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On January 17, 2004 the Los Angeles Times ran an article written
by James Bates exposing Charles Holland, president of the Writers
Guild of America West, as a phony Green Beret among other career
embellishments. With meticulous research Bates carefully documented
the discrepancies in Holland's authorized biographical story, "Soldier
of Fortune," clearly indicating that he had never been in US
Army Special Forces nor served in combat.
The Writers Guild of America is the foremost registry for screenplays
in the motion picture industry and is considered one of the most
influential groups in entertainment. Becoming a member of this prestigious
organization does not come cheap: An aggregate of twenty-four (24)
units of Credit is required and a check in the amount of $2,500.
The organization is meant to be the agency protecting writer's rights
against fraudulent claims of authorship.
Several members of the Special Operations Forces (SOF) community
(Rangers, SEALS, Air Commandos, and Green Berets) responded vocally
to Holland's presidency. Led by Chuck Pfarrer, a legitimate former
US Navy SEAL, screenwriter, and member of the Writer's Guild of
America, complaints were lodged about this senior executive of WGA
West. They called for Holland's resignation.
On March 18, 2004, Holland issued a press release announcing his
resignation as of President of WGAw.
"Effective immediately, I am resigning
as President of the WGAw. I do this fully of my own volition because
I believe it to be in the best interest ofr the Guild.
Shortly after I was appointed president,
I became the subject of controversy regarding my military and
football background. Many felt I should resign. Many urged me
to remain. I thought the questions raised were irrelevant
to the Guild and expected they would be marginalized when placed
in context with my professional career and Guild service.
Consequently, I determined to let process sort matters out.
Though the WGAw Board of Directors had
no constitutional power to remove me, I sought a vote of confidence
and received one. The Guild constitution provides for recall on
petition of 300 signatures, relatively minor for a Guild of 9,000
members. I expected petitions to circulate, and they did. However,
the requisite signatures were never obtained. I went further
to conduct informal outreach measures by supporters and collect
member feedback from TV staff visits performed by the guild's
Member Services department. What has emerged is that, though members
lack motivation to have me removed, deep misgivings and substantial
concerns lie in the minds of a great many members. I am now persuaded
that the personal aspersions cast upon me will continue and that
they will distract our Guild's focus, hindering our negotiating
position. That I cannot allow.
In my Guild service, I have always trumpeted
unity, strength, and common sense. As committed as I am
to fulfilling my responsibilities and to standing up for myself,
the Guild is more important than one man. On the eve of negotiations,
I have no choice but to remove myself and clear the air for the
only issue that matters - the best possible deal for the benefit
of the most possible writers.
I possess great pride in having served
the Guild with all my might for six years. With deep personal
regret, I step aside, yet I know that I leave the WGAw in the
best of hands. To my supporters, know that I will be forever grateful
for, even awed by, your loyalty and devotion. I urge you to invest
that loyalty in Dan Petrie Jr. and the Writers Guild of America
as I return to the honorable position of WGAw member in good standing."
The Special Operations Forces community were furious at Holland's
military assertions and consider his resignation a victory for true
combat veterans. There had never been a secret course for Special
Forces qualification as Holland claimed. Headquarters for US Army
Special Operations Command at Ft. Bragg had no record of Holland
ever being assigned there. Everyone who is Special Forces qualified
is in their database. Even men assigned to classified missions have
records annotated showing them assigned to specific units. Further,
men of SOF know each other, or can rapidly find others who do know
them. Holland failed all tests and refused to provide the unclassified
records that would support his SOF assignments. His claim combat
missions where he was "shot at by snipers" were equally
false.
In "Stolen Valor," B. G. Burkett and Glenna Whitley documented
false claims from the Vietnam War. These people are known as SOF
wannabes. Holland has joined them and his record can now be found
on the SEAL Wall of Shame. http://sec-global.com/services/ctp/vsg/news/040117.html
Holland was repeatedly offered chances to explain his actions or
retract his statements. Instead he lied. Most ironic is that Holland
writes for JAG, a CBS television series dedicated to searching for
military justice.
The interview portraying Holland as a Green Beret can be located
at: http://sec-global.com/services/ctp/vsg/profiles/hollandcd/soldier.html.
He stated that he did not go to Afghanistan. Holland said: "Now
somebody has to show up for me, and there's a degree of guilt about
that."
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