Sunday, April 19, 2015

Reagan shooter finds rejection, indifference in future home


The last man to shoot an American president now spends most of the year in a house overlooking the 13th hole of a golf course in a gated community.


He likes taking walks, plays guitar and paints, eats at Wendy's and drives around in a Toyota. Often, as if to avoid detection, he puts on a hat or visor before going out.


John Hinckley Jr. lives much of the year like any average Joe: shopping, eating out, watching movies.


Hinckley was just 25 when he shot President Ronald Reagan and three others in 1981. When jurors found him not guilty by reason of insanity, they said he needed treatment, not a lifetime in confinement. The verdict left open the possibility that he would one day live outside a mental hospital.


For the past year, under a judge's order, Hinckley has spent 17 days a month at his mother's home in Williamsburg, a small southeastern Virginia city. Freedom has come in stages and with strict requirements: meeting regularly in Williamsburg with a psychiatrist and a therapist, volunteering. It has all been part of a lengthy process meant to reintegrate Hinckley, now nearing 60, back into society.


Court hearings are set to begin Wednesday on whether to expand Hinckley's time in Williamsburg further — possibly permanently.


That leaves some in the place he'd call home wondering: Is he ready for life on the outside? And are they ready for him?


Local real estate agent John Womeldorf always points out the street where Hinckley's 89-year-old mother lives if he's showing a house in the same resort community. He doesn't want new homeowners to be surprised after they've moved in.


"I just matter-of-factly ask them 'Do you remember the guy that shot President Reagan?' And usually they do and I say, 'Well his mother lives here and he gets released a number of times a year and comes and stays with his mom,'" Womeldorf said.


The news has deterred maybe one or two buyers, he said. "It's been a non-issue."


Not so for others. Cabot Wade, a musician who gave Hinckley guitar lessons, said he never felt Hinckley was violent or dangerous. Nevertheless, he said, "Nobody will touch him with a 10-foot pole."


In hearings before U.S. District Judge Paul L. Friedman, doctors have testified that Hinckley's psychosis and major depression have been in remission for decades and that, while he still has a narcissistic personality disorder, its effects have diminished. Psychological testing shows Hinckley's dangerousness risk is "decidedly low," Hinckley's longtime lawyer, Barry Levine, said during the most recent hearings over his release that ran intermittently from late 2011 through 2013.


For decades, Hinckley was confined to St. Elizabeths Hospital in the nation's capital. But Judge Friedman has been allowing him freedom in stages starting with a 2003 order: at first, day visits outside the institution, then local overnight visits.


Starting in 2006, Hinckley was allowed three-night trips to Williamsburg, then four, then more. In late 2013, Friedman approved the current 17-day stretches. Friedman said he was persuaded Hinckley was not a danger and that the longer stays might "provide new opportunities for employment and structured community activities."


In Wednesday's hearing, St. Elizabeths and Levine are expected to call for even more freedom. Prosecutors, however, have consistently opposed Hinckley's release, arguing he has a history of deceptive behavior and troubling relationships with women. During the last hearings, they cited a July 2011 incident in which he went to a bookstore instead of a movie and then lied about it. The Secret Service, whose agents sporadically tail Hinckley, reported he looked at shelves that contained books about Reagan and his attempted assassination, though he didn't pick anything up.


"Mr. Hinckley has not shown himself ready to conduct the hard work of transitioning to a new city," prosecutor Sarah Chasson said in 2011.


Experts not involved in Hinckley's case said that people like him can successfully transition back to a community and that there are tools to evaluate whether they remain dangerous, though there are limits. That's why the standard approach is to give freedom incrementally and monitor, said Dr. Paul Appelbaum, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia University and a past president of the American Psychiatric Association.


Hinckley's time in Williamsburg is highly scripted. He lives with his mother, Jo Ann, in the community of Kingsmill. He volunteers and drives alone, but only to places where "people will be expecting him." He must avoid "areas where the president or members of Congress may be visiting."


The aim is to help him rebuild some semblance of a normal life: to hold a job, make friends. But his progress has been halting, hampered by his notoriety.


Several organizations turned him down for volunteer positions before the librarian at Eastern State Hospital, a facility for the mentally ill, agreed to take him. "Not everyone was real happy about it," Sandra Kochersperger said.


