Author: Hondo

  • A Man, His Word – and a Second Chance

    In early 2014, Jaylend Ratliffe was a high school football star.  He was then a junior.  However, he was so talented he was already highly recruited – a “four star” recruit, to be precise.

    One of the colleges recruiting him was Georgia Tech.  In March 2014, that school’s head coach – Paul Johnson – visited Ratliffe.  During the visit, Johnson told Ratliffe the following:  “Jaylend, I want you to know something. Here at Georgia Tech, we’re not like other schools. If anything ever happens to you, we’re going to honor your scholarship.”

    Ratliffe believed Johnson.  He committed to Georgia Tech.

    Five months later, in July, Ratliffe and a friend went riding ATVs.  There weren’t enough helmets for all riders.  Because they didn’t plan “to do nothing stupid”, they decided to leave the helmets behind.

    As you can guess: bad move.  Ratliffe and his passenger, a teammate, were involved in a serious accident.  Both were injured.

    Ratliffe was injured the most seriously.  He had suffered a skull fracture and a traumatic brain injury with intracranial bleeding.

    He was taken to a major hospital and trauma center for treatment.  Initially, Ratliffe seemed to be improving.  But two days after the accident, his condition nosedived – and turned critical.

    Ratliffe was placed in a medically induced coma for a week.  Part of his skull was removed to release pressure on his brain.

    When Ratliffe awoke, he was partially paralyzed.  He never played his senior season of high school football.

    Many college coaches would have revoked his scholarship at this point.  Instead, Georgia Tech honored it.

    After extensive rehabilitation and therapy, Ratliffe has made a good recovery.  He now walks and talks normally. He is even able to compete in certain athletic events – such as track and field, where he does well at the college level. But he’s lost, likely permanently, some fine motor skills. His left hand (before his injury, he was a left-handed quarterback) has not completely healed, and his balance is still affected.  He’ll likely not ever play college football.

    Yet he is today attending Georgia Tech – on scholarship.  He has full access to all of the facilities and services that other student-athletes there have.  And as Paul Johnson puts it:  “It will a near miracle for him to play again. (sic) But we’re happy to have him as a student-assistant.”

    . . .

    Christian Easter is a holiday of faith, and (one might say) of second chances. Somehow this story just seems apropos for today.

    A young man has faith in another man. That other man later honors his word, even though circumstances have changed dramatically.  And because of that, the young man gets a second chance.

    Kudos, Paul Johnson.  You don’t seem to be a vet.  I don’t know whether you learned to keep your word during your coaching stints at Navy (1995-1996 and 2002-2007) or where you were raised in western North Carolina nearly 40 years earlier.

    I’d personally guess the latter – but it doesn’t matter.  You appear to be one a helluva fine man, regardless.

    ESPN has a much longer article about this.  If you have a few minutes, it’s worth a read.  If you do, you might want to have a tissue handy.

  • A Forgotten Hero Is Belatedly Honored

    In 1867, Emil Fredreksen was born.  In 1950, he died, aged 83.

    He died without known next of kin.  After his death, he was buried – sans headstone and apparently without military honors – in Evergreen Washelli Cemetery in Seattle, Washington.

    In between his birth and death, Fredreksen served in the US Navy.  He was serving onboard the USS Bennington in 1905 – and was serving there in San Diego on 21 July.

    That day, a major explosion occurred onboard the USS Bennington.  Of her crew of 179, the explosion killed 66 – and seriously wounded 46.  Only 12 men from the crew were capable of performing their duties immediately after the explosion.

    Fredreksen was one of those 12.  He engaged in rescue effots, repeatedly going below deck to search for wounded crewmembers and bring them to safety.

    For this, 11 men were awarded the Navy Medal of Honor (prior to World War I, award of the MoH was allowable for non-combat heroism).  Fredreksen was one of those 11.

    Fast forward over 110 years.  It turns out that member of the Medal of Honor Historical Society, Mr. Ray Johnston, researched Fredreksen’s case.  Johnson located Fredreksen’s final resting place through pension records.

    Fredreksen’s grave received full military honors – and proper marking  as a Medal of Honor recipient – at 2PM local time yesterday.

    Fox News has an article giving a few more details.  If you have a few minutes, it’s IMO worth your time to read it.

    Rest well, hero.  And many thanks to you, Mr. Johnson.

  • Another Two Are Home

    DPAA has identified and accounted for the following formerly-missing US military personnel.

    From World War II

    1st Lt. Frederick W. Langhorst, 1330 Army Air Force Base Unit, Air Transport Command, U.S. Army Air Forces, US Army, was lost on 17 July 1945 in India.   He was accounted for on 17 March 2016.

    From Vietnam

    SFC Alan L. Boyer, Command and Control Detachment, 5th Special Forces Group, US Army, was lost on 28 March 1968 in Laos.  He was accounted for on 16 March 2016.

    Our apologies that your return took so long, elder brothers-in-arms. Welcome back.

    You’re home now. Rest in peace.

    . . .

    Over 73,000 US personnel remain unaccounted for from World War II; over 7,800 US personnel remain unaccounted for from the Korean War; and over 1,600 remain unaccounted for in Southeast Asia (SEA). Comparison of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from recovered remains against mtDNA from a matrilineal descendant can assist in making a positive ID for unidentified remains that have already been recovered, or which may be recovered in the future.

