SBAND Seminar Materials 2013 Free Ethics: Echoes of War The Combat Veteran | Page 2

I.   Overview1   More  than  2.6  million  Americans  have  now  served  in  Iraq  or  Afghanistan.2  Only   about  half  of  these  troops,  it  found,  had  reported  or  sought  help  for  their  condition.   Untreated,  many  of  these  psychologically  injured  veterans  are  acting  out  in  reckless,  self-­? destructive  and,  sometimes,  violent  ways  that  bring  them  into  contact  with  the  criminal   justice  system.    History  tells  us  that  as  the  wars  in  Iraq  and  Afghanistan  wind  down,  the   numbers  of  troubled  veterans  flooding  into  our  criminal  courts  will  swell.    Our  criminal   justice  system  must  be  better  prepared  than  previous  generations.         A. PTSD’s  Emerging  History     Emerging  historical  research  reveals  a  pattern  of  traumatized  combat  veterans   surfacing  in  the  criminal  justice  system  following  every  major  American  conflict.    Though   many  people  at  the  time  were  are  aware  of  the  problem,  open  discussion  was  considered   taboo  and  substantial  efforts  were  often  made  to  sweep  the  issue  under  the  rug.           Unfortunately,  veterans  of  past  conflicts  were  sometimes  treated  quite  harshly   when  their  psychological  injuries  led  them  into  criminal  behavior.    This  was  particularly   true  in  the  wake  of  Vietnam  when  hundreds  of  thousands  of  psychologically  injured   veterans  returned  home  to  a  largely  hostile  American  public  who  had  come  to  blame  them   for  an  unpopular  war.    These  veterans  were  often  stigmatized  and  literally  discarded  when   their  psychological  injuries  led  to  criminal  behavior.    Even  now,  more  than  30  years  after   that  war,  hundreds  of  thousands  of  Vietnam  veterans  remain  incarcerated,  homeless,   and/or  chemically  addicted  across  America.    Our  society  has  paid  a  staggering  price  for  our   abandonment  of  the  Vietnam  generation.    The  side  effects  of  their  untreated  trauma  have   cost  us  in  many  unforeseen  ways.    Countless  families  have  been  destroyed,  jobs  lost,  and   taxpayer  dollars  spent  on  treatment  that  came  too  late  to  make  a  difference  for  many.    This   is  particularly  tragic  in  the  criminal  justice  context  where  early  criminal  charges  could  have   These  CLE/CEU  materials  provide  a  brief  overview  of  the  unique  problems  facing  criminally-­?involved  veterans   with  service-­?related  disorders  and  how  the  mental  health  and  criminal  justice  systems  can  more  effectively  deal   with  them.    For  a  much  more  thorough  treatment  of  these  issues,  see  the  ATTORNEY’S  GUIDE  TO  DEFENDING  VETERANS  IN   CRIMINAL  COURT  (Brockton  D.  Hunter  ed.,  2013).     2 INSTITUTE  OF  MEDICINE  OF  THE  NATIONAL  ACADEMIES,  TREATMENT  FOR  POSTTRAUMATIC  STRESS  DISORDER  IN  MILITARY  AND   VETERAN  POPULATIONS:  INITIAL  ASSESSMENT,  39  (2012). 1 2