Posted on 04/03/2008 9:35:22 AM PDT by DCBryan1
Is it possible he has just lied about his birthday (not wanting to reveal his age) and not the rest?
Mistaken identity - Hillary Clinton won the Navy Cross in Korea.
I read recently about a man who was convicted for falsley claiming to have won some medal while serving in the military - so, there could be legal ramifications.
See the book Fake Warriors for advice.
He sounds like a piker - perhaps a real Navy vet could engage him in conversation - a fake will be found out within minutes.
maybe he just “misspoke” when he refuses to bring it in or asks, “Whats a DD-214?”
The fact that this guy is claiming to have won a Navy Cross as a pilot at the age of 15 is egregious and may violate federal law.
Our new electrical specialist claimed to have once belonged to the 75th Ranger Division and that he was also the seventh highest decorated soldier still alive. He also claimed to have a Kentucky Master Electrician's license.
The first claim was easy to disprove, as there was never a Ranger division, and we do have a documented Ranger who works for us and two others who were attached to Ranger units on a temporary basis (one was a medic and the other a translator).
The second claim was even easier to disprove, as there were about one hundred thirty Medal of Honor recipients still alive at the time, and his claims of having four Distinguished Service Crosses just didn't ring true.
And finally, his claim to be a master electrician quickly came unraveled when he couldn't answer the simplest questions about electricity.
He quit about fifteen minutes before he was going to be called to the back and fired for lying on his application.
You can "revise memories" with this stuff.
If you do a Google.com search there ought to be several pieces in the first 10 hits that refer you to its use in psychiatry.
BTW, it can "delete memories", and "add memories", all in the hands of an experienced professional (of some kind).
Probably the reason Hillary thinks she was under fire in Bosnia ~ ever check how many face lifts and tooth jobs she's had done ~ it's incredible. If this is her anesthetic of choice she's developed an interesting set of beliefs based on what the dentist told her (while under), what he had on TV or radio as "background noise" at the time, or maybe what Bill Clinton wanted her to believe ~ yeah, an auxiliary to "date rape drug", the "forgeddabout it drug" for your spouse!
Remember, these people have no morals or scruples so anything is possible.
Back to the guy at work, as I recall what gets these guys busted is when they start wearing pieces of uniforms with insignia, or various awards. The awards are protected by law.
About telling tall tales about military service, not real sure that such behavior in the absence of the insignias and awards are actionable.
Also, the age you are setting for this guy puts him well within the range of Alzheimers. He may very well not be able to differentiate between memories of what he did and what he saw on TV.
With folks who are "elderly" or nearly so, it's probably best to avoid the prosecutorial route as a first course of action.
Behind The Bridges at Toko-ri - true facts behind fictional book by James A. Michener
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0IAX/is_3_84/ai_108548248
I own a company and periodically get potential employees claiming military service on their resumes (and I admittedly favor recruiting them).
No claims of medal-of-honor guys, but I’d sure like to be able to check if they got a proper discharge.
The DOD has never been particularly helpful in this regard, essentially demanding a release from the potential employee and a six-eight week waiting period.
Stolen Valor Act of 2005 - Amends the federal criminal code to expand the prohibition against wearing, manufacturing, or selling military decorations or medals without legal authorization to prohibit purchasing, soliciting, mailing, shipping, importing, exporting, producing blank certificates of receipt for, advertising, trading, bartering, or exchanging such decorations or medals without authorization.
Prohibits falsely representing oneself as having been awarded any decoration or medal authorized by Congress for the Armed Forces or any of the service medals or badges.
Increases penalties for violations if the offense involves a distinguished service cross, an Air Force Cross, a Navy Cross, a silver star, or a Purple Heart.
Under the Stolen Valor Act, falsely claiming to have received the Navy Cross, Air Force Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Silver Star or Purple Heart would double the maximum penalty to up to a year in prison, bringing those medals in line with the Medal of Honor.
I am probably the only person I know personally, including some that I know served in the military, that could produce a DD-214 without having to order a copy from the Department of Defense.
I posted the link in case anyone was interested in what inspired Michener.
Man, I was what, the eighth poster hitting that link? LOL! I'm gittin' slow...
The guy is a fake. Expose him.
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