Military Fraud, or Just Crazy?
The March 19 Sunday New York Times Magazine cover story was a gripping account of the emotional problems some female veterans suffer as results of their war experiences, sexual assaults or both.
One of the women featured in the story was a former builder constructionman Amorita Randall, 27, who served six years as a Seabee. Randall told the Times that while in the Navy, she was raped twice in 2002 while she was stationed in Mississippi, and again in Guam in 2004. She also told the Times that she served in Iraq in 2004, which the Times reported as fact but which it now appears was not the case.
The story was written by Sara Corbett, a contract writer for the magazine. Heres how Corbett presented it: Her experience in Iraq, she said, included one notable combat incident, in which her Humvee was hit by an I.E.D., killing the soldier who was driving and leaving her with a brain injury. I dont remember as all of it
I dont know if I passed out or what, but it was pretty gruesome.
The story goes on:
According to the Navy, however, no after-action report exists to back up Randalls claims of combat exposure or injury. A Navy spokesman reports that her commander says that his unit was never involved in combat during her tour. And yet, while we were discussing the supposed I.E.D. attack, Randall appeared to recall it in exacting detail the smells, the sounds, the impact of the explosion. As she spoke, her body seemed to seize up; her speech became slurred as she slipped into a flashback. It was difficult to know what had traumatized Randall: whether she had in fact been in combat or whether she was reacting to some more generalized recollection of powerlessness.
The Navy, while expressing sympathy to a woman it believes is suffering from stress, is annoyed that the Times did so little to check the womans story. A Times fact checker contacted Navy headquarters only three days before the magazines deadline. That, said Capt. Tom Van Leunen, deputy chief of information for the Navy, did not provide enough time to confirm Randalls account of service in Iraq. Nonetheless, Van Leunen said, by deadline the Navy had provided enough information to the Times to seriously question whether shed been in Iraq.
Aaron Rectica, who runs the magazines research desk, disputes that. He said that by deadline, the Navy had not given the Times any reason to disbelieve Randalls claim of service in Iraq. Rectica said the Navy only told the paper that Randalls commanders believed shed been in Iraq but that no one in the unit had been in combat.
Unlike daily newspapers, which are usually printed very early on the day they are distributed, the Times magazine is printed a week ahead of time. The March 18 magazine went to press Friday, March 9. On the following Monday, March 12, the Navy told the Times that it had no record of Randall ever receiving hazardous duty pay or a combat zone tax exemption. One of the reasons for the Times apparent error was a medal. Randalls personnel file includes a Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, which is only awarded to troops who have served in a war zone. The Navy now says that medal was given to Randall in error.
Reached by phone at her home in Grand Junction, Colo., Randall declined to talk but gave the phone to her fiancé, Gregory Lund.
This lady was sexually assaulted twice in the Navy and no one was ever punished for it, he said. While the Navy says it can find no rape complaint, Lund says she told her doctors about the assaults.
She went through a lot. Lund said. But he admits he doesnt know for sure if Randall was ever in Iraq.
If she wasnt, it was a bad mistake on her part, he said. But, he added, For her to cope with [all shes been through], her mind somehow believes she was in Iraq. She doesnt remember anything in Iraq. If she was wrong about that, shes sorry. But what you folks need to realize is how traumatized she is. If shes wrong, I dont know. She doesnt know.
The editor of the magazine, Gerry Marzorati, said he now suspects Randall was never in Iraq.
I think she thinks she was in Iraq, he said. I dont think she was trying to pull the wool over our eyes.
Yeah. I think I was in Iraq, too. And I was in Afghanistan. And Pork Chop Hill. And I was at the Battle of the Bulge. And Pearl Harbor. Somebody should give me lotsa money.
The magazine did not call the Navy to check Randalls Iraq story sooner, Marzorati said, because they believed that checking rank, years of service and time in Iraq would be a perfunctory thing.
Marzorati said the Times is preparing a correction. He added that no one has challenged the military records of the 30 other women mentioned in the article.
Posted by: Anonymoose 2007-03-22 |