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  • This POS lied about being a wounded warrior




    Last weekend, William Colvard's wedding was news.



    Today, it still is...*but for a different reason.

    It turns out he's not the "wounded warrior" he's been saying he was.

    Colvard's wedding was the subject of two television stories on Saturday, and Colvard and his bride celebrated the nuptials they never had five years ago when they were married. The reason, the story went:*He had*been injured in combat in Iraq, and they couldn't afford a ceremony.

    Now, Colvard says he was never injured in combat, and apologizes to a number of people he's been lying to for the last several years.

    WFAA

    Paradise Cove owner Tina Nealy arranged for William Colvard to have a wedding free of charge.

    "I feel violated. I feel completely violated," said Tina Nealy, who*owns Paradise Cove, a wedding venue on Lake Grapevine.

    She volunteered to throw a wedding with all the trimmings for the Colvards when she heard their story.*Even after Nealy's facility was destroyed by floods, she pulled strings with her friends in the wedding trade to make sure the Colvards got a venue;*food;*a cake;*flowers;*and a photographer — all*for free.

    "Their time was donated thinking they were doing the right thing for a wounded warrior," Nealy said.

    WFAA

    "I feel completely violated," said Paradise Cove owner Tina Nealy.

    Colvard was living on a legend that had begun at least two years ago, when he was honored in a "McAfee Military Moment" celebration at a Frisco Rough Riders game.

    "In March of 2008, his convoy was hit by a roadside bomb which caused the Humvee he was in to roll over," a news release said. "He [Colvard]*suffered burns, a separated shoulder and hearing loss."

    The Rough Riders said the news*release was based on an interview with Colvard, he approved it, and was there when it was read at the baseball game.

    Colvard now concedes to News 8 that he was lying.

    He was never injured in a bombed convoy, he said. He said he hurt his shoulder diving over a wall at Camp Taji, a large base in Iraq. Records show he was in the National Guard, and spent seven months on active duty in Iraq. He spent an additional 17 months in rehabilitation in San Antonio, he said.



    Records indicate he was honorably discharged five years ago.

    It's not clear if Colvard is a wounded warrior, even though he has a "Wounded Warrior" medallion on his pickup truck. Congress defines a wounded warrior as a combatant with a 30 percent disability. Colvard did not describe the permanence of his injury;*he now describes himself as an "injured veteran."



    William Covard's pickup truck bears a "Wounded Warrior Edition" emblem.

    Colvard declined to be interviewed on camera. He apologized for lying about his record, but it appears that he continued to embellish his injuries as recently as last Sunday. He told professionals at his wedding*that his Humvee was bombed in a convoy, when the road he was travelling on was not secured.

    It was a "very extensive conversation," Tina Nealy said.

    She has*donated two other weddings to wounded warriors, and says*she will ask more questions the next time around.

    "I will ask for documentation for sure," Nealy said.*"But I'll still give. It's not going to stop me from helping a wounded warrior*—*no way."




    now this story makes me sick.

  • #2
    Why did he not just tell the real story? Camp Taji was fairly hot there for several months when I was working over there. Why make up a story? Guess I'll never get it.

    17 months in rehab is a long time unless he was just milking it.
    Originally posted by MR EDD
    U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

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    • #3
      I hate to discount anyone who served in the armed forces, but can someone explain to me how a cook in the military can get PTSD?

      "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Baron Von Crowder View Post
        I hate to discount anyone who served in the armed forces, but can someone explain to me how a cook in the military can get PTSD?

        http://www.watertowndailytimes.com/a...WS03/706029889
        I know someone who was diagnosed with PTSD because they stayed up too long playing call of duty.. Some people have fragile minds.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Baron Von Crowder View Post
          I hate to discount anyone who served in the armed forces, but can someone explain to me how a cook in the military can get PTSD?

          http://www.watertowndailytimes.com/a...WS03/706029889
          The same way supply guys get it while never seeing combat and only being deployed for 6 months in a combat free zone.
          Putting warheads on foreheads since 2004

          Pro-Touring Build

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Z06killinsbf View Post
            The same way supply guys get it while never seeing combat and only being deployed for 6 months in a combat free zone.
            and that is?
            "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