    DPAA’s web site now has what appears to be a decent “Contact Us” page. The page doesn’t have instructions concerning who can and cannot submit a mtDNA sample or how to submit one, but the POCs listed there may be able to refer you to someone who can answer that question – or may be able to answer the question themselves. If you think you might possibly qualify, please contact one of those POCs for further information.

    If your family lost someone in one of these conflicts and you qualify to submit a mtDNA sample, please arrange to submit one. By doing that you just might help identify the remains of a US service member who’s been repatriated but not yet been identified – as well as a relative of yours, however distant. Or you may help to identify remains to be recovered in the future.

    Everybody deserves a proper burial. That’s especially true for those who gave their all while serving this nation.

  • One Marine Killed, Several Wounded in Iraq

    Fox News is reporting that one Marine has been killed and several others injured by indirect fire in Iraq.  They were reportedly injured by an ISIS rocket that landed near their position in Makhmur, a town approximately 75 miles southeast of Mosul.

    A US defense official termed the attack “a lucky strike by ISIS”.  Names of the individual killed, those injured, and the exact number injured have not yet been released by DoD.  The casualty total (KIA + WIA) is believed to be 5 or less.

    The profession of arms is not without risk, whether in peace or war.  But as I’ve said elsewhere, no place in a bona fide combat zone is truly safe.  IDF doesn’t care where you are, what your MOS/specialty might be, or what you’re doing.  It’s a true equal opportunity threat.

    May God comfort the family, friends, and professional colleagues of the departed, and may He grant speedy and complete healing to those injured.

  • Another Senior Officer Self-Terminates A Career

    Looks like yet another senior military officer has self-terminated their career.

    Lt. Gen. John Hesterman, USAF Assistant Vice-Chief of Staff, has been relieved and will retire.  He was relieved due to having an “unprofessional relationship with a junior officer”.

    Specifically, Hesterman was found to have exchanged inappropriately-worded emails with an Air Force Lieutenant Colonel (from excerpts quoted, apparently female) between March 2010 and May 2011.  No other evidence of misconduct was found.

    Hesterman had recently commanded the air campaign against ISIS.

    This case may well be nothing more than an example of the appearance of impropriety vice actual misconduct.  Other accounts indicate there was more to the matter.  Dunno.

    Either way, it doesn’t matter.  For those in very senior positions – enlisted or officer – mere appearance of impropriety matters.  (It goes without saying that actual impropriety matters.)  Every damn thing leadership does is watched by subordinates; that’s inherent in accepting such an assignment.  And you can bet your last dollar that everything the CG or his/her SEA does is noticed – and that word gets around.

    Both Fox News and the Air Force Times have articles on the matter.  By reading both (neither is very long), IMO you can get a reasonable idea of what happened.

    You might have gotten a raw deal, General.  Or you might have deserved this.  But either way you did this to yourself by forgetting that you were – in essence – a public figure and under the proverbial “microscope”.

  • Yet More Idiocy at DHS

    Remember the San Bernardino shootings? You know, that cold-blooded terrorist massacre perpetrated by a US citizen and his foreign-born spouse?  The spouse who DHS allowed to enter the country in in spite of the fact that she’d made social media postings supporting violent jihad; where DHS didn’t bother even to check her social media posts because it was against DHS policy to do so; and who DHS never interviewed in person as required under Federal law before allowing them to immigrate?

    Well, looks like this one gets “curiouser and curiouser” still with respect to DHS’s actions.

    The two dead terrorists who perpetrated that attack got their weapons from a straw buyer – Enrique Martinez – who was a friend of the husband. The FBI determined this shortly after the attack.

    Martinez had a scheduled interview at the San Bernardino US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) office the day after the attack. FBI officials found out about that interview; they requested that their LE counterparts at Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detain Martinez as a person of interest so that they could interview him about the matter.

    Unfortunately, that didn’t go too well.

    When the ICE agents went to the San Bernardino USICS office as requested by the FBI, they were refused entry. They were unable to detain Martinez.

    Yeah, you read that right.  The Federal personnel running that ICS office refused to allow Federal LE personnel acting at the request of the FBI to enter their facility and detain a person of interest in a terrorism case.

    Tell me that isn’t evidence of a seriously out-of-whack set of priorities.  In my book, when Federal immigration services personnel start ignoring requests from Federal LE to detain persons of interest in terrorist attacks something is seriously effed up.

    Fox News has an article with more details.  It’s worth reading.

    Sounds like “you got some ‘splainin’ to do”, Secretary Johnson.  Or maybe that should read “you got lots more ‘splainin’ to do”.

  • Three More Phoenix VAMC Execs to Be Fired

    Fox News reports that 3 additional VA executives at the Phoenix VAMC are to be fired.  Those indivuals are Dr. Darren Deering, the hospital’s chief of staff; Lance Robinson, the hospital’s associate director; and Brad Curry, chief of health administration services.

    The three are being fired in due to the VA’s secret waiting list scandal that both Jonn and I have written about previously.

    This brings to four the number of VA senior executives who have been fired from the Phoenix VAMC.  The hospital’s former director, Sharon Helman, was previously fired.  Her firing was upheld on appeal.

    Those fired in this round of dismissals will have the right to appeal their dismissal.  Let’s hope the VA did a better job here
    “dotting the ‘Is’ and crossing the ‘Ts’ ” than they did with the two in Philly who unethically engineered their own transfers.

    IMO not nearly enough VA execs and administrative personnel have lost jobs over this scandal so far.  But it’s a start.