Showing posts with label navy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label navy. Show all posts

Sunday, March 2, 2014

New Ukraine navy chief defects













The newly appointed head of Ukraine’s navy has sworn allegiance to the Crimea region, in the presence of its unrecognised pro-Russian leader.


Rear Admiral Denys Berezovsky was only made head of the navy on Saturday, as the government in Kiev reacted to the threat of Russian invasion.


Russia’s troops have been consolidating their hold on Crimea, which is home to its Black Sea Fleet.


The US has warned Moscow may be ejected from the G8 for its actions.


US President Barack Obama called Russian troop deployments a “violation of Ukrainian sovereignty”.



‘Brink of disaster’

Ukraine has ordered a full military mobilisation in response to Russia’s build-up of its forces on the Crimean peninsula. Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk has warned the country is “on the brink of disaster”.


In Crimea, Ukrainian soldiers faced off with Russian soldiers surrounding their bases on Sunday while the Russian army was said to be digging trenches on the border with mainland Ukraine.


The UK has joined the US, France and Canada in suspending preparations for a summit of the G8 in Russia in June. Nato, of which Ukraine is not a member, is conducting emergency talks.


Admiral Berezovsky appeared in Sevastopol before cameras alongside Sergiy Aksyonov, the pro-Russian politician elected by Crimea’s regional parliament as local prime minister.


Mr Aksyonov announced he had given orders to Ukrainian naval forces on the peninsula to disregard any orders from the “self-proclaimed” authorities in Kiev.


Sunday, he said, would go down in history as the birthday of the “navy of the autonomous republic of Crimea”.









Admiral Yuri Ilyn: “I’m very sorry that Ukrainian soldiers and sailors are hostages of this situation”



The admiral then pledged to “strictly obey the orders of the supreme commander of the autonomous republic of Crimea” and “defend the lives and freedom” of Crimea’s people.


Admiral Berezovsky was later sacked by interim Ukrainian Defence Minister Ihor Tenyukh and a treason case launched against him.


Ukraine’s Ukrainska Pravda newspaper reports that the admiral was speaking before the “numerous cameras of predominantly Russian TV channels”.









John Kerry: Russian troop movement is a “brazen act of aggression”



Earlier, Ukrainian naval officers found their headquarters in Sevastopol occupied by Russian troops and were unable to go to work.


Admiral Yuriy Ilyn, who was until recently commander of the Ukrainian navy and served briefly as head of Ukraine’s armed forces under ousted President Viktor Yanukovych, told the BBC’s Christian Fraser at the scene that the armed forces were “hostages of the situation”.


Separately, Ukraine withdrew coast guard vessels from two ports in Crimea and moved them to other bases in the Black Sea and Sea of Azov on Sunday.


Several Ukrainian army bases were surrounded by Russian troops on Sunday but there were no reports of clashes despite the refusal of Ukrainian soldiers to open their gates.


John Kerry told US media Russia might “not even remain in the G8″ and Russian President Vladimir Putin might “find himself with asset freezes”.


“You just don’t in the 21st-Century behave in 19th-Century fashion by invading another country on completely trumped-up pretext,” Mr Kerry told the CBS program Face the Nation.


The Russian parliament authorised Mr Putin on Saturday to deploy troops in Ukraine to protect the lives of Russian citizens there.


Moscow has not recognised the government which took power in Kiev last month after overthrowing the elected pro-Russian President, Viktor Yanukovych.


Mr Yanukovych’s decision in November to abandon closer ties with the EU in favour of Russia sparked massive protests in Kiev, which ended in a bloodbath, as dozens of protesters were shot dead in clashes with police.


Are you in Ukraine? What is your reaction to this news of Russian troop deployment? Email us at haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk adding ‘Ukraine’ in the subject heading and including your contact details.



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New Ukraine navy chief defects

Ukrainian navy head removed, faces treason probe





Ukrainian soldiers, left and unidentified gunmen, right, guard the gate of an infantry base in Privolnoye, Ukraine, Sunday, March 2, 2014. Hundreds of unidentified gunmen arrived outside Ukraine’s infantry base in Privolnoye in its Crimea region. The convoy includes at least 13 troop vehicles each containing 30 soldiers and four armored vehicles with mounted machine guns. The vehicles — which have Russian license plates — have surrounded the base and are blocking Ukrainian soldiers from entering or leaving it. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





Ukrainian soldiers, left and unidentified gunmen, right, guard the gate of an infantry base in Privolnoye, Ukraine, Sunday, March 2, 2014. Hundreds of unidentified gunmen arrived outside Ukraine’s infantry base in Privolnoye in its Crimea region. The convoy includes at least 13 troop vehicles each containing 30 soldiers and four armored vehicles with mounted machine guns. The vehicles — which have Russian license plates — have surrounded the base and are blocking Ukrainian soldiers from entering or leaving it. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





A Russian convoy moves from Sevastopol to Sinferopol in the Crimea, Ukraine, Sunday, March 2, 2014. A convoy of hundreds of Russian troops headed toward the regional capital of Ukraine’s Crimea region on Sunday, a day after Russia’s forces took over the strategic Black Sea peninsula without firing a shot. The new government in Kiev has been powerless to react. Ukraine’s parliament was meeting Sunday in a closed session. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





A Russian convoy moves from Sevastopol to Sinferopol in the Crimea, Ukraine, Sunday, March 2, 2014. A convoy of hundreds of Russian troops headed toward the regional capital of Ukraine’s Crimea region on Sunday, a day after Russia’s forces took over the strategic Black Sea peninsula without firing a shot. The new government in Kiev has been powerless to react. Ukraine’s parliament was meeting Sunday in a closed session. (AP Photo/Darko Vojinovic)





