WASHINGTON - An Operation Iraqi Freedom veteran says Army officials at Fort Knox, Ky., refused
him medical treatment after he talked publicly about poor care at the base,
which helped spark hearings in Congress.
Fort Knox officials charged that soldier, Lt. Jullian Goodrum, with being absent
without leave and cut off his pay after he then went to a private doctor who
hospitalized him for serious mental stress from Iraq, Goodrum said.
"They are coming after me pretty bad," said Goodrum, 33, a veteran who has
served the military for more than 14 years, including the first Gulf War and
Operation Iraqi Freedom.
He showed United Press International a form from Fort Knox that states that Fort
Knox officials "do not want him in medical hold." Some soldiers are kept on
medical hold during treatment while the Army determines their status.
Goodrum has now been hospitalized in a locked mental ward at the Walter Reed
Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. after turning himself in there Feb. 9.
Doctors there say he has post-traumatic stress disorder from Iraq and major
depression, and they worry he could hurt himself. He is not allowed to go down
the hall from the inpatient psychiatric clinic for a Coke without an escort.
Goodrum said stress from Iraq, and the way
he has been treated by the military since he returned, has made him so depressed he is lucky to be alive. He also
has injuries to both wrists, in part from loading 65-pound shells on the USS
Missouri when he was in the Navy in the first Gulf War. The ship pounded Iraqi
troops in Kuwait and took fire from Iraqi tanks. An Iraqi Silkworm missile
missed her bow by 30 yards.
Goodrum appeared in an Oct. 29 UPI article about more than 400 soldiers on
medical hold at Fort Knox who were waiting weeks and sometimes months for
medical treatment.
That article, and an article on a similar situation at Fort Stewart, Ga.,
sparked a series of hearings in Congress -- including a Jan. 21 appearance by
Col. Keith Armstrong, garrison commander at Fort Knox, before a panel of the
House Armed Services Committee.
Fort Knox spokeswoman Connie Shaffery said privacy rules prohibit her from
commenting on Goodrum's case, unless he signed a waiver saying otherwise. He
declined. Shaffery said a soldier who does not show up for duty is absent
without leave.
"If a soldier is not at his or her duty station and is not in an authorized
leave or pass status, he is absent without leave," Shaffery said. "When a
soldier is listed as AWOL, it stops all pay and benefits. When instructed to
return and they do not comply, that is a violation."
After appearing in the UPI article on Oct. 29, Goodrum asked for medical care on
or about Nov. 7. He said he told Fort Knox officials that he was having a
breakdown.
"I said I was having problems. I told them I felt like I was having a breakdown
right there," Goodrum said. Goodrum said Fort Knox told him to go away. A
handwritten note in Goodrum's records from Nov. 7 says, "Colonel Stevens do
(sic) not want this patient to be in medical hold."
Goodrum said he then drove down an interstate highway at 5 miles an hour through
rushing traffic. He said he was completely dysfunctional because of a
combination of PTSD and what he says was retribution from his chain of command
for speaking up about poor medical care at the base. He said he could have wound
up dead.
"A truck could have run right over me," Goodrum said about that day. "It was a
complete nervous breakdown."
Goodrum, a member of the Army Reserve, was named the 176th Maintenance
Battalion's "Soldier of the Year" in 2001. He has received a host of awards,
including the combat action ribbon, and positive reviews from superior officers.
"Lt. Goodrum is a truly outstanding junior officer," reads one performance
evaluation from 2002. "In addition to his technical competence, he demonstrates
great leadership potential. ... Promote to captain and select for advance
military schooling."
Goodrum said his problems began in Iraq, working under combat conditions in a
transportation company. There, he said, safety violations -- including the use
of "deadlined" or broken vehicles -- resulted in the death of a 22-year old
soldier. Goodrum appealed to the Army's Inspector General and Congress when he
returned home.
After Goodrum sought medical help at Fort Knox on Nov. 7 and was denied,
Goodrum's civilian doctor hospitalized him for PTSD and alerted Fort Knox.
Dr. Vijay Jethanandani wrote Fort Knox Nov. 15 that Goodrum needed medical leave
until Dec. 7. The doctor kept officials there up to date on Goodrum's condition
in a series of five letters.
"Unfortunately, recent intimidation, threats of being arrested for staying on
medical leave from his superiors has resulted in recurrent psychiatric
symptoms," Jethanandani wrote Dec. 3. "Until 11/26/03, Mr. Jullian Goodrum was
progressing fairly well."
"It does not help that Mr. Goodrum was in combat with a unit in Iraq, where a
superior officer ignored safety protocol jeopardizing the safety of soldiers and
resulting in the death of one man," Jethanandani wrote. "Instead of following up
on his complaints, it appears that some of his superiors on stateside may be
penalizing him for reporting his superior officer in Iraq."
In the wake of the Fort Stewart and Fort Knox stories, last fall Undersecretary
of Defense David S.C. Chu ordered that if medical care is not available on base,
"medical commanders shall promptly refer patients to other military, Veteran
Affairs, or civilian sources of care."
Goodrum said he showed Chu's memo to Fort Knox officials, but it did not help.
"I told them they were ignoring an order from the undersecretary of Defense,"
Goodrum said.
Goodrum's medical files shows that Walter Reed medical staff also have been
unable to get Fort Knox medical officials to discuss his case. "Patient is
currently assigned to the medical hold company in Fort Knox, Ky., and to a Capt.
Savage. Capt. Savage has NOT returned any phone calls from this office," his
record states.
Soldiers at Fort Knox contacted UPI about another situation they consider a sign
of poor care.
On Feb. 11, a soldier on medical hold at Fort Knox who served in Iraq apparently
attempted suicide in the barracks. He was attached to a Special Forces unit in
Iraq.
Soldiers there said he deeply slashed both of his wrists, spraying blood in the
barracks hallway and around his room before being rushed to the hospital.
"If it was not for about three guys, if they had not applied direct pressure and
immediate pressure, he would have died," said a soldier at Fort Knox who knows
him.
Soldiers said they worry that Army officials did not act aggressively to address
his problems, including heavy drinking, that appear to have surfaced since Iraq.
Shaffery said she could not comment on that case, either. "We are sensitive to
psychiatric or suicide issues with all of our population," she said.
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