ARD, CAPPS, Adhesions and Adhesion Related Disorder , Internal Scar Tissue, Hope for those who suffer from Adhesions

Monday, October 01, 2007

Think Kruschisnki can't scam you? Think again....









Posted Sunday, September 30, 2007 @ 11:29 AM



A new design proposition for the EndoGyn websites was suggested from the owner of EndoGyn Ltd. at the green area the menue system will be placed, so the navigation will become very easy and comfortable. With images each topic will become more transparent. If you have any propositions, they will be included, if possible.



Regards --------------------Daniel Kruschinski, MD EndoGyn.com, Adhesions.de, Hysterectomy.de, Fibroids.de, Endometriosis.de, Lift-laparoscopy.com © by EndoGyn Ltd.







"Ltd." is not a legal term for medical bussiness's in Germany, unless your selling burgers on the side, which Kru is probably doing, anything for a buck!


"Hamburgers and Operations"






So now Kru wants his "patients" to help him design the Endogyn web site! Nice proffesional relationship, real professional, Kru! Snub the "American" web site, then pop up on it and say this!!? IHRT is shocked that dandy Sandy, Karen and Helen aren't jumping all over Kru...whats up with that folks??!!!


Daniel Kruschinski is a "chameleon," a con-man, fraud, cheat and refers to himself in the "plural," not unlike these con-men and frauds: Reggie L. Buddle & David Pecard,
Read more.....


Man who posed as Marine hero sentenced to tend military graves
By
MIKE BARBERP-I REPORTER

For pretending that he was a decorated U.S. military veteran, 59-year-old Reggie L. Buddle of Puyallup must tend to the graves of those who really were.

Reggie L. Buddle of Puyallup, standing in the khaki shirt, during the 2006 opening ceremony for the Washington State Senate. (Photo provided by U.S. Attorney's office)
U.S. Magistrate Kelly Arnold in U.S. District Court in Tacoma on Monday sentenced the counterfeit Vietnam vet to two years' probation and 500 hours laboring at Tahoma National Cemetery for posing as a decorated U.S. Marine captain and military chaplain in 2005 and 2006.
Buddle, who never was in the Marine Corps, pleaded guilty in April to unlawful wearing of U.S. military medals and decorations. That followed an investigation by the inspector general of the Department of Veterans Affairs.
After the hearing, Buddle, who served two years as an Army enlisted man but never in combat and never earning any of the medals he wore, apologized in court Monday and said he was ashamed, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office in Seattle.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Ron Friedman said such cases, which have been growing nationwide since Congress passed stiffer measures 18 months ago against pretending to be a member of the armed forces, were researched to recommend an appropriate sentence.
"In this case, we thought it was a good idea to teach him what true service is like," Friedman said.

When Buddle begins serving those who rest at the national military cemetery in Kent, he must avoid any interaction with families of veterans.

"The court expressed concern that he not be allowed to participate in any funerals or counseling sessions or any other type of matters at the cemetery. That was part of his underlying crime; it was clear he will be there to supply labor," Friedman said.

Though Buddle was never an ordained chaplain or reverend, nor authorized by state law to act in any such capacity, he officiated at serviceman's funerals, weddings and baptisms.
Friedman said state statutes were researched and found to protect the legitimacy of marriages in such instances.
Buddle even hoodwinked the state Senate.

On Feb. 27, 2006, dressed in a Marine Corps uniform replete with the rank and medals he awarded himself, Buddle stood before the Senate and gave the prayer at the opening ceremony.


Not everyone was so certain that Buddle was the real item. Doubters called authorities, who began investigating.
Among the unearned medals and service decorations with which Buddle festooned his uniform were those for valor and service in Vietnam; a Combat Action Ribbon authorized for wear by those who have fought enemy forces; a Presidential Unit Citation ribbon, issued to members of units that displayed extraordinary heroism under fire; and the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, a high-ranking medal authorized for "extraordinary" contribution to national defense.

Real Marines and their families seemed satisfied with the sentence. MORE.....http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/325655_fakevet31.html




Another fraud......



