Appellate Court Rules Poor VA Mental-Health Care for Vets Is Unconstitutional

Matthew and April Magdzas walk with their daughter Lila on Park Point Beach in Duluth, Minn., on Aug. 14, 2010, three days before he took all their lives despite frequent VA care / Courtesy of the family

The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq potentially got a lot more costly Tuesday. That’s because a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco has concluded that the Department of Veterans Affairs’ treatment of mentally-ailing vets is so poor it is unconstitutional.

“Among other issues, Veterans ask us to decide whether these delays violate veterans’ due process rights to receive the care and benefits they are guaranteed by statute for harms and injuries sustained while serving our country,” the three-panel judge ruled unanimously. “We conclude that they do.”

It is a far-reaching decision that could prove exceptionally costly for the country, if the plaintiffs — a pair of veterans’ groups — and the VA can’t come to an agreement. The panel ordered a federal district judge — who had tossed the lawsuit out in 2008 — to work with both sides and try to hammer out a new mental-health treatment plan.

The plaintiffs are Veterans for Common Sense, in Washington, D.C., and Veterans United for Truth, based in California. The three-judge panel included Chief Judge Alex Kozinski, appointed to the bench by President Reagan, and a pair of judges — Procter Hug Jr. and Stephen Reinhardt — appointed by President Carter. Reinhardt wrote the toughly-worded decision, which was hailed by veterans. “This decision hopefully will serve as a model for veterans in the future, and as a testament to the bond of faith between our citizens and the defenders of our freedom,” said Gordon Erspamer, who argued the case before the panel on behalf of the veterans’ groups. The VA and Justice Department had no immediate comment.

The jurists went resolutely through the evidence and said they could reach no other decision. About five of every 18 veterans who kill themselves each day are under the VA’s care, the court said. “Although the VA is obligated to provide veterans mental health services, many veterans with severe depression or post-traumatic stress disorder (`PTSD’) are forced to wait weeks for mental health referrals and are given no opportunity to request or demonstrate their need for expedited care,” the decision said. “The delays have worsened in recent years, as the influx of injured troops returning from deployment in Iraq and Afghanistan has placed an unprecedented strain on the VA, and has overwhelmed the system that it employs to provide medical care to veterans and to process their disability benefits claims.”

The sad fact is that even with VA care veterans can slip through the cracks. We highlighted that in April in a tough story about Matthew Magdzas, a Superior, Wis., National Guardsman who killed himself — and his pregnant wife and baby daughter — last August after 10 visits with the VA in the two weeks before they died. One thing I have gleaned from reporting on the mental-health woes of returning troops is that sometimes treatment is as much art as science. Different therapies, in a variety of combinations, work in different ways on different veterans. Sometimes, nothing seems to work. No court ruling will change that.

The judges said they had to step in to guarantee the rights that both the President and the Congress are responsible for providing. “We willingly acknowledge that, in theory, the political branches of our government are better positioned than are the courts to design the procedures necessary to save veterans’ lives and to fulfill our country’s obligation to care for those who have protected us,” they said. “But that is only so if those governmental institutions are willing to do their job.”

The court’s conclusion at the end of its 104-page decision is blunt:

The United States Constitution confers upon veterans and their surviving relatives a right to the effective provision of mental health care and to the just and timely adjudication of their claims for health care and service-connected death and disability benefits…their entitlements to the provision of health care and to veterans’ benefits are property interests protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The deprivation of those property interests by delaying their provision, without justification and without any procedure to expedite, violates veterans’ constitutional rights. Because neither Congress nor the Executive has corrected the behavior that yields these constitutional violations, the courts must provide the plaintiffs with a remedy.

But the federal judiciary doesn’t have to pay the bills. As someone who has covered the mental ills of U.S. vets since 9/11, the court has stepped up to the plate in an admirable way. There’s just one problem: the nation can’t afford to make whole the veterans whose brains and minds have been bruised and mashed by these wars. The repeated deployments have taken a toll that can never been fixed, no matter how much money is thrown at it. But such care can be dramatically improved.

This, of course, is the downside of the “long war” advocates of the current U.S. strategy have been pushing since 9/11. The weight of the war has rested on the narrow shoulders of the 1 percent of the nation with loved ones actually fighting it. Never have so few fought for so long, on behalf of so many who were asked to do so little in return. Part of the strong support for soldiers’ sacrifices is rooted in the guilt that comes from knowing someone else is doing your dirty work — a problem compounded when the war is fought with borrowed money as federal taxes are cut. “Wars, including wars of choice, have many costs,” the judges noted. “Affording our veterans their constitutional rights is a primary one.”

Related Topics: Military, Military Benefits, Military Health, Military Mental Health, National Security, Troops, Veterans
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  • http://driftingspecter.wordpress.com driftingspecter

    This is excellent news!! The stigma associated with mental health issues in our society is a travesty!! The fact that we place our military people in such difficult situations and then ignore the resulting mental health issues is nothing short of criminal!!

