Vet Fakes Paralysis to Avoid War
The Associated Press
Published 11:37 a.m. CT Nov. 6, 2009

EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill. -
An Army veteran admitted in federal court Friday that he plotted with his wife to bilk the U.S. government by faking paralysis after a car wreck to get disability benefits and avoid being deployed to Iraq. Jeffrey Rush, 27, also pleaded guilty to fraud charges tied to his product-liability lawsuit against Ford Motor Co. and a seat-belt maker over the 2004 rollover accident he claimed led to his becoming a paraplegic. Federal prosecutors alleged Rush, now of Nashville, Tenn., and wife Amy Rush, 25, stood to get millions of dollars in their scam, much of it in the Ford lawsuit that unraveled and eventually was dropped by their attorney when he figured out he was being duped by the couple. As part of the scheme, court records show, Rush wrongly got $107,857 in benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs and scammed an additional $28,730 from the Social Security Administration. Court documents and discussions offered no details on how Rush perpetuated the scheme. Rush, standing upright in court Friday with shoulders slouched and hands folded in front of him, pleaded guilty to two fraud conspiracy counts and one count apiece of mail fraud and making false statements to the Social Security Administration. Rush, who entered the pleas without any deal with prosecutors, faces up to 65 years in prison and $1 million in fines when sentenced Feb. 17. He remains free on bond. Amy Rush pleaded guilty last month to similar charges and awaits Jan. 22 sentencing. Jeffrey Rush was assigned to the 24th Transportation Company at Kansas' Fort Riley in June 2004 when that outfit was warned it would be deployed "in the near future" in support of troops in Iraq. Five months later, Rush was involved in a one-car rollover accident with his own vehicle. Several times afterward, Rush told medical specialists he could not walk and had lost bowel and bladder control, baffling doctors who could not pinpoint the source of his paralysis. Rush's Army company was deployed to Iraq some seven weeks after the wreck. Over the next several months, Rush insisted in requests for compensation and special housing that he couldn't move from the waist down, eventually getting a medical discharge from the Army in July 2005 and drawing $2,700 in monthly VA benefits. On Dec. 9, 2005, in St. Clair County, the Rushes sued Ford and the maker of the seat belts used in Rush's 2002 Explorer Sport Trac, blaming both companies for his supposed paralysis and his wife's resulting "loss of consortium and conjugal relations." The Rushes went on to have a child in July 2006. The lawsuit demanded at least $400,000 in damages, though the Rushes' attorney, Bruce Cook, had reached a $6 million settlement in another case involving a similar vehicle. The lawsuit came just weeks after the automaker supplied Rush with a van worth $32,674. Cook told The Associated Press on Friday that it became clear he was being duped by the Rushes, who he said fumbled for an explanation of how Amy Rush got pregnant and how the supposedly wheelchair-bound Rush's legs stayed so muscular despite their claimed lack of use. Cook said he dropped the lawsuit in April 2006 and apologized to Ford.
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