Author: Jonn Lilyea

  • Retired 1st Sgt. Harold Eatman passes at 102 years old

    Retired 1st Sgt. Harold Eatman passes at 102 years old

    AW1Ed sends us the sad news that retired First Sergeant Harold Eatman has passed at the age of 102 years old. He was an original member of the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment and one of the few who jumped four times with the 82d Airborne Division during World War II, according to Army Times;

    “Harold Eatman was among the generation of All American paratroopers who defeated Nazism, liberated Europe, and inspired many generations of paratroopers to follow,” said Lt. Col. Joe Buccino, spokesman for the 82nd Airborne, in a statement. “We always say that when you wear the Double A patch, you walk among legends. One of those legends has passed.”

    Eatman was one of fewer than 2,800 paratroopers to have made all four World War II combat jumps with the 82nd Airborne Division — in Sicily, Salerno, Normandy and Holland. Fewer than 16 now remain living, according to the 82nd Airborne.

    Eatman volunteered to serve in the Army in 1942, according to the 82nd Airborne. He served in H Company, 505th Regimental Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, from October 1942 through September 1945.

    His awards and decorations include the French Legion of Honor, the Bronze Star Medal, the Purple Heart, two Army Commendation Medals, and the Senior Parachutist Badge with four bronze stars.

  • Monday morning feel good stories

    Monday morning feel good stories

    Jarhead sends us a link from Milwaukee, Wisconsin;

    Milwaukee police are looking for a man involved in an attack at a Milwaukee restaurant.

    The man punched the manager in the face and went after a waitress until she pulled a gun on him.

    The incident was caught on surveillance video.

    Everything happened pretty fast at a George Webb restaurant.

    The manager at the grill that night said the customer was shouting at the waitress.

    She told him to get out, and surveillance video shows the man viciously punch her in the face. He then he goes after the waitress.

    The woman pulled out a handgun from her apron and only then did he retreat, still shouting at them as he left.

    Timothy sends us a link to a story from Phoenix, Arizona;

    A woman shot a man who tried to break into her apartment Saturday afternoon in Phoenix, police said.

    The shooting was reported near 7th Avenue and Colter Street, according to the Phoenix Police Department.

    Police said the man tried to break into the woman’s apartment unit with a rock. The man claimed he had belongings inside the apartment.

    Police said the woman shot the man. He was transported to a hospital and is expected to survive.

    From Fort Worth, Texas;

    An off-duty Dallas police officer thwarted two suspects who had just robbed a Whataburger in west Fort Worth, shooting them as they left the restaurant early Sunday, police said.

    The suspects were in stable condition later Sunday morning, said officer Daniel Segura, police spokesman. No one else was injured.

    The incident unfolded about 4 a.m. at a Whataburger in the 9500 block of White Settlement Road, off Loop 820 in west Fort Worth.

    The off-duty officer, who was at the Whataburger, “engaged the armed suspects” as they were leaving the restaurant, Segura said. Both suspects were shot, and the off-duty officer and responding Fort Worth officers gave them medical treatment at the scene before they were taken to a hospital.

    Police believe a third suspect fled the Whataburger in a vehicle. The suspects’ weapons were recovered at the scene, Segura said.

    From Oklahoma City, Oklahoma;

    A bystander armed with a pistol shot dead a gunman who opened fire in a restaurant in Oklahoma City.

    The gunman was killed in the car park of Louie’s On The Lake after the shooting which left four people injured.

    The shooting happened around 6.30pm last night at the restaurant on Lake Hefner.

    Two customers, a woman and a child, were hospitalised with gunshot wounds, but police spokesman Captain Bo Matthews said both ‘are going to survive’.

    ‘I know is that it was just a good Samaritan that was there and looks like he took the right measures to be able to put an end to a terrible, terrible incident,’ quoted Matthews as saying.

  • Wayne Patrick Bresnahan; phony combat veteran

    Wayne Patrick Bresnahan; phony combat veteran

    Our partners at Military Phonies send us their work on this fellow Wayne Patrick Bresnahan who claims that he served in the Marine Corps special operations in two wars;

    Yeah, no. He was in the Marine Corps Reserve from March 1989 – 1993 and unless Boston is in the Middle East, he didn’t see any deployments.

