Remember Our Heroes
Sergeant First Class Shawn C. Dostie, 32, of Granite City, Illinois
Sgt Dostie died in Baghdad, Iraq, on December 30, 2005, when an improvised explosive device detonated near his HMMWV during patrol operations. Dostie was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
By Leef Smith
Courtesy of the Washington Post
Thursday, January 12, 2006
Shawn Dostie wasn't a new recruit. He didn't join up to fight the war in Iraq or, like many soldiers, view the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, as a call to arms.
Dostie, of Granite City, Illinois, enlisted in the Army in 1991 after graduating from high school. More than a decade later, the 32-year-old sergeant first class, attached to the 101st Airborne Division and assigned to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, viewed the Army as a career.
Army Brigadier General Andrew Twomey presents a U.S. flag to Stephanie Dostie, wife of slain Sgt. 1st Class Shawn Dostie
Family members said that Dostie knew his deployment to Iraq in September was a mission that would place him in harm's way but that he was committed to protecting his platoon of 12 men and women.
A roadside bomb killed Dostie on December 30, 2005, as he patrolled a main supply route near Baghdad. His wife, Stephanie Dostie, 31, said her husband saved three other soldiers riding with him in a Humvee.
He did "everything he could to protect his people," she told the Sun Journal of Lewiston, Maine. "He took the blast."
Shawn Dostie's family gathered at Arlington National Cemetery yesterday morning to honor the man they said was a loving father of two who joined the Army to follow in the footsteps of his father, a retired Sergeant First Class.
"He wanted to follow me in," Dostie's father, Robert Fugere of Rumford, Maine, told the Belleville News-Democrat. "He wanted me to be proud of him."
Dostie was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division.
According to news reports, Dostie had completed Pathfinder training -- three weeks of instruction for soldiers who operate in small teams to secure and establish landing or drop zones in advance of air operations -- shortly before deploying to Iraq on September 27, 2005.
"Shawn was a dedicated soldier who loved his country, family, friends and the soldiers he served with," Stephanie Dostie said in a prepared statement. "I watched Shawn evolve into a superior soldier, husband, father and friend."
Standing yesterday under an awning set up to protect them from a light morning rain, Shawn Dostie's family -- including his two children, Cameron, 8, and Bayleigh, 5 -- watched as soldiers folded the flag that had draped his coffin.
Weeks after Dostie's death, friends are still reaching out to comfort his family.
"He was a good man and a hard worker," said Keith Rodgers of Fort Hood, Texas, who penned condolences in an online guest book for mourners. "His work will live on through the soldiers that he trained. . . . Your loved one is a hero."
"Shawn was an incredible person with a huge heart overflowing with love for his family, friends and this country," echoed a posting from Ray and Tracey Benton of Fort Polk, Louisiana. "His pride, devotion and dedication as a soldier will never be forgotten. He was and will always be a hero to us."
Sergeant First Class Shawn C. Dostie was killed in action on 12/30/05.
“Not for fame or reward, not lured by ambition or goaded by necessity, but in simple obedience to duty.”
"Each of these heroes stands in the unbroken line of patriots who have dared to die that freedom might live and grow and increase in its blessings."
--Inscription at Arlington Cemetary
-- Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Friday, December 30, 2005
Wednesday, December 28, 2005
Army Pfc. Jason D. Hasenauer
Remember Our Heroes
Army Pfc. Jason D. Hasenauer, 21, of Hilton, New York.
Pfc. Hasenauer died near Kandahar, Afghanistan, when his HMMWV accidentally rolled over during patrol operations. He was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Died on December 28, 2005.
When two uniformed Army men and a chaplain walked up to his driveway Wednesday morning, Daniel T. Hasenauer knew his son had died. But he also realized that his son died doing the job he wanted to do for years.
Pfc. Jason Hasenauer, 21, of Hilton was killed Tuesday in Afghanistan when his Humvee rolled over because of a roadside bomb. Four other men were in the Humvee and were injured, but Hasenauer was the only fatality. The incident is under investigation.
"We would always talk about life and issues he was having in Afghanistan. We would share everything with each other, so I didn't just lose a son ... he was also my best friend," said his father.
Hasenauer, who was assigned to the 82nd Airborne in Fort Bragg, N.C., was a 2003 graduate of Hilton High School and a member of the Hilton Fire Department.
He was set to come home on Valentine's Day and talk about setting a date to marry his fiance, Colette Kopp of New Jersey, and baptize his 3-week-old daughter Kayla Hasenauer, who was born Dec. 2.
Hasenauer had seen his daughter only through photographs and pictures online.
"He was looking forward to watching his daughter grow up and putting her to bed for the first time," said his mother, Rita Hasenauer.
The Hasenauers are a military family with three generations in the Army, Navy and Air Force. Following in their older brother's path, Danny Hasenauer, 19, will enter the Army Reserves, and Jeremy Hasenauer, 15, plans on joining the Coast Guard.
The family spent Thursday afternoon at home receiving friends, family and a chaplain and starting to make funeral arrangements. Three flags on their lawn were lowered to half-staff.
"He taught me not to let fear take over and to conquer obstacles," said Jeremy Hasenauer. "He was my hero and my role model."
Danny Hasenauer said he'll miss his brother's selfless nature.
"He always just wanted to make people happy and help out. He joined the Army because he wanted to help people beyond where he lived," he said. "He wanted to help the troops bring freedom."
His father said he will miss hunting with his son and camping at the family's property in the Southern Tier, which were two of Hasenauer's favorite hobbies. Even though he enjoyed such sports as wrestling and floor hockey in high school, joining the Junior Firefighter Explorers at 14 became Hasenauer's youthful passion.
"(Hasenauer) was dedicated to the point where he'd been calling the fire department on a weekly basis even while in Afghanistan, and even as late as Monday just to find out what was going on in the department and to say 'hi,'" said Hilton Fire Chief Mark Kalen, adding that Hasenauer became a full-fledged volunteer firefighter at age 18.
The fire department lowered its flag and posted a sign outdoors with the words "In Memory of Jason Hasenauer."
"He showed people respect, and in this day and age, you don't see a lot of kids that age who do," said Jim Mackenzie, a volunteer firefighter.
Fire Capt. Joe Lissow, another volunteer firefighter, said there were times Hasenauer was driving down the road, would see a firefighter's wife unloading groceries and would stop and help her put them in the house.
"He was just an awesome man, and it is just so devastating," Lissow said.
"Every time he was home, he always checked in with the fire department."
Grief counselors will be available when students return to class on Tuesday at Hilton High School and Merton Williams Middle School, said district spokeswoman Barbara Carder.
She said district officials want to provide support for Hasenauer's brothers - Jeremy, a sophomore; Eric, 12, a seventh-grader; and Daniel, a 2004 Hilton High graduate who is a part-time janitor in the district. The district also wants to offer support to the brothers' friends and teachers.
Army Pfc. Jason D. Hasenauer was killed in action on 12/28/05.
Army Pfc. Jason D. Hasenauer, 21, of Hilton, New York.
Pfc. Hasenauer died near Kandahar, Afghanistan, when his HMMWV accidentally rolled over during patrol operations. He was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Died on December 28, 2005.
When two uniformed Army men and a chaplain walked up to his driveway Wednesday morning, Daniel T. Hasenauer knew his son had died. But he also realized that his son died doing the job he wanted to do for years.
Pfc. Jason Hasenauer, 21, of Hilton was killed Tuesday in Afghanistan when his Humvee rolled over because of a roadside bomb. Four other men were in the Humvee and were injured, but Hasenauer was the only fatality. The incident is under investigation.
"We would always talk about life and issues he was having in Afghanistan. We would share everything with each other, so I didn't just lose a son ... he was also my best friend," said his father.
Hasenauer, who was assigned to the 82nd Airborne in Fort Bragg, N.C., was a 2003 graduate of Hilton High School and a member of the Hilton Fire Department.
He was set to come home on Valentine's Day and talk about setting a date to marry his fiance, Colette Kopp of New Jersey, and baptize his 3-week-old daughter Kayla Hasenauer, who was born Dec. 2.
Hasenauer had seen his daughter only through photographs and pictures online.
"He was looking forward to watching his daughter grow up and putting her to bed for the first time," said his mother, Rita Hasenauer.
The Hasenauers are a military family with three generations in the Army, Navy and Air Force. Following in their older brother's path, Danny Hasenauer, 19, will enter the Army Reserves, and Jeremy Hasenauer, 15, plans on joining the Coast Guard.
The family spent Thursday afternoon at home receiving friends, family and a chaplain and starting to make funeral arrangements. Three flags on their lawn were lowered to half-staff.
"He taught me not to let fear take over and to conquer obstacles," said Jeremy Hasenauer. "He was my hero and my role model."
Danny Hasenauer said he'll miss his brother's selfless nature.
"He always just wanted to make people happy and help out. He joined the Army because he wanted to help people beyond where he lived," he said. "He wanted to help the troops bring freedom."
His father said he will miss hunting with his son and camping at the family's property in the Southern Tier, which were two of Hasenauer's favorite hobbies. Even though he enjoyed such sports as wrestling and floor hockey in high school, joining the Junior Firefighter Explorers at 14 became Hasenauer's youthful passion.
"(Hasenauer) was dedicated to the point where he'd been calling the fire department on a weekly basis even while in Afghanistan, and even as late as Monday just to find out what was going on in the department and to say 'hi,'" said Hilton Fire Chief Mark Kalen, adding that Hasenauer became a full-fledged volunteer firefighter at age 18.
The fire department lowered its flag and posted a sign outdoors with the words "In Memory of Jason Hasenauer."
"He showed people respect, and in this day and age, you don't see a lot of kids that age who do," said Jim Mackenzie, a volunteer firefighter.
Fire Capt. Joe Lissow, another volunteer firefighter, said there were times Hasenauer was driving down the road, would see a firefighter's wife unloading groceries and would stop and help her put them in the house.
"He was just an awesome man, and it is just so devastating," Lissow said.
"Every time he was home, he always checked in with the fire department."
Grief counselors will be available when students return to class on Tuesday at Hilton High School and Merton Williams Middle School, said district spokeswoman Barbara Carder.
She said district officials want to provide support for Hasenauer's brothers - Jeremy, a sophomore; Eric, 12, a seventh-grader; and Daniel, a 2004 Hilton High graduate who is a part-time janitor in the district. The district also wants to offer support to the brothers' friends and teachers.
Army Pfc. Jason D. Hasenauer was killed in action on 12/28/05.
Army Specialist Aaron M. Forbes
Remember Our Heroes
Army Specialist Aaron M. Forbes, 24, of Oak Island, N.C.
Spc Forbes was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 67th Armored Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Fort Hood, Texas; killed Dec. 28 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat operations in Baghdad.
www.newsobserver.com -- The father of a 24-year-old soldier killed in an explosion in Iraq said his son joined the military because he had trouble finding other work, but grew into "a heck of a man" who came to love the Army and his service in the Middle East.
Army Spc. Aaron M. Forbes was killed when an improvised explosive device exploded near his Humvee during combat operations. He was assigned to the 1st Battalion of the 67th Armored Regiment, which is part of the 4th Infantry Division's 2nd Brigade Combat Team, based at Fort Hood, Texas.
Forbes left for his second tour of duty in Iraq just a day or two before Christmas, said his father, Allan Jokisch of Oak Island.
"You know what Aaron told me when he was on his first tour? He said the civilians over there loved the American soldiers," he said.
"He said, 'Dad, you don't see that side on the news. All you see is the bombings. ... You don't see them coming up and hugging us, shaking our hands. That's why I want to go back, because they love us.' "
Forbes joined the Army in 2002 and married his wife, Brittany, that July 4, shortly after he finished boot camp. A couple of weeks before he left for his second Iraq tour, they finalized his adoption of her 5-year-old son, Alex, from a previous marriage.
"He loved that little boy so much," Jokisch said.
The couple lived at Fort Hood. Forbes' wife learned of her husband's death while spending the holidays with her grandmother in Hilton Head, S.C.
Jokisch said the men had a sometimes distant relationship when Forbes was growing up, which led the son to take his mother's maiden name.
Things began to change when Forbes moved in with his father in 2001, after Forbes' mother died of cancer and his 21-year-old sister died of still unexplained causes within six months of each other, Jokisch said. Another son, 22-year-old Kenny, lives in Sarasota, Fla.
Struggling to find work, Forbes enlisted in the Army, which proved to be a transforming experience for father and son.
"If you knew him before he went in the military, you would have seen a totally different guy -- he matured so much," Jokisch said. "We grew so close after he got in the military. ... In the last four years, whenever we'd get ready to hang up [the phone], we'd always say, 'I love you, man.' "
Those calls came regularly while Forbes was at home, Jokisch said.
"That's the thing I'm going to miss," Jokisch said. "He was my best friend, I swear. My son was a heck of a boy -- a heck of a man."
Army Specialist Aaron M. Forbes was killed in action on 12/28/05.
Army Specialist Aaron M. Forbes, 24, of Oak Island, N.C.
Spc Forbes was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 67th Armored Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Fort Hood, Texas; killed Dec. 28 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat operations in Baghdad.
www.newsobserver.com -- The father of a 24-year-old soldier killed in an explosion in Iraq said his son joined the military because he had trouble finding other work, but grew into "a heck of a man" who came to love the Army and his service in the Middle East.
Army Spc. Aaron M. Forbes was killed when an improvised explosive device exploded near his Humvee during combat operations. He was assigned to the 1st Battalion of the 67th Armored Regiment, which is part of the 4th Infantry Division's 2nd Brigade Combat Team, based at Fort Hood, Texas.
Forbes left for his second tour of duty in Iraq just a day or two before Christmas, said his father, Allan Jokisch of Oak Island.
"You know what Aaron told me when he was on his first tour? He said the civilians over there loved the American soldiers," he said.
"He said, 'Dad, you don't see that side on the news. All you see is the bombings. ... You don't see them coming up and hugging us, shaking our hands. That's why I want to go back, because they love us.' "
Forbes joined the Army in 2002 and married his wife, Brittany, that July 4, shortly after he finished boot camp. A couple of weeks before he left for his second Iraq tour, they finalized his adoption of her 5-year-old son, Alex, from a previous marriage.
"He loved that little boy so much," Jokisch said.
The couple lived at Fort Hood. Forbes' wife learned of her husband's death while spending the holidays with her grandmother in Hilton Head, S.C.
Jokisch said the men had a sometimes distant relationship when Forbes was growing up, which led the son to take his mother's maiden name.
Things began to change when Forbes moved in with his father in 2001, after Forbes' mother died of cancer and his 21-year-old sister died of still unexplained causes within six months of each other, Jokisch said. Another son, 22-year-old Kenny, lives in Sarasota, Fla.
Struggling to find work, Forbes enlisted in the Army, which proved to be a transforming experience for father and son.
"If you knew him before he went in the military, you would have seen a totally different guy -- he matured so much," Jokisch said. "We grew so close after he got in the military. ... In the last four years, whenever we'd get ready to hang up [the phone], we'd always say, 'I love you, man.' "
Those calls came regularly while Forbes was at home, Jokisch said.
"That's the thing I'm going to miss," Jokisch said. "He was my best friend, I swear. My son was a heck of a boy -- a heck of a man."
Army Specialist Aaron M. Forbes was killed in action on 12/28/05.
Army 1st Sgt. Tobias "Toby" C. Meister
Remember Our Heroes
Army 1st Sgt. Tobias C. Meister, 30, of Jenks, Okla.
Sgt Meister was assigned to the 321st Civil Affairs Brigade, Army Reserve, San Antonio; killed Dec. 28 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat patrol operations south of Asadabad, Afghanistan.
A northwest Iowa native who was described as a warm person, a patriotic soldier and "an All-American boy" has been killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan.
First Sgt. Tobias Meister, 30, who enlisted in the Iowa Army National Guard before graduating from Remsen Union High School, died Wednesday when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat patrol operations south of Asadabad, according to the U.S. Department of Defense.
Meister, of Jenks, Okla., was assigned to the U.S. Army Reserve's 321st Civil Affairs Brigade and had been working to help rebuild the war-torn country. He left Iowa about 10 years ago to attend the University of Texas at San Antonio, where he graduated with a business degree before joining an oil and natural gas firm in Tulsa, Okla.
He leaves behind his wife, Alicia, and a 1-year-old son, William.
Tom Letsche, mayor of Remsen, a town of 1,762 people in Plymouth County, said Friday that people were stunned and saddened at the news of Meister's death.
"He was always polite and kind to everybody and just a straight arrow. He was the All-American boy," Letsche said.
Meister's father, Dave, was a longtime Remsen businessman, and his mother, Judy, had been a home-economics teacher at the high school. The pair had moved to Oklahoma earlier this year to help their daughter-in-law and new grandson while their son was deployed overseas. Other survivors include a brother, T.J. Meister, 26, of Naples, Fla., paternal grandmother Dorothy Meister of Kingsley, and maternal grandmother June Corbin of Moville.
"He was a pretty incredible person. He was absolutely the most patriotic person you have ever met," said Debbie Rich of Tulsa, Meister's aunt.
Meister was honored nationally in 2002 when he was named "U.S. Army Reserve Drill Sergeant of the Year." The Oklahoma Legislature subsequently passed a resolution in recognition of the award.
The Army said Meister was also a former middleweight Golden Gloves boxing champion in Dallas, and he had an undefeated career in kickboxing. He was a fifth-degree black belt in tae kwon do. In winning the drill-sergeant competition, he finished first in the two-mile run and did 100 push-ups and 114 sit-ups.
Rich recalled an incident in which an office was vandalized at her family's oil and gas business, which employed Meister. The vandals stuck a water hose through a mail slot, flooding the office, and they unsuccessfully tried to burn an American flag, which particularly infuriated Meister, she said.
"He was so mad. He called all the news stations and the newspapers, and because of his diligence, they ended up catching the vandals," Rich said.
Steve Matgen, who operates a Remsen insurance agency, said Meister reminded him of Pat Tillman, a former Arizona Cardinals football player who quit a lucrative athletic career to join the Army and was killed in Afghanistan. He recalled Meister as a kid who would always greet him in a friendly manner and ask how his day was going.
"Toby loved what he was doing. He was a very selfless person," Matgen said. "What a tragedy for something like this to happen."
Meister was born in Kingsley, and his parents later moved to Remsen, where his father first operated a furniture business and more recently owned a carpet and floor-covering firm. He was inspired by his late grandfather, Bill Corbin of Moville, who fought in the battle of Okinawa in World War II, said Larry Manker of Sioux City, Meister's great-uncle.
Manker recalled that whenever he took Meister and his brother hunting, "You would tell him something once, and that is all you ever had to do. When you got back, you got thanked 100 times. He was the most polite and courteous kid you ever saw. He would do anything for you."
Meister was called to active duty in the Army Reserve last spring, and he was sent to Afghanistan in June. While deployed, he corresponded with members of an online support group, expressing thanks for their care packages while describing his amazement at the natural beauty of the mountains and streams in Afghanistan.
