Air Force Tech. Sgt. Phillip A Myers

Died April 4, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

30 year old Phillip Myers, of Hopewell, Va.; assigned to the 48th Civil Engineer Squadron, Royal Air Force Lakenheath, United Kingdom; died April 4 near Helmand province, Afghanistan of wounds suffered from an improvised explosive device.


Family permitted media at Dover arrival

By Beth Miller

The (Wilmington, Del.) News Journal / Gannett News Service

DOVER, Del. — The service of Air Force Tech. Sgt. Phillip A. Myers, 30, of Hopewell, Va., was not finished when he died Saturday in Afghanistan of injuries suffered from an improvised explosive device.

Late Sunday night, the arrival of Myers’ body at Dover Air Force Base in a flag-draped transfer case became a powerful reminder to his nation and the world of the sacrifices made by members of the armed forces and the high cost of war.

His return also marked an early watershed in the administration of President Barack Obama, a nod in favor of transparency and away from secrecy favored by prior administrations.

Thousands of fallen troops have returned to the United States through the military’s primary mortuary at Dover Air Force Base. Their flights are met by an honor guard, by military officers, by a chaplain and other dignitaries. Their remains are afforded the highest respect and precision as they are processed for return to their final destination.

But until Sunday night, no news coverage of the returns had been permitted since 1991, when President George H.W. Bush and then-Defense Secretary Dick Cheney banned media coverage.

Privacy was cited as the primary reason.

That changed as Myers’ flag-draped transfer case was escorted by an eight-member carry team with crisp, solemn precision to a waiting van from the jet that had carried it from Ramstein, Germany. On Sunday, a few more than two dozen media members quietly snapped pictures, scribbled notes or trained video cameras at the procession shortly after the plane landed at 10:30 p.m.

The casket of an Army soldier was taken down first. That soldier’s family was not asked for permission for media viewing because of time constraints.

“My heart is broken for this family,” said Judy Campbell, chair of Gold Star Families of Delaware, which honors those who have lost a family member in military service. “Their life is changed forever. I hope that having this picture of their loved one returning, that in the years to come it will give them some peace … some comfort.”

For almost 20 years, that hadn’t been possible. Glimpses of the returns were made available only when the Pentagon released hundreds of its own photos after a 2005 Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by University of Delaware professor and former CNN correspondent Ralph Begleiter.

The media ban was lifted last month after Obama ordered a review of the policy. After the review, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates decided coverage would be permitted — but only with the family’s consent.

Thousands of transfers

Obama opened the door to reconsidering the policy in his first prime-time news conference as president in early February. He said he had not decided on the policy and wouldn’t until “I have evaluated that review and understand all the implications involved.”

Vice President Joe Biden in 2004 had urged a change to the policy, when the then-senator told CNN: “This is the last long ride home. These young men and women are heroes. And the idea that they’re essentially snuck back into the country under the cover of night so no one can see that their casket has arrived, I just think is wrong.”

Almost all of the 4,266 casualties in Iraq and the 668 casualties in Afghanistan through the end of March have come through Dover’s mortuary, military officials said earlier this year.

Dover and Pentagon officials could not provide the total number of transfers that have come through Dover, but Air Force spokesman Vince King said in February that 3,867 had come through Dover between May 2004 and May 2008.

Families and military members have been divided on whether the policy should have been changed.

Some agreed with Biden that acknowledging and honoring the fallen troops is an important part of the nation’s ability to better understand the cost of war and the sacrifices made by service members and their families.

Others were concerned that such coverage would be used to advance a political anti-war agenda — as some did in the Vietnam War years — or turn a somber occasion into a “media circus.”

Rules and restrictions

As the window was opened Sunday night to readmit the public to the returns, the procedures put in place by the military were tight and designed to allow the procession to be recorded without allowing media to interfere.

About 30 media members boarded a bus in the Blue Hen Corporate Center at 9 p.m. for transport to the nearby base, then briefed and taken to a restricted area from which they would observe and record.

Each representative signed a set of rules that included a prohibition on taking any images of family members who might be on hand.

No live filming was allowed, nor were “stand-ups,” in which a commentator speaks into a camera as the action unfolds in the backdrop.

The military rules advised media members that “there will be no unnecessary noise or movement during the transfer. Movement required to perform duties should be conducted in a slow and deliberate manner in an effort to not distract from the event.”

Maj. Paul Villagran assumed a new job as director of public affairs for the Air Force Mortuary Affairs Operations Center a week ago to prepare for the change in policy, which was to take effect Monday. By Sunday, more than 80 members of the media had registered to be notified of a permitted return.

Villagran said all was devised to protect the family’s privacy and preserve the honor and dignity of the return.

“There is no amount of effort we wouldn’t put forward to provide that care and support,” Villagran said Saturday.

An important recognition

Myers’ widow was the first to be asked about media coverage and granted permission. She was flown into Dover on Sunday night from the RAF base in Lakenheath, England, where Myers had been assigned to the 48th Civil Engineer Squadron.

Myers died Saturday near Helmand province. He was awarded the Bronze Star at a March 19, 2008, ceremony at Lakenheath. He also had won the Air Force-level 2008 Major General Eugene A. Lupia Awards military technician category for significant achievements.

Other family members drove to Dover on Sunday from Virginia. The military paid for all family travel expenses to Dover.

At precisely 11 p.m., a dark blue shuttle bus carrying family members arrived, and an eight-member carry team, all wearing white gloves, marched to the aircraft. They slowly mounted the long stairs to the cargo bay and walked to the spot where a K-loader was positioned with Myers’ transfer case.

The senior officer on the team, Maj. Gen. Del Eulberg, the Air Force’s civil engineer, was joined by Col. Dave Horton and Maj. Klavens Noel, a chaplain, at the cargo bay door. The chaplain offered a brief prayer.

The team then raised the case and positioned it at the end of the K-loader, which descended slowly to the tarmac. The team then slowly bore the case to a white panel truck and loaded it inside.

The van then was driven off with an escort to the mortuary area. The ceremony was marked by silence, except for two orders from an officer.

Campbell, the chair of the Gold Star Families, said she believes that Sunday’s recognition of the significance of Myers’ sacrifice is important.

“I really do believe, when people know that other people care and remember, it does bring them some comfort,” she said. “Their loss will always be there, but it’s always comforting to know that others are not forgetting the sacrifice.”

Begleiter, who has said he launched his FOIA effort with the National Security Archive in 2004 to restore the return ceremonies at Dover to a rightful place of honor, had this to say Sunday: “This is an important victory for the American people to be able to honor their returning servicemen and women who have made the ultimate sacrifice.”


Myers was dedicated to his airmen, father says

The Associated Press

When Phillip A. Myers decided to join the Air Force, his father didn’t expect him to choose bomb technician as his specialty.

