I’ll be reporting on the suit to be heard in a San Francisco courtroom for Pacifica Radio and KPFA. I’ve included the press release below from one of the co-counsels along with Disability Rights Advocates and others. The broadcast, carried by most other Pacifica Radio stations, will air Tuesday, April 22nd from 10am to 1pm Pacific time. The plan is to bring veterans, families who will be testifying, legal experts to comment on the case and therapists who work with soldiers with post traumatic stress disorder. This is a very important case - and one that will determine whether soldiers get the health care promised or will continue to be subjected to delays and denials with disasterous results.
MEDIA ADVISORY
Contact:
Paul Sullivan, Veterans for Common Sense
(202)-491-6953
Robert M. Handy, Veterans United for Truth
(805)-455-5259
Gordon P. Erspamcr, Morrison & Foerster
(925)-295-3341
Sidney M. Wolinsky, Disability Rights Advocates
(510)-665-8644
TRIAL TO BEGIN IN FEDERAL COURT CASE BY WOUNDED VETS AGAINST VA
WHAT: Trial
WHO: Before Senior Judge Samuel Conti, United States District
Court, Northern District of California.
WHEN: Monday, April 21, 2008, at 9:00 a.m.
WHERE: Federal Courthouse, Courtroom # 1, 17th Floor, 450 Golden
Gate Avenue, San Francisco, CA
Senior Federal District Court Judge Samuel Conti has expeditiously set trial in this ground-breaking nationwide lawsuit against the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) challenging systemic problems in the VA’s health care and adjudication systems for disabled veterans. The trial, to begin on April 21, will include testimony from the heads of national veterans organizations, top VA officials and some of the leading experts in the country on the widespread failings of the VA system.
Tragically, the VA has been neglecting wounded veterans returning from service in Iraq and Afghanistan who are in desperate need of ongoing care and support, including medical treatment and disability payments for living expenses. Among those suffering the most are returning veterans with mental disabilities such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Veteran suicides have reached an epidemic level, with over 120 veterans taking their own lives every week. This lawsuit is unprecedented in directly challenging the VA’s 600,000 case backlog in handling claims, appellate delays of five to ten years, the waiting lists that veterans face before receiving health care, and the inadequacy of VA care for PTSD.
PTSD is a psychiatric disorder that can develop in a person who witnesses or is confronted with a traumatic event. PTSD is the most prevalent mental disorder arising from combat. The suit claims that numerous VA practices violate the constitutional and statutory rights of veterans by denying veterans safeguards in the VA benefits process and mandated medical care. The suit also calls for court orders requiring the VA to provide immediate medical and psychological help to returning troops and to screen them for risk of suicide.

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