"Great place, less the bad guys," Meister wrote in an online letter.
Army 1st Sgt. Tobias C. Meister was killed in action on 12/28/05.
Army 1st Sgt. Tobias C. Meister, 30, of Jenks, Okla.
Sgt Meister was assigned to the 321st Civil Affairs Brigade, Army Reserve, San Antonio; killed Dec. 28 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat patrol operations south of Asadabad, Afghanistan.
A northwest Iowa native who was described as a warm person, a patriotic soldier and "an All-American boy" has been killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan.
First Sgt. Tobias Meister, 30, who enlisted in the Iowa Army National Guard before graduating from Remsen Union High School, died Wednesday when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat patrol operations south of Asadabad, according to the U.S. Department of Defense.
Meister, of Jenks, Okla., was assigned to the U.S. Army Reserve's 321st Civil Affairs Brigade and had been working to help rebuild the war-torn country. He left Iowa about 10 years ago to attend the University of Texas at San Antonio, where he graduated with a business degree before joining an oil and natural gas firm in Tulsa, Okla.
He leaves behind his wife, Alicia, and a 1-year-old son, William.
Tom Letsche, mayor of Remsen, a town of 1,762 people in Plymouth County, said Friday that people were stunned and saddened at the news of Meister's death.
"He was always polite and kind to everybody and just a straight arrow. He was the All-American boy," Letsche said.
Meister's father, Dave, was a longtime Remsen businessman, and his mother, Judy, had been a home-economics teacher at the high school. The pair had moved to Oklahoma earlier this year to help their daughter-in-law and new grandson while their son was deployed overseas. Other survivors include a brother, T.J. Meister, 26, of Naples, Fla., paternal grandmother Dorothy Meister of Kingsley, and maternal grandmother June Corbin of Moville.
"He was a pretty incredible person. He was absolutely the most patriotic person you have ever met," said Debbie Rich of Tulsa, Meister's aunt.
Meister was honored nationally in 2002 when he was named "U.S. Army Reserve Drill Sergeant of the Year." The Oklahoma Legislature subsequently passed a resolution in recognition of the award.
The Army said Meister was also a former middleweight Golden Gloves boxing champion in Dallas, and he had an undefeated career in kickboxing. He was a fifth-degree black belt in tae kwon do. In winning the drill-sergeant competition, he finished first in the two-mile run and did 100 push-ups and 114 sit-ups.
Rich recalled an incident in which an office was vandalized at her family's oil and gas business, which employed Meister. The vandals stuck a water hose through a mail slot, flooding the office, and they unsuccessfully tried to burn an American flag, which particularly infuriated Meister, she said.
"He was so mad. He called all the news stations and the newspapers, and because of his diligence, they ended up catching the vandals," Rich said.
Steve Matgen, who operates a Remsen insurance agency, said Meister reminded him of Pat Tillman, a former Arizona Cardinals football player who quit a lucrative athletic career to join the Army and was killed in Afghanistan. He recalled Meister as a kid who would always greet him in a friendly manner and ask how his day was going.
"Toby loved what he was doing. He was a very selfless person," Matgen said. "What a tragedy for something like this to happen."
Meister was born in Kingsley, and his parents later moved to Remsen, where his father first operated a furniture business and more recently owned a carpet and floor-covering firm. He was inspired by his late grandfather, Bill Corbin of Moville, who fought in the battle of Okinawa in World War II, said Larry Manker of Sioux City, Meister's great-uncle.
Manker recalled that whenever he took Meister and his brother hunting, "You would tell him something once, and that is all you ever had to do. When you got back, you got thanked 100 times. He was the most polite and courteous kid you ever saw. He would do anything for you."
Meister was called to active duty in the Army Reserve last spring, and he was sent to Afghanistan in June. While deployed, he corresponded with members of an online support group, expressing thanks for their care packages while describing his amazement at the natural beauty of the mountains and streams in Afghanistan.
"Great place, less the bad guys," Meister wrote in an online letter.
Army 1st Sgt. Tobias C. Meister was killed in action on 12/28/05.
Sunday, December 25, 2005
Army Specialist Sergio Gudino
Remember Our Heroes
Army Specialist Sergio Gudino, 22, of Pomona, California.
Spc Gudino was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Ga.; killed Dec. 25 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his M1A1 tank during combat operations in Baghdad.
www.dailybulletin.com -- OMONA - Sergio Gudino wanted nothing more than to provide for his wife and 3-year-old son.
To do that, the Pomona resident joined the U.S. Army, surprising his three siblings.
"Sergio is like a big ol' teddy bear," said Victor Gudino, Sergio's eldest brother. "I knew he was a strong person but I couldn't see my brother doing that -- shooting at people."
Now Sergio's family is struggling with the news that their sibling's life was cut short.
The 21-year-old Army specialist died Christmas Day when a roadside bomb went off near the tank he was driving during combat operations in Baghdad, Iraq, the Defense Department announced Tuesday.
"He's not going to be here to see his son grow up," said Sergio's younger brother Andrew, 18. "I'm going to miss him."
Sergio, a quiet man who always had a smile on his face, was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division out of Fort Stewart, Ga.
Sergio was a graduate of Claremont High School. Although his brothers attended Pomona High, Sergio chose to attend Claremont High for the academic program, Victor, 27, said.
Not only was Sergio a straight-A student, he was also a strong athlete who was part of the football, track and field and wrestling teams, Andrew said.
The Gudino brothers said they all thought Sergio would go on to college, and they were surprised when he decided to marry shortly after graduating.
Sergio married his wife, Candy, in December of 2001 and worked and attended Chaffey College, his brothers said. But when Sergio learned he was going to be a father he refocused and concentrated on working.
To provide for his wife and newborn son, Cyrus, he held down three jobs, working for United Parcel Service in one of the company's warehouses, at a sandwich shop and selling time shares, Andrew said.
Then about three years ago Sergio announced he was joining the Army.
Eddie Gudino, 25, said he realized his brother was thinking of joining the service when he saw an Army recruiter at Sergio's wedding.
"When I seen the recruiter you pretty much got the hint," Eddie said.
Sergio went off to Iraq but returned to Pomona this fall to recover from a serious wound that left a gash in his right shoulder. Eddie said Sergio told their father the wound was accidental and resulted when a large caliber round left in a weapon discharged.
Sergio spent about two months in Pomona before returning overseas around late October, Eddie said.
The older brothers said they tried to talk to Sergio and get him to reconsider returning to Iraq. He had the option of not returning but he wanted to rejoin his colleagues.
He was also talking about re-enlisting when his commitment ended, Victor said.
"He liked what he was doing. He never seemed scared about anything," he said.
When he was in town Sergio spoke about how he missed not having a particular brand of Mexican hot sauce, his brothers said.
The Tabasco sauce the military provided just didn't satisfy Sergio, so he bought a couple of cases of Tapatio hot sauce and took it with him, Victor said.
While he was away Sergio would call on special occasions such as Mother's Day and he'd e-mail periodically, the brothers said.
Often Sergio's wife would forward messages or share news about him with the family, the brothers said.
Victor said the news of his brother's death hasn't really sunk in.
"I still can't believe it," he said. "It just comes to my head all the time. I'm not going to be able to see him."
Word that Sergio had died came Sunday afternoon, Eddie said. Military officials came to the family's home and he knew something was wrong.
The officials wanted to speak with the Gudino brothers' parents, Eddie said. So he called his father who lives in Rancho Cucamonga and asked him to come speak with the Army officials.
His father held his emotions in, Eddie said, and only broke down when he spoke with Sergio's wife on the phone.
"I'd never seen him cry before," Eddie said.
Army Specialist Sergio Gudino was killed in action on 12/25/05.
Army Specialist Sergio Gudino, 22, of Pomona, California.
Spc Gudino was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Ga.; killed Dec. 25 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his M1A1 tank during combat operations in Baghdad.
www.dailybulletin.com -- OMONA - Sergio Gudino wanted nothing more than to provide for his wife and 3-year-old son.
To do that, the Pomona resident joined the U.S. Army, surprising his three siblings.
"Sergio is like a big ol' teddy bear," said Victor Gudino, Sergio's eldest brother. "I knew he was a strong person but I couldn't see my brother doing that -- shooting at people."
Now Sergio's family is struggling with the news that their sibling's life was cut short.
The 21-year-old Army specialist died Christmas Day when a roadside bomb went off near the tank he was driving during combat operations in Baghdad, Iraq, the Defense Department announced Tuesday.
"He's not going to be here to see his son grow up," said Sergio's younger brother Andrew, 18. "I'm going to miss him."
Sergio, a quiet man who always had a smile on his face, was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division out of Fort Stewart, Ga.
Sergio was a graduate of Claremont High School. Although his brothers attended Pomona High, Sergio chose to attend Claremont High for the academic program, Victor, 27, said.
Not only was Sergio a straight-A student, he was also a strong athlete who was part of the football, track and field and wrestling teams, Andrew said.
The Gudino brothers said they all thought Sergio would go on to college, and they were surprised when he decided to marry shortly after graduating.
Sergio married his wife, Candy, in December of 2001 and worked and attended Chaffey College, his brothers said. But when Sergio learned he was going to be a father he refocused and concentrated on working.
To provide for his wife and newborn son, Cyrus, he held down three jobs, working for United Parcel Service in one of the company's warehouses, at a sandwich shop and selling time shares, Andrew said.
Then about three years ago Sergio announced he was joining the Army.
Eddie Gudino, 25, said he realized his brother was thinking of joining the service when he saw an Army recruiter at Sergio's wedding.
"When I seen the recruiter you pretty much got the hint," Eddie said.
Sergio went off to Iraq but returned to Pomona this fall to recover from a serious wound that left a gash in his right shoulder. Eddie said Sergio told their father the wound was accidental and resulted when a large caliber round left in a weapon discharged.
Sergio spent about two months in Pomona before returning overseas around late October, Eddie said.
The older brothers said they tried to talk to Sergio and get him to reconsider returning to Iraq. He had the option of not returning but he wanted to rejoin his colleagues.
He was also talking about re-enlisting when his commitment ended, Victor said.
"He liked what he was doing. He never seemed scared about anything," he said.
When he was in town Sergio spoke about how he missed not having a particular brand of Mexican hot sauce, his brothers said.
The Tabasco sauce the military provided just didn't satisfy Sergio, so he bought a couple of cases of Tapatio hot sauce and took it with him, Victor said.
While he was away Sergio would call on special occasions such as Mother's Day and he'd e-mail periodically, the brothers said.
Often Sergio's wife would forward messages or share news about him with the family, the brothers said.
Victor said the news of his brother's death hasn't really sunk in.
"I still can't believe it," he said. "It just comes to my head all the time. I'm not going to be able to see him."
Word that Sergio had died came Sunday afternoon, Eddie said. Military officials came to the family's home and he knew something was wrong.
The officials wanted to speak with the Gudino brothers' parents, Eddie said. So he called his father who lives in Rancho Cucamonga and asked him to come speak with the Army officials.
His father held his emotions in, Eddie said, and only broke down when he spoke with Sergio's wife on the phone.
"I'd never seen him cry before," Eddie said.
Army Specialist Sergio Gudino was killed in action on 12/25/05.
Army Specialist Anthony O. Cardinal
Remember Our Heroes
Army Specialist Anthony O. Cardinal, 20, of Muskegon, Mich.
Spc Cardinal was assigned to the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Ga.; killed Dec. 25 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat operations in Baghdad.
Associated Press
As his time in Iraq ticked down, Army Spc. Tony Cardinal was worried, his wife, Amber, said.
The Michigan-reared soldier was due to leave Iraq on Jan. 5, but was anxious as the date neared.
"He mentioned to me that he's more afraid of dying now than ever, because he was so close to coming home," she said.
While his death had not been officially announced by the Pentagon, Amber Cardinal said two soldiers came to her door in Fort Stewart, Ga., on Christmas and told her he had died earlier in the day. She had no further details.
Spc. Cardinal, 20, graduated in 2003 from Oakridge High School in Muskegon; his wife graduated from Oakridge the following year.
Amber Cardinal said she last heard from him on Christmas Eve, when he wrote that he had two missions that day.
Spc. Cardinal had spent nearly a year in Iraq and was to spend the rest of his enlistment in Georgia.
"Amber and the kids meant the world to him," Cardinal's mother, Maria, said. "He always put them first. He was a wonderful husband and a good father."
Amber Cardinal had recently moved to Fort Stewart with their two children, 19-month-old Mikel and 2-month-old Maylee. Her family remains in Michigan.
"I'm coming home as soon as possible. It's too hard being here now," she said.
Spc. Cardinal joined the Army shortly before the arrival of the couple's first baby because jobs were scarce in the Muskegon area, his wife said. He was in Iraq when the couple's daughter was born in October. He only saw her via the Web.
Amber Cardinal said her husband came to love the military and wanted to make a career out of it.
"He was really dedicated to his job," she said. "He said they were getting things done over there."
Army Specialist Anthony O. Cardinal was killed in action on 12/25/05.
Army Specialist Anthony O. Cardinal, 20, of Muskegon, Mich.
Spc Cardinal was assigned to the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Ga.; killed Dec. 25 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat operations in Baghdad.
Associated Press
As his time in Iraq ticked down, Army Spc. Tony Cardinal was worried, his wife, Amber, said.
The Michigan-reared soldier was due to leave Iraq on Jan. 5, but was anxious as the date neared.
"He mentioned to me that he's more afraid of dying now than ever, because he was so close to coming home," she said.
While his death had not been officially announced by the Pentagon, Amber Cardinal said two soldiers came to her door in Fort Stewart, Ga., on Christmas and told her he had died earlier in the day. She had no further details.
Spc. Cardinal, 20, graduated in 2003 from Oakridge High School in Muskegon; his wife graduated from Oakridge the following year.
Amber Cardinal said she last heard from him on Christmas Eve, when he wrote that he had two missions that day.
Spc. Cardinal had spent nearly a year in Iraq and was to spend the rest of his enlistment in Georgia.
"Amber and the kids meant the world to him," Cardinal's mother, Maria, said. "He always put them first. He was a wonderful husband and a good father."
Amber Cardinal had recently moved to Fort Stewart with their two children, 19-month-old Mikel and 2-month-old Maylee. Her family remains in Michigan.
"I'm coming home as soon as possible. It's too hard being here now," she said.
Spc. Cardinal joined the Army shortly before the arrival of the couple's first baby because jobs were scarce in the Muskegon area, his wife said. He was in Iraq when the couple's daughter was born in October. He only saw her via the Web.
Amber Cardinal said her husband came to love the military and wanted to make a career out of it.
"He was really dedicated to his job," she said. "He said they were getting things done over there."
Army Specialist Anthony O. Cardinal was killed in action on 12/25/05.
Saturday, December 24, 2005
Army Sgt. Myla L. Maravillosa
Remember Our Heroes
Army Sgt. Myla L. Maravillosa, 24, of Wahiawa, Hawaii
Sgt Maravillosa was assigned to the 203rd Military Intelligence Battalion, Army Reserve, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.; died Dec. 24 in Kirkuk, Iraq, of injuries sustained earlier that day when her Humvee was attacked by enemy forces using rocket-propelled grenades in Hawijah, Iraq.
KHNL-8 - Family and friends today mourned the death of Army Sgt. Myla Maravillosa.
Sergeant Myla Maravillosa was killed in Iraq when humvee was hit by an enemy grenade on Christmas Eve.
Her mother, Estelita Maravillosa from Wahiawa, said she supported her daughter's decision to join the Army reserve.
But said it was the worst thing that could happen during the holidays, a visit from two army officers. "Christmas eve... what happened... it's very terrible.
The 23 year old was assigned to the Army Reserve's 203rd Intelligence Battalion. Her specialty was interrogations. Myla joined the reserve to help pay for college and to serve her country.
Estelita says it's a country paying a high price in this war.
"My daughter is the victim. I hope President Bush will remember that one, will realize how many American soldiers are being killed.
"What I wanted is my daughter will be buried with dignity and honor. That's all I wanted, that all my request will be granted, because that is my last farewell to her. That's all."
Myla had only been in Iraq since late November.
Estaellita brought her to Hawaii for a funeral service, then will take her to the Phillipines to be buried.
Estelita also plans to start a foundation there in her daughter's name to help feed needy children.
Army Sgt. Myla L. Maravillosa was killed in action on 12/24/05.
Army Sgt. Myla L. Maravillosa, 24, of Wahiawa, Hawaii
Sgt Maravillosa was assigned to the 203rd Military Intelligence Battalion, Army Reserve, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.; died Dec. 24 in Kirkuk, Iraq, of injuries sustained earlier that day when her Humvee was attacked by enemy forces using rocket-propelled grenades in Hawijah, Iraq.
KHNL-8 - Family and friends today mourned the death of Army Sgt. Myla Maravillosa.
Sergeant Myla Maravillosa was killed in Iraq when humvee was hit by an enemy grenade on Christmas Eve.
Her mother, Estelita Maravillosa from Wahiawa, said she supported her daughter's decision to join the Army reserve.
But said it was the worst thing that could happen during the holidays, a visit from two army officers. "Christmas eve... what happened... it's very terrible.
The 23 year old was assigned to the Army Reserve's 203rd Intelligence Battalion. Her specialty was interrogations. Myla joined the reserve to help pay for college and to serve her country.
Estelita says it's a country paying a high price in this war.
"My daughter is the victim. I hope President Bush will remember that one, will realize how many American soldiers are being killed.
"What I wanted is my daughter will be buried with dignity and honor. That's all I wanted, that all my request will be granted, because that is my last farewell to her. That's all."
Myla had only been in Iraq since late November.
Estaellita brought her to Hawaii for a funeral service, then will take her to the Phillipines to be buried.
Estelita also plans to start a foundation there in her daughter's name to help feed needy children.
Army Sgt. Myla L. Maravillosa was killed in action on 12/24/05.
Thursday, December 22, 2005
Army Specialist Joshua Lee Omvig
Remember Our Heroes
Army Specialist Joshua Lee Omvig, 22, Grundy Center, Iowa.
SPC Joshua Omvig of the 339th MP Company, was born in Wyoming on November 18, 1983 to proud parents, Randy and Ellen Omvig, and left a hole in his families hearts when he passed on December 22, 2005 at the age of 22 at his home in Iowa.
The following is an excerpt from the website honoring Joshua which is maintained by his aunt, Julie Westly. Please visit this memorial website for more information on Joshua, and to learn more about PTSD. http://joshua-omvig.memory-of.com/About.aspx
Spc. Omvig was a Proud American, an American Hero and a member of the United States Army Reserve 339th MP Company based in Davenport, Iowa. He recently returned from an 11 month tour of duty in Iraq, fighting for his country and it's people in "Operation Iraqi Freedom." Josh was a PROUD member of the Grundy Center American Lutheran Church, the Grundy Center Volunteer Fire Department, and the Grundy Center Police Reserves.