“That was the biggest thing that surprised me,” said his father, Eddie. The younger Myers half-jokingly told his father that he took on the job because it paid more, but he wound up loving the work.

“If there’s anything we can find comfort in, it’s knowing that he died doing what he loved to do,” his father said. “That is without a doubt. He was just so enthused about it.”

Myers, 30, of Hopewell, Va., died April 4 near Helmand province of wounds suffered from an explosive. He was assigned to Royal Air Force Lakenheath in the United Kingdom.

Eddie Myers said his son looked out for the people serving under him.

“If he thought a job was too dangerous, he would get out and check it out himself,” he said. “That might be why we don’t have Phillip here today. But to me, that’s admirable.”

He graduated from high school in 1996 and worked at the Riverside Regional Jail in Hopewell before joining the military.

Phillip also is survived by his wife, Aimee, and their two children, Dakotah, 6, and Kaiden, 3.

Marine Lance Cpl. Stephen F. Dearmon

Died April 3, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

21 year old Stephen Dearmon, of Crossville, Tenn.; assigned to 2nd Marine Logistics Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died April 3 in Taqaddum, Iraq, as a result of a non-hostile incident.


Photographer was promoted last year

The Associated Press

CROSSVILLE, Tenn. — The military says a Marine from East Tennessee has died in a non-hostile incident in Iraq.

The Department of Defense said Wednesday that 21-year-old Lance Cpl. Stephen F. Dearmon of Crossville died April 3 in Anbar province. The military says the incident is under investigation.

He was assigned to 2nd Marine Logistics Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force, at Camp Lejeune, N.C., and was trained as a combat photographer.

Dearmon joined the Marine Corps in August 2007 and joined his current unit in April 2008. He was promoted to lance corporal Oct. 1.

His decorations include the National Defense Service Medal, the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal and the Iraq Campaign Medal.


Happiness was important to Dearmon

The Associated Press

Stephen F. Dearmon was known as a true gentleman wherever he was.

“He would open doors for people. If he was at the store he would help elderly people put groceries in their cars. For Stephen that’s how life was supposed to be. He loved people, he loved life, but he hated the evil in the world,” the Rev. David Hayes said.

Dearmon, 21, of Crossville, Tenn., died April 3 after a noncombat incident in Anbar province. He was a combat photographer and was assigned to Camp Lejeune.

Dearmon joined the Marines in August 2007 and was promoted to the rank of lance corporal Oct. 1.

“He was such a loving, caring, goodhearted boy who would give anyone the shirt off his back. You couldn’t ask for a better son. He hung out with his mom like we were best friends. He wasn’t ashamed to go shopping with me or be seen with me anywhere,” said his mother, Robin Hartke.

He also is survived by his stepfather, Steven Hartke, and his father, William Dearmon.

“Stephen didn’t like to see anyone sad. If you were sad, he would have you laughing by the end of the time you were talking with him. He wanted everyone to be happy,” Hayes said.

Navy Lt. Miroslav S. Zilberman

Died April 2, 2010 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

31 year old Miroslav Zilberman, of Columbus, Ohio; assigned to Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron (VAW) 121, based at Naval Base Norfolk, Va.; died after his E-2C Hawkeye crashed into the Arabian Gulf on March 31, 2010. The recovery effort was abandoned on April 2, 2010 and his body was not recovered.


Navy ends search for missing Hawkeye pilot

The Associated Press

MANAMA, Bahrain — The Navy says it has called off search and rescue efforts for a pilot who went missing after his plane crashed in the Persian Gulf region, and the Department of Defense has declared him deceased.

The Navy said in a statement Saturday that Lt. Steven Zilberman’s plane went down in the North Arabian Sea on March 31 after it “experienced mechanical malfunctions.”

Zilberman’s plane, from Norfolk, Va.-based Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 121, was returning to the carrier Dwight D. Eisenhower following a mission supporting operations in Afghanistan.

Three other crew members survived the crash without significant injuries, but Zilberman couldn’t be found.

Zilberman, 31, was flying an E-2C Hawkeye, which is primarily used to detect incoming aircraft with its 24-foot diameter radar. Born in the Ukraine, Zilberman was from Columbus, Ohio, and had served in the Navy for eight years.


Ordered crew mates to eject before crash

The Associated Press

Miroslav Zilberman moved with his parents from Ukraine to a suburb of Columbus, Ohio, in the early 1990s. They wanted to get him away from the possibility of forced military service to a place that promised a better life.

But Zilberman, who went by Steven, always admired the service of his grandfather, Gregory Sokolov, who was a major in the Soviet Army in World War II. After graduating from Bexley High School in 1997, Zilberman decided he wanted to defend his adopted country and became a Navy pilot.

Zilberman, 31, was returning from a mission in Afghanistan on March 31 when his E-2C Hawkeye began having mechanical problems. He ordered his three crewmen to bail. The plane crashed into the Arabian Gulf.

Zilberman’s body was never recovered, and he was declared dead. His crew mates all survived.

“Lieutenant Zilberman was an exceptional Naval Officer and pilot who embodied the best of what America represents,” said Capt. Roy Kelley.

Zilberman was based at Naval Station Norfolk, Va. While in the Navy, he earned a bachelor’s degree in computer science from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y.

He is survived by his wife, Katrina, and children, Daniel, 4, and Sarah, 2.

Army Chief Warrant Officer 3 Michael L. Hartwick

Died April 1, 2006 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

Michael Hartwick of Orrick, Mo.; assigned to the 4th Battalion, 4th Aviation Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, Fort Hood, Texas; died April 1 when his Apache helicopter crashed while conducting a combat air patrol in Baghdad. Also killed was Capt. Timothy J. Moshier.


Orrick soldier fulfilled dream: flying Apache helicopter, serving country

By Margaret Stafford

Associated Press

ORRICK, Mo. — Chief Warrant Officer Michael L. Hartwick Jr., who died when his helicopter crashed in Iraq, was being remembered in his hometown as a born leader who always had a passion to fly.

Hartwick, of Orrick, and Capt. Timothy Moshier, of Albany, N.Y., were killed Saturday when their AH-64D Apache Longbow helicopter crashed. The military said the crash possibly was caused by hostile fire west of Youssifiyah, which is about 10 miles southwest of Baghdad.

“When I heard the news, I thought, ‘That’s one of America’s best and brightest,”’ said Sandra Pendleton, who taught Hartwick social studies at Orrick High School. “If you had a son, he was what you would have wanted him to be.”

Both Hartwick and Moshier were assigned to the 4th Battalion, 4th Aviation Brigade, 4th Infantry Division at Fort Hood, Texas.

A statement attributed to Hartwick’s family said he died “while fulfilling his life dream of flying the AH-64 Apache helicopter while serving his country. He was a true Patriot.”

