Activism & Campaigns

Prosthetic legs of a black veteran repossessed after government refuses to cover cost

Decorated war hero, Jerry Holliman, has decried the injustice from the United States Veterans Association after it repossessed his new prosthetic legs.

Holliman’s hope of returning to his Hattiesburg home and living an independent life was dashed in a  nursing home for military veterans two days before Christmas.

Jerry Holliman was fitted for prosthetic legs last August
after losing both limbs to diabetes_Photo: PurpleHeartHomeUSA.org

Holliman’s limbs have since been returned, but the Mississippi man says he still can’t use them — turning his temporary stay at a local veteran’s home into a stopover with no end in sight.

“‘I’ve been here over a year. I wanna go home,” Holliman told the Mississippi Clarion Ledger. “This place is not for me. It’s a dignified place for these guys to die, that’s what it is.”

Holliman has served twice as an active military member. Despite his service, the Veteran Association stated that it won’t cover the entire cost of prosthetic legs which ABC News reports costs between  $5,000 to $50,000.

Jerry Holliman earned two Bronze Stars like this one, which hangs in a display showcasing various U.S. service medals at G. V. Sonny Montgomery VA Medical Center in Jackson, Miss. The Bronze Star Medal is a decoration awarded to members of the United States Armed Forces for either achievement, merit or valor in a combat zone._Photo: Sarah Warnock, Clarion Ledger

The 69-year-old was encouraged to file a Medicare claim, but the government wants to stick him with the co-pay.

Clearly frustrated, Holliman believes the country is forgetting about him.

“Medicare did not send me to Vietnam,” Holliman said. “I was sent there by my country… with the understanding that if something bad happened to me, that it would be covered by the VA.”

At 18, Holliman volunteered to fight for his country in Vietnam. After  40 years in the U.S. Army and participating in 37 convoy missions in Iraq from 2004-2005, he was honorably discharged in 2010, earning Bronze Stars in both wars.

It was while he was in Vietnam that he was exposed to Agent Orange. According to Clarionledger, the chemical was used by the American military to kill vegetation. The chemical also caused diseases to Vietnamese and U.S. Service members, including cancers and diabetes.

Holliman survived three forms of cancer but in recent years, diabetes began affecting his legs.

Novieku Babatunde Adeola

Novieku Babatunde Adeola is a content writer, entertainment journalist, freelance PR practitioner, and event engineer. His passion stems from the need to change the narrative in Africa and the diaspora. He has worked with several media organizations in Ghana.

Recent Posts

Two students saved their P.E. teacher after he suffered cardiac arrest: ‘Medically, I was gone’

A physical education teacher, Alfred Kattola, owes his life to the quick thinking of two…

3 hours ago

Doctors misdiagnosed an 11-year-old girl 30 times before finding out she was suffering from brain tumor

An 11-year-old girl, Tia Gordon, has endured misdiagnoses of sickness bugs and migraines by medics…

4 hours ago

How Serena Williams has helped 14 companies reach unicorn status

Serena Williams is undoubtedly one of the greatest tennis players to grace the court. In…

5 hours ago

LeAnna Roberts earns her master’s degree at just 17 years old, her third degree in two years

At the age of sixteen, LeAnna Roberts made headlines when she graduated from the University…

5 hours ago

‘I invested in Tesla in 2006 before Elon took over’: Will.i.am on two investments he made that changed his life

Will.i.am is a musician, producer, technologist, entrepreneur, and philanthropist. Born Williams Adams, the musician turned…

6 hours ago

Ghanaian American Ohemaa Nyanin named general manager of WNBA Golden State

Ohemaa Nyanin has been named the general manager of the WNBA Golden State team. Nyanin,…

7 hours ago

Allen Onyema: Meet the peaceful man who left law to start Nigeria’s leading airline, Air Peace

Meet Allen Onyema; he is the founder of Nigeria’s largest carrier, Air Peace. The Nigerian…

9 hours ago

The story behind Alicia Keys’ Broadway musical Hell’s Kitchen nominated for 13 Tonys

Alicia Keys has reached a new milestone with her musical "Hell's Kitchen" as it has…

10 hours ago

Simone Biles admits she blacked out at her wedding party

Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles decided to commemorate her first wedding anniversary to NFL star…

13 hours ago

‘God jammed the gun’ – Man arrested after attempting to shoot pastor during service livestream

Authorities in Pennsylvania have arrested and charged a 26-year-old man who was seen allegedly attempting…

13 hours ago

British darts player Deta Hedman explains why she declined to play against transgender opponent

British female darts player Deta Hedman withdrew from the Denmark Open over the weekend after…

13 hours ago

New York-based Ghanaian couple accused of fatally beating 5-year-old son sentenced

A New York-based Ghanaian couple accused of fatally beating their 5-year-old son was on May…

13 hours ago

Former Miss Nevada to finally meet her biological mom 44 years after being abandoned in airport

Former beauty queen Elizabeth Hunterton, who was abandoned in an airport as a newborn in…

13 hours ago

9-year-old’s decision to give his only dollar to tycoon he assumed was homeless earns him free shopping spree

It was an act of goodwill with no intended expectation in mind. Donating his only…

1 day ago

Meet Goldfields’ Catherine Kuupol, who is now the first woman general manager in Ghana’s mining history

Get to know Ms. Catherine Kuupol, a mineral engineer who has provided metallurgical technical services…

1 day ago