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And behind every one of these cases is an individual. Four years ago, someone had forged John Fulton's name and taken out nearly $90,000 in student loans. The fraud destroyed the 45-year-old Army veteran's credit and prevented him from getting the security clearance he needed to work for the Department of Defense. Fulton went to the U.S. Department of Education, the Inspector General and the Attorney General, with no success. Finally, he contacted Giffords. "Nobody wanted to help. Nobody wanted to listen to me. And they're the only ones that would." About two weeks ago, Fulton got word that the forgery had been confirmed. He is now working security on Davis-Monthan Air Force Base. Earlier this week, Fulton came in to deliver a tin pan of coffee cake his fiancee had baked. He also left a note for Giffords. "My emotions are running high with all that has happened," he wrote. "I hope and pray that you know what a great service you have done for one simple couple, and how it has changed our lives to levels we never thought we would see. I hope you get this, and that it helps to put a beautiful smile on your face." Since the shootings, the office has received more than 20,000 gifts and expressions of sympathy. Interns are busily cataloguing them. Giffords made a point of responding to everyone who contacted her office (Police searching shooting suspect Jared Loughner's home found a letter from Giffords, thanking him for attending the 2007 forum that may have been the genesis of his anger toward her.) Karamargin said every card, note, e-mail and tray of cookies will be acknowledged. "It will take up some time," he says. "But I think it's also a snapshot, really, of a community that has responded in the best possible way to the worst possible event." Although the office is busier than ever, there are holes. Just outside the reception area hangs a dry-erase board with little magnetic pegs showing who's in an out. Beside Zimmerman's name, a blue peg marks the "IN" column; to the right someone has written in blue marker "IN OUR HEARTS!" Friday would have been his 31st birthday. "The loss of Gabe Zimmerman is a heartbreak beyond words that I'm not even convinced will ever heal," says Sapir. "He was a friend, the most phenomenal supervisor you could ask for. And a beautiful soul." Simon knows how lucky she is to be alive, let alone back to work. The bullet that pierced her chest missed her vital organs and lodged in her hip. It became infected and was removed about a week later. The other slug passed through her right forearm, missing the bones and nerves completely. She feels discomfort when she writes, so she's typing more these days. Simon -- a longtime junior high teacher who met Giffords on a lobbying visit in 2001, when Giffords was a newly elected state representative
-- says she needed to come back for her own peace of mind. And as one of the office "moms," Simon says the staff needed her, if for no other reason than to keep the snack drawer stocked and the medicine chest filled. "I think it's a little bit like getting on the horse again," she says. "These are my friends, as well as my colleagues."
[Associated
Press;
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