An extremist group posted a video on the Internet on Wednesday claiming to show Iraqi insurgents dragging the body of a U.S. pilot on the ground. Parts of the video were blurry, and the face of the man being dragged was not shown. The U.S. military said the authenticity of the video could not be confirmed.

The death brought sadness — and confusion — to his hometown.

“People don’t know what’s really happening here,” said Ken McAfee, a retired Orrick High School coach who had Hartwick in a physical education class. “Nobody really knows yet when Mike will be coming back.”

Hartwick graduated from Orrick in 1986 and married his high school sweetheart, Kerri. She and their two young children still live in Orrick.

He had an all-American boy resume in high school: member of the National Honor Society and student council, senior class president, and football and basketball star. But he was remembered more for his kindness, his faith, his natural leadership ability and the desire he always had to fly.

Rick Wrisinger, current principal at the school, was Hartwick’s coach in junior high school. He remembered Hartwick once telling a man who had been a tail gunner in Vietnam that he was going to fly a helicopter one day.

“You know, you hear kids say things like that all the time, and you think ‘We’ll see,”’ Wrisinger said. “But he followed through and did it.”

Pendleton said Hartwick did a tour of duty with the Air Force but when he couldn’t get into flight school, he joined the Army so he could get into its flight school.

Pendleton said she wrote to Hartwick’s wife in a sympathy card that Michael was “one of the reasons it’s so good to be in education. Even as a teenager, he was a good person, intelligent, nice to everybody.

“I know this makes it sound like he walked on water, but I’ve dealt with hundreds of kids in 28 years, and he was just one of the best. He came from a very strong Christian family and he had a faith in God, and I think that’s what made him how he was.”

A few years ago, when Hartwick returned to Orrick after flying missions over Kosovo, the school held a surprise welcome home party for him in the school gymnasium.

“Nothing thrills me more than that we did that,” Wrisinger said. “He told me that day that ‘This makes it all worth it, to know people really do care.”’

Wrisinger said Hartwick had given him posters of the Apache helicopter he flew and the Viper helicopter, which he had qualified to fly.

“He was just always real proud of what he was doing,” he said. “I would tell you the most impressive thing about Mike was his respect for people and for life.”

Wrisinger had just sent Hartwick a care package last week, and Pendleton said the National Honor Society had been collecting things to send him. The society will instead send the package to Hartwick’s unit in Iraq, she said.

Marine Lance Cpl. Nelson M. Lantigua

Died March 31, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

20 year old Nelson Lantigua, of Miami; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 10th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died March 31 in Taqaddum, Iraq, as the result of a non-hostile incident.


N.C.-based Marine dies in Iraq

The Associated Press

CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. — The military says a North Carolina-based Marine has died after a non-hostile incident in Iraq.

The Department of Defense said Thursday that 20-year-old Lance Cpl. Nelson M. Lantigua of Miami died on Tuesday in Anbar province. Officials said the incident is under investigation, but no details have been released.

Lantigua was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 10 Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Lejeune.


Followed cousin’s example in joining Corps

The Associated Press

Nelson M. Lantigua was the only child of a single mother who gave birth to him when she was 13 years old in Santiago, Dominican Republic. His mother, Maria Lantigua, struggled for years to bring her son to the United States. She finally succeeded in time for him to attend high school. Aunts, uncles and his grandmother stepped in to fill the familial gap in the United States, cooperatively raising Lantigua.

“Here, he learned to differentiate the good path from the wrong path. He grew as a person,” Rafael Lugo said of his son-in-law.

Lantigua, 20, of Miami, died March 31 of wounds suffered from a noncombat incident in Anbar province. He was assigned to Camp Lejeune.

After spending a few years in the United States, Lantigua longed to return to the Dominican Republic and raise a family.

But first he followed the example of his older cousin, Francisco Arturo Santos, who had joined the Marines. The family disapproved of his decision but relented when he told them he felt a need to serve his adoptive country.

He also is survived by his wife, Rossana.

Marine Capt. Aaron J. Contreras

Died March 30, 2003 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

31 year old Aaron Contreras, of Sherwood, Ore.; assigned to Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron (HMLA)-169, Marine Aircraft Group-39, Marine Corps Air Station Camp Pendleton, Calif.; killed in a helicopter crash in southern Iraq.


Religious father of three was ‘determined at everything’

By Patrick McMahon

USA Today

To his hometown parish priest, Marine Capt. Aaron Contreras, 31, was a devout Catholic who knew his Bible inside and out.

“He was a very unusual young man in a spiritual way,” recalled the Rev. Tom McCarthy, a priest at St. Francis Catholic Church in Sherwood, Ore., a suburb of Portland.

“Aaron was very religious, and believed in his church,” said his father Edward, a Vietnam veteran.

Contreras played football, basketball and ran some track in high school.

“He was determined in everything he did,” his father said.

Contreras and two others died when their UH-1 Huey helicopter crashed Sunday, March 30, at a supply and refueling point in southern Iraq, the Defense Department said.

On Friday, a private memorial service will be held for the three Marines at Camp Pendleton near Oceanside, Calif., where their helicopter squadron is based.

Contreras was born in San Jose, Calif. on July 4, 1971. His family moved to the Portland, Ore., suburb of Sherwood in 1979.

One of five brothers, he is remembered at Sherwood High School as a student-athlete. After high school, he attended Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Prescott, Ariz.

He and his wife, Janelle, had three children — one boy and two girls. In recent years the family lived in San Diego.

“The rest of us are going to miss him terribly,” Contreras’ mother, Rosary, told Portland television station KOIN.

“We just hope this war ends soon. I mean for both sides, there are families losing sons, husbands and fathers. We want peace and I know our president is doing the best he can.”

Army Sgt. Eugene Williams

Died March 29, 2003 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

24 year old Eugene Williams, of Highland, N.Y.; assigned to 2nd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Ga.; killed in a suicide car-bombing near Najaf, Iraq.


Father of one was expecting second child in June

From wire reports

All Eugene Williams wanted was a little home cooking.

That’s what his older sister, Lori Ackert, remembers most from a letter he sent her. It arrived Saturday, March 29. “He was very optimistic — he wrote that he couldn’t wait to come home so he could cook us some good food,” she told the Poughkeepsie (N.Y.) Journal.

Just hours earlier, Williams had been among the four soldiers killed by the suicide car bomber near Najaf in south-central Iraq.

A laid-back man with a love for soulful R&B music, Williams, 24, had planned to finish a demo tape showcasing his singing. Although he aspired to fame, to family and friends in Highland, N.Y., in the Hudson River valley, it was enough that he was a good guy.