Josh insisted on graduating early from high school after joining the reserves at just 17 years of age. He was so excited about his future, he wanted to get into basic training as fast as he could....He had wanted, his whole life to be a police officer, and to serve and protect his country, and the citizens of his country, America. The Army Reserves was his ticket to achieving that dream.
......then came 911, The War Against Terror, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and Iraq.
While serving is duty in Iraq for an 11 month "tour" the conditions where unimaginable, and worse yet were the UNSPEAKABLE "jobs" and "duties" they had to do.
Josh was a proud American, loved his country, and was proud to defend her and the freedoms of it's people. He knew why he had to do the things he and others did, he was just never able to recover from having seen and done them.
He came home a year ago with PTSD (POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER) and was never the same.
Army Specialist Joshua Lee Omvig died as a result of untreated Post Traumatic Stress Disorder on 12/22/05.
Update 11/06/07:
President Bush Signs Joshua Omvig Suicide Bill into Law
By Becky Ogann
DES MOINES (AP) - President Bush has signed the Joshua Omvig Suicide Prevention Bill, providing improved screening and treatment for at-risk veterans.
The law is named after Joshua Omvig, a 22-year-old soldier from Davenport, who committed suicide in December 2005 after he returned from Iraq.
The bill requires mental health training for Veterans Administration staff, screen suicide risk factors for veterans who receive VA care, refer at-risk veterans for counseling and designate a suicide prevention counselor at each VA medical facility.
Veterans Health Administration mental health officials estimate as many as 5,000 veterans a year commit suicide.
Army Specialist Joshua Lee Omvig, 22, Grundy Center, Iowa.
SPC Joshua Omvig of the 339th MP Company, was born in Wyoming on November 18, 1983 to proud parents, Randy and Ellen Omvig, and left a hole in his families hearts when he passed on December 22, 2005 at the age of 22 at his home in Iowa.
The following is an excerpt from the website honoring Joshua which is maintained by his aunt, Julie Westly. Please visit this memorial website for more information on Joshua, and to learn more about PTSD. http://joshua-omvig.memory-of.com/About.aspx
Spc. Omvig was a Proud American, an American Hero and a member of the United States Army Reserve 339th MP Company based in Davenport, Iowa. He recently returned from an 11 month tour of duty in Iraq, fighting for his country and it's people in "Operation Iraqi Freedom." Josh was a PROUD member of the Grundy Center American Lutheran Church, the Grundy Center Volunteer Fire Department, and the Grundy Center Police Reserves.
Josh insisted on graduating early from high school after joining the reserves at just 17 years of age. He was so excited about his future, he wanted to get into basic training as fast as he could....He had wanted, his whole life to be a police officer, and to serve and protect his country, and the citizens of his country, America. The Army Reserves was his ticket to achieving that dream.
......then came 911, The War Against Terror, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and Iraq.
While serving is duty in Iraq for an 11 month "tour" the conditions where unimaginable, and worse yet were the UNSPEAKABLE "jobs" and "duties" they had to do.
Josh was a proud American, loved his country, and was proud to defend her and the freedoms of it's people. He knew why he had to do the things he and others did, he was just never able to recover from having seen and done them.
He came home a year ago with PTSD (POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER) and was never the same.
Army Specialist Joshua Lee Omvig died as a result of untreated Post Traumatic Stress Disorder on 12/22/05.
Update 11/06/07:
President Bush Signs Joshua Omvig Suicide Bill into Law
By Becky Ogann
DES MOINES (AP) - President Bush has signed the Joshua Omvig Suicide Prevention Bill, providing improved screening and treatment for at-risk veterans.
The law is named after Joshua Omvig, a 22-year-old soldier from Davenport, who committed suicide in December 2005 after he returned from Iraq.
The bill requires mental health training for Veterans Administration staff, screen suicide risk factors for veterans who receive VA care, refer at-risk veterans for counseling and designate a suicide prevention counselor at each VA medical facility.
Veterans Health Administration mental health officials estimate as many as 5,000 veterans a year commit suicide.
Sunday, December 18, 2005
Marine Lance Cpl. Samuel Tapia
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. Samuel Tapia, 20, of San Benito, Texas
Lance Cpl. Tapia was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 18 by small-arms fire while conducting combat operations in Ramadi, Iraq.
www.brownsvilleherald.com -- December 21, 2005 A 20-year-old San Benito native serving with the U.S. Marine Corps in Iraq died Sunday.
Lance Cpl. Samuel Tapia, who graduated from San Benito High School in 2004, was with the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines Weapons Company in Iraq, his wife Jackelyn Tapia said.
“He died in action,” she said. “He was the only one (who died that day). He died like a true hero, like a true Marine.”
She said Tapia had been in the Marine Corps for a year and three months and had been in Iraq for four months. She said he was an infantryman and was doing patrols.
“He would always tell me he wasn’t scared of dying,” Jackelyn Tapia said, adding that he had called her almost every day for the last month.
“He was proud of what he was doing.”
She said she and Tapia met while working at Whataburger. They had been married for a year and a half and had one daughter, Samantha who turned 1-year-old the day of her father's death.
She said her husband always had a smile on his face.
“He was very happy, always making people laugh,” she said. “He was a big-time joker.”
In high school, he was in choir. After the military, he wanted to be a state trooper or a police officer, Jackelyn Tapia said.
But, Samuel had always had a dream of serving in the Marines, his aunt, Maria Tapia, said.
“Since he was 5 years old, he wanted to be a Marine,” she said in Spanish.
She said Samuel was a “good boy,” “educated” and “calm.”
Maria Tapia said she was there when Samuel was born on Sept. 4, 1985, in a San Benito house.
“I feel bad because I received him when he born,” she said, adding she was handed Samuel immediately after he was delivered.
“He was real outgoing,” his cousin, Marco Tapia, said.
Another cousin, Carmelo, agreed about that.
In addition to his wife, daughter, numerous cousins, uncles and aunts, Tapia is survived by his parents, Juvenal and Rosario Tapia of San Benito, one brother and one sister.
Marine Lance Cpl. Samuel Tapia was killed in action on 12/18/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Samuel Tapia, 20, of San Benito, Texas
Lance Cpl. Tapia was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 18 by small-arms fire while conducting combat operations in Ramadi, Iraq.
www.brownsvilleherald.com -- December 21, 2005 A 20-year-old San Benito native serving with the U.S. Marine Corps in Iraq died Sunday.
Lance Cpl. Samuel Tapia, who graduated from San Benito High School in 2004, was with the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines Weapons Company in Iraq, his wife Jackelyn Tapia said.
“He died in action,” she said. “He was the only one (who died that day). He died like a true hero, like a true Marine.”
She said Tapia had been in the Marine Corps for a year and three months and had been in Iraq for four months. She said he was an infantryman and was doing patrols.
“He would always tell me he wasn’t scared of dying,” Jackelyn Tapia said, adding that he had called her almost every day for the last month.
“He was proud of what he was doing.”
She said she and Tapia met while working at Whataburger. They had been married for a year and a half and had one daughter, Samantha who turned 1-year-old the day of her father's death.
She said her husband always had a smile on his face.
“He was very happy, always making people laugh,” she said. “He was a big-time joker.”
In high school, he was in choir. After the military, he wanted to be a state trooper or a police officer, Jackelyn Tapia said.
But, Samuel had always had a dream of serving in the Marines, his aunt, Maria Tapia, said.
“Since he was 5 years old, he wanted to be a Marine,” she said in Spanish.
She said Samuel was a “good boy,” “educated” and “calm.”
Maria Tapia said she was there when Samuel was born on Sept. 4, 1985, in a San Benito house.
“I feel bad because I received him when he born,” she said, adding she was handed Samuel immediately after he was delivered.
“He was real outgoing,” his cousin, Marco Tapia, said.
Another cousin, Carmelo, agreed about that.
In addition to his wife, daughter, numerous cousins, uncles and aunts, Tapia is survived by his parents, Juvenal and Rosario Tapia of San Benito, one brother and one sister.
Marine Lance Cpl. Samuel Tapia was killed in action on 12/18/05.
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
Army Specialist Peter J. Navarro
Remember Our Heroes
Army Specialist Peter J. Navarro, 20, of Wildwood, Mo.
Spc Navarro was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 70th Armor, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, Fort Riley, Kan.; killed Dec. 13 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee while conducting combat operations in Taji, Iraq.
KSDK-Loved ones gathered to say goodbye to Army Specialist Peter Navarro, a 20 year old man from Ballwin who was killed in Iraq.
Specialist Navarro was killed by a roadside bomb just one month before the scheduled end of his deployment in Iraq. He had been home earlier this year, and told his parents he had to go back to Iraq because the people in his unit needed him.
For his parents, it was the second time in 6 months they buried a son.
Peter's younger brother, Daniel, was killed in a car accident earlier this year.
Peter Navarro was one of four soldiers killed when a roadside bomb exploded. His father, Jose Navarro, said, "In our last conversation he told us, 'Don't send any mail because on December 20th, we won't be getting anymore mail for our unit.' They were getting ready to head back."
On December 23rd, people lined the streets to say goodbye to Specialist Navarro as the funeral procession passed by. Those in the procession likely saw people they never met standing along the road to say goodbye. Some were waving flags in support, and some were veterans saying goodbye to a soldier they never met. Those in the procession also likely saw a group protesting the military. Click here to read about the protestors.
After learning of their son's death, Jose Navarro said, "He died because he was trying to make a difference, and being a soldier was what was making a difference in this time of life." Jose Navarro was also in the military. He spent 23 years as a Navy Medic.
Peter joined the Army right after graduation from Lafayette High School in 2003, forgoing his acceptance at Truman State.
The Navarros have another son, Kevin, who is 14 years old.
Army Specialist Peter J. Navarro was killed in action on 12/13/05.
Army Specialist Peter J. Navarro, 20, of Wildwood, Mo.
Spc Navarro was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 70th Armor, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, Fort Riley, Kan.; killed Dec. 13 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee while conducting combat operations in Taji, Iraq.
KSDK-Loved ones gathered to say goodbye to Army Specialist Peter Navarro, a 20 year old man from Ballwin who was killed in Iraq.
Specialist Navarro was killed by a roadside bomb just one month before the scheduled end of his deployment in Iraq. He had been home earlier this year, and told his parents he had to go back to Iraq because the people in his unit needed him.
For his parents, it was the second time in 6 months they buried a son.
Peter's younger brother, Daniel, was killed in a car accident earlier this year.
Peter Navarro was one of four soldiers killed when a roadside bomb exploded. His father, Jose Navarro, said, "In our last conversation he told us, 'Don't send any mail because on December 20th, we won't be getting anymore mail for our unit.' They were getting ready to head back."
On December 23rd, people lined the streets to say goodbye to Specialist Navarro as the funeral procession passed by. Those in the procession likely saw people they never met standing along the road to say goodbye. Some were waving flags in support, and some were veterans saying goodbye to a soldier they never met. Those in the procession also likely saw a group protesting the military. Click here to read about the protestors.
After learning of their son's death, Jose Navarro said, "He died because he was trying to make a difference, and being a soldier was what was making a difference in this time of life." Jose Navarro was also in the military. He spent 23 years as a Navy Medic.
Peter joined the Army right after graduation from Lafayette High School in 2003, forgoing his acceptance at Truman State.
The Navarros have another son, Kevin, who is 14 years old.
Army Specialist Peter J. Navarro was killed in action on 12/13/05.
Saturday, December 10, 2005
Army Sgt. Julia V. Atkins
Remember Our Heroes
Army Sgt. Julia V. Atkins, 22, of Bossier City, La.
Sgt Atkins was assigned to the 64th Military Police Company, 720th Military Police Battalion, 89th Military Police Brigade, Fort Hood, Texas; killed Dec. 10 when an improvised explosive device detonated near her Humvee during patrol operations in Baghdad.
By John Andrew Prime
The Shreveport Times
A family who remembers Julia Atkins as a fun-loving young woman proud of her new car and planning for the future will attend a memorial in her honor Sunday while they wait for her body to return home for a funeral and burial.
Atkins, 22, died Saturday when an improvised explosive device detonated under her military vehicle in Baghdad, where she was serving with the 64th Military Police Company, 720th Military Police Battalion, 89th Military Police Brigade, based at Fort Hood, Texas.
"I'm proud of her," her distraught stepbrother, Larry Thomas, said Tuesday at the family home in Bossier City. "She was doing something she wanted to do."
Thomas, who served with the Louisiana Army National Guard's Shreveport-based 1/156th Armor Battalion's Bravo Compnay until early 2004, just before it deployed to service in Iraq, will attend the memorial for Atkins on Sunday at Fort Polk. With him will be their two sisters and his stepfather, Billy Atkins, a staff sergeant with the 1st Battalion's headquarters company. Atkins returned with other unit members in September after an 11-month deployment to Iraq, which followed months of training at Fort Hood and at Fort Irwin in the high desert of California.
Atkins was overcome with grief Tuesday. Larry Thomas said since his stepsister served in the active-duty Army and her dad was in the National Guard, their units' paths didn't cross in Iraq.
"Her dad didn't see her for a year while they were over there," Thomas said.
"But they spent a lot of time together at Fort Hood, as much as they could."
He said her dad was disappointed that their leaves home this summer saw the two just miss one another. "They were trying to set up their leaves, but they didn't mesh."
When Julia Atkins came home this summer, Thomas said, she was proud of her new car, a bright red 2004 Oldsmobile Alero. "She would get her nieces and nephews and get in that car and go.
"She loved to shop and she loved to eat. She was ... she was just Julia, and I was looking forward to my sister coming home in February."
The family, while small, remains tightly knit. Thomas' mother, Johnnie Bell Atkins, died in July 1996. A sister, Tawanna Thomas, lives in Bossier City. Another, Shiri Thomas, lives at Fort Hood with her husband, Ricky Selby, who also is in the Army.
Julia Atkins planned to return to school and get married, Larry Thomas said. Atkins' fiancé also is in the Army and remains on duty in Iraq, where a memorial for her also will be held Sunday.
Army Sgt. Julia V. Atkins was killed in action on 12/10/05.
Army Sgt. Julia V. Atkins, 22, of Bossier City, La.
Sgt Atkins was assigned to the 64th Military Police Company, 720th Military Police Battalion, 89th Military Police Brigade, Fort Hood, Texas; killed Dec. 10 when an improvised explosive device detonated near her Humvee during patrol operations in Baghdad.
By John Andrew Prime
The Shreveport Times
A family who remembers Julia Atkins as a fun-loving young woman proud of her new car and planning for the future will attend a memorial in her honor Sunday while they wait for her body to return home for a funeral and burial.
Atkins, 22, died Saturday when an improvised explosive device detonated under her military vehicle in Baghdad, where she was serving with the 64th Military Police Company, 720th Military Police Battalion, 89th Military Police Brigade, based at Fort Hood, Texas.
"I'm proud of her," her distraught stepbrother, Larry Thomas, said Tuesday at the family home in Bossier City. "She was doing something she wanted to do."
Thomas, who served with the Louisiana Army National Guard's Shreveport-based 1/156th Armor Battalion's Bravo Compnay until early 2004, just before it deployed to service in Iraq, will attend the memorial for Atkins on Sunday at Fort Polk. With him will be their two sisters and his stepfather, Billy Atkins, a staff sergeant with the 1st Battalion's headquarters company. Atkins returned with other unit members in September after an 11-month deployment to Iraq, which followed months of training at Fort Hood and at Fort Irwin in the high desert of California.
Atkins was overcome with grief Tuesday. Larry Thomas said since his stepsister served in the active-duty Army and her dad was in the National Guard, their units' paths didn't cross in Iraq.
"Her dad didn't see her for a year while they were over there," Thomas said.
"But they spent a lot of time together at Fort Hood, as much as they could."
He said her dad was disappointed that their leaves home this summer saw the two just miss one another. "They were trying to set up their leaves, but they didn't mesh."
When Julia Atkins came home this summer, Thomas said, she was proud of her new car, a bright red 2004 Oldsmobile Alero. "She would get her nieces and nephews and get in that car and go.
"She loved to shop and she loved to eat. She was ... she was just Julia, and I was looking forward to my sister coming home in February."
The family, while small, remains tightly knit. Thomas' mother, Johnnie Bell Atkins, died in July 1996. A sister, Tawanna Thomas, lives in Bossier City. Another, Shiri Thomas, lives at Fort Hood with her husband, Ricky Selby, who also is in the Army.
Julia Atkins planned to return to school and get married, Larry Thomas said. Atkins' fiancé also is in the Army and remains on duty in Iraq, where a memorial for her also will be held Sunday.
Army Sgt. Julia V. Atkins was killed in action on 12/10/05.
Thursday, December 01, 2005
Marine Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Clay
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Clay, 27, of Pensacola, Fla.
SSG Clay was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
www.pensacolanewsjournal.com - SSG Clay, a Washington High School graduate, was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division in Twentynine Palms, Calif.
As part of Operation Iraqi Freedom, his unit was attached to Regimental Combat Team 8, 2nd Marine Division.
"Words will never describe accurately the honor, courage and commitment of these fallen Marines and sailors," Col. William Crowe, commanding officer of the 7th Marine Regiment, said in a news release. "Seventh Marine Regiment is deeply saddened by the terrible loss of life of 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines. These men did not give their lives in vain, and we will not soon forget our fellow brothers."
Clay was born Dec. 12, 1977, in Pensacola. In addition to Washington High School, he also attended Scenic Heights Elementary and Ferry Pass Middle. He joined the Marine Corps in June 1996, shortly after graduating from Washington.
Assigned to his battalion in November 2003, Clay served as a platoon sergeant. He deployed to Iraq with his unit in July.
Clay was a highly decorated Marine during his nine years in the Corps.
His awards include: the Combat Action Ribbon; three awards of the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal; the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal; two awards of the Meritorious Unit Commendation; the Navy Unit Commendation; two awards of the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal; the Expeditionary Medal-Marine Corps; the Korean Defense Service Medal; the National Defense Service Medal; five Sea Service Deployment Ribbons; the War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal; and the War on Terrorism Service Medal.
Clay's death comes less than two months after the Oct. 23 fatal shooting of Marine Cpl. Jonathan "J.R." Spears, 21, of Molino. Spears was the 2,000th U.S. soldier killed in Iraq, the first from the Pensacola area.
When Spears' uncle, Ed Spears, heard of Clay's death, his thoughts went first to the Clay family.
"We know exactly what they're going through," he said. "It's something you can never be ready for. It's something you never expect to deal with."
Clay resided with his wife, Lisa, in California. His parents, Sara Jo and Bud Clay, reside in Pensacola.
"God bless these fallen heroes," Crowe said. "God bless the families of these wonderful Marines and sailors."
Marine Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Clay was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Clay, 27, of Pensacola, Fla.
