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ETS in 1985, military exam but no VA C&P

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kanewnut

Question

I applied for disability and was examined before leaving the military. The VA never scheduled me for a C&P. Is this considered a CUE? I am guessing that C&P's have always been required, but under what circumstances? Was my exam by the military before ETSing the same as a C&P? I have searched but can't find the answer.

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On 6/23/2019 at 8:23 PM, asknod said:

You present a chronological exhibit with a tool we call a Chrono. See attached.  It's tied to a specific claims file VA sends you. Each document is assigned a place on the chrono by date- i.e. 1/30/1968 --- hit by mortar blast in Hue. Purple Heart Awarded (RBA [Record Before the Agency] @ pg 2345. VA likes to salt in 1969 STRs right next to your request for GI benefits in 80 which are then followed by your 11/2018 NOD etc. I submit these to the VLJ to support my timeline of events. Once records- any records-have been associated with the claims file, they are constructively in the VA's possession.

@asknod - so how can one figure out the dates that records have been associated with a claims file & use chrono to make the timeline? We have denied claims from 2009 and a memorandum of missing service records. At some point we can tell they received records that are relevant but I don't know how to figure out what they received when. 

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You need to get a copy of your claims file. As I mentioned above, you will find every document in a claims file has a time/date stamp showing when it was entered. Sadly, they do not send you a claims file in chronological order. They used to do so back in the 80s and 90s.  With the new VBMS, it's all chronological so you don't have to sort it out. When I get computer access now to a Vet's file after VA recognizes my POA, I can see every document s/he or their VSO ever entered. I can see everything VA raters ever did to it. I can see a lot of their notes and the old rating decisions. 

I am being given access to a new tool called Caseflow soon which allows me to literally look over the VA rater's shoulder in real time to see what they are doing... or not doing. 

 

 

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