An anti-Yanukovych protester sits next to his tent in Kiev’s Independence Square, the epicenter of the country’s current unrest, Ukraine, Sunday, March 2, 2014. A convoy of hundreds of Russian troops is heading toward the regional capital, Simferopol on the Crimean peninsula in Ukraine today. On the road from Sevastopol, the Crimean port where Russia maintains a naval base, AP journalists saw 12 military trucks. Russian troops took over the strategic Black Sea peninsula yesterday and are ignoring international protests. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)





Anti-Yanukovych protesters sit inside a tent as they guard one of the entrance in Kiev’s Independence Square, the epicenter of the country’s current unrest, Ukraine, Sunday, March 2, 2014. A convoy of hundreds of Russian troops is heading toward the regional capital, Simferopol on the Crimean peninsula in Ukraine today. On the road from Sevastopol, the Crimean port where Russia maintains a naval base, AP journalists saw 12 military trucks. Russian troops took over the strategic Black Sea peninsula yesterday and are ignoring international protests. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)





Top Headlines



Ukrainian navy head removed, faces treason probe

Crimea forms its own fleet as Ukraine Navy chief sides with region

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Crimea forms its own fleet as Ukraine Navy chief sides with region

Monday, February 10, 2014

Wake Up America! - Navy SEAL Hands Obam

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  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on A Political Statement.
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Wake Up America! - Navy SEAL Hands Obam

Friday, January 24, 2014

VIDEO: Do You Have What It Takes to Be a Navy SEAL?







Need a new career in 2014? How about trying to be a Navy SEAL? Former Navy SEAL and author Rorke Denver discusses what it takes to join the elite group, and tips on how normal folks can be more disciplined. Photo: Rorke Denver.













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VIDEO: Do You Have What It Takes to Be a Navy SEAL?

Sunday, December 22, 2013

NY Post: Snow falling on Navy ship was from Fukushima radioactive steam… “Is that aluminum foil I taste?” — Sailor: People were defecating on themselves in hallways from excruciating diarrhea — Officer: We saw radiation 300 times ‘safe’ levels (VIDEO)

NY Post: Snow falling on Navy ship was from Fukushima radioactive steam… “Is that aluminum foil I taste?” — Sailor: People were defecating on themselves in hallways from excruciating diarrhea — Officer: We saw radiation 300 times ‘safe’ levels (VIDEO)
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Published: December 22nd, 2013 at 9:04 pm ET
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New York Post, Dec. 22, 2013: Navy sailor Lindsay Cooper knew something was wrong when billows of metallic-tasting snow began drifting over USS Ronald Reagan. [...] she and scores of crewmates watched a sudden storm blow toward them from the tsunami-torn coast of Fukushima, Japan. The tall 24-year-old with a winning smile didn’t know it then, but the snow was caused by the freezing Pacific air mixing with a plume of radioactive steam [...] Senior Chief Michael Sebourn, a radiation-decontamination officer, was assigned to test the aircraft carrier for radiation. The levels were incredibly dangerous and at one point, the radiation in the air measured 300 times higher than what was considered safe, Sebourn told The Post.


Lindsay Cooper, Navy sailor aboard USS Ronald Reagan during 3/11 rescue operation: “I was standing on the flight deck, and we felt this warm gust of air, and, suddenly, it was snowing [...] We joked about it: ‘Hey, it’s radioactive snow! I took pictures and video [...] Japan didn’t want us in port, Korea didn’t want us, Guam turned us away. We floated in the water for two and a half months [until Thailand took them in] “People were s- -tting themselves in the hallways [All the while crew members had been suffering from excruciating diarrhea].”


Cooper interviewed by EON, published Dec. 20, 2013: (at 4:30 in) “As soon as you step foot on the flight deck and went outside you had this taste of like aluminum foil.”[...] (at 10:45 in) We thought that we had felt a plume because there was kind of this warm air that went past the ship and you could kind of tell the differences between jet exhaust — we didn’t have any jets going around at the time. It was like 20 degrees outside and you could feel this warm air and you kind of enjoyed it at first and then you’re like, ‘Is that aluminum foil that I taste?’


Watch the interview here





Published: December 22nd, 2013 at 9:04 pm ET
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WHAT REALLY HAPPENED




Read more about NY Post: Snow falling on Navy ship was from Fukushima radioactive steam… “Is that aluminum foil I taste?” — Sailor: People were defecating on themselves in hallways from excruciating diarrhea — Officer: We saw radiation 300 times ‘safe’ levels (VIDEO) and other interesting subjects concerning The Edge at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, November 17, 2013

US Drone Strikes Navy Ship By Mistake


Tyler Durden
Zero Hedge
November 17, 2013


111713chancellorsville
While hardly as dramatic as last week’s revelation that Syrian Al-Qaeda cannibals apologized after chopping off the head of one of their CIA-funded “rebels” by mistake, the news that a US drone struck a US missile cruiser during training off Southern California, causing two minor injuries is maybe even more embarrassing. After all, with Al-Qaeda one can at least make a legitimate case of a friendly fire, er, beheading incident. When it comes to the coast off SoCal, it will be difficult to suggest the Chinese (or Russian) navies were running sorties next to the surfers off Point Mugu.


From AP:


The Navy says an aerial target drone malfunctioned and struck a guided missile cruiser during training off Southern California, causing two minor injuries.


Lt. Lenaya (luh-NEY-yah) Rotklein of the U.S. Third Fleet said the accident on the USS Chancellorsville happened Saturday afternoon while the ship was testing its combat weapons system off Point Mugu.