Carl Relyea, his football coach at Highland High School, said Williams easily stood out. “He was a good student and a dedicated and loyal football player. That was who he was to his teammates. I guess he continued that later in life.”

Williams was married to Brandy Delacruz Williams and lived in Hawaii. They have a 3-year-old daughter, Mya, and were expecting a second child in June.

Brandy Williams told NBC’s Today show Monday that she will tell her children their father gave his life for his country. “And even though he’s not here, he loves them with all his heart, and that he’s always going to be our hero,” she said.

She last spoke to her husband on March 15, before the first bombs fell in the war. He told her that he wouldn’t be able to call for a while but that he was mailing letters to his girls.

Marine Sgt. Fernando Padilla-Ramirez

Died March 28, 2003 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

26 year old Fernando Padilla-Ramirez, of Yuma, Ariz.; assigned to Marine Wing Support Squadron-371, Marine Wing Support Group-37, Marine Corps Air Station, Yuma, Ariz.; went missing while conducting convoy operations near Nasiriyah, Iraq. His remains were identified April 10.

* * * * *

Fernando Padilla-Ramirez was born in Mexico and was naturalized as a U.S. citizen in 2001. He joined the Marines as a teenager, serving for four years and then signing up for another three.

Once he finished his military service, Padilla-Ramirez, 26, planned to return to San Luis, Ariz., and become a police officer.

On March 28, his convoy was attacked near the town of Nasiriyah, and he was reported missing. His remains were identified April 10.

Padilla-Ramirez grew up one block from the San Luis Police station. When he was 12, he started pestering the department about joining its Police Explorers program — even though he knew the minimum age was 14. Padilla-Ramirez came around so often he was finally made an unofficial observer. He was a graduate of Kofa High School in Yuma, Ariz.

“He was a very quiet, respectful kid. He made friends with everybody,” Police Officer Luis Marquez said.

Padilla-Ramirez had already finished the first phase of police training and was prepared to complete the requirements when he returned from Iraq.

He had a wife, a 5-year-old son, and a second son was born just five days after he shipped out to Iraq.

When Padilla-Ramirez was still listed as missing, yellow ribbons were hung from police patrol cars. Now, San Luis officers mourn him with black tape over their badges.

“We’re proud of him. For us, he was a hero,” Marquez said.

— USA Today, Associated Press

Navy Lt. Florence B. Choe

Died March 27, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

35 year old Florence Choe, of El Cajon, Calif.; died March 27 when an Afghan National Army soldier opened fire on personnel assigned to Combined Security Transition Command — Afghanistan at Camp Shaheen, Mazar-E-Sharif, Afghanistan. Also killed was Navy Lt. j.g. Francis L. Toner IV.


Afghan soldier’s slaying of 2 officers stuns base

By Andrew Tilghman

Staff writer

Lt. j.g. Francis “Frankie” Toner and Lt. Florence Bacong Choe were taking a Friday afternoon jog along a well-worn path on the outskirts of Forward Operating Base Shaheen in Afghanistan.

Then an Afghan Army soldier raised his military-issued weapon and fatally shot the two officers. A third Navy officer was also wounded in the shootings, said Air Force Capt. Elizabeth Mathias, a spokeswoman for U.S. Forces in Afghanistan.

The Afghan soldier fatally shot himself moments after the killings, Mathias said.

The shooting stunned the sailors and soldiers living on the base, who are there to “mentor” the Afghan troops.

“I really hope that this incident doesn’t just pass as two more service members killed in Afghanistan. I want everyone to know how they died and why,” said Lt. Michael Lucrezio, a medical service corps officer assigned to the base.

“The simple fact is that they were murdered in cold blood. The guy who shot them wasn’t some random bad guy who snuck on base wearing a stolen uniform; he was an army soldier who had been vetted through the [Afghan National Army] recruiting process and trained to their basic standards,” Lucrezio said in an e-mail to Navy Times after the shooting.

Afghan officials expressed condolences for the deaths. Afghan Minister of Defense Abdul Rahim Wardak said he was “saddened and deeply regretful this tragedy occurred,” and that the incident was under investigation, according to a military press release.

Meanwhile, back at home, a Navy chaplain and senior chief knocked on the door at the Toner’s family home in Rhode Island to relay news of the 26-year-old Seabee’s death.

“The irony is that he loved those people,” Sharon Toner, the officer’s stepmother, said of Toner in an interview. “His heart just went out to the children over there because they weren’t in school and they didn’t have shoes. The poverty over there really hit him hard.”

Toner’s family had expected him home for leave the following week, his stepmother said.

Toner was assigned to Naval Facility Hawaii at Pearl Harbor, where he lived with his wife, Brooke. He was on a one-year deployment to Afghanistan to help oversee reconstruction projects in an area north of the capital.

Choe, 35, was a medical service corps officer assigned to Naval Medical Center in San Diego, where she lived with her husband, Lt. Cmdr. Chong “Jay” Choe, a urology resident at the hospital, and their 3-year-old daughter, according to a statement from the hospital.

She was born at the same hospital while her father was a career sailor, said Sonja Hanson, a spokeswoman for the hospital.

Choe contacted a Navy recruiter just days after Sept. 11, 2001, Hanson said. She also was on a one-year deployment in Afghanistan, where she helped run the medical station that served U.S. troops as well as Afghan troops and civilians, Mathias said.

Choe’s family declined requests for an interview, Hanson said.

The Toner family is planning a memorial service at the Merchant Marine Academy on Long Island, N.Y., where Toner earned his bachelor’s degree in 2006, his stepmother said.

Toner was voted prom king at his high school and played football in college, his family said. He sought a Navy career immediately after his graduation.

“He was going to do a full 20 years. His long-term goal was to someday work at the Pentagon. He loved, loved the Navy, loved the Seabees and he never had any thoughts about doing anything else,” his stepmother said.

Sharon Toner said her stepson’s death was a “freak event.”

“I don’t see that as a reflection on the Afghan people. In America we have people right here — you read it in the newspaper every day, people murdering other people and doing things like that. That doesn’t reflect on the society as a whole,” she said.


Officer ‘always had a smile on her face’

The Associated Press

Lt. Florence B. Choe was serving as a medical administration and logistics mentor to the Afghan National Army.

“She was a professional naval officer who was extremely smart and extremely pleasant,” said Sonja Hanson, a hospital spokeswoman who knew Lt. Choe.

Choe, 35, of El Cajon, Calif., was killed March 27 when an insurgent posing as an Afghan National Army soldier opened fire.

She was based at the Naval Medical Center San Diego, where she was born.

She earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from the University of California at San Diego in 1997, and a master’s degree in public health and health care administration in 2001 from San Diego State University. She was commissioned as a Medical Service Corps member in the Navy on Feb. 21, 2002.