Hinckley was "very quiet" and "very sweet," she said. He made copies and shelved books.


"I think John's paid for what he did. He was in a totally different mind at that time. He was psychotic," said Kochersperger, who retired in 2013. "I think he needs to be given the opportunity at this stage to try to have some kind of a life."


Some other residents are also accepting, but others are unwilling to forgive. Kingsmill resident Joe Mann, 73, said Hinckley should remain confined.


"All it takes is one slip, one flip of whatever in the brain caused him to do what he did before," he said.


Hinckley's attorney has called those concerns are unfounded, and notes that Hinckley's elderly mother helps supervise him. Lawyers have discussed the inevitable: She will die.


"Time is not our friend. This thing has a growing urgency to it," Levine told the judge in November 2011.


"The time," he said, "is now."



Saturday, April 18, 2015

Manager removed at Philly VA after IG audit slams facility


WASHINGTON — A top manager at the Department of Veterans Affairs office in Philadelphia has been temporarily removed from his position to get “different eyes” on the deeply troubled facility, the department said Friday.


Gary Hodge was head of the Pension Management Center — one of only three such centers in the country — until earlier this week when an inspector general audit found tens of thousands of unanswered inquiries and pieces of returned mail. Hodge was reassigned as an assistant director of the Pension and Fiduciary Service in the VA’s headquarters in Washington, D.C., according to a department spokeswoman.


The Philadelphia audit detailed a variety of issues, including chronic inefficiency, mismanagement and unsafe working conditions. It has also rekindled a national scandal that began a year ago with revelations that the VA systematically manipulated patient records to disguise long wait times at hospitals and clinics.


The department is “shifting leadership in the regional office by bringing in another leader from another Pension Management Center to see if having different eyes on the problem will bring new solutions,” VA spokeswoman Walinda West wrote in an email to Stars and Stripes.


West said the move is “not a promotion, demotion or lateral move.”


Hodge is on temporary assignment that will include ongoing VA projects, and he is slated to resume his duties as manager of the Philadelphia Pension Management Center on Aug. 17, West said.


The IG found that the center was responsible for more than 31,000 veteran inquiries that had languished for an average of 312 days — the standard response time is supposed to be five days — and another 22,000 pieces of returned mail that were never processed.


Also, the devices used to time-stamp received mail were not secured, meaning staff could change the date without supervision. Last year, it was revealed that VA used off-the-books wait lists to hide long delays in veterans receiving requested health care.


The VA has said the audit describes conditions a year ago and that it has since made improvements. But lawmakers on Capitol Hill blasted the findings this week as proof of how deep problems have gotten in the department.


Allison Hickey, the VA undersecretary for benefits, is slated to publicly address the many problems Monday during a news conference.


tritten.travis@stripes.com

Twitter: @Travis_Tritten



Friday, April 17, 2015

Mabus announces name of new littoral combat ship


ST. LOUIS (Tribune Content Agency) — Ray Mabus came here from his home in Mississippi as a young boy to watch the Cardinals play. He returned on Friday as the secretary of the Navy to name a new combat ship the St. Louis.


Mabus announced the name and plans to build the ship, formally known as a littoral combat ship, at a pomp-and-circumstance ceremony in front of the Soldiers’ Memorial.


“This is the coolest job in the world,” Mabus said. “I get to name every Navy ship.”


Mabus — who had to drive to St. Louis on Friday from Chicago, delaying the ceremony, because of a problem with his scheduled flight — spoke of his fond memories of the city burnished by the Cardinals’ greatest hero. He remembered how his father drove him to St. Louis to see Stan Musial play in the early 1960s — and the importance he placed on Musial’s character.


“He said, ‘Stan represents everything that was good about baseball and America,’?” Mabus said.


Mabus recalled being heartbroken when they arrived. Musial didn’t start the game. But then he came in as pinch hitter and knocked a single.


Years later, Mabus, a former governor of Mississippi, remembered Musial when the town of Kosciusko, Miss., wanted a famous Polish-American to attend a ceremony honoring its heritage. Mabus suggested Musial, who agreed to attend. Mabus accompanied him on the trip.


“It remains one of the highlights of my life,” Mabus said.


Mabus said any city that honored Musial, like St. Louis, has “got to be a pretty special city.”


