Get Rich or Dye Trying
If you've got a little time to set aside, Pat Michels has an evocative profile of Preston Wheeler—the KBR contractor whose near-death in Iraq is one of the most-seen war videos on YouTube. He went into the country to pay his bills.
By 2005, he was deep in debt from house expenses and medical bills, and didn't see a way clear. If there were two kinds of folks in Wickes, the ones with something and those without, he could see which group he was headed for.
Preston knew of people from town who had driven trucks in Iraq. "They came back no problem, so I decided maybe I'd go over there and I wouldn't have a problem," he says. "It wasn't desperation. I just knew that was a lifetime opportunity to go make that kind of money. I wanted a home so bad, I was willing to pay that price."
In 2005, when his second wife admitted to cheating on him, he asked her to move out, making his choice to leave simple. Summing up his state of mind at the time, he remembers thinking, "I got nobody else. It's just me, and I'm gonna do this or get killed."
And for all his trouble, it looked like it worked.
Ironically, Preston may yet end up with the money he wanted from Iraq—possibly much more—precisely because of the attack. The claim he filed under the Defense Base Act, a World War II-era law providing generous worker's compensation for civilians supporting the U.S. military overseas, may settle soon, and he could end up with a lump sum that would more than pay for a new house in Wickes.
His lawyer, Gary Pitts, who represents many contractors in similar claims, says Preston is lucky, legally speaking. Some of Pitts' clients are fighting drawn-out claims with American International Group Inc., the insurance carrier for KBR, over soft-tissue and back injuries that are tougher to document than two bullets in the right arm. In disputed PTSD claims, Pitts says, the case often comes down to opposing opinions from the contractor's therapist and AIG's in-house expert. "It's a shootout every time," Pitts says. Preston's case is unique because if AIG asks him to document his trauma, all he has to do is push "play."
Take it away, Smedley Butler.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
One of the Little League dads did just exactly that. He was a transmission guy at a Ford dealer and now he's a transmission guy in Iraq making six figures tax free. It was his way to get enough together to buy his wife and five kids a house.
Interesting to me the disparity between civilian pay and military pay in the combat zone.
Actually, a lot of vets are doing this.
Why not? Six figures, tax free, not much more dangerous than what they've been doing for the last five years anyway.
Get Rich or Dye Trying
I don't get it. What is being "dyed"? Red for blood? Green for money?
Warren, I wondered about that too. I always feel especially stupid wondering if something is a reference I'm not getting, or just a typo.
Tax free income? WTF?
now he's a transmission guy in Iraq making six figures tax free.
If he is a contractor, it is not all tax free. Only people actively serving in the military qualify for the Combat Zone Exemption. All pay earned while serving in a combat zone is tax free.
Contractors to the military who work in a combat zone qualify for the Combat Zone Extension. Basically, all tax deadlines stop the minute you step into the country until six months after you leave. This applies to estimated filings, filing deadlines, ira contributions, etc.
He may qualify for the Foreign Income Exclusion which applies to any US citizen who works outside of the US. The First $80K is tax free as long as they do not spend more then 31 days inside the US in 12 consecutive months.
Been there. Done that. Got the T-shirt.
The Wine Commonsewer said: Interesting to me the disparity between civilian pay and military pay in the combat zone.
Like TTT, I have been there and done that. If you crunch the numbers, it is cheaper to have a civilian on the ground working 84+ hours per week than having two soldiers that would work 50. Sure, KBR is making big money (and they may be cheats and crooks), but for the work production inside the wire, it saves the government and taxpayers money.