National Enquirer

VA STABS OUR HEROES IN THE BACK!

Bribery, fraud & shoddy services endanger health of U.S. military

-

AMERICA’S military heroes are being failed by the disgracefu­l Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), according to a bombshell government report exclusivel­y obtained by The National ENQUIRER!

From shocking incidents of bribery and fraud to disturbing lapses in medical protocol, a dossier from the department’s internal watchdog — the Office of the Inspector

General (OIG) — identified mismanagem­ent, errors and outright criminalit­y plaguing the nation’s nearly 1,300 VA facilities!

In one shameful incident, a pharmacy technician stole $8.2 million in HIV medication from the East Orange VA Medical Center in New Jersey, and at VA Harbor Healthcare System in New York, a vet choked to death after a nurse fed him too large a piece of chicken! “It’s an outrage,” veterans advocate

Derrick Iozzio tells The ENQUIRER. “In my opinion, the VA has been doing a good job only of putting up a whitewash over the generally poor care they are providing veterans.”

Iozzio insists “we owe them better than what the VA has been giving them” because these brave men and women were willing to sacrifice their lives for our country.

Jeremy Parkins, who runs the Ohio-based veterans outreach organizati­on Dress Right Dress, says the OIG’s report shows a “systematic breakdown” in the quality of care.

The stunned Air Force veteran says, “We served and then come home, and we have to worry about the level of medical care we receive?”

The OIG consists of an 1,100plus group of inspectors, investigat­ors and auditors who are tasked with rooting out corruption inside the VA and improving its operation. The office is mandated to provide a system-wide report twice a year to Congress.

The latest, reflecting April to September 2021, noted 98 percent of facilities had one or more “severe” staffing shortages. Disturbing­ly, psychiatri­sts were particular­ly in short supply!

The eye-opening report comes as the Army continues to grapple with a mental health emergency in Alaska among active-duty personnel. Seventeen soldiers died by suicide at installati­ons in the state in 2021, double the

total for the prior two years combined. Meanwhile, service members have complained of long wait times for mental and behavioral health appointmen­ts, as well as poor service when they are finally seen by profession­als.

The OIG report also described dozens of troubling incidents, which ended in deaths!

Among them were:

A twisted nurse’s assistant at Louis A.

Johnson VA Medical Center in Clarksburg, W.Va., went undetected for 11 months as she murdered seven elderly vets — and nearly killed an eighth — with massive doses of insulin, a crime previously reported in The ENQUIRER. Officials later determined the hospital had “serious clinical and administra­tive failures” that prevented the serial killer from being stopped sooner!

A vet fatally gunned down a relative shortly after calling a veterans crisis hotline at the Fort Harrison VA center in Montana. The OIG found a coordinato­r failed to properly assess the situation, neglected to complete a required safety plan and didn’t take action “to prevent a family member’s death.”

A vet at the Marion VA Medical Center in Illinois died of accidental acute multidrug intoxicati­on after a psychiatri­st prescribed longterm benzodiaze­pine use for post-traumatic stress disorder — but failed to educate him on the dangers of mixing the pills with other drugs.

A vet who’d been committed to Ohio’s

Chillicoth­e VA Medical Center was fatally run over by a car after fleeing the hospital. The OIG determined the facility’s staff was poorly trained and on the day of the man’s death, employees didn’t notice he was missing for three hours!

A vet killed himself one day after leaving an inpatient mental health unit at a Las Vegas VA hospital. The OIG later found the staff failed to flag him as high risk for suicide and didn’t take into account changes in his demeanor or his history with drugs.

In addition to these incredible lapses, the OIG report also detailed shocking instances of fraud committed by some of the VA’s 426,000 employees, as well as its armies of contractor­s and business partners.

For instance, a contractin­g officer at the Anchorage VA Medical Center in Alaska steered more than $5 million in snow-removal and housekeepi­ng contracts to a company in return for $30,000 in bribes! And a sticky-fingered worker at the Biloxi VA Medical Center in Mississipp­i swiped 3 million N95 masks and resold them for nearly $20 apiece during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic!

“At the VA, there is so much corruption going on that such stories don’t surprise me in the least,” says Iozzio, who runs Catch 22 Peer Support in Texas.

A Veterans Affairs spokespers­on assures The ENQUIRER the department is “strengthen­ing our commitment to improving veterans’ timely access to care” and working to improve — but did not comment on specific examples.

But Iozzio stresses, “America needs to do better. Much, much better.”

 ?? ?? Advocate Derrick Iozzio says veterans deserve “better than what the VA has been
giving them”
Outreach operator Jeremy Parkins sees a “systematic breakdown” in quality of care
for veterans
Advocate Derrick Iozzio says veterans deserve “better than what the VA has been giving them” Outreach operator Jeremy Parkins sees a “systematic breakdown” in quality of care for veterans
 ?? ?? A government report shows veterans continue to face a battle for health care
A government report shows veterans continue to face a battle for health care
 ?? ?? The VA’s own watchdog cited problems plaguing its facilities
The VA’s own watchdog cited problems plaguing its facilities
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? After calling Fort Harrison’s crisis hotline, a veteran killed a relative
After calling Fort Harrison’s crisis hotline, a veteran killed a relative
 ?? ?? A nurse’s assistant in Clarksburg, W.Va., murdered seven elderly vets
A nurse’s assistant in Clarksburg, W.Va., murdered seven elderly vets
 ?? ?? At Chillicoth­e in Ohio, a fleeing vet was fatally run over by a car
At Chillicoth­e in Ohio, a fleeing vet was fatally run over by a car
 ?? ?? A vet at the Marion, Ill., facility died from multidrug intoxicati­on
A vet at the Marion, Ill., facility died from multidrug intoxicati­on

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States