±Recent Visitors

Recent Visitors to Com-Central!

±User Info-big


Welcome Anonymous

Nickname
Password

Membership:
Latest: HighestAce
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 6648

People Online:
Members: 0
Visitors: 411
Total: 411
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Community Forums
02: Home
03: Member Screenshots
04: Community Forums
05: Community Forums
06: Community Forums
07: Community Forums
08: Member Screenshots
09: Community Forums
10: Downloads
11: Downloads
12: Member Screenshots
13: Community Forums
14: News Archive
15: Member Screenshots
16: Community Forums
17: Photo Gallery
18: Community Forums
19: Photo Gallery
20: Community Forums
21: Home
22: Community Forums
23: Community Forums
24: Community Forums
25: Member Screenshots
26: Downloads
27: Home
28: Community Forums
29: News Archive
30: Home
31: Community Forums
32: Community Forums
33: Member Screenshots
34: Community Forums
35: Community Forums
36: News Archive
37: Member Screenshots
38: Community Forums
39: Home
40: Home
41: Community Forums
42: Community Forums
43: Member Screenshots
44: Community Forums
45: Home
46: Community Forums
47: Community Forums
48: Home
49: Photo Gallery
50: Home
51: Home
52: Community Forums
53: Community Forums
54: Home
55: Member Screenshots
56: Community Forums
57: Member Screenshots
58: Home
59: Community Forums
60: Community Forums
61: Home
62: Community Forums
63: Home
64: Community Forums
65: News
66: Home
67: Photo Gallery
68: Home
69: Home
70: Community Forums
71: Community Forums
72: Community Forums
73: Community Forums
74: Community Forums
75: Home
76: Downloads
77: Community Forums
78: Statistics
79: Community Forums
80: Home
81: Photo Gallery
82: Photo Gallery
83: Home
84: Photo Gallery
85: Community Forums
86: Community Forums
87: Home
88: Community Forums
89: Community Forums
90: Member Screenshots
91: Home
92: Community Forums
93: Your Account
94: Downloads
95: Home
96: Community Forums
97: Photo Gallery
98: Home
99: Downloads
100: Community Forums
101: Home
102: Community Forums
103: Photo Gallery
104: Member Screenshots
105: Home
106: Home
107: Your Account
108: Downloads
109: Home
110: Community Forums
111: Community Forums
112: News Archive
113: News Archive
114: Home
115: Home
116: Community Forums
117: Community Forums
118: News Archive
119: Downloads
120: Home
121: Community Forums
122: Community Forums
123: Home
124: Community Forums
125: Home
126: Community Forums
127: News
128: Community Forums
129: Home
130: Home
131: Downloads
132: News
133: Member Screenshots
134: Member Screenshots
135: Community Forums
136: News
137: News
138: Downloads
139: Home
140: Community Forums
141: News
142: Home
143: Home
144: Community Forums
145: Community Forums
146: News Archive
147: Home
148: Community Forums
149: Photo Gallery
150: Photo Gallery
151: Home
152: Supporters
153: Community Forums
154: Community Forums
155: Home
156: Community Forums
157: Community Forums
158: Home
159: Community Forums
160: Home
161: Member Screenshots
162: Member Screenshots
163: Home
164: Home
165: News
166: Community Forums
167: Member Screenshots
168: Photo Gallery
169: Photo Gallery
170: Community Forums
171: Home
172: Photo Gallery
173: Community Forums
174: Downloads
175: Community Forums
176: Home
177: Home
178: Photo Gallery
179: Home
180: Community Forums
181: Home
182: Community Forums
183: Community Forums
184: Home
185: Home
186: Community Forums
187: Community Forums
188: Home
189: Home
190: Downloads
191: Member Screenshots
192: Your Account
193: News Archive
194: News Archive
195: Community Forums
196: Community Forums
197: Home
198: News
199: Home
200: Community Forums
201: Member Screenshots
202: Community Forums
203: Photo Gallery
204: News
205: Community Forums
206: Community Forums
207: Home
208: Downloads
