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Veterans Day wake-up call: Sociopaths as military impostors

You are here: Home / Explaining the sociopath / Veterans Day wake-up call: Sociopaths as military impostors

November 11, 2007 //  by Donna Andersen//  96 Comments

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Every Sunday my local newspaper, the Press of Atlantic City, prints the names of servicemen and women who died the previous week in Iraq and Afghanistan. Every Sunday, I make myself read the names. It’s the least I can do to honor their sacrifice. Today, Veterans Day, the newspaper printed a story about a local young man, a private, killed in Baghdad six months ago. I’m afraid I couldn’t read the story—it was too upsetting.

Veterans Day was always important to my ex-husband, James Montgomery. He wanted to show his patriotism and commemorate the comrades he lost in Vietnam as a member of the Australian military. In fact, when we met, 25 years after Vietnam, Montgomery claimed he was still affiliated with Special Forces. Military service was an important part of his persona.

This is an important part my upcoming book, Cracked Open, about life with a sociopath. An excerpt follows.

Veterans Day, 1996

In November 1996, James was invited to speak to schoolchildren about the importance of Veterans Day. A few days before the holiday, he went to a sixth-grade classroom in nearby Somers Point, New Jersey. With him were Joe Nickles, who had been an Army drill sergeant, and Bill Ross, who was a local mayor and had served in World War II. The three men sat on kid-sized chairs in the front of the room, talking about life in the military and answering questions from students. A teacher in the back of the classroom operated a video camera, transmitting the presentation to the rest of the school via closed circuit TV.

Each of the men spoke of their experiences in a way the children could understand. They talked about the training and the commitment. They explained what kept them going under fire—concern for their buddies.

A boy asked James a question: “Did you lose any friends in Vietnam?”

James answered slowly. “Yes,” he said, stretching out the word, “and I felt very sad when it happened. That’s why Veterans Day is so important. It’s a time to remember all those served their country, especially those who gave their lives.”

Standing in the back of the room, I was proud of everything James did to protect the rest of us.

James Montgomery Veterans Day 1995

When Veterans Day actually arrived on Monday, November 11, 1996, James planned to attend a ceremony in Mays Landing, New Jersey. The previous year, James was the keynote speaker. The Press of Atlantic City reported that he “recounted service-to-the-nation stories about comedienne Martha Raye and retired Major Dick Meadows, who led the raid on Son Tay to rescue POWs.” The local Mays Landing Record Journal ran a photo of him wearing his Special Forces beret and camouflage jacket in the rain.

I was supposed to meet him at the ceremony. But as I was ready to leave, I discovered that James had taken his car keys—and mine as well. After a moment of dismay, I was relieved—work deadlines were looming, and I really didn’t have time to drive out to Mays Landing, stand at a ceremony, and drive back. But my efficient and logical thinking didn’t go over well with my husband.

“Why didn’t you turn up?” he demanded when he arrived home.

“I was going to,” I said. “You took my car keys.”

“You could have come if you wanted to. You could have called a taxi,” he retorted, without acknowledging his own mistake.

I was astounded. “Are you kidding? That would cost a fortune!” I said. “And I’ve got a lot of work. I was better off staying home and getting it done.”

“It appears that what is important to your husband is not important to you,” he said. “Gale understood how important this is. She used to iron my uniforms.”

James stomped downstairs to his office, and I was left to wonder about being compared to my husband’s deceased wife. I felt guilty—temporarily—and then I went back to work.

Never in the military

What I know now, that I did not know in 1996, was that James Montgomery, my ex-husband, was never in the military.

From what I can tell, Montgomery had been including military service in his biographical profiles and resumes since at least 1980. He sent me a copy of the “mention in dispatches” report that recounted his heroism in Vietnam, for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross, Australia’s highest military honor. While we were married, Montgomery was active in the local chapter of the Vietnam Veterans of America. In gratitude for his contributions, the VVA gave Montgomery a plaque, which he hung on the wall.

