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Stolen valour, tin medals and tin pot generals

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Brian Dennehy dead at 81

The actor Brian Dennehy died yesterday of heart failure due to sepsis. He was 81.

The star of Rambo: First Blood, Gorky Park and Cocoon among more than 50 feature films and countless television work often played the role of the likeable tough guy. He was cut from the same rough thespian cloth as Jason Robards and George C. Scott.

There are gushing eulogies for Dennehy today. It is predictable in that way we have of airbrushing clean any hint of scandal the moment someone falls off the branch. But Dennehy was a high-profile member of a shadowy group of fraudsters, fantasists and con-artists guilty of what the Americans call stolen valour.

In a 1989 interview with the New York Times, Dennehy claimed to have suffered concussion and shrapnel wounds while on combat duty in Vietnam. Four years later in a short interview with Playboy magazine, Dennehy said he served a five-year tour of Vietnam and suffered minor injuries.

In that interview, Dennehy was asked if he’d ever taken a life in combat. He offered a reply which in retrospect can only be seen as a florid evasion:

“Anyone in combat would agree that it’s pretty much accidental. It’s not what you’re thinking about. You spend a considerable amount of time just trying not to be in a combat situation. You’re trying to avoid coming face-to-face with anything. So, when something bad happens, it’s usually accidental.”

Public deception

None of it happened. Dennehy had served in the US Marine Corps between 1958 and 1963 but did not set foot in Vietnam. The closest he came to combat was playing inter-service American football in Okinawa.

Dennehy publicly apologised for his deception in 1999. But there are reports that he continued telling embellished stories of courage under fire to anyone silly enough to listen. Once an actor …

False anecdotes

Pulitzer Prize winner and history professor, Joseph Ellis was known to lace his lectures with anecdotes of his wartime service in Vietnam. Praised for this meticulous attention to detail in biographies of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, Ellis told the Boston Globe he was a paratrooper with the 101st Airborne Division, had served in General Westmoreland’s staff and then added some other salty stories of life as a heroic non-combatant in promoting civil rights and attending anti-war protests.

In truth, Ellis had been a reservist but had never left the comfortable confines of academia. He had no association with the civil rights or anti-war movements. His books continue to sell with many reviewers choosing to ignore his deceptions.

False gallantry exposed

Politicians trading on war time gallantry have been exposed. Mundane military service, laudable enough, has transcended into lurid legends, fearless acts of bravery that never actually took place.

Stolen valour has become so widespread it is thought that for every US Navy SEAL, there are at least 300 imposters.

It is a major problem in Australia, too, where the term military imposter is preferred. The exposure of Australian military cheats is left essentially to a group of volunteer ex-servicemen and women known collectively as the Australian and New Zealand Military Impostors Group to sort out.

Australian military imposters

ANZMI conducts investigations, obtains statutory declarations and examines military records. They rely on members of the public, often military veterans to bring these the charlatans to their attention.

The group’s website, an archaic walk down memory lane through an internet circa 1998 (guys, if you’re reading this get in touch and I’ll fix that up for you) presents a rogue’s gallery of liars and cheaters, embellishers and the terminally deluded.

The offences range from the wearing of tin medals (medals purchased rather than bestowed), wearing medals unearned, all the way to complete fabrications of military service. The numbers of these fraudsters who have inveigled themselves in RSL branches, often to become office bearers, is astonishing.

Equally amazing is the apparent ease in which the deceptions are accepted. Questions are rarely asked even when a fraudster appears to be selling a story that defies belief.

On ANZAC Day 2013, “Major-General” Neville Donohue addressed a dawn service at Clayton in Melbourne’s east, bearing a stack of medals on the left side of his chest so numerous and shiny North Korean generals would have been envious. Present at the service on that day were the current Speaker of the Parliament and member for Casey, Tony Smith and then Labor member for La Trobe, Laura Smyth.

No one present seemed to bat an eyelid.

But later in the day, Donohoe turned up at the traditional Collingwood v Essendon ANZAC Day clash at the MCG and was filmed entering the ground chest out, medals dazzling, to a television audience of millions, proving the rule that the only bad publicity is too much publicity. ANZMI was swamped with bemused correspondence from genuine veterans.

It transpired the budding Monash had been a mere corporal in the Royal Australian Corps of Signals between 1970 and 1976 and was never deployed overseas.

