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13th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) Courtesy Story 05.18.2010
Civilian contractors receive

JOINT BASE BALAD, – Three KBR, Inc. employees received the Secretary of Defense Medal for Defense of Freedom in a ceremony, May 1, at Joint Base Balad, .

The Defense of Freedom Medal is the civilian equivalent of the military’s Purple Heart Medal. It is awarded to civilian employees working in support of the Department of Defense who are injured or fatally wounded by hostile fire while in the line of duty.

Robert Martin Jr., a heavy truck driver with KBR’s Iraq Theater Transportation Mission and a Lindale, Texas, native, sustained a gunshot wound while driving in a flatbed convoy mission Dec. 5, 2005.

Lawrence Reynolds, a heavy truck driver with KBR’s Iraq’s TTM and a Tulsa, Okla., native, received shrapnel wounds and later had a cardiac episode as a result of an improvised explosive device detonation on his convoy, June 6, 2006.

Lemmis Stephens Jr., a tank driver and fuel technician with KBR and a Houston native, sustained bilateral eye injuries when an incoming round exploded 70 feet from his bus, sending shrapnel through his windshield.

All three contractors have since returned to work in Iraq.

“Brave civilian men and women put their life on the line every day,” said Brig. Gen. Paul L. Wentz, commanding general of the 13th Sustainment Command (Expeditionary) and a Mansfield, Ohio, native.

Civilian contractors have made and continue to make key contributions to the success of Iraq, Wentz said.

Wentz said the day’s ceremony was a bittersweet time, because, like the Purple Heart, the Defense of Freedom Medal is one earned through great physical sacrifice.

“It’s a medal a commander never wishes to present,” Wentz said.

Doug Horn, the vice president of operations for KBR and a Houston native, made his keynote address via live video feed from Baghdad due to logistical constraints that prevented him from attending the ceremony.

Stephens was also in Baghdad and witnessed the ceremony via video.

“An employee once told me he felt it to be a high calling to come to Iraq,” Stephens said. “Since he was unable to join the military, he wanted to make a meaningful contribution to the war on terror by offering his skills as only he can do and by assisting other KBR employees to make life easier for Soldiers in Iraq.

… You see, that’s what a hero is, an everyday person.”

Stephens said civilian contractors are now an integral and permanent part of battlefield logistics and support in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Stephens said it is a harsh reality that contractors are put in danger on a daily basis, but the injuries and lives lost have not been in vain.

“I am truly humbled by and I am also proud of the role you are all playing in support of the U.S. military and ultimately in the support of the people in Iraq,” he said. (Click HERE for original article)

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Barb Dill at husband Wade's grave.

worked for KBR from December 2004 through June 2006. He worked as Vector Control and a Hazmat Coordinator all over . When he came for R&R in June of 2006 he was suffering from what his wife Barbara describes at severe . In July 2006, within a month of returning home he committed suicide. has not been tracked and is an under reported illness of civilian contractors returning from the war theater.

To add insult to injury, as Barbara Dill battles with AIG for the death benefits she and her daughter deserve, KBR recruiters are calling to talk to Wade in an effort to recruit him to come back to work for KBR.  I kid you not!!

In a recent post by Defense Base Act Compensation Blog, Barbara Dill states:

“I just got a call from, get this, KBR.  Yep, They asked for Wade Dill.  The number they called from was 713-753-4177.  This is the third or fourth time they have called trying to recruit him back to work

Isn’t it funny that they can’t find any medical records on anyone that needs them, but they can still hang on to a dead mans job application from over 4 years ago!!

I can understand one inadvertent call from an unknowing KBR recruiter. But once the recruiter was informed of Wade Dill’s tragic death one would think KBR would’ve made a note in his file or removed him from the data base all together. But to continue to call is unconscionable. Can you imagine the pain Barbara Dill and her daughter endure every time KBR calls to recruit her dead husband. Talk about pain and suffering!

I have to wonder how often this is happening and to who!

Here’s a chance for to redeem herself. How about a personal heartfelt apology on behalf of KBR to Barbara Dill and her daughter for the pain caused every time one of their recruiters call to hire Wade to back to work for KBR.

Ms Sparky

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I have noticed there are several patterns for performing a self breast exam. This is but one.

