Posted on Sep 4, 2015
Stolen valor a victimless nuisance? A soldier's war lie unravels 8 years later, opening old wounds.
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“Really, bro? I hope the lie was worth it … I know for a fact that you were not there when Wilson died, I know that you didn’t hold him, and I know that he did not even have a [expletive] stomach wound!”
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Sgt. Christopher Wilson’s mother had no reason to distrust the soldier and his vivid story of her son’s death in Afghanistan.
Spc. Brandon Garrison found her in the dark days afterward and provided the details — the details a mother fears but needs — of Wilson’s last moments after a Taliban attack in Korengal Valley in March 2007.
The futile attempt to save Wilson, the blood, the coldness of imminent death. It was all there in Garrison’s account, and he provided the memories she clung to for years.
“I just needed to know. It is a knife wound so deep you just have to know every aspect or you can’t breathe,” Wilson’s mother, Ilka Halliday said.
Except none of it was true.
Garrison’s war lies are unraveling, eight years later, after soldiers who were with Wilson when he died came forward.
Garrison was not by Wilson’s side when he died, and had instead spent his Afghanistan deployment inside the wire as a vehicle parts clerk.
The false story of the infantry soldier’s death has exposed the pain such deceit can cause for survivors. For Wilson’s mother and his family, the sting of lies and loss has not been diminished by the passing of years.
But the lie has also unearthed questions about Garrison’s other war claims and cast a shadow over the well-meaning support he has received as a wounded veteran.
In Kansas, where he lives, 29-year-old Garrison is well-known as a combat vet who walks with a cane and has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury and other health problems he says are related to burn-pit exposure. He recently received a donated home based on his status as an honorably discharged veteran and was given a service dog.
To some who served with him in Afghanistan, he was a lackluster soldier who lied about his Army war record and embellished his combat injuries.
His supervisor in Korengal Valley called him a "compulsive liar."
--------> Full story at
http://www.stripes.com/news/special-reports/features/a-soldier-s-war-lie-unravels-8-years-later-opening-old-wounds-1.365955
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Sgt. Christopher Wilson’s mother had no reason to distrust the soldier and his vivid story of her son’s death in Afghanistan.
Spc. Brandon Garrison found her in the dark days afterward and provided the details — the details a mother fears but needs — of Wilson’s last moments after a Taliban attack in Korengal Valley in March 2007.
The futile attempt to save Wilson, the blood, the coldness of imminent death. It was all there in Garrison’s account, and he provided the memories she clung to for years.
“I just needed to know. It is a knife wound so deep you just have to know every aspect or you can’t breathe,” Wilson’s mother, Ilka Halliday said.
Except none of it was true.
Garrison’s war lies are unraveling, eight years later, after soldiers who were with Wilson when he died came forward.
Garrison was not by Wilson’s side when he died, and had instead spent his Afghanistan deployment inside the wire as a vehicle parts clerk.
The false story of the infantry soldier’s death has exposed the pain such deceit can cause for survivors. For Wilson’s mother and his family, the sting of lies and loss has not been diminished by the passing of years.
But the lie has also unearthed questions about Garrison’s other war claims and cast a shadow over the well-meaning support he has received as a wounded veteran.
In Kansas, where he lives, 29-year-old Garrison is well-known as a combat vet who walks with a cane and has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury and other health problems he says are related to burn-pit exposure. He recently received a donated home based on his status as an honorably discharged veteran and was given a service dog.
To some who served with him in Afghanistan, he was a lackluster soldier who lied about his Army war record and embellished his combat injuries.
His supervisor in Korengal Valley called him a "compulsive liar."
--------> Full story at
http://www.stripes.com/news/special-reports/features/a-soldier-s-war-lie-unravels-8-years-later-opening-old-wounds-1.365955
Posted 9 y ago
Responses: 14
It took me a while to read the full story, a few times I had to look away because I could feel my blood pressure rising. Do you know why there is a VA Backlog? Because of guys like this and others that fill the claim center with claim after claim after claim for things that they make up. Do you want to know why a lot of great support organizations for Veterans are having a hard time raising funds to provide the critical and necessary support? Because of guys like this one taking large gifts based on lies. Want to know why so many Veterans do not want to go to the VA for treatment for PTSD? Because of guys like this one that make it seem that PTSD is just one of those things you come back with. Want to know why Stolen Valor is not a victimless crime? Because of this guy telling this fallen Soldier's mother lies and putting images of her dying son in her mind that never happened.
Come on bro, you served. You deployed. You did a critical mission to allow others the chance to hunt and kill the bad guys. Without your work, their HMMWVs would not have been running. Be proud of that! No need to go around making yourself look like GI Joe!
Come on bro, you served. You deployed. You did a critical mission to allow others the chance to hunt and kill the bad guys. Without your work, their HMMWVs would not have been running. Be proud of that! No need to go around making yourself look like GI Joe!
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SSG Warren Swan
MSG (Join to see) - They need to take all the free sh*t he got and give it to a troop that actually deserves it, and earned it. And to make it good force this a**clown to give it away personally.
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SGT Ben Keen
MSG (Join to see) - I agree, he isn't proud. The question will now become will he stop or continue with his lies and say it's part of his service connected injury. Last time I checked, IEDs, PRGs and AK47s don't make you liar.
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PO1 John Miller
SGT Ben Keen
People like this guy is partially the reason why I refuse to be diagnosed (and possibly treated) for PTSD myself. I think I do have it, but not on the same level that other vets do. I was never in a fire fight, never saw my friends get killed/blown up, etc. I believe that PTSD treatment should be for those types of men and women, and also victims of sexual assault who develop PTSD.
People like this guy is partially the reason why I refuse to be diagnosed (and possibly treated) for PTSD myself. I think I do have it, but not on the same level that other vets do. I was never in a fire fight, never saw my friends get killed/blown up, etc. I believe that PTSD treatment should be for those types of men and women, and also victims of sexual assault who develop PTSD.
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Man this guy needs to do time. Wouldn't this me along the same lines a Stolen Valor?
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Oh oh oh. I want to meet this "Vet" and have a nice little chat with him and do certain things with his cane.
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