who deserves to be repaid for services rendered no questions asked?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

And they rename it, and let me tell you a story . . .
Posted by: DivaCleavage on Jan 31, 2007 10:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, sometimes they also call it "adjustment disorder." That way, they can say: "There are X number of PTSD cases and x number of adjustment disorder cases, blah blah blah." So, they fudge the numbers. One of my acquaintances, a former Marine, came back in 2003 from Kuwait and was discharged with an 80% disability rating for "adjustment disorder" and was actually prescribed medication. Once he moved back home from San Diego, he never hooked up with the VA and they never followed up and he never got meds again. His mom was anti-medication and didn't see what a nutcase he had been & like everyone else, could not believe he had become so nuts - "such a nice guy" "so sweet" - that whole thing. But, he was beating his wife suddenly in a rage, had thrown her down the steps, was having sex with her while she slept as if in a trance - (she took meds that made her sleep so soundly, she wouldn't wake up in a fire!) So, around Christmas of 2003, he went into a rage in front of his brother, beating his wife, (so the brother was finally convinced,) but my acquaintance then became so distraught, he ran his head into a wall, hit a stud and broke his neck and is now paralyzed from the neck-down.

Because of budget cuts, when I needed hospitalization in March of 2003, the psych ward at the VA in Chilicothe, Ohio, had no snacks or food between meals (I am diabetic - had to buy stuff from vending machines), we missed the means test (financial) by $1000 and I was charged $1000 for two days of substandard care, I saw the crappy doctor for 30 seconds on the 2nd day to tell him I had not slept and had a reaction to the medication, he said he'd change it and didn't. He made NUMEROUS errors on my intake story . . . I needed to stay there, but I told them what they wanted to hear to get the hell out of there. I didn't feel safe there.

Yeah, and my GI Bill expired in 2000, so I can't use it for college now - I only used it for one year. Nice.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

I sit here and cry for all that is lost...
Posted by: djnoll on Jan 31, 2007 1:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have experienced first hand what life with PTSD is like, and it is the disease of mind and soul that never is seen only felt. It is the illness whose wounds last a lifetime because they are never seen and therefore, are discounted and ignored by the medical establishment. It is a living nightmare, literally, that never ends until you die or get so drugged or drunk that the movie in your head pauses and you can sleep for a few moments.

We send our soldiers into a war at the behest of a madman, and we count the ones who come home in body bags and on stretchers, but we never count the ones who do not have open wounds. They do not count in the military, or in the civilian medical profession either. They are the ones that exist like living timebombs because no one believes them. No one, not family, not officers, not doctors, not ministers or priests. NO ONE.

PTSD is an insidious disease, and our young people, who grew up playing video games that encouraged killing the enemy or watching TV where people kill each other, are not prepared for the real truth of war: people actually die, and they do not come back the next day! It is a miracle that they even come back close to what they were when we allowed them to be sent to hell. They come back wounded, but we do not help them, either in the past or now. WE are not at VA hospitals demanding that they treat our sons and daughters. WE are not in doctors offices demanding care. WE are not on the steps of Congress demanding accountability. WE are not at the Pentagon demanding what was promised when our children enlisted. NOW IT IS TIME TO STOP LISTENING TO POLITICIANS, AND START ACTING FOR OURSELVES!

PTSD does not discriminate on gender or race or ethnic background. It does not care if a soldier was in Iraq or Afghanistan or where ever they were sent. It is an equal opportunity destroyer, and the government of this country does not care! Immediate treatment is what cures PTSD, not long lines or lists. Studies have shown that unless treatment is received within a short period of time of the trauma, the illness becomes a premanently debilitatiing untreatable condition. There can be no time for waiting or lists or lines or doctors who will not treat. Meds are only temporary solutions, and it requires unlearning techniques and then behavioral changes to cope. Sufferers of PTSD can never forget, but they can learn to put the images into a kind of remission and live their lives again. These treatments take time, and are only affective is adminstered close to the time of trauma.

ACT AND HELP PREVENT ANOTHER LIFE LOST FOR THAT BASTARD OF A PRESIDENT AND HIS CORPORATE PUPPET MASTERS!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

I Worked @ VA Post Gulf War and Same Crap Happened
Posted by: colleenwhalen on Jan 31, 2007 7:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I worked in the Sacramento California VA clinic at Stockton and Broadway after the Gulf War and the exact same crap happened in the 1990's. A Vietnam Vet came into the lobby and told me (I was working at the front desk) I have a loaded hunting rifle in the back seat of my car and I want to blow my brains out - he said he went across the street to the VA Mental health clinic and they told him "waiting list is full, come back in 3 months".

I told him to go to the highest level manager in our building and personally walked him over to that man's office. Nothing was done for the guy and he wound up committing suicide in the VA parking lot.............the difference was it didn't get any media attention so there was no important Senator to read the story on the floor of the legislature.

the va won't even admit there is such a thing as Gulf War Syndrome - Bush slashed VA funding - well of course since the little shit is a draft dodging coward with five military deferments and went AWOL for six months while he flunked his jet pilot training course in Alabama - BTW Bush was cashing National Guard paychecks the entire time he was AWOL in Alamaba.

Dan Rather was forced to resign in disgrace for reporting the truth about Bush going AWOL.

What I want to know - is why isn't the son of a bitch been impeached? The recent peace rallies on Jan 27 aren't enough. We need 2 million people marching down Pennsylvania Avenue hollering Impeach Bush Cheney Jail to the Chief.

How much longer will this madness go on?

The reason I joined Code Pink is because I used to work at the VA after the Gulf War and saw how shabbily veterans are treated by our govt.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Jon Schulze (Suicide Marine) - Brother
Posted by: 19D_Scout on Feb 3, 2007 2:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hi all. I am Jonathan's oldest Brother, the Marine we are talking about.

Our family has 10 veterans (1 Navy, 5 Army, 3 Marines, 1 Air Force). So believe me....we have experience with the VA and Jon had strong family support.

I've seen posts from people asking why Jon did not go right to a civilian hospital. Well, Jon did not have private insurance and the cost to do so would have been even more of a burden to Jon whom did not need anymore issues to worry about, especially with one 6 month daughter and one on the way!

Jon has a long history with the VA. He regulary went to the VA for help, so it's not like he just showed up and asked to be admitted. Every time he went for evaluations he usually had to wait hours just to even get the chance to see a doctor.

People ask why the family did not do more....we tried hard. At this point the only thing we could have done was lock him up in a room...he was his own man and made his own decisions...this was impossible. Although, Jon came from a strong line of military heritage it was the "So Called" professionals at the VA that should have caught/red flagged the severity of his PTSD! They had several years on record.

Jon was your poster child for PTSD and the Gov. failed him badly. He saw and was involved in some of the worst combat since Vietnam.

From a military family history and die hard patriotic family......we have lost faith for the first time in 70 years.

I'm telling you the VA will cover their backs. I would not believe a word they say. I know first hand WHAT HAPPENED. Shame on them!

How can our government spend 600 BILLION on the war and fund so little on our military heros? I'm almost ashamed to be an American these days.

If your curious ask and I will reply where I can.

Please contact your Congressmen and Senator's. Express your concerns.

Best regards,
Jon Schulze's Brother

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]