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Walts, posers & wannabes (merged)

Just reading about an amusing exchange on an online dating site in the UK between a walt claiming to be in the Paras, and the sister (I think) of a guy in 2 PARA who figured out he was a lying sack of poo, trashed him online, then shopped him to her brother.

Well done that woman!
 
Anyone familiar with "Capt. Peter. Mason"? Hard to find factual information online.
 
RDJP said:
Anyone familiar with "Capt. Peter. Mason"? Hard to find factual information online.

Its wiki I know but this is all I could find:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Mason
 
Halifax Tar said:
Its wiki I know but this is all I could find:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Mason

Yup, have seen that.  Unfortunately, any hard evidence is really hard to find regarding this gentleman.
 
The original Walter Mitty is making a come back..

http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/secret-life-of-walter-mitty/

Ben Stiller is one of my favorite comedic actors too!
 
Sythen said:
The original Walter Mitty is making a come back..
http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/secret-life-of-walter-mitty/
Ben Stiller is one of my favorite comedic actors too!
I can only assume that James Thurber is rolling in his grave. 
 
Anderson Cooper interviews a Walt:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iD7a9oj-Go8

 
                                      Shared with provisions of The Copyright Act

Combat tales, video have Marines smelling faker
Gina Cavallaro staff writer (14Apr)
http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2012/04/marine-combat-tales-video-marines-smelling-faker-041412w/
(Video link below)
His own brother calls him a fraud. The Marine Corps has no record of him. His war stories don’t add up, and his “war photos” are blurry images of partially hidden faces.

Yet a man from Harrisburg, Pa., with several aliases ended up posing in a video documentary as a Marine first sergeant with harrowing stories of combat, losing friends in battle and the pain of post-traumatic stress disorder.

The eight-minute video — “Soldier On: a conversation with 1st Sgt. Brian Camacho USMC” — was produced in Toronto for MilitaryMinds.ca, an online forum where combat vets can share their stories in the hopes others will break their silence on the burden of PTSD

Several attempts to reach Camacho, whose real name is Brian Khan, were unsuccessful. Emails went unreturned and phone numbers were no longer in service.

Khan reached out to MilitaryMinds in mid-February to the site and found a sympathetic ear in its founder, Cpl. Chris Dupee, an infantryman with the 3rd Royal Canadian Regiment and a veteran of combat in Afghanistan who has been diagnosed with PTSD.

After exchanging messages and calls with Khan, Dupee asked him if he’d travel to Toronto and tell his story on camera.

Dupee raised $1,400 in four hours with a call for donations on his Military Minds Facebook page. Another $300 was raised later.

In Toronto a week later, Dupee and the first sergeant bonded, partied and built a mutual trust. It was all captured on video.

But even as he bonded with the Marine, Dupee said, he had doubts.

“A couple of things did not add up, but we pursued it anyway. He was going to kill himself, and our knowledge of the U.S. military was limited,” Dupee said.

In one instance, Khan told a story of having left the wire for a patrol with a 10-man team and returning with only two. The next time he told it, four had returned.

“I can count every friend I lost over there; it just didn’t sound right,” Dupee said.

Interspersed with footage of real combat, Khan is seen in a red, letterman-style satin jacket bedecked with patches, pins, ribbons and scrolls. In other scenes, he wears a woodland MARPAT uniform with jump wings and a Marine Corps Combatant Diver insignia above the service tape.

“I was attached to a recon unit. Did a lot of special ops, a lot of snatch and grab, a lot of patrols, a lot of security force,” he says as the video opens.

Referring to his purported PTSD, he adds: “This is the hardest fight I’ve ever been in — this is every day. Right now, I would prefer to go in a firefight.”

And smaller details were wrong. For example, Khan uses the Army “hooah” instead of the Marines’ distinctive “oorah” in the video trailer.

But when video director Paulo Rubio asks: “Did you lose any friends?” and Khan replies “Too many to count,” it was, for Rubio, a signal that the first sergeant might be lying.

“I would have [their names] tattooed on my body; I would commemorate every one,” Rubio said as he recalled his reaction to Khan’s vague statement. “Marines know who they’ve lost.”

Days after the video was posted on March 25, vigilant Marines began to call foul, including leaders within F’n Boot, a rough-edged watchdog group of Marines who ruthlessly go after fakers.

“Any Marine knows, just taking one look at that [expletive] video, he’s not a first sergeant,” said an active-duty staff sergeant who contacted Marine Corps Times after he found the video on YouTube. “I don’t know if he’s ever been in, but I can’t find him anywhere.”

And he won’t, because according to Brian Khan’s brother, Ian Khan, the 45-year-old has never served in the military.

“My brother’s a fraud. He’s obsessed with the Marine Corps but he never went in,” Ian Khan said in a phone interview.

It became clear that Camacho was really Brian Khan after a cursory search for him and his likeness online. Though his Facebook page quickly vanished after the fraud was uncovered, videos of him and his kids at a cellphone store in Harrisburg, and his true last name, were an easy match with his kids’ Facebook pages and those of other family members.

