Help Bring Army Veteran, Charlie, Home — A Fighter’s Journey Against All Odds.

Help Bring Charlie, a US Army Veteran Home — A Fighter’s Journey Against All Odds.

Help Bring Charlie Home — A Fighter’s Journey Against All Odds.

Charlie Dancing the Night

of the Incident

Help Bring Charlie Home — His Life Depends on It!

At 67, Charlie Otkins, a US Army Veteran, father, and grandfather has faced what no one should ever endure. A joyful night at his 50th high school reunion turned into a life-changing emergency. Now, paralyzed from the neck down and dependent on a ventilator, he’s fighting to come home to California — and needs our help to get there.

Help Bring Charlie Home — A Father’s Fight After a Preventable Tragedy

man wearing black cap with love your neighbour print during daytime

Charlie's Story

On what was meant to be a night of celebration with classmates from McKinley Senior High School in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Charlie suddenly collapsed.

Emergency responders intubated him in the field, and again in the ER — but in the crucial hours that followed, no CT scan of his neck or spine was performed, nor was his neck properly immobilized. Despite being treated at a Level 1 Joint Commissioned Trauma Center, the largest in the state of Louisiana , the standard ATLS protocols were not followed for an elderly fall patient, who was not responsive.

For six long days, Charlie’s neck remained unstable. When imaging was finally done, the results were devastating: his spinal cord had been nearly a complete transection at the C3/C4 level, leaving him quadriplegic and ventilator-dependent.

Doctors have since confirmed that had a CT scan and immobilization been done immediately, the severity of his paralysis could have been prevented. Yet even in the face of unimaginable loss, Charlie’s spirit refuses to break.

With a tracheostomy and a ventilator to breathe, he pushes air through a bubble in the trach which is supposed to prohibit his ability to speak, but he is determined to tell his family and friends:

“I want to go home.”

man wearing black cap with love your neighbour print during daytime

man wearing black cap with love your neighbour print during daytime

man wearing black cap with love your neighbour print during daytime
four women looking down

Where is Charlie Now?

Charlie is currently hospitalized in Louisiana. His daughter, who is also a veteran and single mother of two has been bedside nearly four months, who lives in California is ready and prepared to become his primary caregiver, with specialists standing by who understand his complex spinal and respiratory needs. She has also been working with the VA, however, everything with the VA takes months, and considering governmental freeze in department everything is in delay.

But because Charlie cannot travel by ground or commercial flight, he needs emergency air medical transport equipped for full ventilator support.

That transport — his only safe way home — costs between $40,000 and $60,000, which insurance will not cover.

Getting him home is not just about comfort — it’s about preserving his life. Every additional day in the hospital raises the risk of infection and further complications. Time is critical.

Special thanks to the PCU staff at Our Lady of the Lake Hospital, under the leadership of Head Nurses Keith & Justin. Despite the breech of duty to care prior to Charlie's arrival to their unit, the staff has been unwavering in their duty in caring for Charlie in this critical state in spite of limited staff and nurse work assignment of 4 patients daily.

"You Can't Keep Down. God is with me. All my life I had to fight, and I can't stop fighting now."

A group of friends at a coffee shop

We Need Your Help.

How You Can Help?

Donate — Every gift brings Charlie closer to the care and comfort he needs to survive.

Share — Post his story on social media, by text, or email to spread hope and awareness.

Pray — For Charlie’s strength, healing, and safe journey home.

A group of friends at a coffee shop

"You Can't Keep Down. God is with me.

All my life I had to fight, and I can't stop fighting now."