SSG Clay was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
www.pensacolanewsjournal.com - SSG Clay, a Washington High School graduate, was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division in Twentynine Palms, Calif.
As part of Operation Iraqi Freedom, his unit was attached to Regimental Combat Team 8, 2nd Marine Division.
"Words will never describe accurately the honor, courage and commitment of these fallen Marines and sailors," Col. William Crowe, commanding officer of the 7th Marine Regiment, said in a news release. "Seventh Marine Regiment is deeply saddened by the terrible loss of life of 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines. These men did not give their lives in vain, and we will not soon forget our fellow brothers."
Clay was born Dec. 12, 1977, in Pensacola. In addition to Washington High School, he also attended Scenic Heights Elementary and Ferry Pass Middle. He joined the Marine Corps in June 1996, shortly after graduating from Washington.
Assigned to his battalion in November 2003, Clay served as a platoon sergeant. He deployed to Iraq with his unit in July.
Clay was a highly decorated Marine during his nine years in the Corps.
His awards include: the Combat Action Ribbon; three awards of the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal; the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal; two awards of the Meritorious Unit Commendation; the Navy Unit Commendation; two awards of the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal; the Expeditionary Medal-Marine Corps; the Korean Defense Service Medal; the National Defense Service Medal; five Sea Service Deployment Ribbons; the War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal; and the War on Terrorism Service Medal.
Clay's death comes less than two months after the Oct. 23 fatal shooting of Marine Cpl. Jonathan "J.R." Spears, 21, of Molino. Spears was the 2,000th U.S. soldier killed in Iraq, the first from the Pensacola area.
When Spears' uncle, Ed Spears, heard of Clay's death, his thoughts went first to the Clay family.
"We know exactly what they're going through," he said. "It's something you can never be ready for. It's something you never expect to deal with."
Clay resided with his wife, Lisa, in California. His parents, Sara Jo and Bud Clay, reside in Pensacola.
"God bless these fallen heroes," Crowe said. "God bless the families of these wonderful Marines and sailors."
Marine Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Clay was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Adam W. Kaiser
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. Adam W. Kaiser, 19, of Naperville, Ill.
Lance Cpl Kaiser was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq. Also killed were Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Clay, Lance Cpl. John M. Holmason, Lance Cpl. David A. Huhn, Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez, Cpl. Anthony T. McElveen, Lance Cpl. Scott T. Modeen, Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten, Sgt. Andy A. Stevens, and Lance Cpl. Craig N. Watson.
www.suntimes.com - Lance Cpl. Adam W. Kaiser, 19, of Naperville, had been interested in the military for years before he joined. Kaiser, who held a black belt in tae kwon do, chose the Marine Corps because he believed it presented the toughest challenge, said his father, Wade Kaiser.
"He offered his life for his country when called on for him to give it," Wade Kaiser said, his voice cracking. "I can't be any more proud of him."
Thursday's bombing was the deadliest attack on American troops in Iraq in four months. Also killed was Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten, 19, of Byron, which is just south of Rockford, and eight others. A roadside bomb exploded while they were on a foot patrol near Fallujah. Eleven others were wounded.
The team was conducting "counterinsurgency operations throughout Fallujah and the surrounding area" to improve security for the Dec. 15 elections, the military said.
In addition to his dad, Kaiser is survived by his twin sister, Amanda; sister, Sarah; and mother, Christine. He joined the Marines shortly after graduating from Naperville Central.
Mike Pine said Kaiser, his best friend, "was a hard guy to dislike." Pine said Kaiser "had been dedicated to [joining the service] for his entire life."
"From the very beginning, he always wanted to do it," Pine said. "He was always talking about it."
Hyun Wuk Chung, Kaiser's tae kwon do master for five years, said Kaiser was an excellent student. "He was almost mine," he said. "He was like my stepson. I am so sad."
The military said Patten is survived by his father, Alan, and mother, Gayle Nachansky, of Byron.
Kaiser joined the Marine Corps in October 2004 and Patten joined in August 2004. They both served as riflemen and were deployed to Iraq in July.
Kaiser and Patten were assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, out of Twentynine Palms, Calif. The unit was attached to the Regimental Combat Team 8, which is part of the II Marine Expeditionary Force based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
The unit has suffered some of the highest casualties of the Iraq war. In the nearly three years since the war began, 147 Marines from II MEF have died in combat, according to 2nd Marine Division spokesman Lt. Barry Edwards.
"Words will never describe accurately the honor, courage and commitment of these fallen Marines and sailors," 7th Marine Regiment commanding officer Col. William B. Crowe said in a statement. "These men did not give their lives in vain, and we will not soon forget our fellow brothers."
Marine Lance Cpl. Adam W. Kaiser was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Adam W. Kaiser, 19, of Naperville, Ill.
Lance Cpl Kaiser was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq. Also killed were Staff Sgt. Daniel J. Clay, Lance Cpl. John M. Holmason, Lance Cpl. David A. Huhn, Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez, Cpl. Anthony T. McElveen, Lance Cpl. Scott T. Modeen, Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten, Sgt. Andy A. Stevens, and Lance Cpl. Craig N. Watson.
www.suntimes.com - Lance Cpl. Adam W. Kaiser, 19, of Naperville, had been interested in the military for years before he joined. Kaiser, who held a black belt in tae kwon do, chose the Marine Corps because he believed it presented the toughest challenge, said his father, Wade Kaiser.
"He offered his life for his country when called on for him to give it," Wade Kaiser said, his voice cracking. "I can't be any more proud of him."
Thursday's bombing was the deadliest attack on American troops in Iraq in four months. Also killed was Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten, 19, of Byron, which is just south of Rockford, and eight others. A roadside bomb exploded while they were on a foot patrol near Fallujah. Eleven others were wounded.
The team was conducting "counterinsurgency operations throughout Fallujah and the surrounding area" to improve security for the Dec. 15 elections, the military said.
In addition to his dad, Kaiser is survived by his twin sister, Amanda; sister, Sarah; and mother, Christine. He joined the Marines shortly after graduating from Naperville Central.
Mike Pine said Kaiser, his best friend, "was a hard guy to dislike." Pine said Kaiser "had been dedicated to [joining the service] for his entire life."
"From the very beginning, he always wanted to do it," Pine said. "He was always talking about it."
Hyun Wuk Chung, Kaiser's tae kwon do master for five years, said Kaiser was an excellent student. "He was almost mine," he said. "He was like my stepson. I am so sad."
The military said Patten is survived by his father, Alan, and mother, Gayle Nachansky, of Byron.
Kaiser joined the Marine Corps in October 2004 and Patten joined in August 2004. They both served as riflemen and were deployed to Iraq in July.
Kaiser and Patten were assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, out of Twentynine Palms, Calif. The unit was attached to the Regimental Combat Team 8, which is part of the II Marine Expeditionary Force based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
The unit has suffered some of the highest casualties of the Iraq war. In the nearly three years since the war began, 147 Marines from II MEF have died in combat, according to 2nd Marine Division spokesman Lt. Barry Edwards.
"Words will never describe accurately the honor, courage and commitment of these fallen Marines and sailors," 7th Marine Regiment commanding officer Col. William B. Crowe said in a statement. "These men did not give their lives in vain, and we will not soon forget our fellow brothers."
Marine Lance Cpl. Adam W. Kaiser was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Scott T. Modeen
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. Scott T. Modeen, 24, of Hennepin, Minn.
Lance Cpl Modeen was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Modeen, a 24-year-old lance corporal, joined the Marines after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and was in his second tour of duty in Iraq.
"Scott was the kind of person who could make you laugh whenever you were around him," said a statement from his family. "After 9/11, he joined the Marines and was proud to be defending our freedom. He was proud to be a Marine."
by Sue Webber - Sun Newspapers
A memorial billboard tribute to Lance Cpl. Scott Modeen, 24, of Robbinsdale, was unveiled Jan. 5 in Crystal. Modeen was one of 10 Marines killed Dec. 1, 2005, in Iraq. (Bill Jones Sun Newspapers)
A month-long tribute to Lance Cpl. Scott Modeen of Robbinsdale was unveiled Jan. 5 in Crystal.
Modeen, 24, was one of 10 Marines killed Dec. 1, 2005, in Iraq. His funeral was Dec. 12 at The Church of the Sacred Heart in Robbinsdale.
A memorial billboard designed by one of Modeen's friends was installed last week by Clear Channel Outdoor, on the south side of 42nd Avenue North between Brunswick and Colorado avenues, facing east above Keng's Chow Mein restaurant.
"We were approached by a friend of Scott Modeen's who asked us to do it," said Jeff Fuller, a representative of Clear Channel Outdoor. "We felt it was something we wanted to get involved in."
Matt Guertin, a 1999 Cooper High School graduate and friend of Modeen's, came up with the idea and designed the outdoor board.
"I'd known Scott since ninth grade," said Guertin, an entrepreneur who lives in Golden Valley and owns his own painting company.
Guertin said he and other friends of Modeen's collaborated on the design idea following the Marine's funeral. Guertin used his computer graphics skills to create the design and submitted it to Clear Channel Outdoor for consideration.
Modeen's mother, Kim, said last week she was eagerly awaiting a chance to see the billboard.
In the meantime, she is savoring a last letter from her son that the mailman delivered to her home the day of Scott's funeral Dec. 12.
"The envelope said, 'Don't open me until Christmas,'" Kim Modeen said.
She waited until Dec. 26 to open her son's letter, she said.
"It was the most grown up, beautiful letter," she said. "I just bawled and bawled. It was a 'Dear Mom' letter. He told me how much he loved me, that I was in his heart all day, and that he couldn't wait for a home-cooked meal.
"He said he had a job to do and he was doing it so others could enjoy the holidays with their families."
Her son's letter reminded her that the invisible bubble would keep him safe, said Kim Modeen, who plans to frame her son's last letter.
Marine Lance Cpl. Scott T. Modeen was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Scott T. Modeen, 24, of Hennepin, Minn.
Lance Cpl Modeen was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Modeen, a 24-year-old lance corporal, joined the Marines after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and was in his second tour of duty in Iraq.
"Scott was the kind of person who could make you laugh whenever you were around him," said a statement from his family. "After 9/11, he joined the Marines and was proud to be defending our freedom. He was proud to be a Marine."
by Sue Webber - Sun Newspapers
A memorial billboard tribute to Lance Cpl. Scott Modeen, 24, of Robbinsdale, was unveiled Jan. 5 in Crystal. Modeen was one of 10 Marines killed Dec. 1, 2005, in Iraq. (Bill Jones Sun Newspapers)
A month-long tribute to Lance Cpl. Scott Modeen of Robbinsdale was unveiled Jan. 5 in Crystal.
Modeen, 24, was one of 10 Marines killed Dec. 1, 2005, in Iraq. His funeral was Dec. 12 at The Church of the Sacred Heart in Robbinsdale.
A memorial billboard designed by one of Modeen's friends was installed last week by Clear Channel Outdoor, on the south side of 42nd Avenue North between Brunswick and Colorado avenues, facing east above Keng's Chow Mein restaurant.
"We were approached by a friend of Scott Modeen's who asked us to do it," said Jeff Fuller, a representative of Clear Channel Outdoor. "We felt it was something we wanted to get involved in."
Matt Guertin, a 1999 Cooper High School graduate and friend of Modeen's, came up with the idea and designed the outdoor board.
"I'd known Scott since ninth grade," said Guertin, an entrepreneur who lives in Golden Valley and owns his own painting company.
Guertin said he and other friends of Modeen's collaborated on the design idea following the Marine's funeral. Guertin used his computer graphics skills to create the design and submitted it to Clear Channel Outdoor for consideration.
Modeen's mother, Kim, said last week she was eagerly awaiting a chance to see the billboard.
In the meantime, she is savoring a last letter from her son that the mailman delivered to her home the day of Scott's funeral Dec. 12.
"The envelope said, 'Don't open me until Christmas,'" Kim Modeen said.
She waited until Dec. 26 to open her son's letter, she said.
"It was the most grown up, beautiful letter," she said. "I just bawled and bawled. It was a 'Dear Mom' letter. He told me how much he loved me, that I was in his heart all day, and that he couldn't wait for a home-cooked meal.
"He said he had a job to do and he was doing it so others could enjoy the holidays with their families."
Her son's letter reminded her that the invisible bubble would keep him safe, said Kim Modeen, who plans to frame her son's last letter.
Marine Lance Cpl. Scott T. Modeen was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten, 19, of Byron, Ill.
Lance Cpl Patten was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Author: Lindsay Kus
Posted On: Monday, December 19, 2005
Rockford--Family and friends say good-bye to a Byron Marine killed in combat.
Monday more than 100 people paid their respects to 19-year-old Lance Corporal Andrew Patten.
Patten, or Andy as his friends call him, died just two weeks ago on a battlefield in Iraq. Family, former Byron High School classmates, fellow veterans, and community members came to the Maywood Evangelical Free Church in Rockford to say good-bye to the very special young man.
His friend Matt Nyberg says, "It's so hard. It's sad to say good-bye but I like to think of it more of a memorial of his life. His life was incredible. Incredible, but short."
Born in Byron, Andrew Patten graduated from Byron High School in May of 2004. The following summer he decided to join the Marines. Nyberg says, "He wanted to help people and loved adventures. He loved America. He was proud of it." After a four-month stint in Iraq, Lance Corporal Patten was killed on a battlefield in Fallujah.
Monday tearful friends and family joined together at the funeral service to say good-bye. Former classmates talked about the popular Marine. They called him their best friend. "We had incredible times together. We'll keep those memories for the rest of our lives. We're always gonna remember these memories," says friend Eddie Engelert. Mike Bond adds, "I'm gonna miss being able to talk to him."
And although they want be able to talk to him again, the young men say they're proud of their friend and his bravery overseas. Nyberg says, "It makes you proud you read books about people who were buried in Arlington to know that one of your best friends is buried with some of the bravest men in the country. It makes you proud."
Lance Corporal Andrew Patten was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
Marine Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten, 19, of Byron, Ill.
Lance Cpl Patten was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Author: Lindsay Kus
Posted On: Monday, December 19, 2005
Rockford--Family and friends say good-bye to a Byron Marine killed in combat.
Monday more than 100 people paid their respects to 19-year-old Lance Corporal Andrew Patten.
Patten, or Andy as his friends call him, died just two weeks ago on a battlefield in Iraq. Family, former Byron High School classmates, fellow veterans, and community members came to the Maywood Evangelical Free Church in Rockford to say good-bye to the very special young man.
His friend Matt Nyberg says, "It's so hard. It's sad to say good-bye but I like to think of it more of a memorial of his life. His life was incredible. Incredible, but short."
Born in Byron, Andrew Patten graduated from Byron High School in May of 2004. The following summer he decided to join the Marines. Nyberg says, "He wanted to help people and loved adventures. He loved America. He was proud of it." After a four-month stint in Iraq, Lance Corporal Patten was killed on a battlefield in Fallujah.
Monday tearful friends and family joined together at the funeral service to say good-bye. Former classmates talked about the popular Marine. They called him their best friend. "We had incredible times together. We'll keep those memories for the rest of our lives. We're always gonna remember these memories," says friend Eddie Engelert. Mike Bond adds, "I'm gonna miss being able to talk to him."
And although they want be able to talk to him again, the young men say they're proud of their friend and his bravery overseas. Nyberg says, "It makes you proud you read books about people who were buried in Arlington to know that one of your best friends is buried with some of the bravest men in the country. It makes you proud."
Lance Corporal Andrew Patten was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
Marine Lance Cpl. Andrew G. Patten was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Cpl. Anthony T. McElveen
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Cpl. Anthony T. McElveen, 20, of Little Falls, Minn.
Cpl McElveen was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
by Tim Post, Minnesota Public Radio
December 4, 2005
Residents of the central Minnesota town of Little Falls are dealing with the death of one of their hometown sons. Cpl. Anthony McElveen, 21, was killed last Thursday by a roadside bomb in Iraq. Nine other Marines were killed in that attack, including Lance Cpl. Scott Modeen, 24, from New Hope.
Collegeville, Minn. — Anthony McElveen's high school social studies teacher, Randy Tabatt, saw the young Marine just last June. McElveen was attending his younger sister's graduation from Little Falls High School. Tabatt was handing out diplomas, so he was only able to talk briefly with his former student.
"He told me that he was heading out (to Iraq) very soon. I said 'Good luck.' And that was it," Tabatt said.
Tabatt remembers McElveen as a hardworking and dedicated student who loved to talk about politics. Tabatt says by his junior year, McElveen knew he wanted to be a Marine.
"He was a tremendously patriotic young man. He had a love for his country, very respectful, very polite. He wanted to do the right thing. All in allm a good civic-minded individual," Tabatt said.
McElveen vistited Tabatt's classroom last spring and talked with students. He told them he loved what he was doing in the U.S. Marine's 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Division, and was proud of his part in the Iraq war.
"He carried himself with such pride. He was a stoic individual wearing that uniform," said Tabatt. "When he came through the hallways people were in awe of him. When he came into the classroom and spoke the students were very respectful of what he had to say."
Another of McElveen's former teachers invited him into the classroom that day. His band instructor, Dwight Nelson, says McElveen looked every bit a Marine when he strode into the band room. McElveen spent four years playing the saxophone, and so Nelson's students remember him well.
"Many of these kids he went to school with, some of them three years. They remember him sitting in the saxophone section being a good high school student. The next minute he's off to war, and the next minute he's gone," Nelson said.
Nelson says it's McElveen's recent visit to Little Falls that's stuck in everyone's mind. His death is even more painful for everyone in town because, as Nelson says, he was just here.
"We all hear of the 2,100 some deaths (in Iraq), but it's always another person, another face, from another area. Now it really hits home when it's somebody who's walked the streets of our town," Nelson said.
McElveen's parents live in Little Falls. He was married just 10 months ago, to another Little Falls native, who is serving in the U.S. Navy.
Marine Cpl. Anthony T. McElveen was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Cpl. Anthony T. McElveen, 20, of Little Falls, Minn.
Cpl McElveen was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
by Tim Post, Minnesota Public Radio
December 4, 2005
Residents of the central Minnesota town of Little Falls are dealing with the death of one of their hometown sons. Cpl. Anthony McElveen, 21, was killed last Thursday by a roadside bomb in Iraq. Nine other Marines were killed in that attack, including Lance Cpl. Scott Modeen, 24, from New Hope.
Collegeville, Minn. — Anthony McElveen's high school social studies teacher, Randy Tabatt, saw the young Marine just last June. McElveen was attending his younger sister's graduation from Little Falls High School. Tabatt was handing out diplomas, so he was only able to talk briefly with his former student.
"He told me that he was heading out (to Iraq) very soon. I said 'Good luck.' And that was it," Tabatt said.
Tabatt remembers McElveen as a hardworking and dedicated student who loved to talk about politics. Tabatt says by his junior year, McElveen knew he wanted to be a Marine.