    The military records do not support Wayne Bresnahan’s claim of many things:

    L/Cpl (E-3) vs. claim of Cpl (E-4) and Sgt (E-5).
    No assignments overseas. No medals to support overseas assignments/deployments.
    Nothing on his Combat History page, so the claim that he fought in two wars is not supported.
    He was on active duty for six months (19 JUN 1989 – 15 DEC 1989). There were no conflicts that the US was involved with during this period. Operation Just Cause was on 20 DEC 1989, but this was five days after Bresnahan was released from active duty.
    Bresnahan was in the US Marine Corps Reserve. Typically, they only go on active duty to attend boot camp, advanced infantry training (School of Infantry or SOI), and perhaps some OJT (On the Job Training). Then, they are released from active duty and assigned to a Reserve Center to participate in weekend drills once a month and a two-week active duty for training each year. This appears to be what Bresnahan did with his six months of active duty. Reserve personnel are also subject to recall to active duty, but Bresnahan’s records do not show him being recalled to active duty other than the initial six months for basic and MOS training.
    Trained as COMM (Communication) vs. Recon. Nothing wrong with being a COMM Marine, which is an admirable profession – he just wasn’t in Recon.
    No “Special Ops”
    Even counting drilling Reserve time, Bresnahan spent a little less than four (4) years in the US Marine Corps Reserve. He entered in 1989, but his 1988 claim could have included the time spent in a Delayed Entry Program. He got out in 1993 and this does not support his claim of seven (7) years. He was a drilling reservist during Operation Desert Storm but it does not appear that he or his unit were activated.

    He fancies himself as a rap star, but you’ll have to go to MP to watch his crappy video.

  • First four soccer players rescued from Thai cave

    First four soccer players rescued from Thai cave

    Fox News reports that the first four teen soccer players have been rescued by Thai SEALs from their cavern prison;

    The conditions of the boys were not released, but the head of joint command center coordinating the search said he met with the children and described them as being in “perfect” health and called today’s mission the “best situation.”

    “The operation went much better than expected,” Narongsak said about the rescue, which began at 10 a.m. Sunday local time.

    Officials estimated the first phase of the rescue would take 12 hours, giving the divers six hours into the cave and back.

    Sunday’s mission, however, took 7 hours and 40 minutes.

    Saman Kunan, a retired Thai SEAL has lost his life during the rescue mission;

    The deceased volunteer rescuer, identified as Saman Kunan, 38, was returning at about 1 a.m. from the chamber where the boys are trapped when he ran out of oxygen, passed out and died. Kunan had left the SEALs in 2006 to work at Bangkok’s airport as an emergency rescue officer.

    For the cave rescue, he was part of a team trying to establish an air line to the chamber where the children and their coach are holed up. Kunan’s body will be flown to his hometown of Roi Et for a royally-sponsored funereal, the king of Thailand announced.

    They should bury the soccer coach alongside him…alive.

  • US & Afghan troops capture ISIS capital

    Stars & Stripes reports that US and Afghan special forces troops have captured an ISIS stronghold that Daesh has claimed as their local capital, Gurgoray in Deh Bala district in Nangarhar province. The announcement came after months of fighting.

    The U.S. and Afghan offensive involved five Special Forces teams and three Afghan commando companies. In total, 600 members of the U.S. Army Special Forces, also known as Green Berets, participated in the mission, which began in April and continued into June, a U.S. military officer said.

    Checkpoints manned by U.S. Special Forces, Afghan commandos and police now rise high above the valleys of Deh Bala, while American fighter-bombers continue to blast the Gurgoray Valley to stifle movements there by ISIS remnants.

    Nangarhar province is one of the few places Americans continue to fight alongside Afghan forces in battle, and it has also been the deadliest spot for U.S. servicemembers, with a third of American combat deaths occurring there last year.

    ISIS has fled the area and taken up residence in the caves of Tora Bora.

    “We know that our security forces have always showed bravery to capture areas from Daesh or Taliban, but after a while these areas go back in their hands again,” Israrullah Murad, a member of Nangarhar’s provincial council, said.

    The district’s Afghan Local Police commander, Sakhi, said the operations against ISIS in the region now means locals – including the Taliban – can return.

    “All the people feel very happy about the elimination of ISIS,“ Sakhi said through an interpreter. “As soon as ISIS is finished, the Taliban will come back. They were scared of ISIS.”

  • Jerry Ireland; phony war stories

    Jerry Ireland; phony war stories

    Someone sent us their work on this fellow, Jerry Ireland, who claims that he caught the PTSD from his deployments to the war against terror in Iraq and Afghanistan. He founded an organization in Maine to help veterans get into farming, United Farmer Veterans. But amidst charges of animal cruelty and striking fear in his neighbors, the organization fell apart, according to the Portland Press Herald which questions his military service record;

    Since he started United Farmer Veterans of Maine in 2015, Ireland has discussed his military service and resulting post-traumatic stress disorder as a way of explaining how he got into farming.

