CAN THE COURT REFORM THE VA AND THE DA?

By | December 29, 2011

CHICAGO (jGLi) – Attorney Lawrence Gottfried of the Board of Veterans Appeal (BVA) pled guilty of removing
documents from veteran case files in order to delay or preclude decisions on the merits of benefit applications,
destroying portions of at least 32 out of 38 case files assigned to him for over a three-month period. This conduct
continued over four years, possibly affecting the claims of over 1,000 United States veterans.

Another BVA attorney, Jill Rygwalski, also pled guilty to similar tampering with veteran case files, potentially
affecting 1,100 veterans. Rygwalski was convicted of forging documents and destroying medical records while
processing medical and benefit claims of veterans. About 70 veterans died after Ms. Rygwalski returned their cases
to local veterans’ office for further action necessitated by her own unlawful conduct, resulting in large forfeitures of
accrued benefits.
Officials of the VA and the DOD (Department of Defense), together with the Department of the Army (DA) and
other government entities responsible for the U.S. Armed Services, have taken inappropriate and improper measures
to reduce budget outlays for service-connected death or disability compensation (SCDDC) to Iraq and Afghanistan
war veterans. Their actions effectively deprive soldiers suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) of the
opportunity to later apply for SCDDC.

DESTRUCTION, ALTERATION OF VETS RECORDS CONTINUE TODAY

According to the complaint filed by the Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans for the Truth (collectively
called “Veterans”) against the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in 2007 before U.S. District Court of Northern
California Judge Samuel Conti in San Francisco, despite the conviction of these BVA lawyers, “the destruction,
alteration, and forgery of veterans’ records and claim files and other illegal practices continue today.”
While Judge Conti dismissed the allegations cited above by the Veterans, who filed a class action suit, seeking
injunctive and declaratory relief to remedy delays in 1) provision of mental health care and 2) adjudication of
SCDDC, the majority of the three-judge panel of the U.S. Ninth Circuit in San Francisco overturned Conti’s ruling,
citing VA’s failure to provide adequate procedures for veterans facing prejudicial delays in the delivery of mental
health care that violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment of the veterans and that Conti erroneously
denied Veterans the relief to which they are entitled under the Due Process Clause.”

The opinion by Circuit Judges Procter Hug, Jr. and Stephen Reinhardt was challenged at the en banc oral argument
last Dec. 13 by an 11-member Circuit judges. The en banc ruling is due next year.

U.S. Veterans and Filipino and Filipino American veterans would be waiting with bated breath the verdict of this
case. A favorable ruling could stop the estimated 18 suicides per day among America’s 25 million veterans, who
could no longer wait because of the delay of their medical treatment.

1/3 OF FEMALE VETS HAD BEEN RAPED IN THE SERVICE

Out of the 1.6-M deployed in the Global War on Terrorism (Iraq & Afghanistan wars), 230,000 have sought medical
treatment, and 83,000 of them were for mental conditions such as PTSD.

By June 2007, 3,810 died in those wars, 111 died of self-inflicted wounds and DOD does not report suicides among
the vets of GWOT.

About 1,000 vets under care of VA commit suicide every year or 2.7 commits suicide a day in early May 2007.
Outside the VA case, additional 5,000 commit suicide every year at 13.6 a day or 16.4 a day combined with
percentage with PTSD unknown.

PTSD is psychiatric disorder in a person, who experiences, witnesses, or is confronted with traumatic event, often
life threatening. It is the most prevalent mental disorder arising from combat.

It involves intense fear, helplessness or horror, exposed to trauma, re-experience of traumatic event, often thru
flashbacks or nightmares; avoidance of anything associated with the trauma and numbing of emotions and increased
arousal, often manifested by difficulty sleeping and concentrating and by irritability.

There is no cure of PTSD. But early identification and treatment of symptoms may lessen severity of the condition
and improve the overall quality of life for service members and veterans. If left untreated, severe PTSD can lead to
substance abuse, depression, and suicide.

Returning veterans with PTSD range from 15% to 50%.

Female vets are less likely to receive disability benefits for PTSD than male. The difference maybe a consequence of
the relative difficulty of substantiating exposure to non-combat traumatic stressors – notably, military sexual assault.
In 2003, DOD report, nearly one-third of female vets reported that they had been sexually assaulted during military
service.

PRESIDENT OBAMA CALLS PTSD ONE OF TWO SIGNATURE WOUNDS

If the panel’s ruling is affirmed by en banc judges, it will give veterans a collective sigh of relief and a silver lining
that they will finally be treated for what President Obama calls the two “signature wounds of today’s war” – the
PTSD and the traumatic brain injuries.

It can also be cited as a precedent in the pending class action for declaratory and injunctive relief under the U.S.
Constitution filed by Filipino American veteran Romeo R. de Fernandez, et al. of the Veterans Equity Center v. U.S.
DVA et al. pending before the U.S. District of Northern California in Oakland.

The Filipino veterans claim that the “use of the (National Personnel Records Center’s) Missouri List and Loyalty
Challenges’ should be declared unconstitutional as they infringe on their property and liberty rights protected by the

Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which provides that “No person shall …. be
deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”

They also claim that refusal by the VA to accept “alternate proof of WWII military service source if their names do
not appear on the Missouri List and Challenging the loyalty of WW II Filipino veterans and their FVEC claims as
unreliable evidence” are depriving them of meaningful access to the courts and their right to petition for a redress of
grievances in violation of their First and Fifth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

A favorable ruling will also call into question the recent pronouncement of Army Deputy Undersecretary Thomas
Hawley that there is an additional ground for denial of Filipino veterans’ benefit claim – if their names are found in
the list of collaborators with the Japanese Imperial Army.

VA Secretary Erick K. Shinseki also opened the possibility of accepting the service records from the Adjutant
General of the Philippines but limited it to documents issued “sometime immediately after the war (1947).”

These two suggestions should be cited as “inappropriate and improper measures to reduce budget outlays.” Like
Filvets, U.S. vets are “second class citizens, who must survive without the procedural protections and civil rights
embodied in the U.S. Constitution and enjoyed by their fellow citizens,” according the 2007 complaint of the
Veterans.
Happy New Year! (lariosa_jos@sbcglobal.net)