New Program Addresses Military Sexual Trauma Among Women Veterans

The Department of Veterans Assistance launched a new program that aims to support women veterans, especially those who have experienced military sexual trauma.

People of all backgrounds experience sexual violence, but sexual harassment and assault against women veterans is especially pervasive.

According to the United States Department of Veteran Affairs, one in three women veterans report experiencing sexual violence during their military service.

To provide resources that better address military sexual trauma, the West Virginia Department of Veterans Assistance has launched a new Women Veterans Program.

The program will be led by Jessica Lynch, a West Virginia resident who was taken as a prisoner of war in Iraq in 2003.

Lynch joined Gov. Jim Justice’s virtual press briefing Wednesday to share news of the program’s launch, and her hopes for what it can accomplish.

“It’s going to be a very exciting job that I’m willing to take on, and I hope that we are able to reach more women veterans across the state,” she said.

Edward Diaz, cabinet secretary for the Department of Veterans Assistance, said addressing gaps in resources for survivors of military sexual abuse was a top priority entering his current position.

Women veterans are “just so much more likely to have experienced sexual harassment, sexual assault and, of course, unfortunately, rape,” he said. “It needs to be addressed not only on a national level, but also within our home state here.”

Diaz said that social stigma surrounding sexual violence often discourages survivors from coming forward and seeking the resources they need.

“A lot of the women who have gone through this — and even men who have gone through this — they aren’t as comfortable talking to male veterans,” he said. “They’re reluctant to come into our offices. They’re reluctant to come in for assistance.”

Plans for program outreach remain under development. But the Department of Veterans Assistance plans on hosting community events, and directly contacting local veteran communities around the state.

The goal is to spread awareness about the resources available to survivors, and help them to access support.

“There are initiatives across every state and territory in the U.S. trying to address this problem — trying to make sure that women are heard,” Diaz said. “From a state level, I wanted to bring this forward.”

Diaz said that Lynch has remained an important and passionate supporter of women veterans in West Virginia since her military service.

When looking for someone to lead the program, this made Lynch an obvious choice.

“Over the past several weeks getting to know her on a personal level, I’m in awe. I’m truly amazed of her character … being able to empower women veterans across the state,” he said.

Justice applauded the Department of Veterans Assistance for their new program, and Lynch for her work leading the project.

“You’re stepping up for West Virginia again, and you’re stepping up for our women’s veterans and everything that need help, need help, need ambassadors,” he told Lynch.

Health care providers have also made recent steps toward advancing resources available to women veterans. Earlier this month, the Berkeley VA Medical Center opened a new clinical space to specifically address the needs of women veterans.

Justice said it is important to continue advancing resources for women veterans.

“Let’s try to do any and everything we can to salute and help our women veterans,” he said.

Two Va. TV Station Employees Shot During Live Broadcast

The general manager of a TV station in Virginia says two crew members were fatally shot on air in central Virginia.
Jeffrey A. Marks, general manager of WDBJ-TV, identified the two killed as Alison Parker and Adam Ward. Parker was 24, Ward 27.

 
The station says in tweets and in a story on its website that the incident happened Wednesday morning at a shopping center on a lake in Moneta.

Update: 3:02 p.m.:

Officials say they don’t yet know a motive in the fatal on-air shooting of a reporter and a cameraman from a TV station in Virginia.

Authorities say they know the suspect, Vester Flanagan, was a former employee at the station, WDBJ-TV. They say they don’t know if the shooting was racially motivated. Flanagan was black and had formerly complained about racial bias at the station.

Flanagan died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound hours after the Wednesday morning shooting. He went by Bryce Williams on the air. 

 
Update: 3:00 p.m.:

 
A law enforcement official says the suspect in the on-air shooting of two TV station employees died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Franklin County Sheriff W.Q. “Bill” Overton Jr. gave that detail Wednesday during a news conference.

Officials say suspect Vester Flanagan died at 1:26 Wednesday at a hospital in northern Virginia. Authorities say the man killed his former co-workers – reporter Alison Parker and cameraman Adam Ward – during a live broadcast for WDBJ-TV on Wednesday morning outside a shopping mall.

The station has said Flanagan went by Bryce Williams on the air. While he worked at the station, they say, he was angry and difficult to work with. He was fired. 

 
Update: 12:20 p.m.:
 
As the Virginia TV station that saw a reporter and cameraman fatally shot in a live broadcast went live for its noon broadcast, the station shared more details about the suspect.

WDBJ-TV said Wednesday that suspect 41-year-old Vester Lee Flanagan II appeared on air at the station as Bryce Williams.  

Video of the shooting was posted on the Twitter account and Facebook page of someone under the name Bryce Williams. The video showed an outstretched arm holding the handgun and firing repeatedly at Parker as she tried to run away.

Also, ABC News reported that someone using the name Bryce Williams sent the organization a lengthy fax that it has turned over to authorities.

WDBJ-TV general manager Jeffrey Marks and an anchor spoke to viewers for the Wednesday broadcast, several hours after the early morning shooting. They told viewers more about the victims –  reporter Alison Parker and cameraman Adam Ward. They spoke about the victims as family members at the station. Both were dating co-workers.  

 
Update: 11:45 a.m.:
 
An official has identified the suspect in the fatal on-air shooting of a reporter and cameraman from a TV station in central Virginia.

Becky Coyner with dispatch and records at the Augusta County Sheriff’s Office says the suspect is 41-year-old Vester Lee Flanagan II, of Roanoke.  

The suspect has not yet been apprehended by police.

 
Original Post 10:50 a.m.:

 
The incident was caught on video. In it, Parker is interviewing someone about tourism on Bridgewater Plaza in Franklin County. She was smiling when suddenly at least eight shots were heard. The camera appeared to be dropped on the ground. The reporter can be heard screaming.

The station then switches back to a shot of an anchor back at the station, who has a shocked expression on her face.

Marks later appeared on the air and said neither the station nor officials know the motive for the shooting or any identify of a suspect.

Later, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe identified the shooter as a “disgruntled” TV station employee. 

McAuliffe said on a WTOP radio show police are pursuing the suspect on westbound I-64 and an arrest is “imminent.”

Marks said employees of the Virginia TV station are now being told to stay in the building are are being provided with police protection.

The station is based in Roanoke, Virginia, and serves the southwest and central part of the state. The shopping mall is just off Smith Mountain Lake.
 
Moneta is about 25 miles southeast of Roanoke.
 

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