“She always had a smile on her face, and everyone admired her. All of us at the Naval Medical Center are proud of her, and we are grieving for her,” said Hanson.

She is survived by her husband, Lt. Cmdr. Chong “Jay” Choe, a urology resident at the medical center, and her daughter, Kristin, 3.

Marine Maj. Kevin Nave

Died March 26, 2003 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

36 year old Kevin Nave, of Union Lake, Mich.; assigned to 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, Camp Pendleton, Calif.; killed in a vehicle accident in Iraq.


Marine Maj. Kevin G. Nave graduated in 1985 from Waterford Kettering High School, where he was on the varsity football and wrestling teams. After high school, he went to the University of Michigan on a Reserve Officer Training Corps scholarship. He graduated in 1989 with a degree in political science.

Nave had a wife, Carrie, a son, Anthony, 6, and a 5-year-old daughter, Maeve.

Army Staff Sgt. Raphael A. Futrell

Died March 25, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

26 year old Raphael Futrell, of Anderson, S.C.; assigned to the 13th Military Police Detachment, 728th Military Police Battalion, 8th Military Police Brigade, 8th Theater Sustainment Command, Fort Shafter, Hawaii; died March 25 in Baghdad, Iraq, of injuries sustained from a non-combat related incident.


Futrell was Shafter-based MP

The Associated Press

HONOLULU — The military says a Hawaii-based soldier from South Carolina has died in Iraq after a non-combat incident.

The Pentagon said March 27 that Staff Sgt. Raphael A. Futrell, 26, of Anderson, S.C., died March 25 in Baghdad. Officials said the incident is being investigated, but no details have been released.

Futrell was assigned to a military police battalion at Fort Shafter, Hawaii.

His mother, Vicki, said in an interview March 27 that her son always wanted to work in law enforcement and was working as a military police officer. She said he was on his second deployment to the region.

Futrell was a member of the 13th Military Police Detachment in the 728th Military Police Battalion, 8th Military Police Brigade, 8th Theater Sustainment Command, based in Hawaii.


Family remembers fallen MP

The Associated Press

Staff Sgt Raphael A. Futrell loved his job as a military police officer, said his older brother, Capt. Wilson Winters.

“He liked being a police officer, anything that dealt with investigating,” Winters said. “He was a dual canine operator — bomb-sniffing dogs and attack dogs. He was certified in both. He enjoyed handling the dogs.”

Futrell, 26, of Anderson, S.C., died March 25 in Baghdad from non-combat related injuries. Known as “Ralph,” he was a 2001 high school graduate and was assigned to Fort Shafter.

“He did things around the house every time he would come home on leave,” single mom Vicki Futrell said of her younger son.

“He’d clean out my refrigerator, clean out my garage. He’d take care of my dogs.”

He also is survived by Chance, his 3-year-old son with his former wife, Angela.

His mother said she will remember the practical gifts he would give her, like the jug for ice water when she worked as a teller.

“Once when I was sick with the flu, he made macaroni and cheese,” she said. “He said, ‘This would be good for you,’ and that was the best macaroni and cheese.”

Army Spc. Gregory P. Sanders

Died March 24, 2003 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

19 year old Gregory Sanders, of Hobart, Ind.; assigned to 3rd Battalion, 69th Armor, Fort Stewart, Ga.; killed in action in Iraq.


Greg Sanders, the son of a Navy sailor, was wearing combat gear even before he was out of diapers.

“He wanted to be a soldier,” said his mother, Leslie Sanders, holding a photo of her son, age 2, wearing a green-and-khaki camouflage T-shirt. “He was born to be a soldier.”

Sanders, 19, of Hobart, Ind., was killed in a sniper shooting Monday in Iraq as his unit moved north toward Baghdad. His wife, Ruthann, was his high school sweetheart, and they have a 14-month-old daughter, Gwendolyn.

“We’re just trying to take it one day at a time,” Ruthann Sanders said. “We’re very proud of him.”

Leslie Sanders said her son enlisted right after graduating from Hobart High in 2001. He struggled over whether to join the Marines but chose the Army.

He knew life in the military could be dangerous. As a child, he saw a Navy plane crash at his father’s base in California. His father, a Navy veteran who is now deceased, talked with him before he joined the Army. “His dad told him it’s not going to be all these wonderful things,” Leslie Sanders said. “But Greg just said, ‘I want to be a soldier.’ ”

The family received a letter from Sanders on Monday, hours before they learned he had been killed, said an uncle, Rick Knight. It was written two weeks earlier in Kuwait. “His morale was great, and he said he anticipated coming home in June or July,” his uncle said.

_ Associated Press

Air Force 1st Lt. Tamara Archuleta

Died March 23, 2003 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

23 year old Tamara Archuleta, of Los Lunas, N.M.; assigned to the 41st Rescue Squadron, Moody Air Force Base, Ga.; killed in a HH-60G Pave Hawk crash on March 23, 2003, in Afghanistan.

Tamara attended the University of New Mexico and participated in the Air Force ROTC program.

After her commission, she trained to become a HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter pilot. She was assigned to the 41st Rescue Squadron at Moody Air Force Base.

On March 23, 2003, Tamara was co-pilot of Komodo 11 during a mission in Afghanistan. The helicopter crashed, killing her and the five other airmen on board.

We honor her service.

Marine Cpl. Michael W. Ouellette

Died March 22, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

28, of Manchester, N.H.; assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died March 22 in Camp Bastion, Afghanistan, while supporting combat operations. Also killed was Cpl. Anthony L. Williams.


Lejeune Marines killed in Afghanistan, Corps says

Staff report

Two North Carolina-based Marines died March 22 while supporting combat operations in Afghanistan, according to the Defense Department.

Cpls. Anthony L. Williams, 21, of Oxford, Pa., and Michael W. Ouellette, 28, of Manchester, N.H., died in Helmand province. They were assigned to Camp Lejeune’s 3rd Battalion, 8th Marines. Both Marines were veterans of the Iraq war, according to a 2nd Marine Division release.

Williams, a combat engineer, joined the Corps on June 12, 2006, fulfilling a lifelong dream, according to his high school principal.

“What stuck for me was that [the Corps] seemed to be a passion for him,” David Madden, Oxford High principal, told The Philadelphia Inquirer. “He knew this is what he wanted to do. Nothing he ever said stays in my mind; it was what he did. I see kids say they will join the Marines and don’t do it. He said he was going to join, and he did. He followed through with his plan.”

Williams was a “hardworking small-town guy who carried himself in a dignified manner. … I find it difficult to accept the fact that he’s gone. It’s a tough thing,” Madden said.

Ouellette, an infantryman, made an appearance at his old high school before joining the Corps on June 15, 2005. During his visit, he told classmates, teachers and administrators he was going to join, Memorial High School principal Arthur Adamakos told New Hampshire television station WMUR.