She said two sailors were treated for minor burns after the ship was struck. She said the ship was heading back to Naval Base San Diego so that officials can assess the damage.



Syrian “hackers” to be blamed shortly (just like in the case of healthcare.gov), as the time for Obama’s internet kill swtich “put option” is long overue.


This article was posted: Sunday, November 17, 2013 at 11:17 am


Tags: domestic news, drones










Infowars



US Drone Strikes Navy Ship By Mistake

Monday, November 11, 2013

Costly ‘technological marvel’: US Navy christens new class $13bn aircraft carrier


RT
November 11, 2013


CVN 78 (Gerald R Ford) at the shipyard during the initial filling of the drydock. (Photo from Wikipedia.org)

CVN 78 (Gerald R Ford) at the shipyard during the initial filling of the drydock. (Photo from Wikipedia.org)



The US Navy has christened the first of a new class of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, the 13-billion-dollar USS Gerald R. Ford. The ship, hailed as the most technologically advanced ever built, is expected to join the fleet in 2016.


The ship is the Navy’s first carrier designed in more than 40 years. The Ford-class aircraft carriers will replace current Nimitz class that was launched in 1972. The Ford is projected to stay in service until 2057.


The ship, named after US President Gerald Ford, was christened at the ceremony at Huntington Ingalls Newport News Shipbuilding in Newport News, Va. on Saturday. The new aircraft carrier is planned to replace the USS Enterprise (CVN-65).


The former president’s daughter, Susan Ford Bales, who was also the ship’s sponsor, performed the ceremonial breaking of a bottle of champagne on the ship’s bow in front of more than 20,000 sailors, shipbuilders and civilians.


The ceremony comes after more than 12 years of planning and construction.


“The carrier is our Navy’s most adaptable platform,” Adm. Jonathan Greenert, chief of naval operations, said, calling the Ford a “technological marvel”. “Ford will herald a new era of our carrier fleet,” he added.


Stretching 330 m (1,092 feet) long, the ship will feature a new nuclear power plant, a redesigned island, electromagnetic catapults and improved weapons movement.


The carrier will be able to carry more warplanes and launch 25 per cent more air missions per day than the current carriers. The US Navy required the carrier to support up to a maximum of 220 sorties a day in times of crisis and intense air warfare activity.


Image from www.thefordclass.com

Image from www.thefordclass.com



The new craft will accommodate almost 4,500 crew members, compared to the average 5,500 people operating a Nimitz class carrier, and up to 90 aircrafts along with unmanned combat air vehicles (UAVs).


The USS Gerald Ford will be equipped with two newly-designed reactors and will have 250 percent more electrical capacity than previous carriers. This will also support a cruising speed over 30 knots.


Super-expensive super-carrier


Requiring 1,000 fewer crew members and 30 per cent less maintenance over its 50-year lifespan, the Ford is said to let the US Navy save $ 4 billion.


While the Navy praises this as another significant advantage, critics say, the cost of building the ship has already skyrocketed. With the carrier now 70 per cent complete, construction costs are about 22 per cent over the over the scheduled budget.


The high price still will not guarantee that after it is commissioned in 2016 the carrier will not face “significant reliability shortfalls”, as the Government Accountability Office, an investigative arm of Congress, said in September.


This may limit the ship’s mission effectiveness and increase the government’s costs even more.


This article was posted: Monday, November 11, 2013 at 10:15 am


Tags: money, war









Infowars



Costly ‘technological marvel’: US Navy christens new class $13bn aircraft carrier

Monday, November 4, 2013

VIDEO: Feds: Navy Secrets Sold for Hookers, Lady Gaga Tickets







U.S. prosecutors say confidential information on ship routes were given to a Malaysian businessman who helped divert ships to inflate costs.













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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Nuclear scare at Navy submarine base after "unbelievable" failures



Source: Independent


A major nuclear incident was narrowly averted at the heart of Britain’s Royal Navy submarine fleet, The Independent on Sunday can reveal. The failure of both the primary and secondary power sources of coolant for nuclear reactors at the Devonport dockyard in Plymouth on 29 July last year followed warnings in previous years of just such a situation.



Experts yesterday compared the crisis at the naval base, operated by the Ministry of Defence and government engineering contractors Babcock Marine, with the Fukushima Daiichi power-station meltdown in Japan in 2011.


It came just four months after the Defence Secretary, Philip Hammond, announced that the base would “remain vital in the future”.


The failure of the electric-power source for coolant to nuclear reactors and then the diesel back-up generators was revealed in a heavily redacted report from the Ministry of Defence’s Site Event Report Committee (Serc).


Read More…






BlackListedNews.com



Nuclear scare at Navy submarine base after "unbelievable" failures

Saturday, September 28, 2013

US Navy Blimp Conducting Aerial Mapping Over Areas Surrounding DC


Fox Baltimore
September 28, 2013


The US Naval Research Laboratory has been conducting aerial mapping operations with a blimp over the areas surrounding Washington DC since Saturday, September 21. The aerial mapping will cease on Oct. 5.


The blimp, a US Navy MZ-3A, has been operating under special approval of the US FAA and the TSA. The aerial mapping will be conducted within the Washington D.C. Flight Restriction Zone (DCA-FRZ) at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service in Beltsville, Md., at U.S. Army Fort Belvoir in Fairfax, Va. and within the DCA-Special Flight Restrictions Area. At times the blimp will travel the region to the north to Frederick Municipal Airport in Maryland and to the southwest near Culpepper, Va.


The MZ-3A is government-owned and operated by contractor Integrated Systems Solutions, Inc.