209: Community Forums
210: Community Forums
211: Community Forums
212: Member Screenshots
213: Home
214: Your Account
215: Home
216: News
217: News
218: Home
219: Community Forums
220: Home
221: Home
222: News Archive
223: Community Forums
224: Community Forums
225: Community Forums
226: Member Screenshots
227: Photo Gallery
228: Home
229: Home
230: Home
231: Your Account
232: Member Screenshots
233: Community Forums
234: Community Forums
235: Home
236: Your Account
237: Community Forums
238: Your Account
239: News Archive
240: Home
241: Home
242: Community Forums
243: Photo Gallery
244: Member Screenshots
245: News Archive
246: Community Forums
247: Home
248: Community Forums
249: Home
250: Supporters
251: Community Forums
252: Downloads
253: Your Account
254: LinkToUs
255: Community Forums
256: Member Screenshots
257: Community Forums
258: Community Forums
259: Home
260: Community Forums
261: Contact
262: Photo Gallery
263: Community Forums
264: Home
265: Downloads
266: Member Screenshots
267: Community Forums
268: Photo Gallery
269: Community Forums
270: Your Account
271: Community Forums
272: Home
273: News Archive
274: Member Screenshots
275: Community Forums
276: Community Forums
277: Community Forums
278: Community Forums
279: Community Forums
280: Home
281: Photo Gallery
282: News
283: Home
284: Photo Gallery
285: Member Screenshots
286: Community Forums
287: Community Forums
288: Community Forums
289: Community Forums
290: Community Forums
291: Member Screenshots
292: Community Forums
293: Community Forums
294: Photo Gallery
295: Community Forums
296: Community Forums
297: Photo Gallery
298: Member Screenshots
299: Community Forums
300: Community Forums
301: Home
302: Community Forums
303: Member Screenshots
304: Home
305: Community Forums
306: Community Forums
307: Home
308: Member Screenshots
309: Community Forums
310: Community Forums
311: Community Forums
312: Downloads
313: Community Forums
314: Member Screenshots
315: Community Forums
316: Member Screenshots
317: Search
318: Community Forums
319: Home
320: Community Forums
321: Community Forums
322: Home
323: Community Forums
324: Home
325: Tell a Friend
326: Photo Gallery
327: Community Forums
328: Community Forums
329: Member Screenshots
330: Community Forums
331: Community Forums
332: Your Account
333: Home
334: Community Forums
335: Community Forums
336: Home
337: Home
338: Community Forums
339: Your Account
340: Your Account
341: Community Forums
342: Community Forums
343: Community Forums
344: Downloads
345: Community Forums
346: Community Forums
347: Community Forums
348: Community Forums
349: Community Forums
350: Community Forums
351: Community Forums
352: Community Forums
353: Community Forums
354: Home
355: Community Forums
356: Member Screenshots
357: Community Forums
358: Member Screenshots
359: Home
360: Photo Gallery
361: Community Forums
362: Home
363: Community Forums
364: Community Forums
365: News Archive
366: Member Screenshots
367: Community Forums
368: Home
369: LinkToUs
370: Member Screenshots
371: News Archive
372: Member Screenshots
373: Home
374: Community Forums
375: Community Forums
376: Home
377: Community Forums
378: Community Forums
379: Community Forums
380: Member Screenshots
381: Community Forums
382: Community Forums
383: Community Forums
384: Community Forums
385: Home
386: Home
387: Community Forums
388: Community Forums
389: Member Screenshots
390: Community Forums
391: Community Forums
392: Community Forums
393: Home
394: Community Forums
395: Downloads
396: Your Account
397: News Archive
398: Community Forums
399: Community Forums
400: Home
401: Community Forums
402: Photo Gallery
403: Member Screenshots
404: Home
405: Community Forums
406: Community Forums
407: Photo Gallery
408: Community Forums
409: Community Forums
410: Home
411: Community Forums

