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  • 24
    Jan
    2013
    12:26am, EST

    Accused leader in Philadelphia dungeon case convicted of murder in 1983

    By Isolde Raftery, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Five people have been charged with 196 counts in the so-called Philadelphia dungeon case, in which a woman allegedly lured children and disabled people into her home, then tortured and imprisoned them for years to steal their welfare checks, federal prosecutors announced Wednesday.

    Prosecutors say the crimes fall under federal hate crime law, marking the first time that hate crime charges have been applied to people with disabilities. 

    Philadelphia Police Department

    Linda Ann Weston, left, 52, accused of being the ringleader of a group that imprisoned people for their Social Security checks. Prosecutors say Gregory Thomas, center, and Eddie Wright are among her accomplices.

    The indictment says that between 2001 and 2011, Linda Ann Weston, 52, of Philadelphia, fed her victims one bowl a day -- if that -- of ramen noodles and drugged them so they wouldn't act up or attempt an escape. Prosecutors say she forced two of her victims into prostitution.


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    Images of the dungeon where six people were rescued in October 2011 show decrepit conditions: a narrow corridor of a windowless room with bare mattresses, soiled sheets and rotten boards. At the center of the tiny room is the boiler to which she allegedly chained her victims – and also her children and niece.


    Two women died in her care, prosecutors say. They are identified in the indictment only by their initials: M.L., who died of starvation after being coerced to live with Weston for five years, and D.S., who died after a month of captivity in 2005.

    This is not Weston’s first brush with the law. She was convicted of third-degree murder in 1983 for hammering her sister’s boyfriend’s head, hiding him in a closet and starving him to death.

    That conviction was brought up in a lawsuit filed in September by Weston’s niece, one of the people rescued in October 2011. The niece, who was 10 when she was transferred into her aunt’s care, is suing her aunt, currently incarcerated, the City of Philadelphia and the caseworker who had her removed from her mother’s house.

    The niece, now 20, alleges that Weston forced her into prostitution, starved her, denied her education and beat her regularly. She says her body bears witness to nearly a decade of abuse.

    The niece’s complaint also alleges that the City of Philadelphia received numerous complaints that Weston was holding children captive in her basement.

    At a press conference announcing the charges on Wednesday night, U.S. Attorney Zane David Memeger, described Linda Weston and her accomplices as an organized crime family. Weston could face the death penalty, Memeger said.

    Her accomplices – boyfriend, Gregory Thomas, Sr., 49, Eddie Wright, 52, daughter, Jean McIntosh, 33, and Nicklaus Woodard, 26 – face a maximum of life in prison, Memeger said.

    Memeger said that during the decade the Westons tortured disabled and mentally ill adults, they stole more than $200,000 of their Social Security benefits.

    “Through cunning, trickery force and coercion she took the benefits that were supposed to help them,” he said.

    He said the “victims were tied up and confined like zoo animals and treated like property akin to slaves.”

    Weston and her accomplices kept their victims on the move, Memeger said, shuttling them from Virginia, Texas and Florida and locking them in attics and basements.

    After Weston was arrested in October 2011, her son, Joseph McIntosh, told the Philadelphia Daily News that his mother abused her own children as well. He said that after she was released after four years from prison for third-degree murder, she successfully petitioned to get her children back.

    "We didn't know about her background," Joseph told the Philadelphia Daily News in October 2011, after his mother had been arrested. "(Department of Health Services) knew about her history. They knew who she was, but they still released us into her custody - all of us at a young age."

    He said his mother locked him in the basement for a year to prevent him from running away -- which he said would have reduced her welfare check payments. She fed him noodles and Kool-Aid doctored with drugs, he said. He said he finally escaped in 1998 when he was sent upstairs to wash but instead walked outside into the yard and hopped the fence.

    McIntosh said that Weston even chained up his sister Jean, who prosecutors accuse of being one of the torturers.

    The victims were freed on Oct. 15, 2011, when Philadelphia Police Department officers rescued them from a dungeon-like space in an apartment in the city’s Tacony section.

