http://www.gazette.com/display.php?sid=871583<<As Army officials try to figure out what led a Green Beret based at Fort Carson to kill himself Sunday, veteran advocates say soldiers returning from war aren’t getting the help they need.
Chief Warrant Officer William Howell, 36, shot himself in the head outside his Monument home during a confrontation with police. Authorities had been called to the house by his distraught wife, who said the couple were having an argument.
Howell had been home for three weeks after serving a 10-month tour in Iraq with an elite fighting unit that experienced heavy combat, according to Maj. Robert Gowan, spokesman for the Army’s Special Forces.
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... At least 23 service members have committed suicide during the past year in Iraq, Robinson said. At least six service members, not including Howell, killed themselves since returning home, he said.
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Others have suggested a connection between the antimalaria drug, Lariam, and the rising suicide rate. Critics of the drug blame it for a cluster of homicides at Fort Bragg involving soldiers who had returned from Afghanistan.
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Staff Sgt. Georg-Andreas Pogany, a Fort Carson soldier charged with cowardice, thinks the drug affected his behavior.
Pogany took the drug four times, including Sept. 29, when he saw the body of an Iraqi man killed by U.S. forces. Pogany felt the onset of a panic attack and feared he was headed for a nervous breakdown. His unit didn’t give him treatment that soldiers who experience combat stress are required to get, he said.
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Howell’s funeral is set for Friday morning. >>>