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            • #7
              Originally posted by baron von crowder View Post
              and that is?
              pfm
              Putting warheads on foreheads since 2004

              Pro-Touring Build

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Baron Von Crowder View Post
                I hate to discount anyone who served in the armed forces, but can someone explain to me how a cook in the military can get PTSD?

                http://www.watertowndailytimes.com/a...WS03/706029889
                PTSD isn't reserved for military members

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Baron Von Crowder View Post
                  I hate to discount anyone who served in the armed forces, but can someone explain to me how a cook in the military can get PTSD?
                  There isn't really such a thing as just a cook in the military. Sure there are people with a food service specialist MOS but they do whatever job their unit assigns them.

                  Think of a unit like the 82nd Airborne. Most people probably just assume it's a bunch of guys that jump out of airplanes and start shooting. Which yeah that's what the unit does but in order to do that mission they bring along an entire support system and are able to operate completely on their own if necessary. They have their own trucks which means they have their own drivers and they have their own mess facilities which means they have their own cooks. Those cooks are probably cross trained to drive trucks which means they are going to be part of a convoy. They'll definitely be cross trained with squad based infantry tactics and in combat zones will be armed.

                  Take Jessica Lynch as an example. Her job was a 92Y which is a unit supply specialist. The closest thing to a civilian job I can think of would like a stocker at a grocery store. However when we are invading a country those stockers have to move items through hostile areas and carry weapons and body armor like every other soldier. The cooks have to move their kitchens and other gear through the same areas.

                  I know an army cook with half a dozen combat tours btw. He's currently a personal chef for a 2 star general. I also know one that just finished a tour on board a navy destroyer in the Persian Gulf.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by BP View Post
                    There isn't really such a thing as just a cook in the military. Sure there are people with a food service specialist MOS but they do whatever job their unit assigns them.

                    Think of a unit like the 82nd Airborne. Most people probably just assume it's a bunch of guys that jump out of airplanes and start shooting. Which yeah that's what the unit does but in order to do that mission they bring along an entire support system and are able to operate completely on their own if necessary. They have their own trucks which means they have their own drivers and they have their own mess facilities which means they have their own cooks. Those cooks are probably cross trained to drive trucks which means they are going to be part of a convoy. They'll definitely be cross trained with squad based infantry tactics and in combat zones will be armed.

                    Take Jessica Lynch as an example. Her job was a 92Y which is a unit supply specialist. The closest thing to a civilian job I can think of would like a stocker at a grocery store. However when we are invading a country those stockers have to move items through hostile areas and carry weapons and body armor like every other soldier. The cooks have to move their kitchens and other gear through the same areas.

                    I know an army cook with half a dozen combat tours btw. He's currently a personal chef for a 2 star general. I also know one that just finished a tour on board a navy destroyer in the Persian Gulf.
                    Thanks, I didnt really think of it that way.

                    It says this guy was infantry, I guess I didnt think about the ramifications of that. My brother was 31W, and since he was infantry trained, he was placed into a top gunner position, and where his worst sights were seen.
                    "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Baron Von Crowder View Post
                      Thanks, I didnt really think of it that way.

                      It says this guy was infantry, I guess I didnt think about the ramifications of that. My brother was 31W, and since he was infantry trained, he was placed into a top gunner position, and where his worst sights were seen.
                      As another example my wife is a medical nutritionist (68M) and part of the 1st Medical Brigade. Her supply sergeant was killed sitting at the staff desk they all have to do rotations at. That and her car had blood splatter and one of the doors was hit with a bullet. She could easily have PTSD as a result of "workplace violence", a lot of others in her company do.

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                      • #12
                        PTSD is an over diagnosed crutch for too many people.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by inline 6 View Post
                          PTSD is an over diagnosed crutch for too many people.
                          I've thought that about a few people until I got to know them.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Baron Von Crowder View Post
                            I hate to discount anyone who served in the armed forces, but can someone explain to me how a cook in the military can get PTSD?

                            http://www.watertowndailytimes.com/a...WS03/706029889

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by diablo rojo View Post
                              Is that svo??
                              sigpic

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