“He was a great person, Mike. He’ll be missed by all his friends and the teachers he had here at Memorial,” Adamakos said, adding that Ouellette was a jovial student who talked to everyone.


Flags flown at half-staff for Manchester Marine

The Associated Press

CONCORD, N.H. — Flags have been lowered to half-staff around New Hampshire in honor of a Marine from Manchester who was killed in Afghanistan and is being buried at the State Veteran’s Cemetery in Boscawen.

Marine Cpl. Michael Ouellette, 28, was killed March 22 while supporting combat operations in the Helmand province in southern Afghanistan. His mother said he was killed by an improvised explosive device.

Ouellette, a 1999 graduate of Memorial High School in Manchester, joined the Marines in 2005. He was deployed to Afghanistan in November after two deployments to Iraq.

More than 400 people paid their respects to Ouelette Sunday night at a Manchester funeral home.


Fallen NH Marine laid to rest

The Associated Press

BOSCAWEN, N.H. — Hundreds of people turned out to pay their final respects to a Manchester Marine killed in combat in Afghanistan.

Cpl. Michael Ouellette, 28, was killed March 22 in an explosion. He was buried March 30 at the Veteran’s Cemetery in Boscawen.

It was gray and rainy, but Ouellette’s family said it was the kind of weather he loved. Ouellette was serving his third tour of duty since 2006 when he was killed.

A 1999 graduate of Manchester Memorial High School, Ouellette started a culinary career, but he found his calling to serve while visiting New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina hit, friends and family say.

Silvio Rodriguez, a fellow Marine who served in Ouellette’s unit overseas, described him as articulate, rough when he needed to be, and helpful.


Fallen Marine was ‘always a role model’

The Associated Press

Marine Lance Cpl. Christopher Escher watched as Cpl. Michael W. Ouellette became a team leader and then a squad leader.

“He was always a leader, even as a junior guy,” Escher said, adding that his friend didn’t even have to go on his last deployment, but “the guys under him didn’t have combat experience.” Ouellette, he said, wanted to make sure they were taken care of.

Ouellette, 28, of Manchester, N.H., died March 22 while supporting combat operations in Helmand province. He was a 1999 high school graduate and was assigned to Camp Lejeune.

He had gone to culinary school in California after graduating.

He deployed twice to Iraq: first from March 2006 to September of that year and then from July 2007 to January 2008.

Alan Ouellette said that his brother “was always a role model for myself and others,” and that he hoped that “we can make his legacy as big as his life.”

“He was one of the few kids that would actually come and talk to us and have a conversation with us,” said Arthur Adamakos, his former principal. Most kids don’t.”

He is survived by his parents, Leonard and Donna.


Mother starts fund in son’s memory

The Associated Press

MANCHESTER, N.H. — The mother of a Marine who was killed in Afghanistan has started a fund to benefit veterans.

The fund is named in honor of Michael Ouellette, a 1999 graduate of Memorial High School in Manchester. He was serving his third tour of duty since 2006 when he was killed in combat in March.

Donna Ouellette created the fund to benefit the Veterans Service program of Easter Seals New Hampshire. The program has helped more than 600 veterans and their families and is managing more than 200 cases. Services may include setting up counseling and financial assistance.


Ouellette’s family accepts Navy Cross on his behalf

By Gina Cavallaro

Staff writer

Cpl. Michael W. Ouellette posthumously received the Navy Cross on Nov. 10 for displaying exceptional valor in combat by leading his Marines in a gun battle in Afghanistan, even after suffering a mortal wound.

Ouellette’s family accepted the award on his behalf from Navy Secretary Ray Mabus in a ceremony at the Marine Reserve Support Center in Londonderry, N.H.

Ouellette, 28, was a squad leader in 1st Platoon, Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 8th Marines, from Camp Lejeune, N.C. On March 22, 2009, his unit was in its fifth month on the ground in the Now Zad district in northern Helmand province.

Almost two hours into a foot patrol, which began in the morning at Forward Operating Base A.P. Hill, Ouellette was wounded by the blast of an improvised explosive device that detonated under his feet.

As the dust settled, the gunfire began from enemy positions a few meters away, and Ouellette lay bleeding in a crater.

Gaining their bearings, the Marines of 1st Platoon scrambled to lay down suppressing fire and Cpl. Jesse Raper, a squad automatic machine gunner, pulled Ouellete, who was conscious and breathing, out of the crater. Together they began to apply tourniquets and Ouellette stayed in charge, said Hospitalman 3rd Class Matthew Nolan, who ran to Ouellette’s side within moments.

With the lower half of his left leg gone and his right upper thigh and groin area ripped through with shrapnel, Ouellette knew there was no time to waste. He calmly took charge of his squad’s response to the enemy ambush.

“When I get there, he’s still calling out orders, he’s still telling the radio operator what to call in for helos, what to call in for mortars, calling his evac nine-line in and making sure that his assistant team leader, Lance Cpl. Rupert, has everything under control,” Noland said.

But Ouellette’s time was slipping away. As a quick-reaction force sped toward the ambush site, having been hampered by additional IEDs along the route, he was taken by ground ambulance to a casualty evacuation landing zone about two kilometers away. And, according to Nolan, Oullete was still breathing and conscious when the bird took off.

“I’m proud of my Marines,” were the last words Nolan heard Ouellete say as he waited for that bird.

The Navy Cross is the highest medal for valor awarded by the Navy and is second only to the Medal of Honor.

Including Ouellette’s, 26 Navy Crosses have been awarded to Marines for heroism in battle in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Army Pvt. Tyler J. Smith

Died March 21, 2008 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

22 year old Tyler Smith, of Bethel, Maine; assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart, Ga.; died Mar. 21 at Forward Operating Base Falcon near Baghdad of wounds sustained when the base received indirect fire.


Maine soldier killed in Iraq

The Associated Press

BETHEL, Maine — A 22-year-old soldier from Bethel has become the latest Maine service member killed in Iraq.

The Defense Department announced Monday that Army Pvt. Tyler Smith died Friday of wounds received when his forward base near Baghdad received indirect fire. The Army would not elaborate on the circumstances, but a spokesman said indirect fire typically describes a mortar or rocket attack.

Smith, a 2004 graduate of Telstar Regional High School, was a combat engineer assigned to a unit of the 3rd Infantry Division.

A spokesman at Fort Stewart, Ga., said Smith joined the Army in December 2005 and arrived in Iraq around the end of November.

Gov. John Baldacci spoke with Smith’s parents, Martin and Wendy Smith. The governor said he will order that flags be lowered to half-staff on the day of the funeral.

