Posted in

Donald Eugene Lee; phony Vietnam veteran

Donald Eugene Lee

The folks at Military Phony send us their work on this Donald Eugene Lee fellow, from North Carolina, who claims that he’s a Vietnam veteran;

Donald Eugene lee2

He did serve during the Vietnam War, from May 1972 to March 1974. He spent time in a unit that I served in later – 1/325th of the 82d Airborne Division – he was there from September 1972 until June 1973 when he transferred to the confinement facility at Fort Bragg, then he had a Permanent Change of Station (PCS) to Fort Riley, Kansas’ confinement facility. I guess Fort Bragg didn’t want him back, so he went to the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood, Texas for six months until he was discharged. But that’s as close as he got to Vietnam – Fort Hood, Texas.

Donald Eugene Lee Assignments

Donald Eugene Lee FOIA

Donald Eugene Lee Unintelligible BS

44 thoughts on “Donald Eugene Lee; phony Vietnam veteran

  1. Witch hunt? Oh, you sorry little shitbag, if you only knew.

    Here’s a hearty handshake and a warm bowl of soup for ya.

    1. We celebrate the life of a real hero like Major Wells and then have to read about a cowardly, slimey, p.o.s. like this !! sickening!!

  2. North Carolina (Bragg/Pope where I’ve been TDY many times), Kansas (only driven through) and Texas (Where I was stationed twice) are TOTALLY like Vietnam…what with all that desert and shit and farm flatlands and Coastal Plain Region(OK Vietnam has that) and longleaf pine forest (NOT).

    Just like Okinawa, (Where I served) is TOTALLY like Colorado, (my next duty station)
    /97 feet ASL to 6,187 feet.
    //Summer and “other” to Winter and “other”
    ///:rolls:

  3. (Sarc on) Well anybody who has ever served at Fort Hood knows it is exactly like Vietnam, except for the lack of Communist Vietnamese, and hostile fire…. and the Ho Chi Minh Trail… and napalm, but other than that it is exactly like De Nam ! (Sarc off)

      1. Yeah, but there were scorpions and poisonous snakes, though. What got me was that after two tour in RVN I couldn’t clear Hood without having to go through the “jungle school” conducted by 1AD. And, no, I wasn’t in the 1AD, they just ran the show.

  4. When I was at Bragg (’87-’88) they told me Fayetteville was nicknamed FayetteNam…I always assumed it was because of the similarity to ‘Nam… /sarc

    Dumbass…

      1. Yeah, I work on Bragg. Fayettenam is still well used when referencing Fayetteville.

        Recently, there was an editorial in which someone called Fayetteville a “diamond in the rough”

        Most people disagreed with her assessment and referred to the town as Fayettenam. When is was pointed out the writer actually lived in Hope Mills, she really started getting walloped.

  5. Hmm. Next-to-last entry seems to show him being picked up as a “Duty Soldier” at some PCF at Fort Bragg, NC (can’t make out the full entry). Immediately above that, two lines appear blacked out.

    If I had to guess, I’m thinking he went AWOL from Hood, went back to Bragg to visit some folks he knew there – then turned himself in when he ran out of $$$ and/or wore out his welcome. He was discharged not terribly long (about 6 weeks) afterwards as a Private/E1. Given his prior confinement, I’m thinking admin discharge and very likely OTHC.

    But I could well be wrong.

    1. Personnel Control Facility (PCF) hold, was assigned to out-processing barracks FT. Bragg for 6 weeks.

  6. Deflecting is what this POS has been doing all along. Blaming others for his shortcomings. He lied about being in Vietnam & I am certain he lies to everybody about his ‘war stories.’ He got caught this time, however.

    1. Dude was a “ballsack warrior” in the Nam… he served with a guy named “Big Dick” Johnson and new a local by the name of Won Hung Lo.

      Shitbag…

          1. And hurry back to camp for another hearty helping of his favorite dish, Cream of Sum Yung Guy!

    1. We had a YN who liked to go UA a lot. First guy I knew off a boat to actually go to CCU.

      We dedicated a song to him at the Christmas party: The Pretenders, Back on the Chain Gang.

      He was not amused.

  7. Wonder what he meant by “standing on the yellow boot prints in 1968” considering he was 12 or 13 years old at that time.

      1. The yellow bus stop was for the “special” bus with the plastic helmets for the riders…

      2. OH, you mean the footprints at the “Short Bus Stop” where they boarded the happy little bus with what they thought were the tastiest windows in town?

  8. Dude has more time in the brig than most guys have in service.

    But wait, he’s a vet so we should feel sorry for him.

    Just another dishonorable maggot.

  9. C’mon, be fair to this guy; after all, he DID serve in the same “Vietnam” that The Duke, Bruce Cabot, and Jim Hutton did (Fort Benning, but since it’s good enough for the movies…just sayin’…)…///

  10. Well, he never did learn from his mistakes while serving in the Brig during his Active Duty Stateside Tours. Found two offenses he committed in the late 90s (one a felony) and now it looks as if he has declared bankruptcy. “Doc”. What a name. Can’t even fix his own situations/problems/ailments.

    1. DOC:
      Dumb Old Coot.

      (that’s the cleanest version I could come up with)

      BTW- when Ft Hood still had it’s RCF, there used to be yellow boot prints for the newbies to stand on when receiving their Welcome speech. Perhaps….

    2. Yeah….I cringed a bit when I saw that “Doc9” handle. After being called Doc for several decades, seeing it used by a shitsack irks me.

  11. Newport, Rhode Island was a lot the Viet of Nam.

    Nicknames:

    Namport,
    Newviet,
    Newport, Viet Nam
    and so on!

Comments are closed.