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Defense attorney Marine Capt. Kelly Repair and prosecutor Marine Capt. Thomas Liu also have declined to comment. Recent prosecutions of active-duty service members include Dontae L. Tazewell, a Navy hospital corpsman sentenced in January 2008 in Norfolk, Va., to two years in prison for wearing an unearned Purple Heart and other decorations. Tazewell falsely claimed he had rescued six Marines and recovered the bodies of four others in Iraq. Prosecutors portrayed him as a failing sailor so desperate to remain in service that he fabricated the story. Navy corpsman Robert White, got 45 days in the brig after pleading guilty in December at Great Lakes Naval Station, Ill., to wearing a Purple Heart he bought. A former girlfriend testified White obtained the medal after he was shunned by his peers for assaulting her, the Navy Times reported. People fabricate military injuries for many reasons, including laziness, greed, sympathy and psychosis, said Loren Pankratz of Oregon Health & Science University, who wrote about PTSD impostors in his book, "Patients Who Deceive." "A more common theme would be somebody who would represent sort of the antihero
-- the guy who's given his all and yet been abused and misunderstood," Pankratz said. Burkett said others are simply con men. Walter E. Boomer, who served as assistant commandant of the Marine Corps from 1992 to 1994, vaguely remembers meeting Budwah in November when they were guests at a Grand National Waterfowl Association benefit on Maryland's Eastern Shore. They shot at ducks, drank and dined with other VIPs and shotgun manufacturing executives. "I accepted his story at face value," Boomer said. "Nothing that I recall would have set off alarm bells." Budwah again managed his way to the center of attention at a September 2008 boxing event in Glen Burnie, Md. Organizer Scott Wagner said the highlight of the night was when he brought Budwah and dozens of other military hospital patients into the ring for a standing ovation. "Were they injured or not? I don't know and I really don't care. If half of them were injured, I still feel good about it," he said. A year after Budwah's speech to the youngsters at the American Legion camp, Spencer Shoemaker sat stunned in the family's kitchen as he read the charges against his Marine idol for the first time. "Well, it's better that I know," the boy said after a long silence. "It did tear me down, but I'll still join the Marines." His father Michael, a construction worker, seethed at the news about Budwah. "He scammed America," Shoemaker said. "He scammed a kid."
[Associated
Press;
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