Breast in leads to Gulf War Veteran News Alert and Rep Boswell Legislation

March 18, 2010 by Denise NicholsVeterans Today

Gulf War Veterans need to be made aware of the following articles.  Alert for all female veterans you know the drill!  Self Breast Checks often and Mammograms.  VA does provide this, so make use of that service!
Male Veterans yes you too can get breast cancer.  Again our females will have to teach you the principles of breast self exams.  Basically you work in a clockwise pattern and outward and inner in direction from the clock face.  If you palpate any lumps or bumps under the skin GET IN TO A DOCTOR for further Assessment!

Also checks should also extend to lymph nodes in the arm pits.

I already know quite a few female gulf war veterans that have had breast cancers.  I would also recommend that all print this out and provide to health care providers, fellow veterans, etc.  Also I would recommend sharing on facebook pages personal and veteran groups facebook pages and specific gulf war veteran unit facebook pages.  I would also reccommend we use all social networks ie Twitter information.

We need mass communications.  Also try to get your local media and newspapers to cover the issues.  Email media contacts in your area.  I also recommend you get in touch with your US Representatives and Senators and get their staffer’s email and keep them in the flow of information.  VSO’s should also get this information for their post newsletters and magazines.  Each Veteran can do their part!  Each citizen should be helping!

Here are the stories about in Iraq from the American Association for Cancer Research Read the remainder of this entry »

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T Miller brings to light yet another Injured War Zone Contractor who is about to become  homeless due to the unwarranted  denial of Defense Base Act insurance benefits by AIG.    Bill Carlisle has worked hard his whole life and was working hard when he was injured.  Thanks to AIG and the fact no one in Congress or the DoL seems to give a damn, Bill’s home in foreclosure with a sale date within the month.

So what if he eventually gets the payments he is already supposed to be getting?  His credit is ruined and he won’t be able to buy another home.   He’s just another KBR AIG DBA casualty.  AIG and CNA are ruining one life right after another.

Why is the Taxpayer paying for these benefits?

In recent years, the Pentagon has come to increasingly rely on private military contractors to do the work that members of the military used to do. But as the number of civilian contractors has grown, so too has the number of deaths and injuries of those contractors and with it, the cost of paying health care benefits for their injury claims.

T. Christian Miller [1] recently won the Selden Ring Award for Investigative Reporting [2] for his coverage of the numerous obstacles contractors face [3] when they’ve been injured and try to collect benefits. We spoke to him about who is responsible for taking care of injured contractors, the ordeal they have to go through to be diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, the role AIG plays in this, contractor suicide rates and how Congress is addressing the problem.

We also hear from one of the people facing the difficulties Miller has documented. Bill Carlisle Jr. was a contractor with defense firm KBR. He sustained both physical and psychological injuries, and is now fighting insurer AIG for the benefits he says they owe him. Read the remainder of this entry »

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On the one-year anniversary of her husband's suicide, Barb Dill breaks down at her husband's tombstone. , a Marine Corps veteran, took a contractor job in . Three weeks after he returned home for good, he committed suicide (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times / Redding, CA / July 16, 2007).

by T. Christian Miller, ProPublica – February 26, 2010

REDDING, Calif. — Wade Dill does not figure into the toll of war dead. An exterminator, Dill took a job in Iraq for a company contracted to do pest control on military bases. There, he found himself killing disease-carrying flies and rabid dogs, dodging mortars and huddling in bomb shelters.

Wade Dill

Dill, a Marine Corps veteran, was a different man when he came back for visits here, his family said: moody, isolated, morose. He screamed at his wife and daughter. His weight dropped. Dark circles haunted his dark brown eyes.

Three weeks after he returned home for good, Dill booked a room in an anonymous three-story motel alongside Interstate 5. There, on July 16, 2006, he shot himself in the head with a 9 mm handgun. He left a suicide note for his wife and a picture for his daughter, then 16. The caption read: “I did exist and I loved you.”

More than three years later, Dill’s loved ones are still reeling, their pain compounded by a drawn-out battle with an insurance company over death benefits from the suicide. Barb Dill, 47, nearly lost the family’s home to foreclosure. “We’re circling the drain,” she said.

While suicide among soldiers has been a focus of Congress and the public, relatively little attention has been paid to the mental health of tens of thousands of civilian contractors returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. When they make the news at all, contractors are usually in the middle of scandal, depicted as cowboys, wastrels or worse. Read the remainder of this entry »

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