Act Don't Wait
November 5, 2009 | Ft Carson, Colorado | Vetting explained
In 2004, I took actions that prevented an Army Base shooting by a distressed major.
I worked for her as a sergeant for a few months at the SRP taking care of deploying and redeploying soldiers. I noticed that she started acting odd and losing friends. She started making the statements "I am not suicidal, I am homicidal." At a medical clinic you really don't expect the care provider to be the unstable one. She was an Army Nurse Case Manager.
She asked me to report to her quarters after work to help her prepare for a late meeting. When I arrived I noticed a 9MM automatic pistol with several loaded spare magazines. She told me she was going to take the weapon to her meeting and finish off her chain-of-command who she did not think were supporting her.
I talked her into not taking the gun and called MP's as soon as I could.
This is just my message to let all know Army stress at a center where you send people to war is just as great as going to the war zone. No soldier likes to send another off to war.
Up Date: I saw on the news the shooter today actually targeted his victims. The Nurse I kept from shooting others had a list in her hand of who she was going to kill.
- Posted in Assignment:
- Fort Hood shooting
iReport welcomes a lively discussion, so comments on iReports are not pre-screened before they post. See the iReport community guidelines for details about content that is not welcome on iReport.
What is iReport?
-
Share
Tell a story, offer an opinion, say what's important to you.
-
Discuss
Join the conversation on the day's big issues.
-
Be heard
The best iReports get vetted and used on CNN platforms.
The label “Not vetted by CNN” lets you know that this story hasn’t been both checked and cleared by a CNN editor.
iReport stories that have a red "CNN iReport" stamp in the corner have been vetted and
cleared. That means they've been selected and approved by a CNN producer to use on CNN,
on air, or on any of CNN's platforms.







Comments