"He was a tremendously patriotic young man. He had a love for his country, very respectful, very polite. He wanted to do the right thing. All in allm a good civic-minded individual," Tabatt said.
McElveen vistited Tabatt's classroom last spring and talked with students. He told them he loved what he was doing in the U.S. Marine's 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Division, and was proud of his part in the Iraq war.
"He carried himself with such pride. He was a stoic individual wearing that uniform," said Tabatt. "When he came through the hallways people were in awe of him. When he came into the classroom and spoke the students were very respectful of what he had to say."
Another of McElveen's former teachers invited him into the classroom that day. His band instructor, Dwight Nelson, says McElveen looked every bit a Marine when he strode into the band room. McElveen spent four years playing the saxophone, and so Nelson's students remember him well.
"Many of these kids he went to school with, some of them three years. They remember him sitting in the saxophone section being a good high school student. The next minute he's off to war, and the next minute he's gone," Nelson said.
Nelson says it's McElveen's recent visit to Little Falls that's stuck in everyone's mind. His death is even more painful for everyone in town because, as Nelson says, he was just here.
"We all hear of the 2,100 some deaths (in Iraq), but it's always another person, another face, from another area. Now it really hits home when it's somebody who's walked the streets of our town," Nelson said.
McElveen's parents live in Little Falls. He was married just 10 months ago, to another Little Falls native, who is serving in the U.S. Navy.
Marine Cpl. Anthony T. McElveen was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez, 20, of Splendora, Texas
Lance Cpl Martinez was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Associated Press
A Texan who put his baseball dreams on hold to serve in the Marines was killed in Iraq in the deadliest attack against American troops in Iraq in four months, the U.S. military said Saturday.
Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez, 20, of Splendora, Texas, and nine others died Thursday when a roadside bomb exploded while they were on a foot patrol near Fallujah. Eleven others were wounded.
Jeremy Hunt, Martinez's stepfather, said Martinez signed up for the Marines as a junior at Cleveland High School and left for boot camp five days after graduating in 2003.
"He met a Marine recruiter, and he saw the life of a Marine," Hunt said. "He knew they were the best trained and highly motivated branch of the United States military, and he always wanted to be with the best."
Martinez was a pitcher for Cleveland High's varsity baseball team, Hunt said.
"For a long time he always wanted to join the Marines, either that or play baseball," Hunt said. "He went to the Marines first and put baseball on the back burner until he got out."
Hunt said Martinez spent his time outside of baseball and school in the company of his family friends "hanging out and making everybody laugh and smile."
Martinez was with the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force out of Twentynine Palms, Calif.
The unit was attached to the Regimental Combat Team 8, which is part of the II Marine Expeditionary Force based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
Martinez deployed for a second tour in Iraq in July after serving a seven-month tour in 2004, Hunt said.
Martinez is survived by his mother and stepfather, Kelly and Jeremy Hunt of Splendora, siblings Candice McGehee and James Michael McGehee of Splendora, and father James Kevin McGehee of Cleveland.
Marine Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez, 20, of Splendora, Texas
Lance Cpl Martinez was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Associated Press
A Texan who put his baseball dreams on hold to serve in the Marines was killed in Iraq in the deadliest attack against American troops in Iraq in four months, the U.S. military said Saturday.
Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez, 20, of Splendora, Texas, and nine others died Thursday when a roadside bomb exploded while they were on a foot patrol near Fallujah. Eleven others were wounded.
Jeremy Hunt, Martinez's stepfather, said Martinez signed up for the Marines as a junior at Cleveland High School and left for boot camp five days after graduating in 2003.
"He met a Marine recruiter, and he saw the life of a Marine," Hunt said. "He knew they were the best trained and highly motivated branch of the United States military, and he always wanted to be with the best."
Martinez was a pitcher for Cleveland High's varsity baseball team, Hunt said.
"For a long time he always wanted to join the Marines, either that or play baseball," Hunt said. "He went to the Marines first and put baseball on the back burner until he got out."
Hunt said Martinez spent his time outside of baseball and school in the company of his family friends "hanging out and making everybody laugh and smile."
Martinez was with the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force out of Twentynine Palms, Calif.
The unit was attached to the Regimental Combat Team 8, which is part of the II Marine Expeditionary Force based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
Martinez deployed for a second tour in Iraq in July after serving a seven-month tour in 2004, Hunt said.
Martinez is survived by his mother and stepfather, Kelly and Jeremy Hunt of Splendora, siblings Candice McGehee and James Michael McGehee of Splendora, and father James Kevin McGehee of Cleveland.
Marine Lance Cpl. Robert A. Martinez was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Sgt. Andy A. Stevens
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Sgt. Andy A. Stevens, 29, of Tomah, Wis.
Sgt Stevens was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
The Tomah Journal
By Bob Kliebenstein
When the national anthem was played prior to the start of the Tomah High School boys basketball game Friday night, the words likely held a little more meaning.
Before the anthem was played, there was a moment of silence after it was announced Sgt. Andy A. Stevens, a 1995 THS graduate, was killed on Dec. 1 in Fallujah, Iraq.
Stevens is the son of Al Stevens, a former longtime THS teacher, who still lives in Tomah. His mother, Kaye Olson, lives in Maryland Heights, Mo., according to a Marine Corps spokesperson.
Stevens was one of 10 United States Marines killed from an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations in Fallujah.
All 10 Marines were assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif. During Operation Iraqi Freedom, their unit was attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward).
Stevens, who joined the Marines in June 1995 and was serving as a scout sniper, deployed to Iraq with his unit in July, the Marine Corps said.
The U.S. military said last Friday that the group was on a foot patrol near Fallujah. Of the 11 Marines who were injured, seven later returned to duty, it said. The military said the rest of the team was conducting “counterinsurgency operations throughout Fallujah and the surrounding area” to improve security for the Dec. 15 elections.
Sandy Murray was the principal of Tomah High School when Stevens was a student there and remembers him as confidant and determined.
“He knew what he wanted to do — and he did it,” she said.
Murray, now Tomah Elementary School principal, reminisced Saturday evening with Karen Riggs, a Tomah High School social studies teacher who was a guidance counselor then.
She remembered Stevens as a pole vaulter on the track team and a choir member, “He was such a hard worker and so much fun,” Riggs said. “He had such commitment.”
Stevens’ awards include the Combat Action Ribbon, two awards of the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal, the Meritorious Unit Commen-dation, the Navy Unit Commendation, the Korean Defense Service Medal, two awards of the National Defense Service Medal, five Sea Service Deployment Ribbons, the War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal and the War on Terrorism Service Medal.
Marine Sgt. Andy A. Stevens was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Sgt. Andy A. Stevens, 29, of Tomah, Wis.
Sgt Stevens was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
The Tomah Journal
By Bob Kliebenstein
When the national anthem was played prior to the start of the Tomah High School boys basketball game Friday night, the words likely held a little more meaning.
Before the anthem was played, there was a moment of silence after it was announced Sgt. Andy A. Stevens, a 1995 THS graduate, was killed on Dec. 1 in Fallujah, Iraq.
Stevens is the son of Al Stevens, a former longtime THS teacher, who still lives in Tomah. His mother, Kaye Olson, lives in Maryland Heights, Mo., according to a Marine Corps spokesperson.
Stevens was one of 10 United States Marines killed from an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations in Fallujah.
All 10 Marines were assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif. During Operation Iraqi Freedom, their unit was attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward).
Stevens, who joined the Marines in June 1995 and was serving as a scout sniper, deployed to Iraq with his unit in July, the Marine Corps said.
The U.S. military said last Friday that the group was on a foot patrol near Fallujah. Of the 11 Marines who were injured, seven later returned to duty, it said. The military said the rest of the team was conducting “counterinsurgency operations throughout Fallujah and the surrounding area” to improve security for the Dec. 15 elections.
Sandy Murray was the principal of Tomah High School when Stevens was a student there and remembers him as confidant and determined.
“He knew what he wanted to do — and he did it,” she said.
Murray, now Tomah Elementary School principal, reminisced Saturday evening with Karen Riggs, a Tomah High School social studies teacher who was a guidance counselor then.
She remembered Stevens as a pole vaulter on the track team and a choir member, “He was such a hard worker and so much fun,” Riggs said. “He had such commitment.”
Stevens’ awards include the Combat Action Ribbon, two awards of the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal, the Meritorious Unit Commen-dation, the Navy Unit Commendation, the Korean Defense Service Medal, two awards of the National Defense Service Medal, five Sea Service Deployment Ribbons, the War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal and the War on Terrorism Service Medal.
Marine Sgt. Andy A. Stevens was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. John M. Holmason
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. John M. Holmason, 20, of Suprise, Ariz.
Lance Cpl Holmason was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
The Oregonian
Maya Blackmun
SCAPPOOSE -- Two photo portraits of John Holmason faced the more than 800 gathered Sunday morning to honor the dead 20-year-old Marine.
In one, he stood straight-faced in his dress blues, the U.S. Marine Corps flag behind him. In the other, he smiled as he sat in a turtleneck and slacks with his hands clasped around his knees, a wall of yellow leaves in the background.
Two pictures showed a bit of a life just 2 decades old, remembered in a memorial service at Scappoose High School.
Lance Cpl. Holmason died Dec. 1 with nine other Marines from an improvised explosive devise that injured 11 more from his unit. They were at a promotion ceremony in a makeshift patrol base outside Fallujah when the explosion occurred, rather than on a foot patrol as reported initially.
Holmason joined the Marines in August 2004, completed boot camp in February and was sent to Iraq in July. He died 46 days short of his 21st birthday, which he was expecting to celebrate at home before heading back to Iraq.
Instead, his body was brought back to a crowd that gathered in the gym of the school he graduated from in 2003. A colorful mix of orange and black trimmed the walls and the floor, along with red, white and blue in floral arrangements and bows.
A bagpiper played the "U.S. Marine Corps Hymn" as white-gloved Marines brought in his casket draped by the U.S. flag.
Prayers, songs, videos and spoken remembrances by family, friends and fellow servicemen followed. They spoke of Holmason as a disciplined Eagle Scout, playful prankster, fun-loving outdoorsman, got-your-back brother, devoted son and grandson, and dedicated Marine.
Gov. Ted Kulongoski, a former Marine, spoke at the Holmason's funeral, as has been his pledge for all service members killed overseas.
His death is an irreplaceable loss to his family and Scappoose, Kulongoski said, but Holmason's life had an undeniable grace and meaning. As with all of the young who have died of late in military service, Kulongoski said, it's hard to watch such talent and promise eclipsed.
"Our state is forever diminished by his loss," Kulongoski said, before presenting Purple Heart medals and the state flags to Holmason's family.
Many moments of the service brought tears, sniffles and throat-clearing.
Jenae Ricker of St. Helens spoke of her cousin treating her as a sister, vowing to protect her.
"I never knew he meant he'd be watching over me," she said.
But laughter also erupted at memories shared, rumbling through the crowd as one photo flashed of Holmason as a boy side-by-side with a girl grinning into the camera, both in curlers.
Senior Airman Christopher Huber of the U.S. Air Force, spoke of fun times shared as children, serious concerns as adults and a growing respect for his cousin.
"For the man he was becoming," Huber said, "and the man he already had become."
Holmason is survived by his father and stepmother, Tim and Paula Holmason, his mother and stepfather, Karla and Mark Comfort; siblings, Hailee, Hunter and Jaden Holmason and Josh and Jacob Comfort; stepsister, Kaysha Comfort; and numerous other relatives.
Hero Hummer
Marine Lance Cpl. John M. Holmason was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. John M. Holmason, 20, of Suprise, Ariz.
Lance Cpl Holmason was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
The Oregonian
Maya Blackmun
SCAPPOOSE -- Two photo portraits of John Holmason faced the more than 800 gathered Sunday morning to honor the dead 20-year-old Marine.
In one, he stood straight-faced in his dress blues, the U.S. Marine Corps flag behind him. In the other, he smiled as he sat in a turtleneck and slacks with his hands clasped around his knees, a wall of yellow leaves in the background.
Two pictures showed a bit of a life just 2 decades old, remembered in a memorial service at Scappoose High School.
Lance Cpl. Holmason died Dec. 1 with nine other Marines from an improvised explosive devise that injured 11 more from his unit. They were at a promotion ceremony in a makeshift patrol base outside Fallujah when the explosion occurred, rather than on a foot patrol as reported initially.
Holmason joined the Marines in August 2004, completed boot camp in February and was sent to Iraq in July. He died 46 days short of his 21st birthday, which he was expecting to celebrate at home before heading back to Iraq.
Instead, his body was brought back to a crowd that gathered in the gym of the school he graduated from in 2003. A colorful mix of orange and black trimmed the walls and the floor, along with red, white and blue in floral arrangements and bows.
A bagpiper played the "U.S. Marine Corps Hymn" as white-gloved Marines brought in his casket draped by the U.S. flag.
Prayers, songs, videos and spoken remembrances by family, friends and fellow servicemen followed. They spoke of Holmason as a disciplined Eagle Scout, playful prankster, fun-loving outdoorsman, got-your-back brother, devoted son and grandson, and dedicated Marine.
Gov. Ted Kulongoski, a former Marine, spoke at the Holmason's funeral, as has been his pledge for all service members killed overseas.
His death is an irreplaceable loss to his family and Scappoose, Kulongoski said, but Holmason's life had an undeniable grace and meaning. As with all of the young who have died of late in military service, Kulongoski said, it's hard to watch such talent and promise eclipsed.
"Our state is forever diminished by his loss," Kulongoski said, before presenting Purple Heart medals and the state flags to Holmason's family.
Many moments of the service brought tears, sniffles and throat-clearing.
Jenae Ricker of St. Helens spoke of her cousin treating her as a sister, vowing to protect her.
"I never knew he meant he'd be watching over me," she said.
But laughter also erupted at memories shared, rumbling through the crowd as one photo flashed of Holmason as a boy side-by-side with a girl grinning into the camera, both in curlers.
Senior Airman Christopher Huber of the U.S. Air Force, spoke of fun times shared as children, serious concerns as adults and a growing respect for his cousin.
"For the man he was becoming," Huber said, "and the man he already had become."
Holmason is survived by his father and stepmother, Tim and Paula Holmason, his mother and stepfather, Karla and Mark Comfort; siblings, Hailee, Hunter and Jaden Holmason and Josh and Jacob Comfort; stepsister, Kaysha Comfort; and numerous other relatives.
Marine Lance Cpl. John M. Holmason was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. David A. Huhn
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. David A. Huhn, 24, of Portland, Mich.
Lance Cpl Huhn was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Lance Corporal Dave Huhn graduated from Portland High School in 2000. He joined the Marines in 2004 and was sent to Iraq earlier this summer. He only had a month left until he was scheduled to come home.
His family first got word of his death just before 1am Friday, and they've spent the day trying to accept the fact that he's really gone. Lance Corporal Dave Huhn's uncle Jeffrey Helmel says Huhn was a typical guy.
Jeffrey Helmel, uncle: "He played football in high school, he would fish, play cards, he liked video games."
But when he enlisted in the Marines specifically to fight in Iraq, his uncle say he did a not-so-typical thing.
Jeffrey Helmel: "He went to a place not real popular now, he went with a purpose and a mission, he went to carry out that mission."
He hadn't even been in the Marines yet for 2 full years, but his family says he already planned to make the military his career, and if Huhn could talk to them today, Helmel says he thinks he'd tell them to be strong.
Jeffrey Helmel: "I think he would say, don't worry about me, I did what I wanted to do. I was there for a purpose, I wanted to come home and it just didn't happen."
Now his family here at home is left to carry on without him, but they will never forget anything about him or the sacrifice he made.
Jeffrey Helmel: "He went there for us. Freedom comes at a cost and it seems that every generation has to pay that cost."
Marine Lance Cpl. David A. Huhn was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. David A. Huhn, 24, of Portland, Mich.
Lance Cpl Huhn was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Lance Corporal Dave Huhn graduated from Portland High School in 2000. He joined the Marines in 2004 and was sent to Iraq earlier this summer. He only had a month left until he was scheduled to come home.
His family first got word of his death just before 1am Friday, and they've spent the day trying to accept the fact that he's really gone. Lance Corporal Dave Huhn's uncle Jeffrey Helmel says Huhn was a typical guy.
Jeffrey Helmel, uncle: "He played football in high school, he would fish, play cards, he liked video games."
But when he enlisted in the Marines specifically to fight in Iraq, his uncle say he did a not-so-typical thing.
Jeffrey Helmel: "He went to a place not real popular now, he went with a purpose and a mission, he went to carry out that mission."
He hadn't even been in the Marines yet for 2 full years, but his family says he already planned to make the military his career, and if Huhn could talk to them today, Helmel says he thinks he'd tell them to be strong.
Jeffrey Helmel: "I think he would say, don't worry about me, I did what I wanted to do. I was there for a purpose, I wanted to come home and it just didn't happen."
Now his family here at home is left to carry on without him, but they will never forget anything about him or the sacrifice he made.
Jeffrey Helmel: "He went there for us. Freedom comes at a cost and it seems that every generation has to pay that cost."
Marine Lance Cpl. David A. Huhn was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Craig N. Watson
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. Craig N. Watson, 21, of Union City, Mich.
Lance Cpl Watson was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Robert Warner
The Enquirer
On a hilltop north of town, Union City folks circled the family of Lance Cpl. Craig Watson eight-deep in the snow.
Two U.S. Marines lifted the American flag from Watson's silver metal casket. Rifle shots rang out, then taps played mournfully across the cemetery.
Carefully, deliberately, the Marines folded the flag in silence. The only sound was the snow-muffled traffic of M-60 in the distance.
One minute, two minutes.
Finally the flag was folded into a perfect triangle.
One of the Marines held the flag. The other slowly saluted.
Then the Marine turned and knelt in front of Shirley Watson, Craig's mother.
Gently, he handed her the flag.
She sobbed the sobs that only the mother of a soldier killed in action could know.
And old soldiers cried.
So it was Sunday as the Watsons buried their 21-year-old son and brother, killed 10 days earlier in a bomb attack on troops in Fallujah, Iraq.
Earlier, in the same high school gym where three years ago Watson was beginning his senior season on the Union City High School wrestling team, some 800 people gathered to remember their native son.
On the spot where so often Watson's hand was raised in victory on the wrestling mat, folding chairs were filled with the people of Union City. There were classmates, teachers, coaches, veterans and out-of-town dignitaries, including U.S. Rep. Joe Schwarz, R-Battle Creek.
"Remember, time is a gift," said Ed Sybesma, the Union City assistant wrestling coach, a military veteran who recalled debating with Watson the merits of the Army and the Marines. "Seeing all of you here today, I know I'm not the only one who's thankful for the time I had with Craig."
"I need to tell you about the last visit I had with Craig," said the Rev. Robert Tharp of the Church of the Nazarene. "The sparkle in his eye wasn't there. He was worried. Craig was putting up a good front for all of us, but he had come to the end of himself.