Musial served in the Navy in 1945.


St. Louis, a Midwestern city far from an ocean, seems an ironic name for a seafaring vessel, but five other Navy ships have worn the city’s name. The last was a cargo ship that was deactivated in 1991.


“I think it’s important that we have a St. Louis in the fleet,” Mabus said. “It’s time to keep that storied name alive.”


The first St. Louis, a sloop, hit the water in 1828. The second was an ironclad gunboat built by civil engineer James B. Eads, who later designed the Eads Bridge over the Mississippi River. That boat operated during the American Civil War.


The fourth St. Louis, a light cruiser, was moored in Hawaii during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. The ship survived and even shot down Japanese torpedo planes, earning the nickname “Lucky Lou.”


The new St. Louis ship will not be a massive aircraft carrier or submarine buried deep in the ocean. The Navy said it would be about 400 feet in length, “fast and agile,” designed for operation close to shore but capable of cruising the open sea. “It is designed to defeat asymmetric ‘anti-access’ threats such as mines, quiet diesel submarines and fast surface craft,” a Navy statement said.


Mabus has attended many ceremonies for littoral combat ships, which are commonly named after cities. Others have namesakes representing places such as Indianapolis, Detroit, Charleston, S.C., and Tulsa, Okla. About a dozen are currently under construction or in the pre-production phase.


A timeline for the St. Louis’ completion is still in the works.


St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay stood with Mabus as he made the announcement. Afterwards they donned caps showing the USS St. Louis name.


Slay said it was an honor “having this beautiful ship that is defending our nation named after our great city.”


©2015 the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Saddam top deputy dubbed 'king of clubs' killed, Iraqi officials say



BEIRUT (Tribune Content Agency) — Izzat Ibrahim, a fugitive confidant of former Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein who helped spearhead a deadly insurgency against U.S. troops and later formed an alliance with Islamic State militants, was shot dead Friday by security forces, Iraqi officials said.


Ibrahim, a former vice president known for his trademark ginger mustache and black beret, was dubbed the king of clubs in the deck of playing cards that the Pentagon issued to identify the most-wanted members of Saddam’s government.


The former general was the highest-ranking Iraqi official to avoid capture after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam in 2003. He was the last surviving member of the late Saddam’s inner circle.


Pro-government militiamen killed Ibrahim and nine bodyguards as they traveled in a convoy north of the city of Tikrit, near the Hamrin mountain range, Iraqi Gen. Haider Basri told state television.


On his official Facebook page, Raed Jabouri, the governor of Salahuddin province, posted a photograph of what he said was Ibrahim’s body. Hadi Ameri, head of the Badr Brigades, a pro-government Shiite Muslim militia, told local reporters that DNA analysis was underway to confirm the dead man’s identity.


Ibrahim has been reported captured or killed several times. Some social media postings said to be from his supporters denied the latest reports of his demise.


Elsewhere in Iraq on Friday, Islamic State militants claimed responsibility for a car bomb that exploded outside the heavily fortified U.S. Consulate compound in the northern city of Irbil, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militants’ websites.


The State Department said no U.S. personnel were killed in the afternoon blast in the bustling capital of Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region. Local news reports indicated that at least three civilians were killed in the explosion, which occurred in a district that is home to many cafes, restaurants and hotels.


In Baghdad, Iraq’s capital, a pair of car bombings also linked to Islamic State killed at least 27 people, news agencies reported. The Sunni Muslim militant group has regularly targeted Shiite neighborhoods and gatherings in Baghdad and elsewhere.


Also on Friday, fierce fighting was reported as pro-government forces held off Islamic State militants trying to overrun the western city of Ramadi and the strategic Baiji oil refinery, north of Baghdad. The dual campaigns have dramatized Islamic State’s continued strength in mostly Sunni areas of Iraq, despite the group’s recent loss of Tikrit.


Pro-government forces recaptured Tikrit this month; the city had been in militant hands since June.


A series of recent airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition backing the Iraqi government has pummeled Islamic State positions near Ramadi and Baiji.


The Tikrit area was the hometown of Ibrahim and his longtime colleague and mentor, Saddam. Both came from humble tribal backgrounds and became loyalists of the Baath Party, which is now banned. Many of Saddam’s closest aides were from Tikrit.


