Jun 3, 2007

Investigative-Reporting Fund-raising Appeal

- Update on jailed veteran at bottom on this post -

MAL Contends will continue its breaking news, analysis, and investigative reporting.

The recent breaking piece on Vietnam-era veteran Keith Roberts (an innocent man jailed for filing for VA benefits for his Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) and subsequent series have demanded a heavy investment of time and costs.

To help offset these costs, this site is conducting a three-day, fund-raising appeal ending at midnight on June 6. Any amount in cash or check can be snail-mailed to:

Michael Leon
2645 Smithfield Drive, Ste 36
Madison, WI 53719

Thank-you to the network of bloggers, veterans and radio shows who have given generously of their time and resources to publicize this outrage. Though the list of sites is too long to be exhaustive, the following sites deserve particular recognition:

- Veterans Today
- The Veterans' Voice
- Nam Guardian Angel
- Veterans for Common Sense
- Uppity Wisconsin
- Op Ed News
- ePluribus Media Community
- MyDD
- News Now Public
- Smirking Chimp
- - WORT Radio - A Public Radio (May 25; at one minute, nine seconds)
- - The Lee Rayburn show (May 24; begins at 44 min., 24 sec.)
- - Wisconsin Public Radio News (May 10)

The Roberts family, attorney Robert Walsh (and his network), Col Dan Cedusky (and all his people) and Steve Hanson, Lee Rayburn, Gil Halstad and Judith Siers-Poisson remain champions and fighters for justice.

Beyond MAL Contends, to stay informed and receive the free and one of the oldest veteran newsletters: Email:http://us.f554.mail.yahoo.com/ym/Compose?To=VeteranIssues-subscribe@yahoogroups.com Questions and issues can be emailed to: http://us.f554.mail.yahoo.com/ym/Compose?To=colonel-dan@sbcglobal.net
Dan Cedusky, Champaign IL , Col , AUS, Ret.
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New Corroborating Evidence in Jailed Vet Case
Material Witness Contradicts Prosecution in E-Mail

An e-mail written by a former Navy officer corroborates the account of a Vietnam-era airman who witnessed the death of a colleague killed in a gruesome C-54 aircraft accident in 1969 at a Naval Air Facility in Naples, Italy.

The crushing death of Airman Gary Holland in the wheel well of the C-54 set in motion a chain of events that 36 years later led the US Veterans Administration (VA) and the US Atty for the Eastern District of Wisconsin in 2006 to indict and convict a veteran, Airman Keith Roberts (1968-71), diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), on charges of wire fraud, arguing that Roberts fabricated his role at the death scene and his relationship with Holland, defrauding the VA.

According to several documents, as the C-54 plane was crushing Holland to death and the base equivalent of a general quarters alarm was sounding, Roberts, who was on line duty, ran outside the aircraft hangar to the area where the base kept heavy equipment (fork lifts, air compressors, and trucks).

He asked personnel for a fork lift and operator, which were sent with him.

Personnel positioned the fork lift under the rear edge of the plane, under a beam inside the plane and tried to use it as jacking point to life the plane off of Holland.

Roberts told the fork lift operator to raise the forks, but they were ordered to stop by an officer who said they would damage the C-54 airplane.

Roberts became upset at the order and for decades told the story of the death of Holland in anger, saying the officer believed a possible dent in the aircraft was more important than the life of Holland.

US Atty Stephen Biskupic’s office said in a Nov. 13, 2006 press release that “Roberts falsified his role in the attempted rescue of an airman killed at Naval Air Facility Naples on February 4, 1969.”

E-mail

The naval officer and aviator who wrote the e-mail was present at and witnessed the incident.

But he was not interviewed by personnel investigating the accident in 1969, by VA Special Agent Ray Vasil of the Inspector General’s office in Chicago in 2005-2006, by the US Atty’s office, nor was he a witness at Roberts’ trial.

The naval officer’s e-mail reads in part:

“I was at NAF Naples from June 1968-71. … I think the c-54 which had the nose wheel accident was a commander middle east forces bird which was at Naples for scheduled maintenance at the time. I remember the accident. I don’t think anyone there at the time would forget it. As I recall someone had used a screwdriver instead of the proper pin to lock the nosewheel. The maintenance officer was Lcdr Hal (Harold) Truesdale. I recall that he stopped someone from using a forklift to quickly raise the nose of the aircraft, as he said it would damage the aircraft and instead opted for having people run to the aft end of the aircraft in order to take the weight off the nose and recover the airman trapped. I am pretty sure the man died as a result of the injuries.”

The naval officer’s e-mail supports Roberts’ version of event of the attempted use of a fork lift and the order by an officer to stop using the forklift.

Testimony by a naval officer on the substance of the e-mail would have likely engendered in a jury at the least reasonable doubt that Roberts lied about his role.

Roberts and the VA

Roberts was advised in 2002 by the late Jim Henning, a Shawano County (Wisconsin) Veteran's Service Officer, to apply for an earlier retroactive date for his PTSD disability benefits predicated in part by his witnessing Holland being crushed to death and related trauma.

Critics and veteran groups accuse the Bush administration of the unprecedented politicalization of the Department of Justice and the VA, and see the indictment and conviction of Roberts on charges of wire fraud (and other veterans) as a consequence of this politicalization that discourages Vietnam-era veterans from seeking PTSD benefits, per the views of the American Enterprise Institute.

Roberts was diagnosed with PTSD and granted disability benefits in 1999, but became suspicious of the VA and he accused the VA of engaging in fraud.

Ultimately, the VA and US Atty Stephen Biskupic turned Roberts' charge around, and charged and convicted Roberts with fraud, a prosecution that has veterans all over the country shaking their heads in disbelief.

Next Legal Steps

Roberts is appealing his conviction.

Roberts' appeal brief is due June 29 before the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.


The government brief is due July 30.


Roberts' reply brief is due August 13.


Oral arguments are scheduled at the Court's convenience.


The case number is: U.S. v. Roberts, E.D. of Wisconsin federal court, docket 05-CR-118. U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, 07-1546,

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