The VA Denied Your Disability Claim. That Denial May Not Be Valid.
If you're reading this at 2 AM with a denial letter in your hand — you're not alone, and you're not done. The VA must follow federal law: 38 USC and 38 CFR are binding on every adjudicator and every clinician. When it comes to disability compensation claims, most denials rest on 'insufficient evidence' — often meaning your records were never fully read.
What you can do tonight — free
Upload your denial letter, rating decision, or C-file to the SUPER-SENTINEL-RESEARCHER on our home page. It reads your documents, cross-references 38 USC, 38 CFR, and VA policy, and gives you a full analysis report you can take to your VSO or attorney. No account. No cost. Private session.
ANALYZE MY DENIAL — FREE →Why this keeps happening
Nothing in current law forces the VA to follow through. Denials aren't audited. Complaints get routed back to the offices that caused them. Guidelines two decades old outlive the science. That is not a bug — it is the system working as built.
The permanent fix
The Veterans and Families Care Accountability and Major Richard Star Act (VFCAMRSA) makes every VA decision a permanent, auditable record and physically blocks any denial that cites inapplicable policy — funded by $95.05 billion in documented internal savings, without touching a single veteran's check.
READ THE BILL — TELL YOUR REPRESENTATIVE →This page is general information, not legal advice. For representation, contact an accredited VSO representative or VA-accredited attorney.