The Shiite-dominated Iraqi government that came to power after the U.S.-led invasion convicted Saddam of crimes against humanity and hanged him in 2006. Many members of Iraq’s Sunni minority viewed the execution of Saddam, a Sunni, as a sectarian lynching. A Sunni-Shiite civil war convulsed the nation for years after the invasion, and sectarian tension still divides Iraq.


It had long been rumored that Ibrahim, said to be in his early 70s, was holed up in the northern city of Mosul, a former Baath Party stronghold. Islamic State, which declared Mosul its capital, controls territory across Iraq and neighboring Syria.


Ibrahim has long been a mysterious figure. Once Saddam was toppled, Ibrahim reportedly ran loyalist Baath Party cells that led the Sunni Muslim insurgency against the U.S. occupation.


Ibrahim was said to be a pivotal interlocutor between pro-Saddam nationalists and the Sunni Islamist militants. The two groups with greatly differing political agendas forged an alliance against the U.S. occupation and the Shiite-dominated government that succeeded Saddam. Ibrahim’s followers included former military officers and intelligence personnel.


Last year, Ibrahim was reported to have formed an alliance with Islamic State militants who captured much of the Iraqi Sunni heartland in June. He was said to have headed a group of pro-Saddam militants known as the Army of the Men of the Naqshbandi Order. The group is reported to have worked in tandem with Islamic State militants, but the alliance broke down.


Ibrahim and his followers brought valuable military and intelligence expertise to their collaboration with various Sunni extremist groups, analysts said.


Los Angeles Times staff writer McDonnell reported from Beirut and special correspondent Bulos from Amman, Jordan.


©2015 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



At least 3 dead as gunfights, roadblocks break out in Mexican border city


4 minutes ago




MEXICO CITY — Gunfights and blockades of burning vehicles broke out Friday in the border city of Reynosa, across from McAllen, Texas, leaving at least three dead, Mexican authorities said.


A federal official who was not authorized to be quoted by name said three armed civilians, presumably cartel gunmen, had been killed in a series of confrontations with soldiers, state and federal police throughout the day.


The official said roads had been blocked with vehicles set on fire by gunmen.


The official confirmed reports that a top member of the Gulf cartel's Reynosa faction had been detained. The gang leader has been known by his nickname "El Gafe," but his real name could not immediately be confirmed. The nickname apparently refers to a now-disbanded Mexican special forces military group.


The U.S. consulate in Matamoros issued a message urging U.S. citizens to take precautions because of "several firefights and roadblocks throughout the city of Reynosa." The city government posted a warning on its Twitter site recommending motorists avoid several areas, including the highway leading to the nearby city of Matamoros.


Warring factions of the Gulf cartel in Reynosa and Matamoros have been fighting turf battles around the two cities.




Bombing is 1st attack on US in Iraq since Islamic State took Mosul



IRBIL, Iraq (Tribune Content Agency) — A suicide bomber struck the U.S. consulate building in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil on Friday afternoon.


Kurdish authorities said that at least three people were killed — a Kurdish security official at the scene said the dead were the three attackers — and five wounded. Among the wounded were two Westerners who were in a restaurant across the street, witnesses said.


Brett McGurk, the deputy assistant secretary of state for Iraq and Iran, said in a post on Twitter that all consulate personnel had been accounted for and that there were no reports of injuries among them. He included the hashtag VBIED, short for vehicle-born improvised explosive device.


The Islamic State, which is also pressing offensives in the cities of Ramadi and Baiji, claimed responsibility for the explosion in an Internet post.


The attack was the first direct assault on U.S. facilities in Iraq since the Islamic State took control of much of the northern and central areas of the country last summer, and only the second bombing in Irbil, the capital of the Kurdistan Regional Government, a city considered so safe that the United States moved many of its diplomats here from Baghdad when the Islamic State captured the city of Mosul and threatened Baghdad last year.


The Kurdish official at the scene told McClatchy that three attackers had approached a checkpoint near the consulate in an SUV, apparently intending to attack on foot to make room for a suicide bomber, who was either also on foot or in the car. They were spotted by peshmerga security forces stationed outside the consulate, who opened fire. The security official said the three attackers were killed, though whether they were killed by gunshots or detonated explosives was unclear. The official spoke only on the condition of anonymity, as he wasn’t authorized to talk to journalists.


