"Lopez, a 34-year-old specialist, served four months in Iraq and was undergoing treatment for mental health issues."
One wonders what happened that he was only downrange for 4 months.
While it does make one wonder, PTSD can happen on day 1 in combat theaters. I'm aware of guys who were attacked and people killed on day 1 when they landed in theater, and on their last day en route to their flight, and every day in between.
We'll soon know the legitimacy of this Soldier's PTSD issues. I hope that this raises awareness to get help - real help - for PTSD sufferers. I hope this does NOT effect gun rights negatively.
I was in Iraq in 2011 and it was still dangerous. A lot of American Soldiers were killed in 2011; albeit not as many as prior years because we had largely withdrawn from the kinetic fight. But I can assure you that the US was still losing Soldiers to snipers, infiltrated bases, mortars, and IEDs. PTSD can happen for a variety of reasons.
According to this site
http://icasualties.org/Iraq/ByYear.aspx
US deaths in Iraq was 54 in 2011, down from 961 in 2007 (during the surge when we had 3 times the number of Soldiers in the height of actual combat operations). Looks like about 200 +/- wounded in Iraq in 2011. So, it was still a dangerous place to be.
The appropriate thing for the military is to actually help these Soldiers. I suspect that this Soldier was getting more harassment than help from people with the attitude that he couldn't possibly have PTSD after only 4 months in Iraq, which is the adult version of bullying - which results in Columbine type situations where the bullied people snap and go on shooting sprees.
I've had clients - hardened combat infantrymen - in my office, have emotional and mental breakdowns and admit they wanted to put a gun in their mouths and end the harassment and torment from their leadership. Unless you have been there, you have no idea nor right to judge what it's like to go through either combat operations or the torment by leadership who don't care or understand or sympathize with junior Soldiers' emotional problems. They can truly be heartless.
According to this article
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/fort-hood-gunman-devastated-mother-death-article-1.1744315
His mother died and he was denied the ability to attend her funeral and was upset by this. That is the harassment I'm talking about. So, they denied him the right to go to his mothers' funeral! I just shake my head. The article goes on to say that he may have been given a 24 hour pass to attend. Seriously, a 24 hour pass to attend an international wedding in Puerto Rico?!?!? What kind of heartless monsters did he work for? What could possibly be so important in 2014 at Ft. Hood to deny this guy a week of leave (you know, that vacation time you save up for and are supposed to be able to use - yet many Soldiers are denied leave so often they lose it, like myself) for an international funeral?
This is a all-too-common tactic for the abusive leadership to deny pass/leave to attend important events like funerals, births, etc. of family members. Many of my clients reported this. Meanwhile, you know darn well that favorite Soldiers and the leaders granting the leave are able to attend. Heck, in 2008, during the Surge, my Brigade Commander went home to attend an Airborne school jump with his son who was in Airborne school. Yet, I know Soldiers during that same era denied leave to attend funerals of close family.
It touches a nerve in me too. I had a client whose dad died out of state, and he was denied a pass or leave to attend the funeral. That client ended up suicidal. He was in very very grim condition for a lot of harassment from the unit leadership. He wrote me a lengthy suicide note and emailed it to me late one night. Long story short, I reached him on the phone on the ledge of a bridge, and literally saved his life by talking him off. This was well documented.
I always took the time and effort to get them help, and get their leadership on board with the program and end the harassment.
IF, and I say IF, this investigations shows that this Soldier had PTSD and his leadership was harassing him, I would hope those leaders are fired from their positions and held legally accountable for contributing to this situation. This is all too common in the Army. This leadership failure across the Army is out of control and partly responsible.
Getting this back onto gun topics, if I were a member of the family-victims I would sue the Government for disarming otherwise law abiding citizens. This is a Constitutional right. I think that lawsuits are the only way to eliminate these gun free zones. Before people chime in about giving up rights, blah blah blah, Soldiers do technically have some rights. Freedom of some speech, although limited, and the enjoyment of most of other Bill of Rights like 4th, 5th and 6th Amendments, 14th, voting rights, etc.