“As a state, we join together and mourn the loss of another young soldier from Maine,” Baldacci said in a statement. “This is a terrible loss for his family, his friends and his community. We honor Private Smith’s sacrifice and will keep his family in our hearts and prayers.”

Members of Maine’s congressional delegation also issued statements honoring Smith’s sacrifice and mourning his loss.

Martin and Wendy Smith could not be reached for comment.

Telstar’s dean of students, Charles Raymond, remembered Tyler Smith as a “straight-shooter” who was fun-loving but responsible. “He was a leader among his peers,” Raymond said.

Smith, who excelled in industrial arts, had worked with his father in construction and was very knowledgeable about that field, the school official said.

Smith died two days before The Associated Press tally of the death toll of U.S. military forces and civilians working for the military in Iraq reached 4,000.

Army Sgt. Jose R. Escobedo

Died March 20, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

32 year old Jose Escobedo, of Albuquerque, N.M.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 77th Field Artillery Regiment in Schweinfurt, Germany; died March 20 in Baghdad, Iraq, of injuries sustained from a non-combat-related incident, which happened the previous night at Forward Operating Base Kalsu in Baghdad, Iraq.


Iraq incident kills soldier from NM

The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The Defense Department has announced that a soldier from Albuquerque has died of injuries suffered during a non-combat incident at a base in Iraq.

The department identified him as Sgt. Jose R. Escobedo Jr., 32. He was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 77th Field Artillery Regiment in Schweinfurt, Germany.

The circumstances surrounding the incident at the Forward Operating Base Kalsu in Iskandariyah are under investigation. The department said Escobedo died March 20, the day after the incident.


Flags at half-staff

The Associated Press

SANTA FE, N.M. — Gov. Bill Richardson has ordered flags to fly at half-staff Friday and Saturday in honor of an Albuquerque soldier who died of injuries suffered during a non-combat incident in Iraq.

Army Sgt. Jose R. Escobedo, 32, was a field artillery forward observer assigned to the 1st Battalion, 77th Field Artillery Regiment based in Schweinfurt, Germany.

Escobedo died March 20, the day after he was injured during a non-combat incident at a base south of Baghdad. The Defense Department did not release details about the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Escobedo left behind a wife, a daughter and two sons.

Richardson says Escobedo’s patriotism, bravery and dedication will always be remembered.


Former Marine found new home in Army

The Associated Press

Staff Sgt. Shawn Johnson, a close friend of Jose R. Escobedo Jr., smiled during his eulogy, remembering Escobedo’s humor. When he would see a soldier doing something that he disliked, he would say something like that wouldn’t happen in the Marine Corps.

“I would just respond by saying, ‘You’re not a Marine anymore,’ ” Johnson said.

“ ‘Once a Marine, always a Marine,’ would be Jose’s response,” recalled Johnson.

Escobedo, 32, of Albuquerque, N.M., died March 20 in Baghdad of injuries from a non-combat incident while in Iskandariyah. He was assigned to Schweinfurt, Germany.

Escobedo attended high school in Albuquerque and joined the Marines after graduation, serving 11 years with the Corps. He briefly left the service and then joined the Army in 2007.

Johnson said he would miss playing pickup basketball with him.

“He was always the one little guy on the basketball court going against a giant,” Johnson said.

He is survived by his wife, Angelica, and their three children, Elvida, 9; Jose, 4; and Mikey, 2.

“You can really see a reflection of his character in his family,” Johnson said following the ceremony.

Army Pfc. Antione V. Robinson

Died March 19, 2008 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

20 year old Antione Robinson, of Detroit; assigned to the 782nd Brigade Support Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, N.C.; died March 19 in Nawa, Afghanistan, of injuries sustained when the vehicle he was repairing collapsed.


Detroit soldier injured repairing vehicle in Afghanistan dies

The Associated Press

DETROIT — A 20-year-old soldier from Detroit has died in Afghanistan of injuries sustained when the vehicle he was repairing collapsed.

The Department of Defense says Pfc. Antione V. Robinson died Wednesday in Nawa.

Robinson was assigned to the 782nd Brigade Support Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, N.C.

The military says the incident is under investigation.

Robinson joined the Army in September 2005 and completed wheeled vehicle mechanic advanced individual training at Fort Jackson, S.C., in 2005. He completed the basic airborne course at Fort Benning, Ga., in 2006.

Survivors include his mother, Ginger L. Jhons; his father, Emror Robinson; and his grandmother, Mary L. Stevenson, all of Detroit.

Navy Special Warfare Operator Chief (SEAL) Adam L. Brown

Died March 18, 2010 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

36 year old Adam Brown, of Hot Springs, Ark.; assigned to an East Coast -based SEAL Team; died March 18 in Afghanistan.


Navy: SEAL killed in Afghanistan

Staff and wire reports

A SEAL assigned to an East Coast SEAL team was killed Thursday in a battle with militants in Afghanistan.

Chief Special Warfare Operator Adam Lee Brown, 36, died from injuries sustained during combat operations, according to a Navy statement released Friday.

Lt. Arlo Abrahamson, spokesman for Naval Special Warfare Group 2, said only that Brown was assigned to a Virginia Beach, Va.-area SEAL team that was part of a special operations task force operating in various parts of Afghanistan.

Brown, a native of Hot Springs, Ark., enlisted in the Navy in 1998 and joined the SEALs in 2001. He earned a Bronze Star with combat “V.”

He is survived by his wife, two children and his parents.


Friends say Brown fought for the common man

The Associated Press

HOT SPRINGS, Ark. — A Navy SEAL who was killed in Afghanistan has been remembered as an honorable, hard-working man who died a warrior’s death.

Family and friends gathered March 24 at Hot Springs Baptist Church for the funeral of 36-year-old Chief Petty Officer Adam Brown.

The Defense Department didn’t release details of Brown’s death on March 18. He was assigned to a Virginia Beach, Va.-based SEAL team.

Family friend Darlene Hull described Brown as diligent, respectful and proud to be an American. Others said he fought for the little guy.

After the funeral, people waving American flags lined streets leading to the cemetery.

Brown is survived by his wife, two children and his parents.

Marine Lance Cpl. Christopher S. Meis

Died March 17, 2011 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

20 year old Christopher Meis, of Bennett, Colo., assigned to 2nd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died March 17 in Helmand province, Afghanistan, while conducting combat operations.


Family remembers Marine killed in Afghanistan

The Associated Press

Christopher “Steele” Meis’ family remembers him as kind, considerate and funny.

“He was a stand-up guy who knew he wanted to be a Marine since eighth grade,” his mother, Holly, Meis, told the Denver Post. “He loved his family. He was all about family and all about country.”

Meis, 20, of Bennett, Colo., was killed March 17 in combat in Helmand province. He was assigned to Camp Lejeune.

