
Todd Shea is an unlikely savior.
But the people he helps don't care that he was once a crack addict or know that they've also been saviors to him.
Download PDF
The Improbable American:
Despite no college education or a medical background, a rugged American named Todd Shea runs a charity hospital in Kashmir, where a 2005 earthquake killed 80,000 people.
Todd's Story
I am a singer/songwriter and guitarist by profession. Though I have always used my music to
perform humanitarian work and support charitable causes, I had never once thought I would end
up taking part in any disaster relief response at an operational level. That changed on 9/11. I was
in New York City on September 11th, 2001 to perform at a world famous live music
establishment, CBGB's Gallery. Instead, I ended up working at the site of the fallen World Trade
Center towers day and night for almost a week, assisting the firefighters, law enforcement
officers and workers by delivering needed items and setting up an outdoor pharmacy for rescue
workers to get food, water, medicines, clothing, tools, comfort items and anything else they
needed to keep them going. Things like ice and contact lens wash and other eye care products,
along with certain types of medications, were nowhere to be found until my fellow volunteers
and I brought them in. Realizing I had discovered a previously unknown ability for acquiring and
coordinating needed items efficiently in a chaotic and disastrous situation, I decided that it was
my duty to respond to future disasters if I believed my abilities were truly needed and was
convinced that I could be an effective participant in relief efforts. After all, the decision made
sense to me. I had already been using my music as an avenue to do good works for many years.
The disaster relief work I’ve been compelled to do has just been a natural step for me, taken in response to the difficult and extraordinary circumstances I’ve found myself and my fellow human beings in- not unlike the inspiration for creating the lyrics of the songs I write as an artistic response to the world I see. For me, responding to disasters is simply an extension of the one of the main purposes of my musical journey- to help those less fortunate and to promote a positive message to young people everywhere that serving a cause greater than the self for the benefit of humanity is the most fulfilling and important thing one can do with their lives.
After 9/11, I continued with my music career (I have written, recorded and released several CDs
of original material and have performed my music all over the United States) until a dear friend
was victimized by a severe crisis at his substance abuse counseling business. I decided to put my
music on hold to help my friend by running the company’s business affairs and trying to save it
from ruin. With the help of a dedicated and determined team, that goal was accomplished.
The entire experience of fighting to keep a good company alive in the face of such difficult circumstances was in many ways similar to the disaster response work I have been involved in. If anything good came out of the situation, it was that I learned more about my ability to work in the midst of any type of financial, man-made or natural destruction, and be effective through all the chaotic, stressful and heartbreaking situations that I've witnessed and dealt with firsthand.
When the tsunami happened at the end of 2004, I was just one of the many millions of people shocked and saddened by the unimaginable scenes of devastation and death. I thought back to my experience at 9/11 and with my friend's company, and decided to act. After doing some research on where I could be effective and with the financial help of my music career manger Al Sirowitz, I ended up going to Sri Lanka with a group of volunteers who were building houses for people who lost homes and family members in the tsunami. I also worked at orphanages, spending time with the children and helping out at a medical center run by an amazing woman named Alison Thompson.
Again getting back to my music career, I spent most of the summer of 2005 performing and
writing songs in Nashville, Tennessee and New York City. I was also planning a benefit concert
for long term tsunami relief projects in Sri Lanka when Hurricane Katrina happened. As a result
of my work on 9/11, I was invited to be a logistics coordinator for some New York City area
search and rescue teams. I procured the donation of a large truck from The Maryland Department
of emergency management and used it to deliver special operations rescue boats to Louisiana.
Within 5 days of Hurricane Katrina, I was working on a Navy base on the Mississippi River
across from downtown New Orleans with the U.S. Army 82nd Airborne, the US Navy, The
Zodiac Boat Company and members of The Battery Park City Community Emergency Response
Team (CERT). I spent two weeks assisting the Army, boat crews and search rescue teams by
helping to put together the boats and finding any item they needed to perform their mission. I
worked with CDRS co-founder Marc O'Regan and CERT team member Jim Kushner (who also
came with me to Pakistan) to make supply runs with the truck to supply depots of organizations
like FEMA and The Salvation Army. When the flood waters receded in some areas, Jim and I
canvassed New Orleans with veterinarians to rescue family pets that were trapped in the homes
of evacuees who weren't able to return to their devastated city. I also helped animal rescue teams
establish field shelters and hospitals. Jim and I received an official commendation from the
President of the Louisiana Animal Control for saving the lives of thousands of dogs and cats
through direct rescue in the field and procurement of food, emergency supplies and medicines
like rabies vaccine for humans, dogs and cats.
I had spent over a month working for the Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, and had just returned
to Maryland to visit my son on October 8, 2005. I had literally just sat down on the couch and
turned on the television. An earthquake had just caused widespread devastation in Pakistan. I
immediately knew that all the experiences I'd had in disaster relief since 9/11 had prepared me to
play an effective leadership role in responding to this earthquake. I turned to my son and said "I'm going to Pakistan." Before knowing who I'd be going with, exactly where I would be going,
exactly what I'd be doing or how I would get there... I knew with certainty that within days I
would be on the ground helping the victims of the earthquake in the most personal and direct
way.
I called the Pakistan Embassy in Washington, D.C. and left a message volunteering my expertise as a logistics coordinator for any emergency response team they might become aware of that needed such a person. The next day an official from the embassy returned my call and gave me the phone number of Dr. Atif Malik. Dr. Malik was helping to put together a medical response team called Operation Heartbeat. I have been serving the people harmed by the October 8th earthquake catastrophe to the best of my abilities ever since. And it has truly been an honor to assist the wonderful people of the great and rising nation of Pakistan.
Todd Shea, April 20, 2006
Pakistan bank account information for direct wire transfers is as follows:
Account Name: Comprehensive Disaster Response Services
Branch Code: 0593
Account Number: 0593-01-01-004883-2
Swift Code: MUCBPKKA
MCB Main Branch Muzaffarabad, Azad Kashmir, Pakistan
U.S. bank account information for direct wire transfers is as follows:
Account Name: SHINE
Account contact person: Laila Karamally
Contact address: 10 Roseleaf Irvine CA92620
Contact phone:
714 261 1044
Branch Code: 0593
Account Number:
23411 69564
Bank Name: Bank of America, Heritage Village
Bank Address: 14222 Culver Dr
Bank City: Irvine
Bank State:CA
SWIFT Code: BOFAUS3N
ABA Routing number : 121 000 358; 0260009593
For the Haiti Earthquake Relief Mission, SHINE/CDRS partnered with Aimer Haiti, The Islamic Medical Association of North America, JP / HRO Foundation, Destiny World Outreach Missions and other many fine organizations,