The 178-foot MZ-3A blimp can travel at a top speed just under 50 knots and can remain aloft and nearly stationary for more than twelve hours.


This article was posted: Saturday, September 28, 2013 at 4:44 am









Prison Planet.com



US Navy Blimp Conducting Aerial Mapping Over Areas Surrounding DC

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Navy Yard shooter Aaron Alexis left note blaming low-frequency attack


Richard A. Serrano
LA Times
September 26, 2013


The Washington Navy Yard shooter believed he was being subjected to an “ultra low frequency attack” and left an electronic note saying this was “what I’ve been subject to for the last 3 months, and to be perfectly honest that is what has driven me to this,” the FBI revealed Wednesday.


Aaron Alexis, 34, a computer technician for a private Navy contractor, killed 12 people and wounded four others in the Sept. 16 rampage as he fired a sawed-off Remington 870 Express shotgun in which he had etched several statements, including “End to the torment!”


The FBI also released video and still photographs from Building 197 at the Navy Yard, including scenes of Alexis in a dark blue-and-white shirt and dark trousers, wielding the shotgun as he roamed down hallways and stairwells in search of victims.

Read More


This article was posted: Thursday, September 26, 2013 at 9:19 am


Tags: government corruption









Infowars



Navy Yard shooter Aaron Alexis left note blaming low-frequency attack

No, the Navy Yard Mass Shooter Did Not Target a "Gun-Free Zone"

Each time another mass shooting takes place, gun-rights advocates are quick to blame the attack on the prohibition of firearms in public places. Their argument claims to explain both the motive behind mass shootings and how they play out: The killers deliberately choose locations where guns are forbidden, they say, and therefore no “good guy with a gun” is on hand to stop the attack. Conservatives’ response to the massacre at the Washington Navy Yard was no exception. (Never mind the heavy security at the military installation.) As Fox News’ Martha MacCallum put it, “on a military base, you’re not allowed to carry weapons” and “someone working or familiar with the area probably would know that.”


Her speculation may have sounded vaguely plausible, but it had no basis in fact. As I explained in a piece in USA Today earlier this year, in scores of mass shooting cases over the last three decades there isn’t a single one in which the killer is known to have targeted a location because it banned guns. To the contrary, evidence in the vast majority of cases shows the motive was clearly otherwise, from workplace revenge to hate crime to a killer’s obsession with his former school.


We now have the same understanding of the Navy Yard mass shooter, thanks to an FBI report released on Wednesday, which includes evidence pertaining to Aaron Alexis’ state of mind. Not only was he plagued by serious mental illness, as previous news reports suggested, but Alexis also had no expectation of entering a venue that was free of firearms. According to the FBI’s analysis of evidence it recovered from his belongings, “There are indicators that Alexis was prepared to die during the attack and that he accepted death as the inevitable consequence of his actions.”


That finding fits with a clear pattern in the data we gathered in our mass shootings investigation: The perpetrators weren’t looking for a safe, gun-free place to carry out their attacks—they were on suicide missions.


The FBI on Wednesday also released some eerie surveillance footage of Alexis entering the Navy Yard premises and moving with stealth through the corridors of Building 197 as he stalked his victims. We’ll never fully know what was going through his disturbed mind, of course, but judge for yourself whether he was acting like a person who believed he was operating in a place full of defenseless sitting ducks:




Political Mojo | Mother Jones



No, the Navy Yard Mass Shooter Did Not Target a "Gun-Free Zone"

Monday, September 23, 2013

Obama, on Navy Yard: "Our tears are not enough"

President Barack Obama pauses as he speaks during a memorial service for the victims of the Washington Navy Yard shooting at Marine Barracks Washington, Sept. 22. | AP Photo

‘It ought to obsess us, it ought to lead to some sort of transformation,’ he says. | AP Photo





The best way to memorialize the 12 killed at the Navy Yard massacre, President Barack Obama said Sunday, is by enacting the new gun control laws he seeks.


Speaking at a memorial service at the Marine Barracks in Southeast D.C., Obama said Monday’s shootings, along with the other gun massacres during his presidency, “ought to lead to some sort of transformation” like those that have taken place in other nations that have restricted access to guns in the wake of mass shootings.



“Our tears are not enough. Our words and our prayers are not enough,” Obama said. “If we really want to honor these 12 men and women, if we really want to be a country where we can go to work, go to school and walk our streets free from senseless violence without so many lives being stolen with a bullet from a gun, then we’re going to have to change.”


(PHOTOS: Shooting at Navy Yard)


Obama addressed the nation’s growing immunity to shock at mass shootings and the lack of a fresh gun control push on Capitol Hill last week.


“It ought to be a shock to all of us as a nation and as a people,” Obama said. “It ought to obsess us, it ought to lead to some sort of transformation — that’s what happened in other countries when they experienced similar tragedies.”


And as he did beginning in January with his post-Newtown gun control push, Obama acknowledged that members of Congress will not back any new gun control laws without being forced to do so by their constituents. So far, Obama’s allies have been unsuccessful in efforts to use that tactic to move votes on major issues in Congress.


(Also on POLITICO: Obama vows to continue gun push)


“By now it’s clear that the change we need will not come from Washington, even when the tragedy strikes Washington,” Obama said. “Change will come the only way it’s ever come, and that is from the American people.”


As Obama noted, the Navy Yard service marked the fifth time as president he has appeared at a similar event in the wake of a mass shooting. At Tucson in January 2011, he celebrated the lives of six people who died at a congressional event for then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.).


At Newtown in December 2012, he elicited sobs from the crowd while reading the list of 20 first-grade students gunned down, then kicked off his administration’s gun control push.