At a loss to explain his brother’s eagle, globe and anchor tattoo, Ian Khan said, “It’s all a game to him. He really believes that he went to Iraq and Afghanistan.”

Brian, he said, has also masqueraded as a Marine colonel.

No record of service for Brian Khan or Brian Camacho was found in an inquiry with Manpower and Reserve Affairs.
                            ____________________________________________

Link to video: http://sofrep.com/4957/recon-marine-or-stolen-valor/

Photo:
Canadian Cpl. Chris Dupee with “1st Sgt. Brian Camacho,” an alleged Marine faker whose real name is Brian Khan.
 
Jonathan Idema. What a strange character. He was part walt and part crazy even if he was on the CIA payroll. He should probably be put in the walt hall of fame.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Idema

http://ronbosoldier.blogspot.ie/2011/01/jonathan-keith-idema-jack-black-jack.html
http://theorlandoslantnel.blogspot.ca/2011/10/idema-file.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2012/06/how_to_kill_a_rational_peasant.html
 
Nemo888 said:
Jonathan Idema. What a strange character. He was part walt and part crazy even if he was on the CIA payroll. He should probably be put in the walt hall of fame.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Idema

http://ronbosoldier.blogspot.ie/2011/01/jonathan-keith-idema-jack-black-jack.html
http://theorlandoslantnel.blogspot.ca/2011/10/idema-file.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2012/06/how_to_kill_a_rational_peasant.html

Wow, he's famous. If I tried to pretend to be him, would that make me a walt walt?  ;D
 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/28/supreme-court-stolen-valor-act_n_1614381.html

( US ) Supreme Court Strikes Down Stolen Valor Act: Lies About Military Honors Are No Crime


06/28/2012

WASHINGTON -- Congress improperly criminalized lies about receiving military honors, the Supreme Court ruled on Thursday.

In striking down the Stolen Valor Act, the majority rejected the government's argument that the law, passed in 2006, was written narrowly enough to avoid chilling protected speech. However, the court left open the possibility of Congress crafting a better law, one that doesn't violate the First Amendment.

The decision in U.S. v. Alvarez affirms the ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, which had invalidated Xavier Alvarez's conviction for introducing himself at a 2007 public meeting as a Medal of Honor recipient for his service in the Marines. Alvarez was an elected member of a Los Angeles-area water board -- and, as it turned out, a serial liar -- but he had not received that honor or, indeed, served in the military. He was one of the first individuals to be convicted under the Stolen Valor Act, passed in 2006.

Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the plurality opinion, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor. Justices Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan wrote to concur in the outcome.

"The Nation well knows that one of the costs of the First Amendment is that it protects the speech we detest as well as the speech we embrace," Kennedy wrote. "Though few might find respondent's statements anything but contemptible, his right to make those statements is protected by the Constitution's guarantee of freedom of speech and expression."

The plurality opinion rejected "the notion that false speech should be in a general category that is presumptively unprotected" by the First Amendment.

Kennedy made clear that the justices did not take lightly the sacrifices made by those who have been awarded the Medal of Honor. But he wrote, "The American people do not need the assistance of a government prosecution to express their high regard for the special place that military heroes hold in our tradition. Only a weak society needs government protection or intervention before it pursues its resolve to preserve the truth. Truth needs neither handcuffs nor a badge for its vindication."

Writing for the dissent, Justice Samuel Alito did not share his colleagues' concerns about a slippery slope created by the Stolen Valor Act.

"The plurality additionally worries that a decision sustaining the Stolen Valor Act might prompt Congress and the state legislatures to enact laws criminalizing lies about 'an endless list of subjects.' The plurality apparently fears that we will see laws making it a crime to lie about civilian awards such as college degrees or certificates of achievement in the arts and sports," Alito wrote in an opinion joined by Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas.

But Alito concluded that Congress could appropriately distinguish lies about receiving the Medal of Honor from lies about "even the most prestigious civilian awards."

Erin Mershon contributed to this report.
 
Interesting decision but likely to be completely ignored in light of the other SCOTUS decision today.

Can libel against a "Class" (Military Veterans etc.) be argued ?  (but then that is civil not criminal).
 
Rifleman62 said:
( US ) Supreme Court Strikes Down Stolen Valor Act: Lies About Military Honors Are No Crime...

Perhaps next time, you can increase the font and change the colour in addition to posting an entire article in bold


...that'll make it both more significant....and less worth reading
  :nod:
 
The posted error has been corrected to what I hope meets the impeccable personal standards you survive by.

Please add me to your substantive "Ignore" catalogue, if you have failed to do so already.

I will continue to peruse your terse posts.
 
Rifleman62 said:
The posted error has been corrected to what I hope meets the impeccable personal standards you survive by.

Please add me to your substantive "Ignore" catalogue, if you have failed to do so already.

I will continue to peruse your terse posts.
"...by which you survive."  ;)

If it makes you feel any better, you're not remotely near the "Ignore" list -- only four or five irredeemably stupid people reside there. I generally appreciate your posts.
 
Who are you talking to rifleman62? It's like you're having a conversation with yourself?
 
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