Four years later, Donohue was found guilty of 30 charges relating to deception, falsely purporting to be a returned service person, falsely purporting to be a Commonwealth official, to be wearing medals without entitlement, obtaining property by deception, using false documents, and driving while suspended. He received a four-month prison term.

Outright deceit

I have spent hours trawling through the ANZMI website. It’s a walk-through of terrible people, often engaged in criminal acts of fraud and outright deceit.

The psychology is fairly predictable. As a nation we hold our veterans in high esteem. They are our most honoured group. The imposters trade on that, lust after it and profit from it often monetarily and in desperate attempts to be admired. Often, they have become stuck having to perpetuate lies. Once a lie of that order is told, it is very difficult to undo. More likely it will be compounded with other lies, other deceptions. The ANZMI motto is “If you tell the truth, it becomes part of your past. If you tell a lie it becomes part of your future.”

A military imposter is so offensive to us because they undermine those who have shown courage and commitment in defence of their country.

We have a bit of time on our hands now, so I recommend the ANZMI website to you. There are hundreds of names there. Some you may know. You may know of others whose stories don’t quite check out or seem unfeasible. If so, drop ANZMI a line.

This is one problem we can fix.

This column was first published at The Australian on 17 April, 2020

120 Comments

  • Razor says:

    I see Paleo Pete just copped a $25k smack from the TGA. Bloody good work I say! Maybe this might make him see the light 🤣

  • Razor says:

    I don’t pretend to understand the psyche of these charlatans but maybe they just want to belong to something. They probably have little self worth and the admiration shown by others fills that void. They probably don’t think it diminishes the value of those that did serve. The joke is not all who served deserve to be held up as heroes. My grandfather left for the Middle East (Rat of Trobruk) and then New Guinea as a studious and particularly abstemious young man and returned as a violent, alcoholic, wife beater who I also suspect was a little too close to a couple of my aunties. A hero? I think not, but does ones prior deeds cancel out their future indiscretions? Is it like the medieval priests and bishops who, for either money or other favours, would forgive sins such as murder including regicide in advance.

    • John L says:

      Do not be too harsh Razor – Post Traumatic Syndrome was unheard of in those days,
      It does not condone his actions afterwards but, unless you have been through what he went through ( and I have not) it is very difficult to comprehend.

      • Razor says:

        Quite true John.

      • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

        The other thing to note on that is that there is nothing inconsistent about a man being a scallywag, a drunk, a hoon or an outright criminal and also being a heroic soldier. In fact, being a shit-drunk punch-on artist with a bad attitude might be a positive boon in certain circumstances.

        I’m not advocating those things as being militarily desirable, but it would be naive to think all our miltary heroes are cut from a superior cloth.

    • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

      Our tendency to lionise those who serve as heroes, one and all, is unfortunate. During the recent bushfire emergency I was one of the few people leaving comments at The Oz hosing down (‘scuse the pun) the daily outpouring of overblown nonsense about volunteer firie “heroes”.

      My experience as a volunteer is that those who have done genuinely heroic things are extremely few and far between. I don’t know that in over ten years with the CFA I have even met one. And while it goes against the almost universal commentary on the subject, even those poor buggers who lost their lives in the most recent fires don’t seem to have been heroic so much as just bloody unlucky, like any soldier on a battlefield who caught a bullet or bomb by virtue of just being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

      And maybe that’s the problem with our military imposters – maybe as a society we are too ready to bestow the title of hero and that encourages them.

      • Trivalve says:

        BLS, we know that much of the media live in a hyperbole bubble. I’m nevertheless sure that there are occasional heroic acts performed by volunteer firefighters as for the professionals, possibly when they caught in sudden situational changes or when they, heaven forbid, go outside their procedural guidelines.

        I was told by a friend who was fighting one of the NSW fires in a remote location that a person who died there was implored by the local RFS captain to leave his house that he was protecting and go to shelter in the RFS shed with everyone else in the valley. He refused 3 times and the short story is that he is no longer with us. That was pure obstinacy.

  • Boa says:

    Here’s one for the technical forensic boffins: can prior data be recovered from a phone that has had a factory reset?

  • Not Finished Yet says:

    Fears were held yesterday for President Donald Trump. At a meeting at the White House with Emeritus Professor of Philosophy Harry Frankfurt of Princeton University, the President was informed that he faced an ‘existential crisis’. The only way he could finally drain the swamp would be through self-exsanguination.

