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Army Duns Maimed GI -- Until Lawmakers Intervene

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Associated Press Writer

Spc. Robert Loria of Middletown, N.Y., lost his arm in Iraq, but instead of a farewell paycheck from the Army he got a bill for nearly $1,800.

On Friday a platoon of New York lawmakers came to his rescue.

Loria found himself stuck in Fort Hood in Texas when Army officials said he owed money for travel expenses and lost equipment.

Rep. Maurice D. Hinchey and Sens. Charles E. Schumer and Hillary Rodham Clinton interceded on behalf of the 27-year-old veteran after his wife, Christine Loria, told the Times-Herald Record of Middletown about the problem.

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Loria was wounded in February. But as he was about to leave the Army this month, officials told him he had been overpaid for his time as a patient at a military hospital in the Washington area. They said he still owed money for travel between the hospital and Ft. Hood, as well as $310 for items not found in his returned equipment.

Instead of receiving a check for nearly $4,500, Loria was told he had to pay nearly $1,800.

“Christmas is coming up and we are severely overdrawn because of this,” his wife said. “It turned out his getting wounded wasn’t the worst thing this year to happen -- this was.”

Clinton, Schumer and Hinchey said Friday that the Army had dropped the billing demands and would allow Loria to return home on leave before he is discharged.

Clinton’s office said late Friday that Army officials were looking at the cases of 19 other injured veterans who may have had payroll situations similar to Loria’s.

She blamed Loria’s problem on someone in the bureaucracy being unwilling to help him with paperwork that the Army insisted upon.

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The lawmakers, all Democrats, said Loria should be able to head home to New York in a day or two.

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