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
Let's hear it for Montana!
A public forum for the JG300 Wild Sau Gruppe!
Post new topic    Reply to topic    Printer Friendly Page     Forum Index ›  JG300 Wild Sau Gruppe Public Forum

View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
JG300-Ascout
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 6257
Location: Cyberspace
PostPosted: Mon Jul 24, 2006 11:52 am
Post subject: Let's hear it for Montana!



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Man ordered to wear sandwich board for lying to probation officer

MISSOULA, Mont. - A Whitefish man who lied to his probation officer about having served in the military was ordered Thursday to stand outside the courthouse here wearing a sandwich board that says, "I am a liar. I am not a Marine."

William C. Horvath, 35, pleaded guilty to making false statements, a felony.

U.S District Judge Donald Molloy sentenced him to four months of house arrest and four years of probation. He also ordered him to stand outside the courthouse for 50 hours wearing a sandwich board with large letters on the front that say: "I am a liar. I am not a Marine."

On the back, it must read: "I have never served my country. I have dishonored veterans of all wars."

Molloy, a veteran himself, also ordered Horvath to write letters of apology to newspapers, the U.S. Marine Corps, Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion in Kalispell. The judge said Horvath must admit in the letters that he lied repeatedly about serving and being wounded.

According to a news release from the U.S. attorney's office, Horvath claimed during an interview with a probation officer on Aug. 9, 2001, that he had served in the Marine Corps. The officer was gathering information on Horvath on a prior charge of being a fugitive in possession of firearms or ammunition.

The probation officer then attempted to verify Horvath's military service, but was told by the Marine Corps that there was no record of Horvath ever having served.

Horvath then presented the probation officer with evidence of his time in the military, including photographs and decorations. However, Marine Corps representatives told the probation officer that the evidence contained a variety of inconsistencies.

For instance, Horvath was wearing his uniform improperly; he displayed decorations incorrectly; and equipment and uniforms in the photos either didn't fit the era or were inconsistent with other items in the photos.

A service of the Associated Press(AP)



_________________
"All facts go to clearly prove that Shades is a thrice-cursed traitor & mentally deranged person steeped in inveterate enmity toward mankind"
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
Tanklord
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 24, 2006
Posts: 817
Location: Louisiana
PostPosted: Mon Jul 24, 2006 5:31 pm
Post subject: Re: Let's hear it for Montana!

I do a lot work helping the local American Legion post expose these fake vets. D.G. Burkett has a great book about the subject: "Stolen Valor". Bottom line, if you didn't earn it, don't wear it, whether it is a uniform or medals.

_________________
The only thing to do when a son-of-a-bitch looks
cross-eyed at you is to beat the hell out of him right
then and there
Back to top
View user's profile Yahoo Messenger
JG300-Ascout
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 6257
Location: Cyberspace
PostPosted: Mon Jul 24, 2006 6:41 pm
Post subject: Re: Let's hear it for Montana!

O'er on another forum before we made our home here, there was a cranky individual (with an alcohol problem) that claimed he'd been under threat of extermination by the tankers (uh-huh...) who had orders to fire on the ASA (radio intercept guys, of which he claimed to be one...a crypto specialist) in their vans if it looked like an overrun was likely in the waning days of Vietnam. (He also claimed Korea service, which by his own profile birthdate, would have made him about 14 at the time).

I know a few ASA guys, bein' as the 8th Radio Research Unit were almost neighbors of ours in VN (we ran some missions in support of their activity) and while they probably deserved shootin' ( Laughing well, they did have tennis courts, air conditioning, and a swimming pool) I can't imagine any tanker in the Army turning their weapons on the spooks just because they "couldn't be captured". With a little help from contacts at the Ranger website for exposing frauds, we blew him away. ("My records were destroyed in the fire in St. Louis"....yeah...that fire only affected Vet's from WWII and before...and for one-two years postwar...not Korea and VN).

I hate these guys....

_________________
"All facts go to clearly prove that Shades is a thrice-cursed traitor & mentally deranged person steeped in inveterate enmity toward mankind"


Last edited by JG300-Ascout on Mon Jul 24, 2006 8:17 pm; edited 1 time in total
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
JG300-Stoopy
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 5840
Location: Group W bench
PostPosted: Mon Jul 24, 2006 7:50 pm
Post subject: Re: Let's hear it for Montana!

I remember hearing about this case (the original one above) back when it happened. Thought it was WAY cool at the time.

Problem is, for whatever reason it's more common than I ever would have thought. What goes through these guy's heads is impossible to understand.

_________________
"Once your reputation is ruined, you can live quite freely."
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website Photo Gallery
JG300-Ascout
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 6257
Location: Cyberspace
PostPosted: Mon Jul 24, 2006 8:21 pm
Post subject: Re: Let's hear it for Montana!

