Category: Phony soldiers

  • Maine’s Stolen Valor Bill

    Joining the recent spate of legislation from States in supporting the troops by making trying to be one illegal is Maine. Since several of our readers come from Maine, I thought you’d like to know;

    Responding to a question from a committee member, the bill’s sponsor, Rep. David Johnson, R-Eddington, said he was not sure how widespread a problem bogus military claims are in Maine, but Maine National Guard officials say fake claims are spotted from time to time.

    “I’d like to know that we’re solving a problem” before passing a law, said Sen. Stanley Gerzofsky, D-Brunswick, a committee member. Other committee members expressed coolness to the bill’s mandatory minimum jail sentence of nine months in some cases.

    I guess Mr. Gerzofsky doesn’t believe in making stolen valor illegal BEFORE there’s a problem. With a new generation, there’s a whole new batch of potential pretenders. What’s the problem with a preemptive measure?

  • Bob Fitzpatrick takes stolen valor to the grave

    Our buddy, Doug Sterner, the founder of the Home for Heroes website sends us this article about the late Bob Fitzpatrick from the News and Sentinel;

    Fitzpatrick was the second most decorated enlisted man of World War II, the result of a nine-day ordeal in the Russell Islands in 1943.

    Fitzpatrick was the lone survivor of a B-17 plane that was shot down by a hoard of Japanese fighters in 1943. He was captured by the Japanese and held for several days on Banika Island before escaping.

    Fitzpatrick spent three days eluding the Japanese, while also fighting dysentery, before he was rescued.

    For his actions, Fitzpatrick was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the highest military honor possible after the Medal of Honor. When he was discharged from service in July 1944, Fitzpatrick had three Bronze Stars, an American Defense Ribbon with a Bronze Star, an Air Medal with Oak Leaf clusters, a Purple Heart, a Silver Star and the Distinguished Service Cross.

    At the time, Staff Sgt. Robert L. Fitzpatrick, who had earned every medal but the Medal of Honor, was the second most decorated enlisted man of World War II – second only to the famed Audie Murphy.

    The problem is that according to Doug Sterner;

    **Not a SINGLE B-17 of the 26 Bombardment Squadron (or parent 11th Group) was shot down from the beginning of the Guadalcanal campaign on 7 August 1942 to 1 March 1943…He was NEVER shot down, NEVER the sole survivor, NEVER captured and escaped from the Japanese.

    ** A fellow researcher has confirmed that the Extract from GO 105 (May 15, 1943) awarding Fitzpatrick the DSC is in fact a forgery. Not only that, the GO # and Date are out of sequence. His response is below:

    Doug,

    HQ USAFISPA issued General Orders No. 105 on 1 May 1943 (not 15 May 1943 ). That G.O. awarded three Distinguished Service Crosses, all to Army Air Corps personnel. The recipients were:

    Thomas J. Classen

    Robert J. Dorwart

    Balfour C. Gibson

    There was no mention on Robert L. Fitzpatrick in that G.O.

    HQ USAFISPA issued General Orders No. 116 on 12 May 1943 and among other things it awarded ten Silver Stars but no DSCs. Mr. Fitzpatrick’s Extract is a fake, pure and simple. The newspaper got snookered.

    Not just the newspaper, the whole town celebrated Bob Fitzpatrick Day when he returned from his service and he wowed them with tales of his exploits that happened only in the space between his ears.

  • Walter Reed phony CSM gets 6 months

    I told you last year about Stoney Crump, the sergeant major at Walter Reed who faked his records to be more studly than he really was. The Army Times reports that Crump was sentenced to six months imprisonment and busted to staff sergeant – that’s three ranks.

    Some of the offenses admitted by Crump include wearing six awards and decorations from March to December of 2009, including the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal with Arrowhead device, which indicates — contrary to military records — that he made a combat jump into Grenada. He admitted he wore a Combat Action Ribbon without authority since 2006 and, on three occasions, two or three unauthorized overseas service bars.

    Prosecution tried to get his pension, but Crump pleaded with the judge to think of his family. The family which Crump had disregarded over the last few years while he told his lies. Ironically, Crump was working for Col. Gordon Roberts, at the time, the sole Medal of Honor awardee on active duty.

  • Help requested from TAH readers: Poser take down.

    Ok, we need your help on this one.

    If you many or many not know one of our readers Aaron who help provide most of the info in regards Kylen Bounds has been busy going after another fake.

    I would like you to meet Jack Wilson.

    He is claiming five to six deployments with Special Forces.

    But he is listed as being in a very non-SF unit according to AKO.

    But our friend Jack has been busy. So with that in mind I am asking anyone that has any info on him to leave a comment.