(Transcript: President Obama’s remarks at Navy Yard shooting memorial service)


And at the Marine Barracks Sunday, the president and First Lady Michelle Obama met with families of the 12 people — all civilian employees — who were killed Monday morning by Aaron Alexis, a military contractor with a history of mental illness.


As he did at the other memorials, Obama ticked through brief biographies of the victims, painting them in the most ordinary terms while describing the work they did at the Navy Yard as integral to the nation’s security.


“What troubles us so deeply is how the senseless violence in the Navy Yard echoes other tragedies,” Obama said.


Navy Secretary Ray Mabus and other military speakers who preceded Obama Sunday stressed that those killed Monday — patriots, Mabus said — were integral to the nation’s military success.


“That is what they are,” Mabus said. “Heroes, ordinary people facing extraordinary circumstances.”


Obama’s call for new gun laws Sunday followed the case he made Saturday night at a Congressional Black Caucus awards dinner.


“We fought a good fight earlier this year, but we came up short,” Obama said Saturday night. “And that means we’ve got to get back up and go back at it. Because as long as there are those who fight to make it as easy as possible for dangerous people to get their hands on a gun, then we’ve got to work as hard as possible for the sake of our children.”


Speaking before Obama Sunday, Washington, D.C., Mayor Vincent Gray put it in more succinct terms.


“There is one lesson that is already abundantly clear,” Gray said. “Our country is drowning in a sea of guns.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Obama, on Navy Yard: "Our tears are not enough"

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Confirmed: Navy Yard Shooter Was On Anti-Depressant Trazodone


Drug linked to previous mass shooting despite Washington Post declaring it “safe”


Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
September 19, 2013


It has been confirmed that Navy Yard gunman Aaron Alexis was on the anti-depressant drug Trazodone, providing yet another example of a connection between psychiatric drugs and mass shootings.


Trazodone. Image: Wikimedia Commons



In verifying that Alexis was prescribed Trazodone by the Veterans Affairs Office, the Washington Post published a brief article downplaying the danger of the drug, quoting Miami physician Gabriela Cora who stated (almost too eagerly), “Honestly, it’s a very safe drug to use.”


However, the drug has been linked to a number of murders, including one mass shooting.


Trazodone is sold under the brand names Desyrel, Oleptro, Beneficat, Deprax, Desirel, Molipaxin, Thombran, Trazorel, Trialodine, Trittico, and Mesyrel. Although not strictly a member of the SSRI class of antidepressants, it shares many of the same properties and also serves to increases the amount of serotonin in the brain.


Despite the Washington Post’s attempts to portray the drug as being safe, it is linked with a whole host of side-effects including suicidal tendencies, panic attacks, depersonalization and anger. Symptoms of Trazodone withdrawal include aggression and violent behavior.


The drug also carries an, “FDA black box warning for suicide, and is documented to cause mania and violent behavior,” writes Kelly Patricia O’Meara.


Several murder cases over the past few years have been directly connected to Trazodone.


Eight people were killed and one wounded during a mass shooting at a beauty parlor in Seal Beach, California in 2011. The killer, Scott Evan Dekraai, was on Desyrel, a commercial variant of Trazodone.


- In 2009, Perley Goodrich Jr. beat his mother and then shot his father dead shortly after being injected with Trazodone in a psychiatric hospital. Goodrich had complained that he didn’t want to take the medication because it made him feel violent.


- In 2009, Steven Foster shot a gas station attendant in the head before shooting him a second time. Bottles of Trazodone pills were later found in Foster’s room.


- Marine Lance Cpl. Delano Holmes fatally stabbed an Iraqi soldier to death in 2007 after military doctors prescribed him Trazodone.


- Indiana soldier Pfc. David Lawrence was taking Trazodone in combination with Zoloft when he killed a Taliban commander in a prison cell in 2010. Lawrence was charged with premeditated murder. According to the FDA, taking these drugs in combination can cause “altered consciousness, confusion, hallucinations and coma.”


This is interesting given that Aaron Alexis had also suffered from PTSD, blackouts and anger issues years before he began receiving treatment from the VA. Was he on more than just one anti-depressant drug at the time of the rampage?


As we highlighted yesterday, the establishment media has been loathe to make the connection between Alexis’ rampage and anti-depressants, despite hundreds of other cases of suicides, murders and mass shootings linked to psychiatric drugs.


Presumably keen to protect around $ 2.4 billion in advertising revenue that comes from pharmaceutical companies every year, the media failed to even address the question of psychiatric drugs and instead blamed the rampage on the AR-15 assault rifle, which authorities confirm Alexis did not even use.


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*********************


Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Infowars.com and Prison Planet.com. He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a host for Infowars Nightly News.


This article was posted: Thursday, September 19, 2013 at 9:12 am


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Infowars



Confirmed: Navy Yard Shooter Was On Anti-Depressant Trazodone

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Gunman"s mother apologizes to Navy Yard victims








This undated photo provided by Kristi Kinard Suthamtewakul shows Aaron Alexis in Fort Worth, Texas. The FBI has identified Alexis, 34, as the gunman in the Monday, Sept. 16, 2013 shooting rampage at at the Washington Navy Yard in Washington that left thirteen dead, including himself. (AP Photo/Kristi Kinard Suthamtewakul)





This undated photo provided by Kristi Kinard Suthamtewakul shows Aaron Alexis in Fort Worth, Texas. The FBI has identified Alexis, 34, as the gunman in the Monday, Sept. 16, 2013 shooting rampage at at the Washington Navy Yard in Washington that left thirteen dead, including himself. (AP Photo/Kristi Kinard Suthamtewakul)