- JG300-Stoopy
I remember hearing about this case (the original one above) back when it happened. Thought it was WAY cool at the time.

Problem is, for whatever reason it's more common than I ever would have thought. What goes through these guy's heads is impossible to understand.


Re: Phonies and Frauds

From: POW-MIA InterNetwork

Date: November 17, 2003

"Real war veterans increasingly uncover truths of 'wannabes'

Actor Brian Dennehy is among those who have either exaggerated their experiences or lied outright about serving.

By Mike Hudson

Toronto Blue Jays manager Tim Johnson fired up his baseball teams with bloody tales of his days as a U.S. Marine in Vietnam. War was hell. He had killed a little girl and her brother who happened into the line of fire.

The truth: He had been in the Marine Reserves. An exemption for baseball players had kept him out of combat.

The Blue Jays fired Johnson. Now he manages in the bush leagues.

U.S. Rep. Wes Cooley told reporters he'd fought in Korea as a Special Forces "demolition expert" trained in mountain climbing and escape tactics. The Oregon Republican said he'd engaged in countless secret missions.

The truth: Cooley never left the states during his military career. He hadn't even finished his training when the Korean conflict ended.

After his lies unraveled, Cooley dropped his re-election bid. He was convicted of falsifying campaign documents.

Actor Brian Dennehy, one of the stars of the Rambo movie "First Blood," said he served five years in Vietnam. He'd been hit by shrapnel. Combat, he told Playboy magazine, was "absolute f---ing chaos."

The truth: Dennehy had been a Marine, but his only overseas assignment had been as a football player on a service team in Okinawa.

After a long delay, Dennehy admitted his lies.

Pulitzer-winning historian Joseph Ellis spiced his lectures with tales of his Vietnam service. His unit had been nearby during the My Lai massacre. He served on the staff of America's top commander in Vietnam, Gen. William Westmoreland.

The truth: Ellis never fought in Vietnam. During the war, he taught military history at West Point.

Ellis made a tepid apology: "Even in the best of lives, mistakes are made."

Stolen glory

Veterans call them by all sorts of names: phonies, fakes, imposters, wannabes. Some claim they fought in wars they never served in. Others served honorably but exaggerate their exploits; they claim service in elite units, tell tales of top-secret suicide raids, wear medals they never earned.

Vets and journalists who have delved into the world of military impostors say untold thousands of masqueraders are using make-believe war records to polish resumes, collect veterans benefits, or impress business associates, friends or romantic partners.

"The sheer number is just mind-boggling," said Mark Bowden, author of "Black Hawk Down," a bestselling book about a U.S. Army Ranger engagement in Somalia. "And it's frankly put me in a position of doubting anybody who tells me a war story."

B.G. "Jug" Burkett, a Vietnam vet who is now a stockbroker in Dallas, feels the same way. Almost any time he reads a newspaper article about someone claiming to be a Vietnam veteran, he digs into their background and files a request for their military records.

Over the past 15 years, Burkett said, he has investigated perhaps 2,000 claims of military service; at least 1,500 of them were bogus in one way or another. Rep. Cooley was among the storytellers he helped expose.

Burkett, co-author of "Stolen Valor: How the Vietnam Generation Was Robbed of its Heroes and its History," is in many ways the godfather of a growing network of debunkers of false military claims. One retired SEAL commander told The New York Times that he and others connected with the elite Navy unit had exposed more than 7,000 SEAL impostors.

Waving the flag

It can take time, but it's almost always possible to prove or disprove whether someone served in the military, where they served, whether they saw combat, and whether they earned medals.

The military keeps records on almost everything. On a typical day in Vietnam, Burkett noted, there were always more clerks with typewriters than riflemen in the field. "Everything is done in triplicate," he said.

People should be skeptical, he said, about those who wear heroism on their sleeves, tell wild tales of wartime mayhem or claim to have led clandestine missions that the government won't acknowledge.

