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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

After 50 years, vet will get his benefits

By Alison Young Knight Ridder

WASHINGTON — Fighter pilot Frank Fong, who lost sight in one eye as he battled Nazis during World War II, has finally won his war against the Department of Veterans Affairs.

More than half a century after he sought compensation for his injury, the VA said Tuesday that it was sending Fong, 86, a check for about $67,000 in payments it should have started making in 1950.

“Veterans have to be persistent. If you let them jack you around you’ll get nothing,” said Fong, a retired commercial artist who lives in Weston, Fla.

Fong, who overcame discrimination as a Chinese-American to serve as a pilot, won some of the Army Air Corps’ highest honors for bravery and skill: two Distinguished Flying Crosses and eight Air Medals. His case was featured in March in a Knight Ridder investigation of how the VA wrongly denies and shortchanges veterans’ claims for disability compensation.

A Board of Veterans’ Appeals judge who heard Fong’s case earlier this summer issued an order last week telling the VA that Fong is entitled to disability payments for the blindness in his left eye for the period July 1950 to August 1997.

Fong filed a claim in 1950, but the VA denied it. It took until 1998 for the VA to concede that a plane crash had scarred Fong’s eye and caused his blindness. The VA began compensating him then, but made the payments retroactive only to 1997.

Until now, the VA has refused Fong’s appeals to be paid for the 47 years before that.

Numerous military flight-surgeon records document that Fong was badly injured when his P-47 Thunderbolt crashed in the spring of 1944. The VA denied Fong’s 1950 disability claim after a VA doctor didn’t diagnose the scar on his retina and the flight surgeon records of the accident weren’t in his official military medical file.