  • Local VFW commander caught at Stolen Valor scam

    Robert L. Deppe, the local commander of the Lakeport, CA VFW resigned earlier this month because he couldn’t prove any of his claims about his military service;

    Robert L. Deppe, 57, also was arrested earlier this month on suspicion of stealing money from a family member and replacing the $100 bills he took with phony money, according to the Lake County Sheriff’s Office.

    Deppe resigned this month two days after the VFW post asked him to authorize it to request his military records, said Kirk Macdonald, adjutant of VFW Post 2015. He’d been the commander three years.

    Yeah, well, it looks like he doesn’t have ANY military service according to our friends at POW Network. But the best part of the story is this part;

    Deppe is not on the roster for the U.S. Army, Company H, 75th Infantry, for 1971, as he claims, said William Page, who fought in Vietnam during the time Deppe claims to have been there and who occasionally works with the POW Network. Nor did the National Personnel Records Center have record of his service, said Page, who obtained the information under the Freedom of Information Act.

    “We cannot find any record of him being in the military,” said Page, who was an infantryman during the war and now lives in Louisiana.

    Page said he began looking into Deppe’s background in 2005 after he recognized his own story in Deppe’s autobiographical account of his year in Vietnam and how he earned his medals.

    “I saw this story and I said, dang, this guy is talking just like me,” said Page, who has a combat infantryman’s badge and a Bronze Star, among other “little doodads.”

    Page also found excerpts from the story of a man who saved his life in Vietnam and that of a man from his platoon who died.

    The William Page in the article is a frequent commenter here at TAH, I won’t out his screen name, just take my word for it. In fact he linked me up with POW Network years ago. You know you’re a studly man when phonies start stealing your exploits, though.

  • Michael Holmes vs. the Army and common sense

    What if I told you a story about a married US soldier in Afghanistan who repeatedly sneaked off of the base in his civilian clothes, accompanied by his girlfriend, a subordinate soldier. That they took their weapons with them, concealed in their clothing, and then willingly turned their weapons over to the owner of the restaurant where they dined. And then bragged about their exploits on Facebook and included pictures.

    Throughout that retelling, you were picturing an Army specialist or young buck sergeant, weren’t you? What if I told you that it was a Texas National Guard Lieutenant Colonel? The same LTC who accused BG William Caldwell of trying to run intelligence operations against visiting members of Congress, LTC Michael Holmes. Well, in April, 2010, the Army conducted a 15-6 investigation into the antics of Michael Holmes and his girlfriend Major Laurel Levine (I know, she sounds like a superhero’s girlfriend or a stripper, doesn’t she?).

    For background see Assoluta Tranquillita who links to all of the best blogs who wrote about this last week.

    What were Holmes and Levine doing when they went off of the base in civilian clothes to dine in restaurants? They were drumming up business for the company they hoped they would found after their tour. They called it SyzygyLogos LLC and they hoped to do business doing exactly what they were doing for the Army in Afghanistan. That’s why they also took pictures of themselves doing the taxpayers’ business in civilian clothes to make it appear as if they already had a private company and were contracted with the US government. On your dime. This is from his company’s Facebook profile of SyzygyLogos LLC under title “Training the Afghans”

    The investigating officer, LTC Richard Santiago, found the investigation to be a breeze since Holmes and Levine left a trail on Facebook like this;

    So this is what Santiago recommended;

    On May 18, 2010, Colonel Joseph P. Buche, Chief of Staff, approved all of Santiago’s recommendations except a. and f., so they didn’t get Article 15s or have their Federal status revoked. They got sent back to Texas in September. Apparently, Holmes stewed for nearly six months before he went to Michael Hastings of the Rolling Stone Magazine to spill his guts over what we’re supposed to believe is some heinous crime.

    Oh, yeah, and Holmes tries to make it sound as if he’s some spook-like Psy-Ops guy, except he’s never been to any kind of training like that. They’ve kinda lost interest in the company they were forming during their duty hours in Afghanistan, too. I guess that happens when Holmes has to go home to his wife every night instead of Hotlips Levine.

    Holmes told Fox News;

    “Do I have an ax to grind? Yeah. But the ax is this. If they can do this to a lieutenant colonel, what are they doing to the sergeants out there? I have a lot of education and training. … I knew where to go and what the rules were and weren’t.”

    Except that “what was done” to Holmes seems to have a mountain of evidence. I don’t know too many sergeants who would hand their personal weapon over to a foreign civilian and try to manipulate their training to look like the sergeant has a business.The pictures that Holmes or Levine themselves put and left on Facebook seem to support the 15-6 investigation.