    88 comments

    there are things that people do anymore that makes me believe in immediate executions after the trials. for anyone to do anything unacceptable as far as i'm concerned to either children or animals and found guilty beyond the reasonable doubt, they serve society no purpose and should begin to serve a …

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    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, philadelphia, crime, kidnapping, hate-crimes, torture, courts, disabilities
  • 13
    Nov
    2012
    9:36am, EST

    Hearing loss the most prevalent injury among returning veterans

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    After a decade of war, America is well schooled on post-traumatic stress, lost limbs and traumatic brain injury, but the most common injury sustained by U.S. troops is literally a silent wound: hearing loss.

    Mark Brogan, a retired Army captain, can speak quite personally about almost all of those examples of combat carnage – he suffered a brain injury, a spinal injury and a nearly severed right arm when a suicide bomber on foot detonated his weapon near Brogan six year ago in Iraq.

    Courtesy of Mark Brogan

    Mark Brogan sustained a spinal injury, a brain injury, a nearly severed arm - and severe hearing loss - when a suicide bomber blew himself up not far from Brogan in Iraq six years ago.

    What does Brogan, 32, consider the worst of the physical trauma? “Hearing loss and the brain injury,” he said from his home in Knoxville, Tenn. He has “profound unusable hearing” in his right ear and severe hearing loss in his left, he said, along with constant ringing, or tinnitus, in his ears.

    After the insurgent's bomb killed a soldier just behind Brogan – along with the person who was wearing the device – other U.S. troops quickly rushed Brogan's side and saw blood streaming from both ears, he said.


    “You’ve been to a concert – you know how your ears are ringing afterward? It’s just like that my entire life,” Brogan said. “A lot of guys get home and they probably don’t even think about getting their hearing checked.

    According the Department of Veterans Affairs, the most prevalent service-connected disabilities for veterans receiving federal compensation in 2011 were tinnitus and hearing loss, respectively, followed by PTSD.

    "I suspect today’s generation of veterans – those who have been in a combat environment – probably have a higher severity of hearing loss (than past generations), especially with the explosions and the IEDs and the ruptured ear drums they’ve sustained,” said Brett Buchanan, a VA-accredited claims agent with Allsup, a national provider of services with disabilities.


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    Allsup recently organized a one-day Web expo where younger veterans had a chance to log in and seek advice on how and where to get treatment — including a primer on how to successfully access and steer through the monolithic VA system.

    While chatting online with dozens of veterans, Buchanan repeatedly was told about their hearing loss, he said.

    To Buchanan, a former Army artillery officer who was among the first wave of U.S. troops to invade Iraq in 2003, the massive scope of the disability is simple to grasp.

    “The military, in general, is just a high noise-producing environment,” Buchanan said. In the Navy, where most sailors work only below deck, there is " the constant drumming of the engines and metal-on-metal noise.”

    And in the Army and Marines, many personnel, he added, spend hours inside “military vehicles that are not quiet,” including tanks and personnel carriers.

    In addition, service members typically devote time to practicing at firing ranges.

    “In those cases, hearing protection negates the loud noise to a large degree. But when you’re in these environments for years upon years, that negation you do with hearing protection may not be enough to prevent injury long term,” Buchanan said.

    “Then you get into the combat environment where weapons are going off, explosions are going off. In combat, you can’t call time out and say, ‘Hey, I need to put in my earplugs.’ ”

    Service-related injuries in veterans are assessed and rated by VA doctors to determine how much monthly compensation those veterans will be paid for their physical sacrifices. Those ratings span scores of 0 to 100 depending on the severity of the wounds. (Brogan, who due to the partial spinal injury has weakness on his right side and a lack of sensation on his left side – but no paralysis – is classified as 100 percent disabled by the VA, he said).

    Through earphone-tone exams and other diagnostic means, the VA also rates hearing loss and tinnitus in veterans who come in for checkups.

    “For hearing loss, the ratings I usually deal with for my clients are 0 percent, meaning they’ve had some hearing loss but it doesn’t quite meet the criteria to get the minimum VA disability rating, which is 10 percent,” Buchanan said. “Tinnitus is a simple 10 percent rating. There’s nothing above that. My tinnitus might be worse than yours but there’s no test for that.

    For Brogan, post-military life has included mastering subtle tricks and new technology to adapt to his muffled hearing. For example, his phone transcribes conversations as they take place. “And in a loud restaurant with background noise, I pretty much can’t understand anybody’s voice,” Brogan said. “I have to tell somebody, ‘Hey, can you repeat that? Can you speak slower so that I can understand you?’ There are techniques, over time, that you learn.”