    Speaking to the Press later in the day he was quoted as saying ‘We are getting exit stencils to mark the new out door in the Oval Office. It’s going to be a beautiful door’. The crisis was later resolved when he said ‘Madagascar. That would be the selfish penguin nation wouldn’t it? I mean, that’s where penguins come from.’

    And so, his Presidency continues.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      And you can quote me my dear NFY, his Presidency will continue well after election day in November , right into 2024 dear friend. Before this Virus hit the US economy was the envy of the World because of Trump, we saw it for ourselves first hand last year on our USA trip. As soon as its clear to travel OS we are back to the USA, an amazing Country where the impossible is so often translated into the possible. I can still here the cheers for Trump at his MAGA Rally we attended in Orlando, Florida, Elvis would have been proud.

      Texas will feature on our next agenda, a lot to see there. Do get yourself over there and your eyes will be opened. Cheers keep safe as we.

  • BASSMAN says:

    Brian Dennehy’s fraudulent behaviour is unforgivable but he remains one of my favourite and grossly underrated actors. His 1992 portrayal of serial killer John Gacy (“To Catch A Killer”, TV Movie) who murdered over 30 men, mostly young boys and buried many of them under his house, chills me to this day,

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    “Lest We Forget” https://tinyurl.com/y72vubdv

  • Boa says:

    JL: Re earlier posts. Looks like the Swedish ‘let it rip’ method didn’t work for them. They ‘ve got problems.
    Slowly, slowly and lots of patience seems to be the best bet?

  • Boa says:

    https://thenewdaily.com.au/podcast/talking-to-professor-peter-doherty-covid-conversation-ep-4/

    An interesting podcast of an interview with Nobel prizewinner Peter Doherty on the manufacture of a vaccine. Also his views on other issues such as climate change, the USA and China. I enjoyed it and found it very interesting.
    A notable quote from the interview ” The years of Trump have been a tragedy for the human species”. He doesn’t mince words!

    • John L says:

      Depends Boa on whether they are correct with “Herd immunity”
      We could possibly be left with the majority of the population having no resistance to it and no vaccine in sight.
      Far too many variables and far too many unknowns to make a judgement call yet.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      I say Boa, if the years of Trump have been a “tragedy for the human species”, I wonder how Doherty would rate the past few months of Xi.

      • John L says:

        My hearing will not allow me to understand the pod cast but the few reports I have seen seems to indicate that the Prof thinks we will need China to produce the vaccines should they become available.
        Now there is an interesting situation – the country responsible for the virus either through inaction, culinary preferences or sloppy protocols in labs and has shipped around the world a bunch of faulty tests and ppe’s is going to produce a vaccine for the whole world if one ever becomes available – yeah right!
        If no vaccines become available, then his view is that we we will have to treat it like HIV and we all take multiple pills daily – the good prof thought that this would not be a problem with the old as they take multiple pills daily – excuse me Prof – I take none but if they had no side effects I probably would. I am not sure if one would take the pills when one gets it or all the time as a precaution.
        Apparently HIV mutates too quickly for a vaccine. He thinks we will get a vaccine for Corona but it might be of marginal use with old people because of low immune response – sounds like I am stuffed either way.
        As to his comments about Trump, I would be pretty sure that most of his US contacts would be in the East and West Coast and universities which are not noted Trump enthusiasts.

        Read an interesting BBC article on Jack Ma of Alibaba fame – one of the themes is that he is getting to be more popular than Xi – apparently not a good tactic,
        https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-52325269

        Our wine bottle count prediction for the end of the lock down has proven to be an abject failure. New supplies are on the way and, when it does finish, it is looking like AA or the virus or both.

      • Boa says:

        Close call, Carl. At the moment i think Trump takes the cake……but that could all change tomorrow. Interesting that China have another 10million in lockdown.

      • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

        The Left or Converted “knoweth not what they say” Carl, very few Conservatives on the Blog now, sadly its fading fast. Cheers

  • Boa says:

    Dear God, the reports emerging about the alleged behaviour of the Porsche driver just get worse and worse. Such a tragic sequence of events.
    My daughter in Mebourne tells me there are rumours of maybe a terror attack too.

  • Dwight says:

    Hi Jack, finally spent some time over at the ANZMI site, and God do they need a webmaster. My pages looked better than that in the early ’90s, when the web was still new.

    Reading some of their cases I mostly angry; these charlatans are pathetic. Thanks for bringing it to our attention.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Terrible isn’t it. I’ve offered to put some of my web people on it and would happily do it for free.

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