The Impostor- A Master Of Disguise
MARICOPA COUNTY, Arizona, June 17, 2000

Over his life, 42-year-old David Pecard has had many careers. Among other things, he has been a lawyer, a police officer, an emergency room technician and a soldier.

He has also been many people: Wayne Simms, Kenny Tyler, Thomas Michael Lamar, Brandon Lee Bailey, David Auni, Michael Simms, Robert Simms and Paul Robert Ritter, among others.


Who is Pecard? No one, not even him, is quite sure. But whatever else he may be, he is also a prolific con man, who over the last 25 years has talked his way with remarkable skill into police departments and onto top secret military posts. He conducted federal investigations with the FBI, put criminals behind bars and married six women.

Peter Van Sant reports on this extremely unusual case. "He has to probably be one of the biggest conmen in the United States of America," says Arizona's Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who in 1996 was conned into deputizing Pecard. "How could he pose as military police; agent, U.S. marshall, FBI, you name it? And he got by with it!" "Doors can be opened if you know how to open them," Pecard says. "I am a chameleon. I adapt.

It's what I've been my whole life." As a high-profile sheriff known for being tough on crime, Arpaio doesn't seem like a likely mark. But in 1996 Arpaio met Pecard, then an Army sergeant, doing military investigations in the Phoenix area. Pecard came to Arpaio's office with a lieutenant colonel. He told Arpaio that he could help the sheriff with getting military equipment. "I just believed him, and I'm always looking for free equipment," Arpaio says. The sheriff personally deputized Pecard, and told his executive officer, Tom Bearup, to set him up with an office and whatever he needed. "To my knowledge we never did a background investigation or anything," Bearup says. "Joe walked him through." Pecard basically worked without supervision, Arpaio admits. But Pecard wasn't out to make money, he says: "If I'm a conman, I guess that makes me the Robin Hood of conmen, because if I'm running cons, most omy cons have been to do something good."

This Robin Hood assembled his own band of helpers, including his neighbor, Joe Thomas. They went out together on stakeouts, answering police calls and pulling people over. Pecard had as many as five or six investigators working for him, he says. The sheriff's office says he had no authority to do this. Pecard's odyssey came to a crashing halt in November 1996, when Pecard allegedly checked two female inmates out of the county jail and sexually abused them. Three days after being accused, he was arrested. In subsequent weeks, his house of ID cards came crashing down, leaving authorities in several states and foreign countries to sift through his multiple identities. One of the inmates, Drema Scrivener, told police investigators that Pecard promised to shorten her sentence for a minor drug charge. Then he checked her out of jail. Scrivener says Pecard took her to an empty office and started fondling her.

Videotape showed that Pecard had checked Scrivener and others out of the jail. Pecard was arrested on charges of improperly taking inmates out of jail and sexual assault. When he was picked up, Pecard was carrying a driver's license with the name Thomas McAfee, and papers saying he was an Army chaplain.

When authorities searched his house, they found evidence of more identities. His deceptions had caught up with him. He faced eight felony counts, including fraud. On top of that, the Army discovered that Pecard had enlisted and deserted at least seven times under seven different identities. Pecard faced life in prison.
Preventative Medicine


What made Pecard such an effective chameleon? "He's got that air about him, that you will buy whatever he's selling," says Detective John Brutsche, who led the investigation in Phoenix that exposed Pecard. Brutsche, who has worked on hundreds of fraud cases in his career, says that Pecard is the best con man he has ever seen. Pecard is a complex man. Sometimes he has done good deeds. In 1995, for example, Pecard, while actinas a Department of Defense investigator, tracked down Robert Allen Franklin, a con man. Franklin had been impersonating military investigators and duping women out of money. Pecard was the only one who was able to track down and capture this con man.

In October 1996, however, while he was a Maricopa County deputy, Pecard bilked a couple out of $7,500. He promised them he could get their daughter out of jail. He took their money but did not do so. Pecard, though, doesn't see himself as a con man. "I see myself as a little boy who made a change and continued to live out that change many years into his life," he says.


