Article from Army Times

Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
Blowhards, beware: Fake valor to be felony
Congress acts to quiet phonies

By John Hoellwarth
Staff writer


Watch what you say at the bar — telling the wrong war story could be a felony by the start of next year.

The one about that night in Thailand is still legal, but running your mouth about unearned military decorations could cost you jail time and thousands of dollars in fines under legislation passed by Congress on Dec. 6.

The House passed a Senate-approved bill that would close a loophole in current law allowing poseurs to escape prosecution as long as they don’t physically wear the decorations they claim.


If signed into law by President Bush, the Stolen Valor Act of 2005 would impose up to six months in jail and up to $5,000 in fines for anyone who falsely claims “verbally, or in writing” to have received an award authorized for members of the U.S. armed forces. Penalties would be doubled for fraudulent claims to decorations specifically awarded for combat valor, such as service crosses, the Silver Star and the Medal of Honor.

And it’s not just medals — the legislation specifically includes badges, ribbons, buttons, rosettes, “or any colorable imitation of such item.”

“People are going to have to watch their p’s and q’s when they start telling stories,” said National Institute of Military Justice president Eugene Fidell. “Congress presumably meant what it said here. Blowhards and fakers, beware.”

Though the law would apply to service members, Fidell said infractions by active-duty personnel likely would be handled under the Uniform Code of Military Justice at the discretion of commanders, not by federal prosecutors.

During floor debate on the bill, which was passed unanimously by the Senate on Sept. 7, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., cited recent cases in Illinois and Missouri of men claiming to be Marine officers and recipients of the Navy Cross, the nation’s second highest award for valor.

The Missouri case involved Jim Fields, a legitimate Marine Purple Heart recipient who served in Vietnam, but never earned the Navy Cross he wore while making a Veterans Day speech to the Chillicothe, Mo., chapter of the American Legion.

When Rep. Sam Graves, R-Mo., Field’s congressman, found out about the incident, he contacted Salazar’s office to become one of the bill’s 110 co-sponsors. His last-minute endorsement may have provided the impetus for House Republican leaders to get the bill to the floor when some doubted it would be put to a vote before the end of the current session.


Extract:

If signed into law by President Bush, the Stolen Valor Act of 2005 would impose up to six months in jail and up to $5,000 in fines for anyone who falsely claims “verbally, or in writing” to have received an award authorized for members of the U.S. armed forces. Penalties would be doubled for fraudulent claims to decorations specifically awarded for combat valor, such as service crosses, the Silver Star and the Medal of Honor.
Finally, says I, with relief. I enjoy listening to war-stories at the bar as much as the next guy - it's the guys claiming extra insight based on fake awards and imaginary combat that get my goat. Friday nights at the VFW may be a bit quieter now.