By Justin Juozapavicius
Associated Press
Sunday, August 3, 2008
WILBURTON, Okla. -- Nestled among the lush forests and mountain foothills of southeastern Oklahoma is a soldier's utopia, a sleepy enclave where U.S. military veterans can claim their share of the American dream for pennies on the dollar.
For 75 years, the little-known United Spanish War Veterans Colony has offered vets an acre of tax-free land for only a couple of hundred dollars, allowing them to build whatever they wish and live out their days in quiet retirement. No homeowner's associations, no nursing homes, no red tape.
Here, the pecan trees are the tallest things around, and wild turkeys and deer outnumber residents. Most of the roads are barely wide enough for a single car.
But a dispute brewing in the colony could threaten the peaceful, communal way of life of the 110 veterans who live here. The opening salvo: Nearly two dozen vets have accused colony leaders of financial mismanagement, and they say residents who question the improprieties are harassed and threatened with eviction.
"They have gotten such control over the residents through fear and intimidation that if you don't keep your mouth shut, if you're a whistle-blower, they want you out of there," said Gordon Landrum, a Vietnam veteran and former member of the board that governs the colony.
Things have gotten so bad, some veterans are threatening to take up arms to defend themselves.
"I've got $74 in the bank, no place to go and three clips and a .45," said Paul Skaggs, who survived the Vietnam War but considers this the toughest fight of his life. "I'm just waiting for someone to take a shot at me."
Colony leaders dismiss the allegations, saying the disgruntled veterans have not formally brought their complaints to the board and accusing the group of taking a "warlike stance."
"If it's war they want, it's war they'll get," said Michael West, a Vietnam veteran and board secretary. "We don't want that, but I'm ready for them."
The colony has operated largely unnoticed for decades in the foothills of the Winding Stair Mountains, about 125 miles south of Tulsa.
Landrum said he was ousted from the board two years ago after questioning the finances of the colony, which reported having more than $450,000 in the bank in 2006. He said he has grown so tired of the harassment, he's planning to pack whatever possessions will fit in an old horse trailer and head for Montana.
He left behind internal financial documents detailing the alleged mismanagement: thousands of dollars unaccounted for on annual financial reports, monthly beginning and ending balances that didn't match up, and records of questionable purchases.
Mike Sherrill, a Vietnam veteran who has served several terms as board chairman, rejected the alleged discrepancies, calling them "minor errors that would happen to anybody balancing a checkbook."
He said the books are now in order, and he welcomed an outside audit of the colony's finances.
An Associated Press review of documents, and recent audits of colony finances, could not account for more than $4,000 in colony money. Among the discrepancies:
· Several checks were made out for cash with no record of a receipt or board approval.
· A $500 grant to the fire department from an electric cooperative was reported as $300 on the department's books.
· The fire department issued a $2,000 check for the purchase of a new firetruck nearly a week before the advertisement for bids was published.
· The fire department did not properly document goods or services received.
To be admitted to the colony, honorably discharged wartime vets must be members of a service organization such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars or the American Legion. They pay a $200 deposit and $50 more for a background check. The fees, along with interest from long-term certificates of deposit, provide the bulk of income to operate the colony, which also gets revenue from timber and mineral rights on the land.
There were more than 330 shareholders in the colony as of 2006, but only about 110 live here.
West, the secretary of the board, said he would "certainly like the truth to come out" if a comprehensive audit is conducted.
"I know my hands are clean, that's about all I can testify to," said West, who came to the colony three years ago. "I don't know what previous boards did, and I don't want to know."
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