After I left Montgomery, I began to suspect it was all a lie. I got my proof in 2005, shortly before I launched Lovefraud.com. I sent my copies of Montgomery’s military records—and they were voluminous—to an organization called Australian and New Zealand Military Impostors. The organization’s investigators—all former military men—determined that every document was fabricated.

“We hold copies of documents that indicate he has been constructing his false history over many years and we have never before run across such an obviously labour intensive project,” ANZMI wrote. “Montgomery gets the award for the wannabe who tried the hardest to perpetuate his fraud while also being the most incredibly stupid.”

For more on Montgomery’s fake military service, read the following links. If his actions weren’t so despicable, they’d actually be quite entertaining.

Forged Victoria Cross citation (Scroll down to James Montgomery)

Montgomery’s military claims debunked

Thousands of impostors

Unfortunately, Montgomery is not alone. As documented on the Is he military? page of Lovefraud.com, thousands of men and women exaggerate the accomplishments of their military service, or claim to have served when they never did. VeriSEAL.org has exposed more than 35,000 men who falsely claimed to be Navy SEALS. This is especially shocking because only 11,000 men actually graduated from the SEAL training program. And the POW network, which exposes false or exaggerated military claims, can’t even count how many liars are listed on its website.

Some of these people with trumped up military claims are relatively harmless. They just want to seem important when they aren’t. But many of the impostors are sociopaths. They use the mantle of respectability that goes with military service in order to con people. Or, they con the government, stealing military benefits that they don’t deserve.

Almost a year ago, on December 20, 2006, the U.S. Stolen Valor Act was signed into law. It addresses the unauthorized wearing, manufacture or selling of military decorations and medals. Some cases are being prosecuted. The United States Attorney’s Office in the western district of Washington is prosecuting eight cases in which phony veterans have scammed more than $1.4 million.

It’s a start.

Australia has laws against claming false military service. Montgomery could be subject to a fine of $3,300 and jail time of up to six months. The sentence is ridiculously light, but the law is rarely, if ever, enforced.

So by faking the respectability of military heroism, my ex-husband, James Montgomery, scammed over $1 million from myself and four other women that I know about. I did manage to get him fired from his job by exposing him in the Australian media. But so far, James Montgomery, like most military impostors, has not been prosecuted.

Category: Explaining the sociopath

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. erin1972

    June 21, 2010 at 7:40 pm

    MiLo-I couldn’t have said that better myself. I deal with tons of vets from Korea, Vietnam up through Desert Storm on a daily basis at my job and I always thank them. I am also going into the army as soon as I can make the weight limit, so I am more than a little offended!

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  2. Buttons

    June 21, 2010 at 7:54 pm

    Um, Frank Lee, you can’t possibly believe that making such vicious remarks wouldn’t get you flamed.

    Veterans of Viet Nam did not HAVE a choice, but were drafted and sent abroad with very little training. Today, our serving military are doing what they’ve been trained to do, and they deserve our support EVEN if we disagree with why they are engaging in combat.

    I find your remarks to be cruel, arrogant, and completely off the hook. For my part, I will choose NOT to read any future post that you make.

    Have a nice day! 😀

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  3. Rosa

    June 21, 2010 at 8:13 pm

    Soldiers are SEXY!!

    I Love a man in uniform! Always have.

    I have a cousin in the Air Force and a cousin in the U.S. Navy.

    God Bless America!!

    And, just for the record, it’s our PRESIDENTS that take us to war, not our soldiers.
    The soldiers are simply carrying out the orders of the Commander-in-Chief (i.e. Prez).

    And there’s plenty of blame to go around on both sides of the aisle for the wars that we are currently involved in.
    I’m NOT trying to turn this into a political thing….at all.

    Shout out to my cousins!!! Love you guys!!!

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  4. erin1972

    June 21, 2010 at 10:13 pm

    Soldiers are SEXY-especially Marines. My daddy was a Marine and I can hardly believe it everytime I see pics of him in his dress uniform when I was tiny. At my old job, there was a Marine that always came into the office and I always had to stop and stare. I am going into the Army-unfortunately too old for the Marines. I know people probably don’t think of female soldiers as sexy but I will take pride in it anyway and btw, I’m not one of the masculine looking females-I’m girly!!!

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  5. Rosa

    June 21, 2010 at 10:22 pm

    I admire you so much for going into the military, Erin 1972.

    If we (women) lived in Saudi Arabia, we would not even be allowed to drive a car.
    I thank God I live in the U.S.A., and I don’t take my freedoms for granted.

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  6. erin1972

    June 21, 2010 at 11:53 pm

    Thanks Rosa-women here don’t realize just how lucky we are to be free. Some of my old neighbors lived in Saudi Arabia for awhile and they said it was so oppressive for women-especially in Afghanistan. It’s the worst for those women. They have to cover their whole bodies, even their faces. It’s so awful. I am so lucky to have the freedom to do this and be a police officer when I’m done. I definitely don’t take that freedom for granted.

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  7. Ox Drover

    June 22, 2010 at 3:35 am

    It isn’t JUST about the “stolen valor” with the psychopaths, I don’t think, it is that they are attempting to steal the MERITS of another. Trying to steal something they have not earned the right to have—pretending to be HONORABLE when they, by the very pretense, are DISHONORABLE and don’t “get it.”

    Frank Lee Speaking–it is a sad fact of the world that no country can live without a military or a police force. Whether the wars are fought for “Justice and Mom and Apple pie” or to steal the neighbor’s cow, or take over the neighbor’s farm, the soldier himself doesn’t determine.

    In our country, we have the right to vote. I exercise that right. I know that there are men and women who bought that right for me to vote with the blood of their bodies. They also bought the right for you to speak your piece however you wish. I don’t agree with you, but I will defend your right to say whatever you want to say.

    I would request though, that you not bring this kind of statements here to LoveFraud. There are lots of political blogs on which you can vent your spleen in a venue in which it is appropriate, but I don’t think this is one of those places.

    The advice and posts up until now that you have given here have been well received because they were good posts and appropriate to THIS BLOG. I do hope you will come back and contribute to the subject matter that is relevant here! Peace.l

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  8. super chic

    June 22, 2010 at 3:38 am

    frank lee,

    freedom is not free, may I suggest
    you read a history book of the United States,
    we only have these freedom’s because of the
    men and women who died for us, you only have the freedom
    to write what you did… because of the men and women who died for you.

    If our freedom was in jeopardy, I would go out
    and fight for it myself, I would not want to live any other way,
    I would willingly die for freedom.

    Land of the Free,
    Home of the Brave.

    I do not believe it’s about oil,
    that is so simplistic.

    IT’S NOT CRAP.

    Log in to Reply
  9. Frank Lee Speaking

    June 22, 2010 at 4:40 am

    With all due respects shabychic no American died for my freedom thank you very much. LOL!

    It is about NOTHING other than oil. Good God, I cannot believe people like you actually exist. The US government is pure evil and running the most diabolical, sociopatic and most hated nation on Earth. It has nothing to do with people being against your crazy notions of “Americun freedum”… It is depressing when you see ordinary Americans like you actually defending an evil mentality which makes ordinary Americans suffer for the crimes of you psychopathic political and corpoate elite. Anyways..

    On a side note, I want clarify something. I have full sympathy for the American troops who died in Vietnam. Them poor guys were drafted and had no choice. I should of stated that. Even though that war was pure American evil as well.

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  10. Frank Lee Speaking

    June 22, 2010 at 4:41 am

    “Rosa says: Soldiers are SEXY!!”

    Amazing.

    Americans really are a most child like people of extremely low intellect.

    Log in to Reply
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