    But his world is not devoid of pretty sounds. At age 5, he learned the piano. Six years after a bomb bloodied the insides of his ears, someone donated a new piano to the veteran. Brogan tickles those black-and-white keys as physical therapy for his brain and for the weakness in his right hand. He's mastering covers of popular tunes. And he's even composed his own melody, captured on video.

    Finally, he's making music again. 

    Original composition. Just sat down one day and this sort of just poured out.

    Watch on YouTube

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    71 comments

    I served in the U.S. Army for 4 years in the late 80's and early 90's. We had hearing protection on the range, but in the field nobody used it. We fired M2's, M60's, M16, grenade simulators, the whole works. I once had a guy fire a shotgun about 3 feet from head in a concrete bunker while practicing …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: iraq, afghanistan, military, va, veterans, disabilities, hearing-loss, featured, ptsd, disability-ratings, traumatic-brain-injury
  • 26
    Sep
    2012
    6:32pm, EDT

    Web expo for veterans with disabilities to offer roadmap for VA navigation

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    A packed convention center — even a place staffed with PTSD experts — is precisely the type of environment most service members and veterans are likely to avoid. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    For many military folks dealing with the symptoms of post-traumatic stress, crowds make them jumpy. And due to the attached social stigma of the disorder, the thought of being spotted at such an gathering would make lots of veterans cringe. 

    But a virtual get-together where disabled veterans can anonymously ask questions about the anxieties weighing them down?

    That's part of the thinking behind the first True Help Disability Web Expo taking place Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Central Standard Time. The free event, organized by Allsup — a nationwide provider of services for people with disabilities — loops together more than a dozen leading health, disability, advocacy and social service organizations, several of them adept at working specifically with current and former service members.


    Attendees simply need to register to chat all day from the comfort of their homes, local coffee shops, or their places of work. The expo will provide a "veterans booth" where military personnel past and present can seek and find suggestions, tips and advice on how and where to get treatment — including a primer on how to successfully access and steer through the monolithic U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, said Brett Buchanan, an Allsup’s VA-accredited claims agent. 

    "In my experience dealing with veterans with PTSD and with depression, I find that the veterans do much better over the phone, when they’re in their house," Buchanan said. "I can have better conversations with them then when I meet them face to face.

    "I think, absolutely, when you’re going to compare a Web expo to a live expo at an actual convention center, I don’t think you would get those individuals anywhere near that environment with those crowds," he added.

    Allsup will bring together representatives from 15 national nonprofit groups that specialize in disabilities, including the National Alliance on Mental Illness, the Brain Injury Association of America, the Invisible Disabilities Association and the National Family Caregivers Association. 

    "Our hope is that veterans will find valuable information and resources that they just didn’t know existed," said Rebecca Ray, director of corporate public relations for Allsup. "We know veterans have a lot of options through the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense. But there are a lot of groups that help veterans that may be new to them." 

    While attendees can live chat with experts throughout the day, the expo will offer two moderated sessions for service members and their families: "What You Need to Know About Veterans Disability," from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. CST, and "Wounded Warriors — A Discussion on Veteran Disability Resources," from 2:35 to 3:00 p.m. CST.

    "We dive into little nuances of the VA disability system," Buchanan said. "There are special considerations for different veterans — specifically if the veteran has more than one disability that’s related to service, or if they’re a combat veteran they are given special consideration.

    "We’ll be talking about the VA process," he added. "We’ll be taking people through, step by step, on filing a claim, what happens if the claim is denied, or what happens if you get a decision and you’re not satisfied with it: are you able to appeal it?"

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    12 comments

    Another worthless experiment as is the usual with the corrupt and dysfunctional US Dept. of Veterans Affairs. They are still doing "research" on PTSD Treatment. Allowed one of their researcher's in their Wash., D.C. Headquarters recently to take time off. To train for the London Olympics as well as  …

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    Explore related topics: iraq, afghanistan, military, va, veterans, disabilities, featured, ptsd, department-of-veterans-affairs, wounded-warriors, disability-claim, allsup, true-help-disability-web-expo

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NBC News contributor covering health, business, military and travel. @writerdude Author of "The Third Miracle: An Ordinary Man, A Medical Mystery and a Trial of Faith" (Random House, 2011).

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