    For once I am proud to be an American… I am proud of a courageous, independent judiciary that will not let these heroes… these lives be swept under the table just because they are inconvenient…

  • pitbullstew

    Oh- hey, cool the courts have weighed in on behalf of all the new vets who have been shorted by the VA…er uh, has anyone seen the agent orange case papers laying about anyhwere? after all they have been in the works for 40 years after appeal and appeals yet again by the companies that made the stuff? While you are at it? Do you think you could rustle up all those delay-deny-defend cases for PTSD and other claims that the VA systematically rejected for the last 4 decades as well?
    Gosh I hate to be a pest but, you see the rest of us are getting kind of old now, as the WWII crowd as had a long cool drink at the trough of their lush beneifts instead as my generation has been neglected?
    A crust of bread sir?

  • http://arae888.wordpress.com arae888

    Call 1-800-273-TALK (8255). It isn’t a long-term solution to this problem, but we’re here to listen until there is a solution.

  • http://billlittle09.wordpress.com billlittle09

    UNBELIEVABLE! Once again some idiots pretending to be judges read fiction into the Constitution. There is no guarantee to health care of any kind to anyone. This is another example of our communist overseers (judges) forcing their will onto the population in total disregard to the law of the land. I have great respect for the military and certainly those who have been injured should be cared for. We have a moral obligation but not a legal one. This sickens me! Wait! I guess that means the taxpayers should pay for me to stay home and reflect on life as I am ill and have a Constitutional right to feel good about life. After all, the pretend evaluation of the Constitution did not mention “for vets only”. It is time we send all judges packing.

  • http://pippilongsausage.wordpress.com pippilongsausage

    @billlittle09 – your asinine response is a perfect example of how the political right is so misguided and anti-American.

    …this medical care is a CONTRACT, clearly spelled out when a person signs up for the military… in your haste to make sure that not one human being gets one little bitty bit of your dollars you’ve completely decided not to consider this fact.

    as for me…i’m 100% behind you Vets…give em hell and hoo-rah!!!!!!

  • http://kenmiller95.wordpress.com ablebaker49

    It’s too bad us Vietnam vets had absolutely NO support from our government nor it’s citizens when we came home. Most of us had no choice in our futures, as there was a draft in efffect, and as Americans we didn’t run to Canada but did our duty. We got back with numerous problems concerning our health. Not just PTSD but exposure to chemicals, and other physical and psycological problems.

    I knew I had problems coping with coming back to civillian life, and went to the VA for help, only to be bumped to the rear by WW 2, and Korean vets who basically were treated a hell of alot better than the Vietnam vets. I went to get medical help at MY OWN expense, and tried to get by as best I could under the circumstances.

    It wasn’t much help either when every time you turned on the news there was always some newscaster slamming the latest on some Vietnam vet going off on someone or us being called baby killers, dopers, and out of control vets in general. Hell I stopped putting my military service on employment applications because of all the discrimination toward vets in the early 70s.

    The VA is incapable of serving it’s veterans with any kind of mental health issues. They mostly want to dope you up, and hope you’ll “off yourself” in the interim so it’s on less vet to worry about. I really feel for the vets of today and can only say that the young guys better take a good look at their peers that are in the service now before enlisting for the same results.

    You won’t be able to keep a job, you’ll probably lose your wife and family, you’ll be alienated by family and friends, you’ll abuse drugs or alcohol, you may be inclined to be violent back in society, and your whole outlook on your future and life in general will be changed for the worst. No matter how hard you try to forget, it won’t help, and you most likely will become another statistic in a suicide, murder conviction, or homelessness.

  • textee

    So-called, self-described “judge” Reinhardt is a sworn enemy of the United States of America, the United States Constitution and the rule of law. The whack job, leftist loon and his fellow, lawless, so-called “judge” Hug in their “toughly-worded decision” (barf!) actually think that they (two unelected, anti-American radicals) were granted the power to establish and run the VA in the manner that they choose, notwithstanding the fact that they have no such authority.

  • http://abnranger1947.wordpress.com abnranger1947

    You sir are the idiot. Just as members active duty members of the armed forces who protect this country and the Constitution have a sworn legal right to do so, this country has not only the moral but the legal right, as well, to provide timely and competent medical care for those men and women who sustain injury in the performance of their duty. PERIOD! Any deviation from this responsibility is immoral. The members of our armed forces serve to protect your freedom, sir, and your attitude is selfish in the extreme and I suggest that you sit down and shut-up.

  • http://abnranger1947.wordpress.com abnranger1947

    Far from being “anti-American leftist loon whack jobs,” these judges had the moral courage to remind both our elected federal representatives and the VA of their moral and legal responsibilities toward the men and women who serve this country in its armed forces. Your tea-bagger attitude is not only ignorant, it’s cowardly.

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