Reprinted in Atlas Shrugs for May 22, 2013
 
 
 
Accused Fort Hood Shooter Paid $278,000 While  Awaiting Trial _NBC_ 
(http://p.feedblitz.com/t2.asp?/26412/13042656/4593422/www.nbcdfw.com/investigations
/Accused-Fort-Hood-Shooter-Paid-278000-While-Awaiting-Trial-208230691.html) 

Injured soldier outraged suspected shooter receives salary  while his 
family financially struggles in recovery

 
Scott Friedman, NBC 5 Investigates 
The Department of Defense confirms to NBC 5 Investigates  that accused Fort 
Hood shooter Major Nidal Hasan has been paid more than  $278,000 since the 
Nov. 5, 2009 shooting that left 13 dead 32 injured.   

The  Department of Defense confirms to NBC 5 Investigates  that accused 
Fort Hood shooter Major Nidal Hasan has now been paid more than  $278,000 since 
the Nov. 5, 2009 shooting that left 13 dead 32 injured. The Army  said 
under the Military Code of Justice, Hasan's salary cannot be suspended  unless 
he is proven guilty.  
If  Hasan had been a civilian defense department employee,  NBC 5 
Investigates has learned, the Army could have  suspended his pay after just 
seven 
days. 
Personnel rules for most civilian government workers allow for  "indefinite 
suspensions" in cases "when the agency has reasonable cause to  believe 
that the employee has committed a crime for which a sentence of  imprisonment 
may be imposed." 
Meanwhile, more than three years later soldiers wounded in the  mass 
shooting are fighting to receive the same pay and medical benefits given to  
those 
wounded in combat. 
Retired Army Spc. Logan Burnett, a reservist who, in 2009, was  soon to be 
deployed to Iraq, was shot three times when a gunman opened fire  inside the 
Army Deployment Center. 
"I honestly thought I was going to die in that  building," said Burnett. 
"Just blood everywhere and then the thought of --  that's my blood 
everywhere." 
Burnett nearly died. He's had more than a dozen surgeries since  the 
shooting, and says post-traumatic stress still keeps him up at night. 
Burnett is now fighting a new battle; only this one is against  the U.S. 
Army. 
The Army has not classified the wounds of the Ft. Hood victims  as "combat 
related" and declines to label the shooting a "terrorist attack." 
The "combat related" designation is an important one, for  without it 
Burnett and other shooting victims are not given combat-related pay,  they are 
not eligible for Purple Heart retirement or medical benefits given to  other 
soldiers wounded either at war or during the Sept. 11, 2001 attack on the  
Pentagon. 
As a result, Burnett, his wife Torey, and the families of  other Fort Hood 
victims miss out on thousands of dollars of potential benefits  and pay 
every year. 
To Burnett the shooting felt like combat. 
"You take three rounds and lose five good friends and  watch seven other 
people get killed in front of you. Do you have another term  that we can 
classify that as?," asked Burnett. 
The Army has categorized the shooting as a case of  "workplace violence." 
"Sickens me. Absolutely sickens me. Workplace  violence? I don't even know 
if I have the words to say," said  Burnett. 
"They don't need to be treated like this. They don't need to  sit and fight 
every day for this benefit or that," said Torey Burnett. 
As that fight continues, Burnett was stunned to see a letter  detailing the 
more $278,000 Hasan has been paid since his arrest.  NBC 5 Investigates 
received the letter from the  Department of Defense in response to a request 
under the Freedom of Information  Act. 
"There have been times when my wife and I cannot afford  groceries. We 
cannot afford gas in our car,"Burnett said. "Literally, times  where we ate 
Ramen noodles for weeks on end. This [that Hasan is still earning a  paycheck] 
makes me sick to my stomach," said Burnett. 
Burnett isn't alone in his outrage. 
"We're giving the defendant in this case every benefit of the  doubt. But 
yet we're not giving the benefits to the victims," said Rep. Thomas  Rooney 
(R) Florida 
Rooney, a former prosecutor at Fort Hood, recently signed a  bi-partisan 
letter urging defense secretary Chuck Hagel to "...reclassify the  victims' 
deaths and injuries as 'combat related'..." 
The letter said the current situation has "...resulted in an  embarrassing 
lack of care and treatment for the victims and their families." 
"What happened here is not a case of workplace violence. What  happened 
here was an attack on our military by a terrorist element specifically  
targeting our military, which just so happened to be in the United States of  
America," said Rooney. 
Reports from the Federal Bureau of Investigation showed Hasan  was 
communicating with a member of Al Qaida prior to the shooting. Additionally,  
the 
government's National Counterterrorism Center lists the shooting at Fort  Hood 
as a "high fatality terrorist attack." 
Rooney said he's also willing to consider whether Congress  should change 
the rules, so the Army could suspend the pay of soldiers arrested  for crimes 
against fellow soldiers.

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