"It was just a couple days before his redeployment to this mission that he believed so much in. And even though he believed he was making a difference in the world with his service, having to go back to Iraq for months and months on end, being away from all of you, it started to weigh on him — the hardships, the distance from home, the dangers.
"Craig needed something more than just cards and cookies to get him through. He needed more than the love of all of you. He needed something else in his struggle. ... He just sheepishly came up to me and asked if I could just go across the parking lot and unlock the sanctuary so he could pray. I put my arm around his shoulders and told him, 'Not only — I'll go with you.'
"We made our way to the front of the sanctuary; we knelt down and we prayed."
God gave Watson a new strength that day, Tharp said.
"He went out, went to California and got on a plane and went to Iraq, and put one boot in front of the other, and did his duty."
After the prayers, and the songs — "America the Beautiful," "Amazing Grace," and a recording of Vince Gill's "Go Rest High on that Mountain," hundreds of mourners made the trip across town to Riverside Cemetery for a full military burial service.
The procession of cars, led by nearly two dozen police and fire vehicles, passed under a giant American flag suspended overhead on Broadway Street downtown. Carried on a horse-drawn wagon, Watson's casket was viewed by hundreds of people lining the streets, some at attention, all honoring to their fallen hero. Church bells rang in solemn tribute.
Then it was on to the hilltop, to the crowd around the grave, and those somber last moments.
Snowflakes gathered white-on-white atop the caps of Marines in full dress uniform.
A final benediction, and it was over.
Union City had laid to rest young Craig Watson, old number 67 from the football team, the cute little kid with the soft eyes, the one with his arm around his dad, Jay Watson, at boot camp, the practical joker, the brother of Kevin, Bradley, James, Derek and everybody in the War Dawg platoon of Company F, 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment.
The people walked back to their cold cars in the snow and wind, sadder but wiser, and knowing Craig's back home now.
Back home in Union City, where he belongs.
Marine Lance Cpl. Craig N. Watson was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Craig N. Watson, 21, of Union City, Mich.
Lance Cpl Watson was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward); killed Dec. 1 by an improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Robert Warner
The Enquirer
On a hilltop north of town, Union City folks circled the family of Lance Cpl. Craig Watson eight-deep in the snow.
Two U.S. Marines lifted the American flag from Watson's silver metal casket. Rifle shots rang out, then taps played mournfully across the cemetery.
Carefully, deliberately, the Marines folded the flag in silence. The only sound was the snow-muffled traffic of M-60 in the distance.
One minute, two minutes.
Finally the flag was folded into a perfect triangle.
One of the Marines held the flag. The other slowly saluted.
Then the Marine turned and knelt in front of Shirley Watson, Craig's mother.
Gently, he handed her the flag.
She sobbed the sobs that only the mother of a soldier killed in action could know.
And old soldiers cried.
So it was Sunday as the Watsons buried their 21-year-old son and brother, killed 10 days earlier in a bomb attack on troops in Fallujah, Iraq.
Earlier, in the same high school gym where three years ago Watson was beginning his senior season on the Union City High School wrestling team, some 800 people gathered to remember their native son.
On the spot where so often Watson's hand was raised in victory on the wrestling mat, folding chairs were filled with the people of Union City. There were classmates, teachers, coaches, veterans and out-of-town dignitaries, including U.S. Rep. Joe Schwarz, R-Battle Creek.
"Remember, time is a gift," said Ed Sybesma, the Union City assistant wrestling coach, a military veteran who recalled debating with Watson the merits of the Army and the Marines. "Seeing all of you here today, I know I'm not the only one who's thankful for the time I had with Craig."
"I need to tell you about the last visit I had with Craig," said the Rev. Robert Tharp of the Church of the Nazarene. "The sparkle in his eye wasn't there. He was worried. Craig was putting up a good front for all of us, but he had come to the end of himself.
"It was just a couple days before his redeployment to this mission that he believed so much in. And even though he believed he was making a difference in the world with his service, having to go back to Iraq for months and months on end, being away from all of you, it started to weigh on him — the hardships, the distance from home, the dangers.
"Craig needed something more than just cards and cookies to get him through. He needed more than the love of all of you. He needed something else in his struggle. ... He just sheepishly came up to me and asked if I could just go across the parking lot and unlock the sanctuary so he could pray. I put my arm around his shoulders and told him, 'Not only — I'll go with you.'
"We made our way to the front of the sanctuary; we knelt down and we prayed."
God gave Watson a new strength that day, Tharp said.
"He went out, went to California and got on a plane and went to Iraq, and put one boot in front of the other, and did his duty."
After the prayers, and the songs — "America the Beautiful," "Amazing Grace," and a recording of Vince Gill's "Go Rest High on that Mountain," hundreds of mourners made the trip across town to Riverside Cemetery for a full military burial service.
The procession of cars, led by nearly two dozen police and fire vehicles, passed under a giant American flag suspended overhead on Broadway Street downtown. Carried on a horse-drawn wagon, Watson's casket was viewed by hundreds of people lining the streets, some at attention, all honoring to their fallen hero. Church bells rang in solemn tribute.
Then it was on to the hilltop, to the crowd around the grave, and those somber last moments.
Snowflakes gathered white-on-white atop the caps of Marines in full dress uniform.
A final benediction, and it was over.
Union City had laid to rest young Craig Watson, old number 67 from the football team, the cute little kid with the soft eyes, the one with his arm around his dad, Jay Watson, at boot camp, the practical joker, the brother of Kevin, Bradley, James, Derek and everybody in the War Dawg platoon of Company F, 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment.
The people walked back to their cold cars in the snow and wind, sadder but wiser, and knowing Craig's back home now.
Back home in Union City, where he belongs.
Marine Lance Cpl. Craig N. Watson was killed in action on 12/01/05.
Wednesday, November 30, 2005
Marine Cpl. Joshua D. Snyder
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Cpl. Joshua D. Snyder, 20, of Hampstead, Md.
Cpl Snyder was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died Nov. 30 of wounds sustained from small-arms fire while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Associated Press
HAMPSTEAD, Md. — A 20-year-old Marine rifleman was killed in combat in Iraq, the second military casualty within six weeks from his tightly knit rural community.
Cpl. Joshua D. Snyder, of Hampstead, died Wednesday of wounds sustained from small-arms fire while fighting enemy forces in Fallujah, the Department of Defense announced Thursday.
Snyder was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
Snyder joined the Marine Corps in December 2002 and joined his unit in June 2003, said Lt. Barry Edwards, a spokesman for the 2nd Marine Division. He served in both Afghanistan and Iraq, Edwards said.
A 2002 graduate of Hereford High School in northern Baltimore County, Snyder was the second alumnus of the school to die in Iraq in five weeks, said Steve Turnbaugh, the football coach at Hereford.
Snyder, who played football, was a teammate of Marine Lance Cpl. Norman Anderson III, of Parkton, who died Oct. 19 from a suicide vehicle-borne improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Karabilah, Iraq. The men had been roommates at boot camp.
“It’s been very tough on the guys that he graduated with. We have a very close-knit football family, and it’s been hard on the football players, both past and present,” Turnbaugh said.
Turnbaugh recalled that Snyder had been injured for most of his senior year on the team and took on the role of a student coach.
“He was always willing to help anybody do anything,” Turnbaugh said.
Marine Cpl. Joshua D. Snyder was killed in action on 11/30/05.
Marine Cpl. Joshua D. Snyder, 20, of Hampstead, Md.
Cpl Snyder was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died Nov. 30 of wounds sustained from small-arms fire while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Fallujah, Iraq.
Associated Press
HAMPSTEAD, Md. — A 20-year-old Marine rifleman was killed in combat in Iraq, the second military casualty within six weeks from his tightly knit rural community.
Cpl. Joshua D. Snyder, of Hampstead, died Wednesday of wounds sustained from small-arms fire while fighting enemy forces in Fallujah, the Department of Defense announced Thursday.
Snyder was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
Snyder joined the Marine Corps in December 2002 and joined his unit in June 2003, said Lt. Barry Edwards, a spokesman for the 2nd Marine Division. He served in both Afghanistan and Iraq, Edwards said.
A 2002 graduate of Hereford High School in northern Baltimore County, Snyder was the second alumnus of the school to die in Iraq in five weeks, said Steve Turnbaugh, the football coach at Hereford.
Snyder, who played football, was a teammate of Marine Lance Cpl. Norman Anderson III, of Parkton, who died Oct. 19 from a suicide vehicle-borne improvised explosive device while conducting combat operations against enemy forces in Karabilah, Iraq. The men had been roommates at boot camp.
“It’s been very tough on the guys that he graduated with. We have a very close-knit football family, and it’s been hard on the football players, both past and present,” Turnbaugh said.
Turnbaugh recalled that Snyder had been injured for most of his senior year on the team and took on the role of a student coach.
“He was always willing to help anybody do anything,” Turnbaugh said.
Marine Cpl. Joshua D. Snyder was killed in action on 11/30/05.
Thursday, November 24, 2005
Army Sgt. 1st Class Eric P. Pearrow
Remember Our Heroes
Army Sgt. 1st Class Eric P. Pearrow, 40, of Peoria, Ill.
Sgt Pearrow was assigned to the 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Carson, Colo.; killed Nov. 24 when his M1A2 Abrams tank accidentally rolled over into a canal in Baghdad.
Army Sergeant First Class Eric P. Pearrow, a 40-year-old veteran tank commander who was killed recently in a roll-over accident in Iraq, developed a lifelong fondness for all-terrain vehicles in the fields that surround Peoria.
Pearrow died in Baghdad, Iraq, on November 24t, 2005, Pentagon officials said Monday. He was a tank commander assigned to the 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, which is based at Fort Carson, Colorado, Army spokeswoman Martha Rudd said. He was an experienced soldier who was qualified to lead an entire tank platoon, she said.
Pearrow was riding in an M1A2 Abrams tank when it accidentally rolled over into a canal, Rudd said.
His cause of death was drowning, said Pearrow's fiancee, Niall Campbell, of Deridder, Louisiana.
Campbell said she and Pearrow postponed their wedding plans after learning he was going to be deployed because "he was a really, really good soldier and he wasn't going to die."
East Peoria resident Don Bell said he and Pearrow became best friends 26 years ago after they discovered that they had many common interests.
"We'd chase girls and go four-wheeling ... that kept us so busy," Bell said.
Bell said he and Pearrow also liked to drive Jeeps off-road, testing their driving abilities by following a creek that led to the Illinois River.
The skills Pearrow honed in Peoria would serve him well in the military, where he was assigned to a tank crew after completing boot camp, Bell said.
"He called me up and said, 'I've got the ultimate, four-wheel-drive vehicle. I'm driving an M1 Abrams tank. This thing goes through everything,"' Bell said.
Pearrow, a Bronze Medal recipient, served with tank units in Operation Desert Storm and Bosnia, Bell said.
Military officials provided little information about the November 24, 2005, accident.
Fort Carson spokesman Lieutenant Colonel David Johnson said it was unclear what Pearrow's unit was doing at the time or where he may have been sitting when the tank turned over.
"He could have been anywhere in the tank, with the exception of driving," Johnson said.
Bell said the other members of Pearrow's tank crew managed to get out of the vehicle after it rolled over.
"He made the ultimate sacrifice for those kids over there. He basically sacrificed his own life to save those kids," Bell said.
Pearrow planned to retire in February, when he was scheduled to return to the U.S., Campbell said.
"We were on leave once for 50 days and never had an argument. He was my perfect other half," she said.
"He loved being a U.S. soldier. He loved the Army," Campbell said. "He was fighting the war because he was an American soldier.
"That was his job. Not because it was a war he believed in. He didn't feel like we needed to be in Iraq. He didn't feel like he was making a difference anymore and that we should have left a long time ago."
Pearrow is survived by two daughters who live in Kentucky, both of whom have enlisted in the military.
Army Sgt. 1st Class Eric P. Pearrow was killed in action on 11/24/05.
Army Sgt. 1st Class Eric P. Pearrow, 40, of Peoria, Ill.
Sgt Pearrow was assigned to the 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Carson, Colo.; killed Nov. 24 when his M1A2 Abrams tank accidentally rolled over into a canal in Baghdad.
Army Sergeant First Class Eric P. Pearrow, a 40-year-old veteran tank commander who was killed recently in a roll-over accident in Iraq, developed a lifelong fondness for all-terrain vehicles in the fields that surround Peoria.
Pearrow died in Baghdad, Iraq, on November 24t, 2005, Pentagon officials said Monday. He was a tank commander assigned to the 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, which is based at Fort Carson, Colorado, Army spokeswoman Martha Rudd said. He was an experienced soldier who was qualified to lead an entire tank platoon, she said.
Pearrow was riding in an M1A2 Abrams tank when it accidentally rolled over into a canal, Rudd said.
His cause of death was drowning, said Pearrow's fiancee, Niall Campbell, of Deridder, Louisiana.
Campbell said she and Pearrow postponed their wedding plans after learning he was going to be deployed because "he was a really, really good soldier and he wasn't going to die."
East Peoria resident Don Bell said he and Pearrow became best friends 26 years ago after they discovered that they had many common interests.
"We'd chase girls and go four-wheeling ... that kept us so busy," Bell said.
Bell said he and Pearrow also liked to drive Jeeps off-road, testing their driving abilities by following a creek that led to the Illinois River.
The skills Pearrow honed in Peoria would serve him well in the military, where he was assigned to a tank crew after completing boot camp, Bell said.
"He called me up and said, 'I've got the ultimate, four-wheel-drive vehicle. I'm driving an M1 Abrams tank. This thing goes through everything,"' Bell said.
Pearrow, a Bronze Medal recipient, served with tank units in Operation Desert Storm and Bosnia, Bell said.
Military officials provided little information about the November 24, 2005, accident.
Fort Carson spokesman Lieutenant Colonel David Johnson said it was unclear what Pearrow's unit was doing at the time or where he may have been sitting when the tank turned over.
"He could have been anywhere in the tank, with the exception of driving," Johnson said.
Bell said the other members of Pearrow's tank crew managed to get out of the vehicle after it rolled over.
"He made the ultimate sacrifice for those kids over there. He basically sacrificed his own life to save those kids," Bell said.
Pearrow planned to retire in February, when he was scheduled to return to the U.S., Campbell said.
"We were on leave once for 50 days and never had an argument. He was my perfect other half," she said.
"He loved being a U.S. soldier. He loved the Army," Campbell said. "He was fighting the war because he was an American soldier.
"That was his job. Not because it was a war he believed in. He didn't feel like we needed to be in Iraq. He didn't feel like he was making a difference anymore and that we should have left a long time ago."
Pearrow is survived by two daughters who live in Kentucky, both of whom have enlisted in the military.
Army Sgt. 1st Class Eric P. Pearrow was killed in action on 11/24/05.
Army Spc. Javier A. Villanueva
Remember Our Heroes
Army Spc. Javier A. Villanueva, 25, of Temple, Texas
Spc Villanueva was assigned to the 2nd Squadron, 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Irwin, Calif.; died Nov. 24, 2005 in Asad, Iraq, of injuries sustained Nov. 23 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his dismounted patrol during combat operations in Hit, Iraq.
SPC Javier "Javi" Villanueva,, 25, of Waco passed away Nov. 24, 2005 while serving his country in Iraq.
SPC Villanueva was born Aug. 22, 1980 to Wilfredo Rivera and Christine Lebron. He was raised in Waco and graduated from La Vega High School in 1998.
After high school he attended TSTC in Waco for 2 years.
SPC Villanueva started work for Albertsons and Taco Bell in Waco and moved to Temple where he worked at Ross clothing store for 2 years and also met his wife.
On May 15, 2003 SPC Javier Villanueva and Felicia Owens were married.
SPC Villanueva joined the Army Sept. 16, 2003, and became a medical specialist stationed at Fort Sill, Okla., Ft. Sam Houston in San Antonio and Fort Irwin, Calif. before going to Iraq in Jan. of 2005 and was scheduled to return Dec. 27, 2005.
Survivors are his wife, Felicia Villanueva of Temple; daughter, Taliyah Villanueva of Temple; mother, Christine Lebron of Waco; father, Wilfredo Rivera of Puerto Rico; brothers, David Lebron of Waco, Carlos W. Rivera of Puerto Rico, Wilfredo C. Rivera of Puerto Rico; grandmother, Beatrice Villanueva of Waco; grandparents, Carlos Sr. and Julia Rivera of Puerto Rico; great-grandmother, Carmen Mansolo of Waco.
Army Spc. Javier A. Villanueva was killed in action on 11/24/05.
Army Spc. Javier A. Villanueva, 25, of Temple, Texas
Spc Villanueva was assigned to the 2nd Squadron, 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Irwin, Calif.; died Nov. 24, 2005 in Asad, Iraq, of injuries sustained Nov. 23 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his dismounted patrol during combat operations in Hit, Iraq.
SPC Javier "Javi" Villanueva,, 25, of Waco passed away Nov. 24, 2005 while serving his country in Iraq.
SPC Villanueva was born Aug. 22, 1980 to Wilfredo Rivera and Christine Lebron. He was raised in Waco and graduated from La Vega High School in 1998.
After high school he attended TSTC in Waco for 2 years.
SPC Villanueva started work for Albertsons and Taco Bell in Waco and moved to Temple where he worked at Ross clothing store for 2 years and also met his wife.
On May 15, 2003 SPC Javier Villanueva and Felicia Owens were married.
SPC Villanueva joined the Army Sept. 16, 2003, and became a medical specialist stationed at Fort Sill, Okla., Ft. Sam Houston in San Antonio and Fort Irwin, Calif. before going to Iraq in Jan. of 2005 and was scheduled to return Dec. 27, 2005.
Survivors are his wife, Felicia Villanueva of Temple; daughter, Taliyah Villanueva of Temple; mother, Christine Lebron of Waco; father, Wilfredo Rivera of Puerto Rico; brothers, David Lebron of Waco, Carlos W. Rivera of Puerto Rico, Wilfredo C. Rivera of Puerto Rico; grandmother, Beatrice Villanueva of Waco; grandparents, Carlos Sr. and Julia Rivera of Puerto Rico; great-grandmother, Carmen Mansolo of Waco.
Army Spc. Javier A. Villanueva was killed in action on 11/24/05.
Army Pfc. Marc A. Delgado
Remember Our Heroes
Army Pfc. Marc A. Delgado, 21, of Lithia, Fla.
Pfc Delgado was assigned to the 170th Military Police Company, 504th Military Police Battalion, 42nd Military Police Brigade, Fort Lewis, Wash.; killed Nov. 24 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee causing it to flip into a canal in Baghdad. Also killed was Staff Sgt. Steven C. Reynolds.
BRANDON - He was the 250-pound football player who smothered his mother with kisses. The respectful soldier who would put superior officers in bear hugs and yell, "Leadership sandwich!"