How did Pecard get his start? Find out: Read "The Impostor's Early Years."
The Impostor's Early Years
After A Deeply Unhappy Childhood,

June 5, 2002

Born in 1956 on the south side of Chicago as Wayne Hudson, Pecard says that he created his first false identity at the age of 7 after being turned down for a paper route. He went back the next day to a different paper route office, gave a different name and a different age, and was given a route.

His father, Tony Hudson, was a drinker who could get violent when he was drunk. Pecard was so unhappy that he even tried to kill himself by slashing his wrists, he says. (Although Pecard has faint scars on his wrists, two of his ex-wives say they are positive these marks did not exist when they were married.)

"That little boy in that house went through hell," says his sister Adrian Hudson, who until recently thought her brother was dead. "My brother, in turn, held everything in, tucked it away and hid it and became someone else." When he was 14, David Pecard, then known as Wayne Hudson, took a step that, in large part, determined his future: He became 18-year-old Robert Simms and joined the Army. He was sent to Vietnam, where, he says, he was happy: "Even though I was going off to war, that didn't matter.

Because I was someone. I was going to be like John Wayne." But one night, sitting around the fire with some Army buddies, he made a mistake, he says; he told them he was 14 and was sent back. Within months, he created a whole new identity, conning his way once again into the Army. This time he was sent to Korea. Over the next 20 years Pecard enlisted at least seven times, each time under a different name.
Ironically, his jobs were rooting out other people's fraud and deception. "At one particular time I was responsible for the security of a tactical weapons site," he says, "which means verifying security clearances, verifying identifications." According to Army Capt. Chip Dillard, who was assigned to defend Pecard against desertion charges, his defendant was always a model soldier. But whenever there was a threat of being discovered, he vanished: "When I reach a point where I can no longer safely be that person, then now I have one focus: I must survive and I must create a new person," he says.


When Pecard left, he often left a wife behind. In 1974, during his first tour in Korea as 17-year-old Private Wayne Simms, he married Susan Kwon. He took her to America and then disappeared when their second child was 6 days old. "He killed my heart," she says now. This behavior is not as bad as it looks, Pecard says: "There was no intent to deceive someone. I was surviving. It's what I learned how to do. Its what I've done all my life." In the summer of 1976, Pecard, then 19, was in between wives and stints in the Army. He moved to Houston and started working for a private investigator. He helped police arrest a man who wanted him to kill a Houston police officer. Inspired by this experience, Pecard felt there were no limits to what he could accomplish. He studied to perfect new identities. He learned Chinese and Korean languages, and earned a black belt in karate. He took courses in medicine and the law.

He earned some credentials and simply forged others, such as a degree from Columbia University. "We're trying to build that model person," says Pecard, referring to himself plurally. "It's like raising a new child. What do you want to be when you grow up? Well, this one wants to be a lawyer so he goes to law school." In 1984, Pecard moved to Oregon. He had learned enough law to work as a paralegal and to pose as a lawyer. He took on the case of inmate Michael Endricks and convinced a judge to release him years before he had served his full sentence.

Over the next seven years, Pecard moved through 12 states and several foreign countries. He ended up in Phoenix, where he became David Pecard. "David is my strongest person I've ever become," Pecard says. "I've worked very hard to make David an accomplished person." Pecard started working as an emergency room assistant at a Phoenix hospital. His supervisor at the time, nurse Dawn Horvack, says he seemed to be good at his job. In 1994 when he rejoined the Army again, this time as a military policemen, his specialty was tracking down con men. In this capacity, he was introduced to Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio in Arizona.

Does Pecard end up in jail?
The answer may surprise you! Read "Turning Over A New Leaf?"

Turning Over A New Leaf? Pecard Claims He Was Mistreated In Jail
June 5, 2002

Since Pecard's arrest in 1996, those he left behind have struggled to understand him.

