3. Glad to see the leaders taking time to visit the wounded in
action. When my husband was in the hospital in the late 1980's after losing over half the blood in his body, the Commanding Officer of the Command he worked for in Norfolk, Virginia, visited him in the hospital. His wound was from Captain Coy Lane who was in charge of the pharmacy at the Naval Hospital in Portsmouth switching aspirins to save some money, giving people regular aspirin instead of buffered aspirin without telling the doctors or the patients about the switch. He should have been charged with attempted murder of many people but no one cared. For sure, he did not visit my husband in the hospital but the Admiral did.
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