3D graphic of the 197 Builidng in the Washington Navy Yard shows areas where shooting took place; 3c x 4 1/2 inches; 146 mm x 114 mm;





Valerie Parlave, assistant director in charge with the FBI Washington Field Office, left, Washington Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy Lanier, center, and Darryll Gilliard, Deputy Assistant Director for Criminal Investigations and Operations at Naval Criminal Investigative Service, arrive to speaks at a news conference about the shootings at the Washington Navy Yard, held outside of the FBI Washington Field Office, in Washington, on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2013, the day after the shootings at the Navy Yard. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)





Washington Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy Lanier speaks at a news conference about the shootings at the Washington Navy Yard, while outside of the FBI Washington Field Office, in Washington, on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2013, the day after the shootings at the Navy Yard. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)





Valerie Parlave, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, left, next to Washington Metropolitan Police Chief, speaks at a news conference about the shootings at the Washington Navy Yard, at the FBI Washington Field Office, in Washington, on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2013, the day after the shootings at the Navy Yard. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)













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(AP) — The mother of Aaron Alexis said Wednesday that she does not know why her son opened fire at the Washington Navy Yard, killing 12 people, but she is glad he can no longer hurt anyone else.


Cathleen Alexis read a brief statement Wednesday inside her New York home, her voice shaking. She did not want to appear on camera and did not take questions from a reporter.


“I don’t know why he did what he did and I’ll never be able to ask him why. Aaron is now in a place where he can no longer do harm to anyone, and for that I am glad,” Cathleen Alexis said. “To the families of the victims, I am so so very sorry that this has happened. My heart is broken.”


Although his motive remains unknown, law enforcement officials and others have described a paranoid man who heard voices and believed he was being followed. At a Rhode Island hotel recently, he heard voices harassing him, wanting to harm him. He couldn’t sleep. He believed people were following him, using a microwave machine to send vibrations to his body. He changed hotels once, then again. But he called police and told them he couldn’t get away from the voices.


On Aug. 7, police alerted officials at the Newport Naval Station about the naval defense contractor’s call. But officers didn’t hear from him again.


By Aug. 25, Alexis had left the state. The 34-year-old arrived in the Washington area, continuing his work as an information technology employee for a defense-related computer company. Again, he spent nights in different hotels. He suffered from serious mental problems, including paranoia and a sleep disorder, and was undergoing treatment from the Department of Veterans Affairs, according to the law enforcement officials.


But Alexis wasn’t stripped of his security clearance, and he kept working.


On Saturday, he visited Sharpshooters Small Arms Range in Lorton, Va., about 18 miles southwest of the nation’s capital. He rented a rifle, bought bullets and took target practice at the 16-lane indoor range, then bought a shotgun and 24 shells, according to the store’s attorney.


Two days later, as the workweek dawned, Alexis entered the sprawling Washington Navy Yard, a 41-acre labyrinth of buildings protected by armed guards and metal detectors where employees must show IDs to get past doors and gates. Authorities believe he drove a rental car there.


He was equipped with his pass for base access — and the shotgun. Within minutes, it would create mayhem.


He stepped inside the massive Building 197, home to some 3,000 employees. He opened fire around 8:15 a.m., raining shotgun blasts down from a fourth-floor overlook and third-floor hallway into a glass-walled cafeteria where employees were eating breakfast. Trained tactical officers arrived, bursting through the building within seven minutes of the first 911 call, and Alexis shot at them, too.


Fire alarms blared, and officers had a hard time hearing one another. A voice came on the overhead speaker telling workers to seek shelter — and later, to head for the gates at the complex. A U.S. Park Police helicopter flew overhead, plucking a wounded woman from the roof with a rescue basket while a crew member armed with a rifle provided cover.


“We have a report on the fourth floor, a male with a shotgun, multiple shots fired, multiple people down. We’re still waiting for the OK that the scene has been secured,” an ambulance crew member says on emergency transmissions posted on Broadcastify.com, a source of live public safety audio feeds.


More dispatches followed: Shooter known to be in the main gate area. Officer down on the third floor. Female on the roof, shot in the shoulder.


Once inside, Alexis picked a handgun off an officer and, armed with two weapons, terrorized the building’s occupants.


He fired relentlessly not only at police who engaged him but at the workers inside: a 61-year-old marine engineer and grandfather who immigrated to the U.S. years ago from India, a Navy veteran and avid pilot who had once been stationed at Pearl Harbor, a die-hard Washington Redskins fan known for generous bear hugs. A Washington police officer was shot multiple times in the legs but survived.


“We just started running,” said Patricia Ward, who was in the cafeteria when the shooting began. She said she heard three gunshots in a row, followed by several more.


Descriptions from witnesses and police paint a portrait of harrowing gun battles inside — all for more than half an hour. The FBI, which launched a nationwide active shooter training program for local law enforcement after last December’s Connecticut elementary school massacre, says the average mass shooting is over within minutes and often ends once police arrive.


But this gun battle kept going. As the chaos unraveled inside, police in the nation’s capital shut down the surrounding area. Nearby schools went on lockdown, flights were halted at Reagan National Airport, and even after Alexis was mortally wounded by a police officer, officers chased leads that a second and possibly a third gunman had been working with him.


Twelve victims died — a body count that police say could have been much higher, even after they determined that the gunman had worked alone. Eight were injured, with all expected to survive.


The Navy said several garages and all surface parking lots at the Washington Navy Yard would open Wednesday for employees to retrieve their private vehicles. But the military installation would reopen for business for Mission Essential personnel only. In a posting on its Facebook page, the Navy said the yard remains an active crime scene.


Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ordered the Pentagon to review the physical security of all U.S. defense facilities worldwide and the security clearances that allow access to them. Hagel is also tasking an independent panel to undertake the same reviews. He said Wednesday “where there are gaps, we will close them.”


More than 24 hours after the shooting, the motive remained a mystery. U.S. law enforcement officials told The Associated Press that investigators had found no manifesto or other writings suggesting a political or religious motivation.


Ron Machen, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, ticked off some of the unanswered questions Tuesday.


“What caused this individual to kill so many innocent men and women? How did he carry out and plan this attack? How did he get access to the weapons? What could have been done to prevent this tragedy? And most importantly, whether anyone else aided or assisted him either wittingly or unwittingly in this tragedy?”


Machen added, “We’re not going to stop until we get answers to those questions.”


___


Associated Press writers David Klepper in Newport, R.I., and Brett Zongker in Washington contributed to this report.


___


Follow Eric Tucker on Twitter at https://twitter.com/etuckerAP


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Gunman"s mother apologizes to Navy Yard victims

How Did D.C. Navy Yard Gunman Get Security Clearance While Being Treated by VA for Mental Illness?



A gunman opened fire at a naval base in Washington, D.C., on Monday, killing 12 people and wounding several others before dying in a shootout with police. The shooter has been identified as Aaron Alexis, a 34-year-old former Navy Reservist who had been arrested at least twice in the past for shooting-related incidents, but who got security clearance to enter the Washington Navy Yard. Alexis was discharged from the Navy Reserve in 2011 following what officials termed a “pattern of misbehavior.” We speak to AP reporters Matt Apuzzo and Adam Goldman who reveal Alexis was treated by doctors within the Veterans Administration for serious mental illness, including “hearing voices.”



TRANSCRIPT:



This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.



Aaron Maté: Well, thirteen people died when a former Navy reservist opened fire on a naval base and Washington, D.C. on Monday, killing twelve people and wounding several others before dying in a shootout with police. The gunman had been identified as Aaron Alexis, a 34-year-old who have been arrested at least twice in the past for shooting related incidents, but, who got security clearance to enter the Washington Navy Yard. Alexis was discharged from the Navy reserve in 2011, following what officials termed a pattern of misbehavior. The Associated Press has just reported Alexis was treated by the VA for serious mental illness including hearing voices.


Amy Goodman : To talk more about the shooting, we are joined by Matt Apuzzo and Adam Goldman, the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporting team from the Associated Press. They cowrote the new book, “Enemies Within: Inside the NYPD’s Secret Spying Unit and Bin Laden’s Final Plot Against America.” We will talk about the book in a minute. But first, to the shooting. Matt Appuzo, Adam Goldman, welcome. Matt, start with what do you know, the report you’re putting out today?


Matt Appuzo: Well, the AP newsletter just moved a few minutes ago that said that Alexis had been treated relatively recently, in recent months, for a host of mental issues at the VA, hearing voices was kind of the catchall. I think the question obviously is going to be, how far along was he in the treatment? What were they seeing in the medical record? What were they seeing in his file? And could that have pulled clearances to get in the building? At this stage, I don’t think we know the answers to those questions and I think that is what investigators are going to be trying to look for too. Were their missed opportunities like we saw at Virginia Tech with Seung Hui Cho where he shouldn’t have been able to do the things to get a hold of the guns given his mental treatment? I don’t know if that was the case here, but it is certainly something the federal government is looking at, the city government is looking at, and reporters like us are looking at.


Amy Goodman: I mean, it’s something, both having the clearance and having the guns.


Matt Appuzo: Right, and our reporter — the guns aren’t something that Adam and I focused a ton on, but our reporter in Washington, Eric Tucker, has really been trying to piece together exactly how they got the guns. We know that there was a shotgun that he used, we know that there was a handgun. Unclear whether he got the handgun from a police officer or security guard on the scene. And they are still trying to link up that AR-15 as well, as to, you know, was that his. We know it was near him. Where did he get it? You know, all those things. So I think that is what the federal government is trying to piece together. That’s what we’re still trying to piece together.


Amy Goodman: Also quite astounding, while being treated at the VA as AP is reporting for among other things, hearing voices, that he had other incidents in the past and his father saying to authorities that he perhaps suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder from helping people at 9/11. I mean, he had gun violence incidents that he was arrested for.


Matt Appuzo : Sure, and I just think, you know, we’re 24 hours into this investigation and we still haven’t figured out — the gun trace issue is always a difficult one. So, until — I think until we know how he got these guns and how the clearances went, I just don’t want to jump to conclusions about what should have happened or shouldn’t have happened. We are only 24 hours into it.


Amy Goodman: Right, and finally, Adam, that issue of mental illness and being able to have guns legally?


Adam Goldman: Yeah, that is a big issue in this country, and we see people repeatedly with mental illness obtained firearms. Newtown, Virginia Tech, and the horrific shooting in the suburb of Denver.


Amy Goodman: Well, of course we will continue to follow this issue. But now we’re going to talk about an issue you have followed for years.




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How Did D.C. Navy Yard Gunman Get Security Clearance While Being Treated by VA for Mental Illness?

Newtown to Navy Yard: Gun Laws Still a Tough Sell



A handful of lawmakers are urging their colleagues to renew the debate about gun violence after Monday’s mass shooting at the Washington Navy Yard. But even Congress’ top advocates of stricter laws know the prospects of any reprised legislation are as dim as ever.