Stories about Marc Delgado kept a church full of family and friends laughing Tuesday.
But the loss of his young life and the pain of his absence left them in tears.
Pfc. Marc Delgado, 21, was killed Thanksgiving Day in Baghdad when an explosive device flipped his vehicle into a canal.
Delgado had been assigned to the Army's 170th Military Police Company, 504th Military Police Battalion, 42nd Military Police Brigade, based at Fort Lewis, Wash.
A 2003 graduate of Durant High School, Delgado would come to his friends' aid in any crisis, they said at his funeral Tuesday.
"His loyalty as a friend surpasses anyone I've known," childhood buddy John Coggins, 20, told a packed Providence Baptist Church on a dreary, overcast morning.
Coggins, much smaller than his friend, would talk trash as a young boy, but Marc was always there to protect him if he got into trouble, he said.
When another buddy, Steven Ginty, needed help in a school play after two classmates stood him up, Delgado agreed to play both parts. Standing 6-foot-3 and 250 pounds, Delgado played a crazy man and then a queen to a 5-foot-5 king.
"It was quite a sight to see," Coggins said.
Coggins and Ginty would drive up Delgado's driveway every morning during high school to pick him up. Delgado, who insisted that they had to leave his house no later than 7:10, would fly out the door right on time, wearing only his pants, carrying his shirt and shoes.
It seemed like yesterday "when we would dress up like our favorite superheroes and fight imaginary bad guys in the front yard," Coggins said.
But before he knew it, Delgado - known as the "O-line Ogre" to his high school football teammates - was leaving for the service.
His mother, Ellen Delgado, said earlier that she had tried to talk him into going into the Navy, like his brother, Eric, who appeared at the service in his uniform. But he wanted to serve in the Army, like his grandfather.
Army Brig. Gen. Rodney Johnson spoke to the crowd, saying he had wanted to come not out of duty but because he knew Delgado.
Johnson, a commandant at the U.S. Military Police School in Missouri, said Delgado was chatty and friendly during his training, when most of his peers were too intimidated to talk to Johnson beyond, "Yes, sir."
"He joined the military when we were a nation at war," Johnson said.
Delgado knew the danger he was entering but made the sacrifice anyway, he said.
Johnson's daughter was Delgado's platoon leader in Iraq.
She would e-mail her father every few days, and Delgado was often a topic of her correspondence.
"Someone looks like they need a hug today," Delgado would call out to other soldiers before wrapping his huge frame around them, Johnson's daughter told him.
The night before his last mission, he hugged two superior officers in a "leadership sandwich," as Delgado called it, Johnson said.
After his speech, Johnson presented Delgado's family with his Purple Heart, Bronze Star and medal for good conduct.
Delgado was posthumously promoted to specialist.
Delgado had looked forward to coming home this February to see his family and celebrate the 21st birthday he had in November, friends said.
Pastor David Stockard, who presided over the service, said Delgado grew up with his son at Providence Christian School, where Stockard was the administrator.
Delgado was a soldier of God as well as a fighter for the country, Stockard said. He regularly attended church and Bible study and worried about getting right with God before he was baptized in February 2001, Stockard said.
Though a protector of his 16-year-old brother, Bryce, Delgado struggled to find his place in life and the family.
"He was that middle child, always trying to find a niche," Stockard said. "But he found a place in our hearts."
Stockard also presided over Delgado's kindergarten graduation, handing him his diploma in the exact spot on the altar from where he spoke Tuesday behind Delgado's casket.
The kindergarten graduation ceremony was taped. The children were asked what they wanted to do when they got older.
"Marc said, "I want to be a policeman,' " Stockard said. "He died being a policeman."
Army Pfc. Marc A. Delgado was killed in action on 11/24/05.
Army Pfc. Marc A. Delgado, 21, of Lithia, Fla.
Pfc Delgado was assigned to the 170th Military Police Company, 504th Military Police Battalion, 42nd Military Police Brigade, Fort Lewis, Wash.; killed Nov. 24 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee causing it to flip into a canal in Baghdad. Also killed was Staff Sgt. Steven C. Reynolds.
BRANDON - He was the 250-pound football player who smothered his mother with kisses. The respectful soldier who would put superior officers in bear hugs and yell, "Leadership sandwich!"
Stories about Marc Delgado kept a church full of family and friends laughing Tuesday.
But the loss of his young life and the pain of his absence left them in tears.
Pfc. Marc Delgado, 21, was killed Thanksgiving Day in Baghdad when an explosive device flipped his vehicle into a canal.
Delgado had been assigned to the Army's 170th Military Police Company, 504th Military Police Battalion, 42nd Military Police Brigade, based at Fort Lewis, Wash.
A 2003 graduate of Durant High School, Delgado would come to his friends' aid in any crisis, they said at his funeral Tuesday.
"His loyalty as a friend surpasses anyone I've known," childhood buddy John Coggins, 20, told a packed Providence Baptist Church on a dreary, overcast morning.
Coggins, much smaller than his friend, would talk trash as a young boy, but Marc was always there to protect him if he got into trouble, he said.
When another buddy, Steven Ginty, needed help in a school play after two classmates stood him up, Delgado agreed to play both parts. Standing 6-foot-3 and 250 pounds, Delgado played a crazy man and then a queen to a 5-foot-5 king.
"It was quite a sight to see," Coggins said.
Coggins and Ginty would drive up Delgado's driveway every morning during high school to pick him up. Delgado, who insisted that they had to leave his house no later than 7:10, would fly out the door right on time, wearing only his pants, carrying his shirt and shoes.
It seemed like yesterday "when we would dress up like our favorite superheroes and fight imaginary bad guys in the front yard," Coggins said.
But before he knew it, Delgado - known as the "O-line Ogre" to his high school football teammates - was leaving for the service.
His mother, Ellen Delgado, said earlier that she had tried to talk him into going into the Navy, like his brother, Eric, who appeared at the service in his uniform. But he wanted to serve in the Army, like his grandfather.
Army Brig. Gen. Rodney Johnson spoke to the crowd, saying he had wanted to come not out of duty but because he knew Delgado.
Johnson, a commandant at the U.S. Military Police School in Missouri, said Delgado was chatty and friendly during his training, when most of his peers were too intimidated to talk to Johnson beyond, "Yes, sir."
"He joined the military when we were a nation at war," Johnson said.
Delgado knew the danger he was entering but made the sacrifice anyway, he said.
Johnson's daughter was Delgado's platoon leader in Iraq.
She would e-mail her father every few days, and Delgado was often a topic of her correspondence.
"Someone looks like they need a hug today," Delgado would call out to other soldiers before wrapping his huge frame around them, Johnson's daughter told him.
The night before his last mission, he hugged two superior officers in a "leadership sandwich," as Delgado called it, Johnson said.
After his speech, Johnson presented Delgado's family with his Purple Heart, Bronze Star and medal for good conduct.
Delgado was posthumously promoted to specialist.
Delgado had looked forward to coming home this February to see his family and celebrate the 21st birthday he had in November, friends said.
Pastor David Stockard, who presided over the service, said Delgado grew up with his son at Providence Christian School, where Stockard was the administrator.
Delgado was a soldier of God as well as a fighter for the country, Stockard said. He regularly attended church and Bible study and worried about getting right with God before he was baptized in February 2001, Stockard said.
Though a protector of his 16-year-old brother, Bryce, Delgado struggled to find his place in life and the family.
"He was that middle child, always trying to find a niche," Stockard said. "But he found a place in our hearts."
Stockard also presided over Delgado's kindergarten graduation, handing him his diploma in the exact spot on the altar from where he spoke Tuesday behind Delgado's casket.
The kindergarten graduation ceremony was taped. The children were asked what they wanted to do when they got older.
"Marc said, "I want to be a policeman,' " Stockard said. "He died being a policeman."
Army Pfc. Marc A. Delgado was killed in action on 11/24/05.
Army Staff Sgt. Steven C. Reynolds
Remember Our Heroes
Army Staff Sgt. Steven C. Reynolds, 32, of Jordan, N.Y.
SSG Reynolds was assigned to the 170th Military Police Company, 504th Military Police Battalion, 42nd Military Police Brigade, Fort Lewis, Wash.; killed Nov. 24 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee causing it to flip into a canal in Baghdad. Also killed was Pfc. Marc A. Delgado.
Steven Reynolds' family and friends say he was always a man on a mission, whether it was at home or overseas. They say he was always on the go but never too busy to call or e-mail the people close to him, and when he could, pay them a visit.
He spent his two week leave from his second tour of duty in Iraq bouncing around the east coast.
"The reason he put so much quality time in the 15 days he went on leave is because he knew it could be the last time he sees everybody," said his mother, Shirley Reynolds.
That would be the last time Reynolds saw his family and friends. He was killed Thanksgiving Day when an improvised explosive device went off near his vehicle in Baghdad. The vehicle flipped over into a canal.
"He died doing what he loved," Reynolds said. "I know it's a cliche, but he really did. He wouldn't have had it any other way."
Reynolds' parents say he dreamed of joining the Army ever since he was a young boy.
"He went right out of high school and went into training. I think his first hitch to get into police was five years, instead of four because he wanted to be in the military police, and the training was a lot longer. He enjoyed it. He was very patriotic, and it was exactly what he wanted to do," said his father, Norman Reynolds.
Reynolds' family says he was a modest person, who knew of the dangers of fighting in the war, but to him he was just doing his job and wanted no praise. Loved ones say he's a hero who gave so much to so many people.
"He made such an impact on my life, for myself personally because we were friends," said Alex Puyol. "Through some of my issues, he was always a friend to me there. He taught me the value of being who you are because he was who he was."
Army Staff Sgt. Steven C. Reynolds was killed in action on 11/24/05.
Army Staff Sgt. Steven C. Reynolds, 32, of Jordan, N.Y.
SSG Reynolds was assigned to the 170th Military Police Company, 504th Military Police Battalion, 42nd Military Police Brigade, Fort Lewis, Wash.; killed Nov. 24 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee causing it to flip into a canal in Baghdad. Also killed was Pfc. Marc A. Delgado.
Steven Reynolds' family and friends say he was always a man on a mission, whether it was at home or overseas. They say he was always on the go but never too busy to call or e-mail the people close to him, and when he could, pay them a visit.
He spent his two week leave from his second tour of duty in Iraq bouncing around the east coast.
"The reason he put so much quality time in the 15 days he went on leave is because he knew it could be the last time he sees everybody," said his mother, Shirley Reynolds.
That would be the last time Reynolds saw his family and friends. He was killed Thanksgiving Day when an improvised explosive device went off near his vehicle in Baghdad. The vehicle flipped over into a canal.
"He died doing what he loved," Reynolds said. "I know it's a cliche, but he really did. He wouldn't have had it any other way."
Reynolds' parents say he dreamed of joining the Army ever since he was a young boy.
"He went right out of high school and went into training. I think his first hitch to get into police was five years, instead of four because he wanted to be in the military police, and the training was a lot longer. He enjoyed it. He was very patriotic, and it was exactly what he wanted to do," said his father, Norman Reynolds.
Reynolds' family says he was a modest person, who knew of the dangers of fighting in the war, but to him he was just doing his job and wanted no praise. Loved ones say he's a hero who gave so much to so many people.
"He made such an impact on my life, for myself personally because we were friends," said Alex Puyol. "Through some of my issues, he was always a friend to me there. He taught me the value of being who you are because he was who he was."
Army Staff Sgt. Steven C. Reynolds was killed in action on 11/24/05.
Sunday, November 20, 2005
Army Sgt. Dominic J. Sacco
Remember Our Heroes
Army Sgt. Dominic J. Sacco, 32, of Albany, N.Y.
Sgt Sacco was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 13th Armor Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, Fort Riley, Kan.; killed Nov. 20 when his M1A1 Abrams tank was attacked by enemy forces using small arms fire in Taji, Iraq.
Associated Press
FORT RILEY, Kan. — Sgt. Dominic J. Sacco, 32, of Albany, N.Y., was killed Sunday in Taji, Iraq, when he was attacked by enemy forces using small arms fire, Fort Riley officials announced Monday.
Sacco was assigned to Company A, 1st Battalion, 13th Armor at Fort Riley as a tanker. While in Iraq, he served as tank commander.
He enlisted in March 1996 and came to Fort Riley November 1997.
This was Sacco’s second deployment to Iraq.
Sacco enlisted in the Army in March 1996 and was based in Fort Riley, Kan. It was Sacco's second deployment to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. He was scheduled to return home next month, said Louisa Testa of Latham, who was married to Sacco between 1996 and 1997.
While Sacco had talked of making the Army a career, Testa said that friends of his told her the birth of a child with his second wife, and seeing a close buddy from his unit killed recently had him looking forward to coming home. "I want to say between the fellow soldier being killed and having a new son, this was too much," said Testa.
While she hadn't spoken with Sacco in a while, she was aware of his doings through mutual friends. They met while high school students -- he at Albany High, she at Mohonasen High. Sacco leaves behind a wife, stepchild and son, as well as a sister, Lisa Sacco, who lives in the Albany area.
She could not be reached late Monday. Sacco graduated from Albany High School in 1991, and Mayor Jerry Jennings knew him from his days as a vice principal at the school. "I just knew him as a student at the high school, he and his sister," said Jennings. "They were nice kids from a nice family." "It's a tragedy and it puts things in perspective. Hopefully people will pray for the family."
Sacco's parents live in Florida, said Testa. She met Sacco through friends while they were in high school, and it was his decision to join the Army that got them married in 1996. A few years out of high school, and not having gone to college, Sacco figured the military could be a career, or it could provide a path to advancement.
Once he joined up and learned he would be stationed in Kansas, the couple decided to get married. Even starting out as a private, Sacco exhibited a willingness to do his job without complaining, said Testa. "He was one of the proudest soldiers," said Testa. "He just kind of got up every day and did what he did."
Army Sgt. Dominic J. Sacco was killed in action on 11/20/05.
Larger Images
Army Sgt. Dominic J. Sacco, 32, of Albany, N.Y.
Sgt Sacco was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 13th Armor Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, Fort Riley, Kan.; killed Nov. 20 when his M1A1 Abrams tank was attacked by enemy forces using small arms fire in Taji, Iraq.
Associated Press
FORT RILEY, Kan. — Sgt. Dominic J. Sacco, 32, of Albany, N.Y., was killed Sunday in Taji, Iraq, when he was attacked by enemy forces using small arms fire, Fort Riley officials announced Monday.
Sacco was assigned to Company A, 1st Battalion, 13th Armor at Fort Riley as a tanker. While in Iraq, he served as tank commander.
He enlisted in March 1996 and came to Fort Riley November 1997.
This was Sacco’s second deployment to Iraq.
Sacco enlisted in the Army in March 1996 and was based in Fort Riley, Kan. It was Sacco's second deployment to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. He was scheduled to return home next month, said Louisa Testa of Latham, who was married to Sacco between 1996 and 1997.
While Sacco had talked of making the Army a career, Testa said that friends of his told her the birth of a child with his second wife, and seeing a close buddy from his unit killed recently had him looking forward to coming home. "I want to say between the fellow soldier being killed and having a new son, this was too much," said Testa.
While she hadn't spoken with Sacco in a while, she was aware of his doings through mutual friends. They met while high school students -- he at Albany High, she at Mohonasen High. Sacco leaves behind a wife, stepchild and son, as well as a sister, Lisa Sacco, who lives in the Albany area.
She could not be reached late Monday. Sacco graduated from Albany High School in 1991, and Mayor Jerry Jennings knew him from his days as a vice principal at the school. "I just knew him as a student at the high school, he and his sister," said Jennings. "They were nice kids from a nice family." "It's a tragedy and it puts things in perspective. Hopefully people will pray for the family."
Sacco's parents live in Florida, said Testa. She met Sacco through friends while they were in high school, and it was his decision to join the Army that got them married in 1996. A few years out of high school, and not having gone to college, Sacco figured the military could be a career, or it could provide a path to advancement.
Once he joined up and learned he would be stationed in Kansas, the couple decided to get married. Even starting out as a private, Sacco exhibited a willingness to do his job without complaining, said Testa. "He was one of the proudest soldiers," said Testa. "He just kind of got up every day and did what he did."
Army Sgt. Dominic J. Sacco was killed in action on 11/20/05.
Saturday, November 19, 2005
Marine Lance Cpl. Tyler J. Troyer
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. Tyler J. Troyer, 21, of Tangent, Ore.
Lance Cpl Troyer was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died Nov. 19 of wounds sustained from small-arms fire while he was conducting combat operations against enemy forces near Karmah, Iraq.
Associated Press
ALBANY, Ore. — A Marine who was fatally shot in the head while on patrol in Iraq was remembered in this working-class community for his blazing fastball, his sense of humor and his devotion to family.
More than 300 people gathered at the Linn County Expo Center on Wednesday to say goodbye to Lance Cpl. Tyler Troyer, 21, of Tangent, who died on Nov. 19.
The crowd wore buttons with a picture of Troyer, who was a star left-hander for the West Albany High School baseball team before joining the Marines.
More than a dozen family members and friends told stories of the mischievous boy who sometimes got into trouble as a youngster. They also praised him as being the glue that connected a family split by divorce.
“Tyler was an example of a person with a destiny in his life,” Galen Troyer, the Marine’s uncle, said from a stage adorned with hundreds of flowers. “He had goals and knew what he wanted to do. Tyler cared about people, and he made a difference.”
Troyer’s father, David Troyer, remembered the day when his son told him he needed his signature so he could sign up for the Marines because he wasn’t yet 18.
“I was a bit nervous,” David Troyer recalled. “But I could see it in his eyes that this was something he really wanted to do. I saw a real change in him.”
Photographs of Troyer sat on easels in the hallway and auditorium of the Expo Center. On one, the young man was pictured with the woman he planned to marry, Megan Oswald.
A newspaper announcement of their engagement was centered at the top of the frame. Below were photos of the pair embracing in front of the White House and sitting beneath a freshly decorated Christmas tree in their apartment. Another easel showed photos of Troyer’s military life and his stint in Iraq. He played soccer with young Iraqis and joined in group pictures with his fellow Marines.
Terri Thorpe, Troyer’s mother, was last to speak. She talked about her the fears she had with a son at war and she remembered the 21 years she had with him.
“He will always continue to be in our hearts,” she said. “I ask that you cry with this family and have sorrow for this family.
“But I also ask that you remember that we have guys left in Iraq still,” and they need support, she said.
Marine Lance Cpl. Tyler J. Troyer was killed in action on 11/19/05.
Marine Lance Cpl. Tyler J. Troyer, 21, of Tangent, Ore.
Lance Cpl Troyer was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died Nov. 19 of wounds sustained from small-arms fire while he was conducting combat operations against enemy forces near Karmah, Iraq.
Associated Press
ALBANY, Ore. — A Marine who was fatally shot in the head while on patrol in Iraq was remembered in this working-class community for his blazing fastball, his sense of humor and his devotion to family.