Gunfire was heard in the neighborhood for several minutes after an initial explosion.


The heavily guarded facility, which houses diplomats and a military command center used to coordinate the air campaign led by the United States against the Islamic State, is in a quiet residential and predominantly Christian section of the Kurdish capital. It’s accessible only through a heavily guarded pedestrian entrance.


The facility is one of three key command centers that coordinate operations among the Iraqi and Kurdish governments — which operate independent security forces in the fight against the Islamic State — and the U.S.-led coalition, which provides air support.


It was unknown whether the attack in Irbil was intended to disrupt the coalition response to the significant Islamic State offensives unfolding elsewhere. One of them is in the western province of Anbar, where the provincial capital of Ramadi is in danger of being overrun, and the other is in Baiji, where the Islamic State is trying to take control of Iraq’s largest oil refinery.


The Iraqi government described the explosion in Irbil as due to an improvised explosive device on the road outside the consulate — a description that might mean a car bomb or one carried by a person.


The explosion was followed by heavy gunfire from security forces, who claimed to have been engaging other gunmen. Kurdish peshmerga, along with Kurdish internal security forces, quickly closed off the area as fires raged through a strip mall of coffee shops and restaurants popular with Irbil’s expatriate community across from the consulate.


A U.S. military helicopter circled the area as at least three ambulances evacuated wounded. One peshmerga guard could be seen being loaded into a pickup by his comrades as security forces attempted to disperse bystanders and journalists from the area by frequently firing automatic weapons into the air.


Prothero is a McClatchy special correspondent.


©2015 McClatchy Washington Bureau. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



'Military Mistress' inadvertently let go after traffic stop, officials say


MOBILE, Ala. — An Alabama sheriff's deputy released a woman dubbed the "Military Mistress," who is wanted in three states, because a radio dispatcher failed to pass along that there were warrants out for her arrest, the agency said Friday.


Bobbi Ann Finley, who got her nickname because of allegations that she moved from military base to military base marrying more than a dozen U.S. servicemembers to gain access to their bank accounts, is wanted on check fraud charges in Colorado, Oklahoma and Oregon.


But a Mobile County deputy who stopped the woman and her husband wasn't informed that she was wanted, said Lori Myles, a spokeswoman for the Mobile County Sheriff's Office.


"The bottom line on all of it was a failure to communicate on our part," said Lori Myles.


The mix-up was revealed publicly by the Marion County Sheriff's Department in Oregon, which issued a news release this week saying Finley had married 14 military men and was wanted on bad-check charges along with her current husband, Zackerie House.


Finley was previously called the "Military Mistress" in news reports about the string of marriages.


A deputy stopped Finley, 39, and House in a vehicle near Interstate 10 on Tuesday morning, Myles said. A records check showed the vehicle was stolen and that Finley was wanted for check fraud charges, but the dispatcher only told the officer about the vehicle and failed to mention the warrant, she said.


"We don't know if it was just an oversight or what," Myles said.


The officer consulted with prosecutors by phone and seized the vehicle since it was listed as stolen, Myles said, but no charges were filed since the woman had paperwork indicating she had purchased the car.


The deputy later found out through Oregon investigators who Finley was and went back to the service station where he had encountered the couple, but surveillance video showed the pair had already left with someone else in a pickup truck, said Myles.


Officials haven't had any contact with the woman since then.


"I don't know where she is now," said Sgt. Chris Baldridge of the Marion County Sheriff's Department in Oregon, which first revealed that Alabama authorities had let the woman go.


Finley and her husband are both wanted on check-fraud charges.


Marion County officials said the couple wrote bad checks totaling almost $13,500 in March and appeared to be purchasing items that could be used for camping or living in rural or remote areas. They were at one point driving a 2005 Cadillac Escalade with an Oregon license plate.


It wasn't clear why Finley might have been in Alabama, but court records show she pleaded guilty to theft of services in the state in 2011. She was credited with serving 252 days in jail and received three years on probation.


Authorities asked an Alabama judge to revoke Finley's probation in January, alleging she owed the state $7,412 in court-ordered payments and hadn't made a payment since May 2014.