"I think deep down inside there's a little part in all of us that wants to be someone else," says Bruce Simms, Pecard's son by Susan Kwon. "We want to be something creative; we want to be somebody different. The difference between us and him is that he actually went out and became someone else; he became someone different," he adds. Bruce Simms was just 6 days old when his father walked out of his life. "There were plenty of times when I'd sit back at night and I'd cry," he says. "I was a little kid, and I'd wonder where my dad was and how come he didn't want to be part of our lives." Bruce's sister Lee, and their mother, Susan Kwon, also say they were devastated by the disappearance.

As Bruce Simms grew up he heard stories about his dad, and wanted to be just like him - even becoming a martial artist. "It wasn't until I was a teen-ager in high school that I actually knew the truth - that my father was actually using different aliases and [that] he was, in a sense, on the run," says Bruce Simms, who thinks his father never really grew up.

Another victim was his fourth wife, Angela Reed. In 1989, she was a 19-year-old in Army boot camp when she met a soldier named Eric Lee. He bought her roses during basic training and took her for rides in a white limo. They married, and when he was sent to Korea, she followed. Soon she became suspicious and, peeking in his briefcase, found out his secret. She reported him to the authorities; he promised to go straight. She loved him, so she believed him. But with his secret out, he had to vanish. She went with him. For two years the two traveled, through Korea, California, Arizona and Washington. "When he was changing his Social Security number," she remembers, "he would go to the office and claim that he never had one because he was out of the country all of his life as a missionary." "And if the first person didn't believe him, he would keep going until somebody did. And they always did; somebody always believed him," she recalls.

But after two years on the run, Angela got sick of this life and left him.

Monica Rios was the sixth wife. She was a clerk in the Maricopa County sheriff's records department when they met. Through her, Pecard could gain access to confidential information. He gave her roses, and after a whirlwind romance, proposed on a firing range. They were married in Las Vegas. Pecard didn't tel her about his past. Although she knew that he had been married once before, she did not know he had been married four other times. Rios found out about his multiple identities on the news. They had been married for five days. "I hate him," says Rios, who recently divorced Pecard.

But the angriest of all may have been Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio. So he got even. Pecard was placed in a cellblock that housed the jail's most dangerous criminals. "There is no question that that man was singled out because he embarrassed Joe," says the sheriff's executive officer, Tom Bearup. Pecard stayed in the Maricopa County jail for 11 months waiting for a court date in Phoenix.

At the same time the Army pressed ahead with perhaps the oddest court martial for desertion in U.S. history.

Because of Pecard's identity crisis, his lawyer, Captain Edward Dillard, had to defend seven different people. Facing overwhelming evidence, Pecard pleaded guilty. Then he begged for leniency, saying that he had enlisted at 14 to serve his country and had seen combat in Vietnam. But the Army's lead prosecutor, Gloria McKinney, says that she found no evidence that Pecard had even been there at all. The Army sentenced Pecard to six years in prison. But when Pecard was sent back to the Maricopa County jail to face the felony charges, he began writing legal briefs. Pecard, who was helped by lawyer Richard Gierloff and Captain Dillard, said that the Maricopa County Sheriff's Department violated his civil rights, denying him meals, withholding medical attention, opening his legal mail, recording his phone calls and keeping him in solitary confinement.

Pecard presented a motion to dismiss the Arizona case and won; in July 1998 the county dropped all charges against him, including those of sexual abuse. When the Army learned about the dismissal, it reduced Pecard's military sentence to time served plus three months. Today Pecard is out of jail. He is now suing Arpaio and the Maricopa County Sheriff's Department for $6 million. Arpaio declines to comment. Now, Pecard says, he will go straight, as David Pecard.

While in jail, he earned a correspondence-school law degree, and he plans to be a lawyer. His lawyer, Gerloff, has hired him. "He's very much dedicated to improving his legal skills," says Gerloff. "He's terribly sincere." Pecard also wants to try acting and has gotten together a resume and head shot. "I should be a natural," he says. But there are signs that Pecard may not have turned over a new leaf. Although Pecard says he wants to be a father to Bruce and Lee, they say that he has made almost no effort to stay in contact. But Pecard says that he is now on the up and up: "David Michael Pecard is a product of everything I have ever been in my life - a product of everything I have ever accomplished in my life. He's who I am.

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