More than 300 people gathered at the Linn County Expo Center on Wednesday to say goodbye to Lance Cpl. Tyler Troyer, 21, of Tangent, who died on Nov. 19.
The crowd wore buttons with a picture of Troyer, who was a star left-hander for the West Albany High School baseball team before joining the Marines.
More than a dozen family members and friends told stories of the mischievous boy who sometimes got into trouble as a youngster. They also praised him as being the glue that connected a family split by divorce.
“Tyler was an example of a person with a destiny in his life,” Galen Troyer, the Marine’s uncle, said from a stage adorned with hundreds of flowers. “He had goals and knew what he wanted to do. Tyler cared about people, and he made a difference.”
Troyer’s father, David Troyer, remembered the day when his son told him he needed his signature so he could sign up for the Marines because he wasn’t yet 18.
“I was a bit nervous,” David Troyer recalled. “But I could see it in his eyes that this was something he really wanted to do. I saw a real change in him.”
Photographs of Troyer sat on easels in the hallway and auditorium of the Expo Center. On one, the young man was pictured with the woman he planned to marry, Megan Oswald.
A newspaper announcement of their engagement was centered at the top of the frame. Below were photos of the pair embracing in front of the White House and sitting beneath a freshly decorated Christmas tree in their apartment. Another easel showed photos of Troyer’s military life and his stint in Iraq. He played soccer with young Iraqis and joined in group pictures with his fellow Marines.
Terri Thorpe, Troyer’s mother, was last to speak. She talked about her the fears she had with a son at war and she remembered the 21 years she had with him.
“He will always continue to be in our hearts,” she said. “I ask that you cry with this family and have sorrow for this family.
“But I also ask that you remember that we have guys left in Iraq still,” and they need support, she said.
Marine Lance Cpl. Tyler J. Troyer was killed in action on 11/19/05.
Army Specialist Dominic J. Hinton
Remember Our Heroes
Army Specialist Dominic J. Hinton, 24, of Jacksonville, Texas
Spc Hinton was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Ky.; killed Nov. 19 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat operations in Bayji, Iraq. Also killed were 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski, Staff Sgt. Edward Karolasz, and Cpl. Jonathan F. Blair
Hinton's daughter, Nicole, is 4 — barely old enough to understand what happened to her father.
"She understands the military, soldiers and stuff, and I told her that he went up to be with God, and he was in God's Army now. So, she understood that, but the thought of him not coming back is what gets her, because she still asks," said Hilton's widow, Crystal.
Hinton, 24, of Jacksonville, Texas, was killed Nov. 19 by a roadside bomb in Beiji.
He was on his second tour and was assigned to Fort Campbell. A 2000 high school graduate, Hinton was working at Western Lithotech when he decided to enlist in 2001. After his service was over, Hinton told his wife he hoped to enter law enforcement.
"He, I think, wanted to become a sheriff — that was his talk. He
wanted to spend time with the kids. That was a big thing for him," Crystal said. He also is survived by a 1-year-old son, Michael.
"He was just very quiet, shy, laid back, very sweet, very polite. Just an overall good kid," said Brother Don Harvey, the Hinton family's pastor. "Just a very solid young man with morals and integrity."
Army Specialist Dominic J. Hinton was killed in action on 11/19/05.
Army Specialist Dominic J. Hinton, 24, of Jacksonville, Texas
Spc Hinton was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Ky.; killed Nov. 19 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat operations in Bayji, Iraq. Also killed were 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski, Staff Sgt. Edward Karolasz, and Cpl. Jonathan F. Blair
Hinton's daughter, Nicole, is 4 — barely old enough to understand what happened to her father.
"She understands the military, soldiers and stuff, and I told her that he went up to be with God, and he was in God's Army now. So, she understood that, but the thought of him not coming back is what gets her, because she still asks," said Hilton's widow, Crystal.
Hinton, 24, of Jacksonville, Texas, was killed Nov. 19 by a roadside bomb in Beiji.
He was on his second tour and was assigned to Fort Campbell. A 2000 high school graduate, Hinton was working at Western Lithotech when he decided to enlist in 2001. After his service was over, Hinton told his wife he hoped to enter law enforcement.
"He, I think, wanted to become a sheriff — that was his talk. He
wanted to spend time with the kids. That was a big thing for him," Crystal said. He also is survived by a 1-year-old son, Michael.
"He was just very quiet, shy, laid back, very sweet, very polite. Just an overall good kid," said Brother Don Harvey, the Hinton family's pastor. "Just a very solid young man with morals and integrity."
Army Specialist Dominic J. Hinton was killed in action on 11/19/05.
Army 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski
Remember Our Heroes
Army 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski, 23, of Freehold, N.J.
1st Lt. Zilinski was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Ky.; killed Nov. 19, 2005 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat operations in Bayji, Iraq. Also killed were Staff Sgt. Edward Karolasz, Cpl. Jonathan F. Blair, and Spc. Dominic J. Hinton.
Flags fly at half staff for soldier killed in Iraq
Associated Press
TRENTON, N.J. — Acting Gov. Richard J. Codey ordered flags to be flown at half staff Wednesday in honor of a soldier from Howell who died in Iraq.
Army 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski II was killed Nov. 19 when a bomb detonated near his Humvee during. He was among five 101st Airborne Division soldiers, two of them New Jerseyans, killed during two roadside bombings in Iraq that weekend.
“1st Lt. Zilinski was a courageous soldier fighting for our country’s safety and security,” Codey said. “We honor his life by flying the national and state flags at half-staff.”
Zilinski, 23, the son of a Vietnam veteran, attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, where he earned several awards in swimming and diving. He was a team captain.
He was assigned to the 101st Airborne Division’s 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, based in Fort Campbell, Ky.
Staff Sgt. Edward Karolasz, 25, of Kearny, also was killed in the bombing.
An order to fly flags at half staff in his honor is expected soon, a Codey spokesman said Wednesday.
Army 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski was killed in action on 11/19/05.
Army 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski, 23, of Freehold, N.J.
1st Lt. Zilinski was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Ky.; killed Nov. 19, 2005 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his Humvee during combat operations in Bayji, Iraq. Also killed were Staff Sgt. Edward Karolasz, Cpl. Jonathan F. Blair, and Spc. Dominic J. Hinton.
Flags fly at half staff for soldier killed in Iraq
Associated Press
TRENTON, N.J. — Acting Gov. Richard J. Codey ordered flags to be flown at half staff Wednesday in honor of a soldier from Howell who died in Iraq.
Army 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski II was killed Nov. 19 when a bomb detonated near his Humvee during. He was among five 101st Airborne Division soldiers, two of them New Jerseyans, killed during two roadside bombings in Iraq that weekend.
“1st Lt. Zilinski was a courageous soldier fighting for our country’s safety and security,” Codey said. “We honor his life by flying the national and state flags at half-staff.”
Zilinski, 23, the son of a Vietnam veteran, attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, where he earned several awards in swimming and diving. He was a team captain.
He was assigned to the 101st Airborne Division’s 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, based in Fort Campbell, Ky.
Staff Sgt. Edward Karolasz, 25, of Kearny, also was killed in the bombing.
An order to fly flags at half staff in his honor is expected soon, a Codey spokesman said Wednesday.
Army 1st Lt. Dennis W. Zilinski was killed in action on 11/19/05.
Thursday, November 17, 2005
Army Sgt. 1st Class James S. Ochsner
Remember Our Heroes
Army Sgt. 1st Class James S. Ochsner, 36, of Waukegan, Illinois.
Sgt Ochsner died in Orgun-E, Afghanistan, when an improvised explosive device detonated near his HMMWV during a supply distribution mission. He was assigned to the Army's 2nd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
Sgt. 1st Class James Scott Ochsner, a native of Waukegan, was scheduled to arrive home next week from his fourth tour of duty in Afghanistan. But the 18-year veteran of the U.S. Army was killed Tuesday in a roadside bomb attack.
Sgt. Ochsner, 36, who served with the Army's 3rd Special Forces Group, died of head injuries after a bomb exploded near his armored vehicle, which had been traveling as part of a troop patrol in Paktika province near the Pakistani border.
"He was going out to distribute some goods to the local people," said Ochsner's father, Bob Ochsner of Beach Park.
The elder Ochsner and his wife, Sandy, were notified of their son's death late Tuesday afternoon.
"He loved the Afghan people; he really enjoyed them," Bob Ochsner said of his son.
Sgt. Ochsner believed it was his duty to serve in the armed forces, Bob Ochsner said.
Military service is an Ochsner family tradition.
Bob Ochsner served in Army Special Forces in the Vietnam War, earning the rank of captain. Sandy Ochsner is also an Army veteran. A surviving son, Robert L. Ochsner II, 38, is a 20-year Army veteran currently stationed at Fort Knox, Ky.
Sgt. Ochsner's wife is also in the Army, and when the couple were sent to Iraq, the elder Ochsners parented their two grandchildren until their son and daughter-in-law returned two years and two months later.
"He was a soldier through and through," said his wife, Ann. "There was never any doubt in his mind he would be a soldier."
Ann Ochsner said she last heard from her husband Monday via e-mail. "It was the typical stuff — what you've done, the kids," she said.
James S. Ochsner attended Clark Elementary and Andrew Cook Magnet schools in Waukegan before enrolling at St. Joseph High School in Kenosha. He was athletic, excelling in wrestling and football.
"He was devil-may-care, 'the jokester,' a great kid," Bob Ochsner said. "Both my sons were gifted children. Jim had a gifted IQ, but he had a hard time getting C's and B's in school. But in Special Forces in language school, he was first in his class in Arabic."
Sgt. Ochsner was first deployed to the Gulf during Operation Desert Storm in 1991 as an Army specialist.
Members of 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, were first sent to train several battalions of the New Afghan National Army at the Afghan Military Academy in Kabul in May 2002.
An intelligence specialist, Sgt. Ochsner served revolving six-month stints in the region.
His most recent tour began last June. He was scheduled to return early next week to become an instructor at the Special Warfare Center at Fort Bragg.
Bob Ochsner said his son was struck by the simplicity of the Afghan people.
"The best thing you could do for them was dig a well," Ochsner said. "We helped them build schools but there was resistance to that. The elder men said they hadn't gone to school."
In addition to his parents, Sgt. Ochsner is survived by his wife and two children, Nick, 16, and Megan, 14, in Fort Bragg, N.C.; his brother Robert; and his sister, Jennifer.
Ochsner, who left in June and was expected to come home in January, had two Bronze Stars, the Combat Infantryman Badge and the Army Commendation Medal for valor. He was assigned to the Army's 2nd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, Fort Bragg. He is one of 203 soldiers who have been killed in Operation Enduring Freedom in and around Afghanistan as of Nov. 16, with about 87 of those deaths occurring this year.
Army Sgt. 1st Class James S. Ochsner was killed in action on 11/17/05.
Army Sgt. 1st Class James S. Ochsner, 36, of Waukegan, Illinois.
Sgt Ochsner died in Orgun-E, Afghanistan, when an improvised explosive device detonated near his HMMWV during a supply distribution mission. He was assigned to the Army's 2nd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
Sgt. 1st Class James Scott Ochsner, a native of Waukegan, was scheduled to arrive home next week from his fourth tour of duty in Afghanistan. But the 18-year veteran of the U.S. Army was killed Tuesday in a roadside bomb attack.
Sgt. Ochsner, 36, who served with the Army's 3rd Special Forces Group, died of head injuries after a bomb exploded near his armored vehicle, which had been traveling as part of a troop patrol in Paktika province near the Pakistani border.
"He was going out to distribute some goods to the local people," said Ochsner's father, Bob Ochsner of Beach Park.
The elder Ochsner and his wife, Sandy, were notified of their son's death late Tuesday afternoon.
"He loved the Afghan people; he really enjoyed them," Bob Ochsner said of his son.
Sgt. Ochsner believed it was his duty to serve in the armed forces, Bob Ochsner said.
Military service is an Ochsner family tradition.
Bob Ochsner served in Army Special Forces in the Vietnam War, earning the rank of captain. Sandy Ochsner is also an Army veteran. A surviving son, Robert L. Ochsner II, 38, is a 20-year Army veteran currently stationed at Fort Knox, Ky.
Sgt. Ochsner's wife is also in the Army, and when the couple were sent to Iraq, the elder Ochsners parented their two grandchildren until their son and daughter-in-law returned two years and two months later.
"He was a soldier through and through," said his wife, Ann. "There was never any doubt in his mind he would be a soldier."
Ann Ochsner said she last heard from her husband Monday via e-mail. "It was the typical stuff — what you've done, the kids," she said.
James S. Ochsner attended Clark Elementary and Andrew Cook Magnet schools in Waukegan before enrolling at St. Joseph High School in Kenosha. He was athletic, excelling in wrestling and football.
"He was devil-may-care, 'the jokester,' a great kid," Bob Ochsner said. "Both my sons were gifted children. Jim had a gifted IQ, but he had a hard time getting C's and B's in school. But in Special Forces in language school, he was first in his class in Arabic."
Sgt. Ochsner was first deployed to the Gulf during Operation Desert Storm in 1991 as an Army specialist.
Members of 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, were first sent to train several battalions of the New Afghan National Army at the Afghan Military Academy in Kabul in May 2002.
An intelligence specialist, Sgt. Ochsner served revolving six-month stints in the region.
His most recent tour began last June. He was scheduled to return early next week to become an instructor at the Special Warfare Center at Fort Bragg.
Bob Ochsner said his son was struck by the simplicity of the Afghan people.
"The best thing you could do for them was dig a well," Ochsner said. "We helped them build schools but there was resistance to that. The elder men said they hadn't gone to school."
In addition to his parents, Sgt. Ochsner is survived by his wife and two children, Nick, 16, and Megan, 14, in Fort Bragg, N.C.; his brother Robert; and his sister, Jennifer.
Ochsner, who left in June and was expected to come home in January, had two Bronze Stars, the Combat Infantryman Badge and the Army Commendation Medal for valor. He was assigned to the Army's 2nd Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group, Fort Bragg. He is one of 203 soldiers who have been killed in Operation Enduring Freedom in and around Afghanistan as of Nov. 16, with about 87 of those deaths occurring this year.
Army Sgt. 1st Class James S. Ochsner was killed in action on 11/17/05.
Wednesday, November 16, 2005
Marine 2nd Lt. Donald "Ryan" McGlothlin
Remember Our Heroes
Marine 2nd Lt. Donald R. McGlothlin, 26, of Lebanon, Virginia.
Lt McGlothlin died from small arms fire while conducting combat operations against enemy forces during Operation Steel Curtain in Ubaydi, Iraq. His unit was attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward). He was assigned to Battalion Landing Team 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, California.
A memorial featuring photographs of Donald Ryan McGlothlin was displayed in the hallway. Students who were too young to know the young man when he roamed the halls, raced around the track, wrestled and cracked the books there eight years ago could see the face of a former student who died in a small-arms fire exchange as he fought in Operation Steel Curtain in Ubaydi in western Iraq.
McGlothlin's death was particularly tough for students and staff because his mother, Ruth McGlothlin, is a guidance counselor at Lebanon High. His father, Donald McGlothlin Jr., is a former Circuit Court judge who practices law in Lebanon. His grandfather, the late Donald McGlothlin Sr., served as a delegate in the Virginia General Assembly for many years.
Mayor Tony Dodi, who is the principal at the high school, said the school and community will stand with the McGlothlin family as they try to cope with the Marine's death. Dodi said he was not principal when McGlothlin was a student, but he often saw the young man when he was honored by the School Board for his many accomplishments. They also attended the same church.
"He was a very pleasant, goal-oriented young man," Dodi said. "He exceeded at all levels of the academic world."
Sean McGlothlin said Thursday that the family wants to gather and talk about his younger brother's life and accomplishments before publicly discussing his life and death. Friends and neighbors were dropping by the family home with food and condolences, he said.
"We appreciate all the support we have received," he said.
McGlothlin, the valedictorian for the class of 1997, racked up a number of honors, was a respected athlete and active in his church and community. He achieved the rank of Eagle Scout before graduating Phi Beta Kappa from The College of William and Mary. He did post graduate work at Stanford University.
McGlothlin would later set his sights on the Marine Corps. He graduated from officer candidate school at the top of his class. He reached the rank of 2nd lieutenant and asked to be assigned to the infantry division.
Family friend Larry Fuller said McGlothlin had the potential to reach the top in any career or task he chose.
"He was an outstanding young man," Fuller said. "I've known him from the time he was real small. I've never known anyone more disciplined and focused."
Marine 2nd Lt. Donald R. McGlothlin was killed in action on 11/16/05.
Marine 2nd Lt. Donald R. McGlothlin, 26, of Lebanon, Virginia.
Lt McGlothlin died from small arms fire while conducting combat operations against enemy forces during Operation Steel Curtain in Ubaydi, Iraq. His unit was attached to 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward). He was assigned to Battalion Landing Team 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, California.
A memorial featuring photographs of Donald Ryan McGlothlin was displayed in the hallway. Students who were too young to know the young man when he roamed the halls, raced around the track, wrestled and cracked the books there eight years ago could see the face of a former student who died in a small-arms fire exchange as he fought in Operation Steel Curtain in Ubaydi in western Iraq.
McGlothlin's death was particularly tough for students and staff because his mother, Ruth McGlothlin, is a guidance counselor at Lebanon High. His father, Donald McGlothlin Jr., is a former Circuit Court judge who practices law in Lebanon. His grandfather, the late Donald McGlothlin Sr., served as a delegate in the Virginia General Assembly for many years.
Mayor Tony Dodi, who is the principal at the high school, said the school and community will stand with the McGlothlin family as they try to cope with the Marine's death. Dodi said he was not principal when McGlothlin was a student, but he often saw the young man when he was honored by the School Board for his many accomplishments. They also attended the same church.
"He was a very pleasant, goal-oriented young man," Dodi said. "He exceeded at all levels of the academic world."
Sean McGlothlin said Thursday that the family wants to gather and talk about his younger brother's life and accomplishments before publicly discussing his life and death. Friends and neighbors were dropping by the family home with food and condolences, he said.
"We appreciate all the support we have received," he said.
McGlothlin, the valedictorian for the class of 1997, racked up a number of honors, was a respected athlete and active in his church and community. He achieved the rank of Eagle Scout before graduating Phi Beta Kappa from The College of William and Mary. He did post graduate work at Stanford University.
McGlothlin would later set his sights on the Marine Corps. He graduated from officer candidate school at the top of his class. He reached the rank of 2nd lieutenant and asked to be assigned to the infantry division.
Family friend Larry Fuller said McGlothlin had the potential to reach the top in any career or task he chose.
"He was an outstanding young man," Fuller said. "I've known him from the time he was real small. I've never known anyone more disciplined and focused."
Marine 2nd Lt. Donald R. McGlothlin was killed in action on 11/16/05.
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