Monday’s tragedy literally hit close to home for those on Capitol Hill, given the proximity of the massacre that claimed 13 lives (including that of the alleged gunman). Discussion in the Senate — which was under a brief lockdown after the shooting — inevitably turned to guns. But it doesn’t figure to last long.


Several lawmakers remarked that the news of a shooter storming into a supposedly secure facility and killing more than a dozen people is unfortunately too familiar. But they surmise that if the Newtown, Conn., attack that left 20 first-graders dead didn’t sway enough members of the Democratic-controlled Senate, what else could?


Sen. Joe Manchin was virtually speechless when asked that question before meeting his colleagues for lunch Tuesday. The West Virginia Democrat’s background-check bill, co-authored by fellow NRA “A-rated” Sen. Pat Toomey, a Republican from Pennsylvania, fell short by six votes last spring.


Manchin said he hopes his bill, or one like it, reaches the upper chamber floor again. But “unless there is desire for a change and people want to change” their votes, there won’t be much movement. The first-term senator and others said they would continue to talk to their colleagues, but noted they are still in the early stages of learning more about the shooter and the possible causes of attack.


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said he would like to bring back the failed legislation — which would have expanded background checks to gun show and Internet sales, but wouldn’t require them for personal sales or loans — but noted that the votes still aren’t there.


The formula for passing any type of legislation related to guns has eluded this Congress, despite political capital spent on the issue by President Obama shortly after his re-election, the push for legislation by some unlikely sources in Congress, supportive polling data on public attitudes, and the passionate lobbying of Newtown families on Capitol Hill and beyond.


California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who has pushed for an assault weapons ban, acknowledged the challenge. “We need 60 votes,” she told reporters outside the Senate chamber. “And to go through it all again, it’s a very emotional discussion because it involves human life — innocent life — and to not be able to succeed is hard.”


After the Navy Yard shooting, the talk on Capitol Hill centered on legislative responses related to mental health and security clearances.


Monday’s alleged shooter reportedly had a history of mental illness and sought treatment from the Department of Veterans Affairs. Aaron Alexis, a former Navy reservist, was previously arrested for gun-related incidents: once for shooting out the tires of someone’s vehicle with a Glock pistol in Seattle and another for shooting a gun inside his apartment in Fort Worth, Texas. He was not charged in either case. He was honorably discharged from the U.S. Navy Reserve in 2011. Officials determined Alexis bought the shotgun he was armed with in Monday’s killings in Lorton, Va., and reportedly had a permit to carry a concealed weapon.


Lawmakers are questioning how Alexis obtained a security clearance, given his past. “When you shoot a guy’s tires out because you’re mad at him, you’re a good candidate to not work in the federal government,” Sen. Lindsey Graham said. “The fact that it never got reported in the system is deeply troubling.” In March, the South Carolina Republican and other lawmakers offered a background check bill dealing with mentally ill potential buyers, but it did not advance. That is the bigger issue, said Graham, who noted, “I don’t think anything has changed on guns.”


The time lapse between Newtown and Navy Yard has revealed several challenges facing advocates of stricter gun laws, in addition to the failure of legislation earlier this year.


A recent blow to their efforts came in Colorado. Earlier in the year, as a response to the Newtown massacre, the state legislature approved a bill requiring universal background checks and banning ammunition magazines that hold more than 15 rounds. Emboldened gun rights supporters gathered enough signatures to recall two legislators who supported the measure, state Senate President Dan Morse and Sen. Angela Giron.


Although gun control advocates outspent recall proponents by a 6-1 margin, Morse and Giron were recalled from their heavily Democratic districts by two and 12 percentage points, respectively. Barack Obama earned nearly 60 percent of the vote in both districts last fall, but enthusiastic turnout from gun rights supporters enabled the recall victories.


Another challenge is time. “Guns have always been very ephemeral for people,” says Lanae Erickson Hatalsky, the director of social policy and politics at Third Way, a center-left think tank that has been tracking the legislation.


“Public attention gets paid to it [after shootings] but then it goes back down. Attention to Newtown lasted longer because of the sheer horrifying nature of the bloodshed. But it’s a fact in politics that people pay attention for a bit, then move on to other issues.”


Erickson Hatalsky pointed out that it took a dozen years to pass the Brady Handgun Violence Protection Act, a 1994 law named for President Ronald Reagan’s press secretary who was shot during a 1981 assassination attempt. “I’m not sure there is anything else that the president or others can do about it except for continuing to make the case that we should keep guns out of the hands of those who shouldn’t have them.”


Cultivating support is made complicated by the full plate of other issues lawmakers are facing — chief among them passing a budget resolution and lifting the debt ceiling by Sept. 30 and mid-October, respectively. A push for a vote on military action in Syria, which was later placed on hold, took up legislative time and political energy. The House will take up the second part of the Farm Bill this week. The Senate is examining energy legislation. Meanwhile, immigration reform remains stalled.


There may be an avenue for extra scrutiny for concealed-carry laws, Erickson Hatalsky said. Alexis reportedly had a permit to carry a weapon that was honored in Texas but not in the District of Columbia. The National Rifle Association has been pushing to expand permits, as the laws widely vary from state to state. An NRA-backed “concealed carry reciprocity” amendment to the background check bill failed by three votes, but if passed it would have required that other states’ concealed-weapons permit laws be honored everywhere.


Notably, though, action on gun issues has taken place only in the Democratic-controlled Senate. The GOP-led House is a different story. Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer said he doesn’t expect to have a vote on any proposals, pointing to the Senate’s failed efforts in April.


The House’s No. 2 Democrat told reporters: “If the past is prologue, our prologue is not very hopeful.”




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Newtown to Navy Yard: Gun Laws Still a Tough Sell