    Ireland has offered conflicting details about his military service to the Portland Press Herald. Several news stories about Ireland dating back to 2015 indicate he served overseas in Afghanistan or Iraq, or both, and he has spoken at length about suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder related to his service.

    Other news outlets have published similar accounts of his military service.
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    His official military record, however, shows no evidence of overseas service. Ireland told the Press Herald that his service record has been mischaracterized in the media, and that his official military record contains inaccuracies and does not include classified missions. But he would not answer questions to detail his service or clarify any inaccuracies.

    In an earlier Press Herald article, Ireland tells them how farming saved him from his PTSD;

    Ireland is one veteran who says farming helped him climb out of a dark hole.

    Ireland joined the Army so that he could pay for college, never dreaming that it would become a career. He did a couple of tours at the Pentagon after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, then traveled all over the world on classified missions working for military intelligence. His post-traumatic stress arose from “stuff I saw and things I never dealt with.”

    “There was a lot of nightmares, a lot of not sleeping, which over months led to some chronic tiredness,” he said. “My wife at the time would say when she would come to bed I would throw her out of bed, which I don’t have any knowledge of to this day.”

    Eventually he lost everything – his house, his job, his first marriage. He began self-medicating and was drawn into an eight-month battle with drugs that ended one desperate night in a hotel room. “I basically made a deal with God that if I was alive in the morning, my life was going to be different,” Ireland said.

    Another Press Herald article;

    After numerous missions in support of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, Ireland received a medical discharge in 2006 but continued to suffer from post-traumatic stress.

    In the Bangor Daily News;

    When war veterans return home, their future often is grim. Suffering from injuries or post-traumatic stress disorder, they find it hard to acclimate to society.

    “They give you medication, put you on another pill to keep you from killing yourself and consider that a success,” said Jerry Ireland, who spent 10 years in the Army and served in Afghanistan.

    In the Bangor Daily News he writes in a comment that “I am a farmer and a veteran from Iraq and Afghistan. These are not soldiers they are food activists that sometimes call themselves farmers.”

    Well, Ireland did wear a uniform – he spent 5 years in the Wisconsin National Guard and in the Army Reserves. He was mobilized, but he never left the Continental United States. It doesn’t look like he was medically discharged and there aren’t ten years of service. He certainly didn’t deploy to Iraq or Afghanistan;

    I don’t know what he thinks he saw that gave him the PTSD, unless it was those endless hours of fire guard one weekend a month and two weeks a year.

  • Sunday morning feel good stories

    Sunday morning feel good stories

    From Jacksonville, Florida;

    Police say a man told them, he was heading to a friend’s house on Tiki Lane, north of Oceanway, when he could see an unknown man already inside, armed with a rifle.

    He told police the armed man called for him to come inside, but he took off running instead and called 911. As he was running, he says he heard at least one gunshot.

    When police arrived, a person inside the home told officers he had been struggling with the suspect.

    JSO didn’t release any details about the struggle, but they tell us the suspect was initially transported to the hospital with life-threatening injuries. The victim was said to have sustained scrapes and bruises.

    From Cooper County, Missouri;

    Deputies said they were called to the Eagle Stop on Steven Kole Court for reports of an armed robbery. When deputies arrived at the scene, they said they were able to take the suspect, a 26-year-old man from Kansas City, into custody without incident.

    Deputies said during their investigation, they talked to a customer at the gas station who noticed the man was acting suspiciously and decided to stay in the area to continue watching him.

    When the man went up to the register and demanded money, the customer was able to intervene with his concealed firearm and held the man in the store until law enforcement arrived, according to deputies.

    From Fort Worth, Texas;

    A suspected robber was killed and another man was hurt after an attempted robbery at a Fort Worth business.

    Fort Worth Police said it happened around 5:30 p.m. at a pawn shop on Jacksboro Highway near North University Drive.

    Police believe the man who was hurt was already inside the pawn shop when the shooting happened, although they’re still trying to figure out exactly what happened leading up to the shooting.

    “It appears several subjects came into this business, attempted to rob this business, at which point, one of the suspects was found to be deceased,” said Sgt. Chris Britt. “Another male from the business was transported (to the hospital).”

  • Braveheart Beer announces POW/MIA beer coming

    Braveheart Beer announces POW/MIA beer coming

    We just got word that Braveheart Brewing, LLC has announced that their POW/MIA beer is coming soon. They’ve promised that a percentage of their profits will be donated to the National League of POW/MIA Families.