The Mercury News

Killings highlight risks of range therapy

Advocates say shooting can help veterans reconnect

- By Nomaan Merchant

DALLAS — Chris Kyle, reputed to be the deadliest sniper in U. S. military history, often took veterans out shooting as a way to ease the trauma of war. Taking aim at a target, he once wrote, would help coax them back into normal, everyday life with a familiar, comforting activity.

But his death at a North Texas shooting range — allegedly at the hands of a troubled Iraq War veteran he was trying to assist — has highlighte­d the potential dangers of the practice.

Former soldiers and others familiar with their struggles say shooting a gun can sometimes be as therapeuti­c as playing with a dog or riding a horse. Psychiatri­sts wonder, though, whether the smell of the gunpowder and the crack of gunfire can trigger unpredicta­ble responses, particular­ly in someone suffering from post- traumatic stress disorder or other illnesses that aren’t immediatel­y obvious. “You have to be very careful with doing those kinds of treatment,” said Dr. Charles Marmar, chairman of the psychiatry department at New York University’s Langone Medical Center. “People have to be well prepared for them.”

“But obviously you would not take a person who was highly unstable and give them access to weapons,” added Marmar, who said he wasn’t commenting on the suspected shooter’s mental state. “That’s very different.”

Paul Rieckhoff, founder of the advocacy group Iraq and Afghanista­n Veterans of America, said he has heard of exposure to weapons being helpful to some veterans who weren’t keen on meeting with a psychiatri­st or undergoing therapy sessions. “These types of programs can often be an onramp for people who won’t go to any other type of program,” Rieckhoff said. “Anything that is connected to the military culture is an easier bridge to cross.”

However, he said, therapy with guns is not “incredibly common right now.”

Former soldiers sometimes take solace in target shooting and use it to reconnect with other veterans, said Rieckhoff and Tim McCarty, a former Air Force staff sergeant who now works at a gun range.

After he left the Air Force in 2011, McCarty said he felt confused as he went from being a valued member of the military to a civilian looking for a job. He found refuge at a gun range, where he started out mowing the lawn. He is now helping to develop a training program for new range shooters.

“It’s just a familiarit­y thing. It’s comforting,” McCarty said of firing a gun. “I don’t want to say it’s a way to hang onto the past, but for a lot of guys, the military was the last thing they knew, and it was one of the best times of their lives, and it’s a way to hang onto that.”

Kyle wrote about going on shooting retreats with wounded veterans in his best- seller, “American Sniper.” The publisher, HarperColl­ins, said Kyle had more than 150 confirmed kills during his service, although the Pentagon did not corroborat­e that total.

“We go hunting a couple of times a day, shoot a few rounds on the range, then at night trade stories and beers,” wrote Kyle, who also organized a nonprofit to give in- home fitness equipment to wounded veterans.

“It’s not so much the war stories as the funny stories that you remember. Those are the ones that affect you. They underline the resilience of these guys — they were warriors in the war, and they take that same warrior attitude into dealing with their disabiliti­es.”

Kyle and a friend, Chad Littlefiel­d, had taken Eddie Ray Routh to the gun range Saturday. Routh, a 25- yearold Marine veteran, was accused of fatally shooting both men and remained jailed Tuesday on murder charges.

Police records suggest Routh was struggling with mental illness, though it’s not clear whether Kyle and Littlefiel­d knew of those issues.

 ?? RICHARD RODRIGUEZ/ ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An Iraq War veteran, reportedly suffering from PTSD, is a suspect in the deaths of two men Saturday at the Rough Creek Lodge near Fort Worth, Texas.
RICHARD RODRIGUEZ/ ASSOCIATED PRESS An Iraq War veteran, reportedly suffering from PTSD, is a suspect in the deaths of two men Saturday at the Rough Creek Lodge near Fort Worth, Texas.
 ??  ?? Routh Suspected in deaths of Chris Kyle and Chad Littlefiel­d.
Routh Suspected in deaths of Chris Kyle and Chad Littlefiel­d.

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