In his book, Burkett notes the story of a man named John Murray who claimed to be an ex-prisoner of war and retired lieutenant colonel. During a POW-MIA Day ceremony in New York, Murray stepped forward with a tiny framed American flag. He said he had made it in his POW camp by shredding his clothing and dyeing the cloth with berries and his own blood. Each day he raised the flag on a bamboo stick so he and his fellow prisoners could honor it.

He got permission to hold a ceremony on National Park Service grounds and persuaded retired Gen. William Westmorland to attend.

That night, Murray, driving drunk and on antidepressants, smashed his car into a utility pole. Police efforts to ascertain his true identity - he claimed three different birthdays and had two Social Security numbers - unraveled his patchwork of lies. Murray had never been in the military. He later pleaded guilty to lying to obtain a government permit.

Murray explained his deception by saying, "I only wanted to help."

Victims and heroes

False warriors are a phenomenon that happens after every war. Historian William Marvel has written that every one of the last dozen recognized living Confederate veterans was bogus. Marvel found that the last one, Walter Williams of Texas, would have been 5 in 1860 and 10 when the war ended. Williams didn't begin identifying himself as a Civil War veteran until 1932, when he applied for a Confederate pension.

Society honors warriors. Movies and television are obsessed with war. Many Americans equate honor and masculinity with military service. Men - and women - with low self-images sometimes try to build up themselves by claiming service and even heroism, say those who have investigated the problem. Cooks and clerks and others who served in noncombat slots feel guilt that they had it easy compared with comrades who risked and sometimes gave their lives in battle.

Society is fascinated, too, with victims and heroes. For self-aggrandizers, Burkett said, Vietnam is alluring because its tortured history allows them to meld two identities. Like Rambo, they can be both heroes who fought for their country as well as victims betrayed by politicians and the public.

Some fakers are compulsive liars who convince themselves of the truth of their own stories. And while most fakers are trying to bolster fragile egos, some use their stories for grander aims: to win elections, steal money, hype their public images as entertainers or business executives, make political statements for or against U.S. military actions.

When confronted with evidence of their duplicity, Burkett said, most will stick with their stories, even presenting doctored and forged documents for support. "It's very rare that they'll cough it up."

Undying beliefs

In his book, Burkett argues that the problem goes beyond acts of individual dishonor. He says military pretenders often appear in news stories that contribute to stereotypes of Vietnam vets as violent, drug-addled, psychologically wasted and homeless.

The image is so universally accepted, he says, reporters and producers are quick to use stories that fit the stereotype, and rarely check the veracity of the source.

And what happens when someone questions the record of a veteran quoted in a news story? Most of the time, Burkett said, reporters, editors and producers refuse to admit their mistakes.

Bowden, the "Black Hawk Down" author, found this to be true when he did his own investigation of the media's handling of this problem: Many journalists simply didn't care about finding out the truth. "It was just an outrage," Bowden said. "It was frankly somewhat disillusioning to me."

The media and the public live by stereotypes; rarely do they willingly forsake long-held beliefs. It's not an easy battle to challenge oft-repeated stories of a community hero's valor, or to correct a flawed but long-accepted historical record.

Burkett said one thing his campaign has taught him is that people want to hang onto their myths, whether it's a society certain that Vietnam veterans are woebegone cases, or a spouse who wants to blame her husband's problems on the trauma of war.

"They want to believe," he said. For some people, "there's a point where, once you cross that threshold, it doesn't matter whether it's true or not." "

www.aiipowmia.com/inte...nabes.html

_________________
"All facts go to clearly prove that Shades is a thrice-cursed traitor & mentally deranged person steeped in inveterate enmity toward mankind"
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
JG300-fr8ycat
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Mar 13, 2005
Posts: 1528
Location: Los Angeles
PostPosted: Tue Jul 25, 2006 3:13 am
Post subject: Re: Let's hear it for Montana!

- JG300-Ascout

Actor Brian Dennehy is among those who have either exaggerated their experiences or lied outright about serving.


That's why Rambo kicked his butt! Laughing

It is sad. I never heard the Dennehy story, blew me away.
Back to top
View user's profile MSN Messenger Photo Gallery
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic    Reply to topic    Printer Friendly Page    Forum Index ›  JG300 Wild Sau Gruppe Public Forum
Page 1 of 1
All times are GMT - 6 Hours



Jump to:  


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum