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Book details
  • Genre:BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY
  • SubGenre:Social Scientists & Psychologists
  • Language:English
  • Pages:264
  • eBook ISBN:9781667841267
  • Hardcover ISBN:9781667841250

Suicide Stalks the Sniper

A Trained Assassin's Journey Out of Hell

by Mark K. Miller and Larry J. Miller

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Overview
This is a story by a father and his son to detail the son's issues with PTSD after returning from multiple overseas Naval deployments as a sniper that led to several suicide attempts, including a long, convoluted plan involving multiple foreign countries. This story is both heartwarming and disturbing. Family and friends worked together to save Mark, but the military seemed indifferent to the struggles that led to this situation. This is a powerful story that provides helpful information for families that may be confronting similar situations.
Description
Synopsis: This is a story by a father and his son to detail the son's issues with PTSD after returning from multiple overseas Naval deployments as a sniper that led to several suicide attempts, including a long, convoluted plan involving multiple foreign countries. This story is both heartwarming and disturbing. Family and friends worked together to save Mark, but the military seemed indifferent to the struggles that led to this situation. This is a powerful story that provides helpful information for families that may be confronting similar situations.
About the author
After approximately nine years of exemplary active duty in the Navy on board two ships and one shore command, Petty Officer Mark K. Miller (Mark) volunteered to serve in the elite Mobile Security Force D-22 for the next five years. After months of grueling training, his detachment was assigned to Embarked Security Teams protecting high-value assets in the Middle East. His fire team engaged several small boat attacks, most notably was on board the USNS Pecos on November 20, 2003. Later, his detachment was assigned to protect the Iraqi Oil Platform (ABOT) and to train the newly arriving Iraqi brigades. He served as a designated marksman where he underwent seven months of extreme mental and physical hardship. One of his translators was killed, which caused severe depression and anxiety (PTSD). This was further aggravated when he developed severe back pain, made worse by having to carry more than eighty pounds of armor and standing on guard for long hours. He was then assigned to several Raven Missions where his depression and back pain became worse. He sought help from several civilian psychologists to no avail. After re-assignment to Kingsville Texas in January 2007, his anxiety and depression became worse. At the recommendation of a psychologist, Mark was started on Prozac for his depression. The drug provoked an adverse effect, causing suicidal ideation and manic behavior. He once again sought help from a Navy mental health professional, who recognized the severity of his condition and committed him to a private mental health hospital for detoxification and treatment. Unfortunately, the psychiatrist in charge did not take him seriously and discharged him four days later. Mark became even more determined to commit suicide and borrowed $20,000 to finance his elaborate suicide plan, which involved traveling to Central America to take an overdose of Nembutal. Mark's family got wind of his suicide mission through a series of events, including finding his abandoned truck and cell phone, and the confession of his girlfriend, elaborating on his suicide plan, which she had not taken seriously until then. With his suicide medication in hand, he was on the last leg of his final journey. Through God's intervention, a streak of good luck, diligence by his family, and through extraordinary efforts from a number of agencies, including the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS), private investigators, US Marshals, and Mexican Federales, Mark was apprehended at the airport in Mexico City where he was preparing to board a plane to Costa Rica to kill himself. He was brought back to the United States for treatment. Instead, he was apprehended by military police and thrown in the brig, where he once again attempted suicide. He was finally committed to a Naval mental hospital where he was diagnosed as having a manic episode of bipolar disorder, aggravated by Prozac. Since then Mark has made a remarkable recovery and has dedicated his life to helping veterans and their families battle depression and suicide.