    Mikey Hastings and Mikey Holmes have a cheerleader in Glen Greenwald at Salon, who thinks that the character of the messengers doesn’t matter;

    As usual, anyone who makes powerful government or military leaders look bad — by reporting the truth — becomes the target of character assassination, and the weapon of choice are the loyal, vapid media stars who will uncritically repeat whatever powerful officials say all while shielding them from accountability through the use of anonymity.

    Given that Holmes has been proven by an Army investigation to be a liar (Holmes told the investigator that hed been given permission to wear civilian clothes and carry his personal weapon concealed outside of the wire – and the evidence of his duplicity has been posted on the internet by Holmes and Levine themselves) don’t you think the Hastings articles should be met with a measure of skepticism? What Greenwald and Hastings want you to do is read the articles without knowing where this bullshit is coming from. Like the IVAW gets bent out of shape when I investigate their individual backgrounds. We’re not supposed to ask where the information is coming from, or what might be the motivations of the messenger.

    If the Army really went on a witch hunt to silence Holmes and Lavine, they might have included an investigation into the relationship between the two, but that investigation was specifically excluded from the 15-6. Personally, I’d have preferred that the command had given him an Article 15, that way we’d have been able to see if Holmes was prepared to take the charges to a court martial and risk a little “pound me in the ass prison”.

    But you know what upsets me most about this whole story? It’s bullshit from the first word of Hastings’ article. Public Affairs and Information Operations are basically the same. There’s no difference except in which people are hearing the information product. If Brigadier General Caldwell was willing to tell visiting Congressmen and Senators bald-faced out-right lies, he could have had used either of those two offices to tell them with the same result.

    The only way this is news is if Caldwell was planning on having Holmes waterboard visitors.

    See more from Bruce McQuain at HotAir, Blackfive, Jimbo at Big Peace and from Mothax at The Burn Pit. There’s also more at Mudville Gazette, but I’m not exactly sure what.

  • Stolen Valor airman

    See that airman on your far right in the picture above? That’s Anthony LaTorre receiving an award from his university on Veterans’ Day last year. He was spotted in the photo by another airman who didn’t know the glorious hero on the stage, but knew him as an aircraft mechanic with three lower level medals;

    The story told how the university recognized five former service members at a Veterans Day concert last year. LaTorre, according to the article, represented the Air Force. He said he served six years, from 2004 to 2010, deploying three times — to Baghdad and Fallujah in Iraq, and Kandahar, Afghanistan.

    LaTorre’s claims outraged Wilcox, who sent an e-mail to Air Force Times laying out what he knew about his former co-worker.

    Yeah, and here’s LaTorre’s brother explaining his sibling’s disorder;

    “Whenever someone tells him a story, he integrates it and believes it as if he did it,” Todd LaTorre said when told about how LaTorre misrepresented himself. “He tells it with great accuracy.”

    LaTorre had sought help but never accepted his inability to distinguish his experiences from someone else’s, according to the brother.

    “He’s in denial,” Todd LaTorre said. “He’s a real good person, but he has no idea of what he’s doing.”

    Oh, well, as long as he’s a good person.

    Read the whole story at the Air Force Times.

  • Update concerning Bounds, Kylen

    In addition to learning new information from Facebook from a friend in the family, I received this comment on my last post about Kylen.

    Ok, so I have held my tongue long enough. I am not going to sit here and read anymore slander about my son.

    My son Kylen bounds is mentally retarded. He has always wanted to go into the military and when he was in high school they let him into the JROTC and he loved it. But because his mental IQ is not the level that the military wants he can not go into anything. My son would be the best for the US and the military cause he loves it so much and would serve proud.

    I know that what he did was wrong and believe me when I tell you we tell him every day that he need to stop obsessing about the military and move on with his life. Now the restraining order that someone posted on here was for his girlfriend and him. His girlfriend is mentally ill as well and we wanted all phone calls and emails to stop between them that is why there is a no contact order with his name listed. As for the uniform you can call the National Guard in Tacoma and yell at them for giving him that. The patches he ordered them online. You can order them from a website and you don’t have to show them any paperwork as to your rank. now think about this people how many other people out there are doing the same thing?

    Kylen was just one that got caught. He did his time for it and now is trying to move on with his life. Please as a mom of a mentally ill kid i beg you to drop all of the hateful post about him and put yourself in my shoes for once. Think about how hard it is to raise a mentally ill child,who loves the military so much that when we take him to the recruiting offices and they tell him not to cry. I hope that me posting this will help you all understand what I am going through as well as him.

    Now I send my thanks to all the veterans out there that have served or are serving. I have family that is in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines right now. My father in law as well as other friends serve in Vietnam. my grandfather that served in ww2. I have had friends that I have lost loved ones in war so I know that I want to thank each and every one of our veterans for protecting our lives. May god bless each and everyone of you.

    So looking back at the post with this information does put things into a different light. So with that being said I am removing that post from public view.