The Denver Post reports that he enlisted in the Marine Corps in January 2010 and he was deployed to Afghanistan a year later.

“He loved being a Marine,” his mother said. “He said he was going to make a career of it, and he told me last week he was going to re-enlist. He wanted to be the front guy; he wanted to make a difference.”

A graduate of Bennett High School, Meis is survived by his mother; father, Christopher; and brother, Hunter, 16.

His awards include the National Defense Service Medal, the Afghanistan Campaign Medal and the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal.

Army Cpl. Gary L. Moore

Died March 16, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

25 year old Gary Moore, of Del City, Okla.; assigned to the 978th Military Police Company, 93rd Military Police Battalion, Fort Bliss, Texas; died March 16 in Baghdad, Iraq, of wounds sustained when an explosive device struck his vehicle.


Del City soldier killed in Iraq

The Associated Press

DEL CITY, Okla. — Military officials say a soldier from Del City has been killed in Iraq.

Officials announced Wednesday that 25-year-old Cpl. Gary L. Moore died Monday when a bomb hit his vehicle in Baghdad.

Moore was assigned to the 978th Military Police Company, 93rd Military Police Battalion in Fort Bliss, Texas.

Officials at Fort Bliss say Moore was a military policeman who joined the Army in January 2007 and was appointed to the rank of corporal in January.

Moore was previously stationed at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., and deployed to Iraq with his company in June 2008 to help provide training and oversight of the Iraqi police force.

Fort Bliss officials say Moore’s awards include the National Defense Service Medal, the Army Service Ribbon, and the Purple Heart, which was awarded posthumously.


Friend describes fallen soldier

Tulsa (Okla.) World

TULSA, Okla. — A friend of a Del City soldier killed in Iraq described him as a religious young man who loved knowing that he was defending his country.

Cpl. Gary L. Moore, 25, of Del City died March 16 when a roadside bomb blew up his vehicle in Baghdad, according to the military.

A military police officer, Moore was assigned to the 978th Military Police Company, 93rd Military Police Battalion at Fort Bliss, Texas.

Amber Rudd of El Paso, Texas, said she first met Moore more than two years ago when he began attending Sunday school classes at the Hillcrest Baptist Church in El Paso, which is near Fort Bliss.

“He was an amazing guy,” the 22-year-old Rudd said. “He was always smiling, always there for everyone.

“He was a friendly soul, and he had tons of friends,” she said.

Moore “loved the military, loved being a MP, and he loved knowing he was protecting our country,” she said.

Moore and the rest of his Fort Bliss outfit deployed to Iraq in June to provide training and oversight of Iraqi police.

Rudd said she last talked to Moore last week, and “he said he couldn’t wait to come home.”

Rudd said Moore loved playing football and volleyball and was engaged to be married.

At the Southwest Baptist Church in Oklahoma City, a spokeswoman said Moore and his fiancée were planning a marriage ceremony there this summer.

Rudd said Moore’s family lives in Del City. The family could not be reached for comment.

Rudd was shocked and stunned when she heard the news that Moore had been killed, she said.

“It hit me hard, especially since I had just talked to him on Thursday,” she said. “I’ve done my fair share of crying since then.”

“He was just one amazing person,” she said, her voice cracking with emotion.

Before heading to Fort Bliss, Moore had been at Fort Leonard Wood, southwest of Rolla, Mo.

Moore was just promoted from specialist to corporal in January, Fort Bliss officials said.


Fiancée: Moore ‘loved life’

Tulsa (Okla.) World

OKLAHOMA CITY — The fiancée of a soldier from Del City who died in Iraq said she spoke to him using a Webcam just days before he died.

One of the subjects Randi Ivie and Army Cpl. Gary Lee Moore talked about during their hour-long conversation was their wedding, which was planned for later this year at Southwest Baptist Church, Ivie said. She said they ended by vowing their love to one another.

Moore, 25, died March 16 when a roadside bomb blew up his vehicle in Baghdad, according to the military. The military police officer was assigned to the 978th Military Police Company, 93rd Military Police Battalion at Fort Bliss, Texas.

Ivie said Moore, a 2003 graduate of Westmoore High School who ran track and cross country, enjoyed serving his country and police work. She said he had worked as a security guard at Quail Springs Mall in Oklahoma City before joining the military in January 2007.

“He loved life,” she said. “He wasn’t a stranger to anyone. He always had a good smile and a strong handshake.”

Among his other traits, she said, Moore was blunt “without being rude, so everyone always knew what was on his mind.” She also said he “had a deep love for the Lord.”

Moore would continually make comments while watching a movie, she said, and loved food, “especially Italian food.”

Before heading to Fort Bliss, Moore had been at Fort Leonard Wood, southwest of Rolla, Mo. He and his company were deployed to Iraq in June 2008 to help provide training and oversight of the Iraqi police force.

Ivie said funeral arrangements for Moore still are pending but that the service likely would be held at Southwest Baptist Church.


Funeral held for Del City soldier killed in Iraq

The Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — A Del City soldier who died last week in Iraq was recalled Tuesday by those at the church he attended as a hero and a committed Christian.

Hundreds gathered for the funeral for Cpl. Gary Moore at Southwest Baptist Church. The 25-year-old died March 16 when a roadside bomb blew up his vehicle in Baghdad.

The church’s head pastor, Sam Davison, said everyone at Southwest Baptist took pride in Moore.

“Gary was 38 years younger than me, but he was one of my heroes,” Davison said. “I’m proud of the service that he rendered. I’m proud of his bravery. I’m proud of Gary.”

Moore was a 2003 graduate of Westmoore High School who joined the military in January 2007. He was assigned to the 978th Military Police Company, 93rd Military Police Battalion at Fort Bliss, Texas.

Brig. Gen. David Phillips, the chief of the military police corps, praised members of that unit for their service and accomplishments in Iraq. He said people in Baghdad are beginning to experience normal lives again because of the work of Moore and others.

“This past fall, when the elementary schools reopened, young girls were able to go to school,” Phillips said.

Moore was engaged to be married later this year to Randi Ivie.

“I can’t think of Gary without thinking of Randi,” said Jason Gaddis, one of the church’s ministers. “It was during a college and career activity in 2003 that they met and became basically inseparable.”

Air Force Staff Sgt. Timothy L. Bowles

Died March 15, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

24 year old Timothy Bowles, of Tucson, Ariz.; assigned to the 3rd Logistics Readiness Squadron, Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska; died March 15 of wounds sustained when his vehicle encountered an improvised explosive device.


Tucson High grad killed in Afghanistan

By Sheryl Kornman

Tucson Citizen

Tucson High School graduate Timothy Bowles, 24, was killed in Afghanistan on Sunday after he volunteered to take the spot of a “comrade who was ill,” said his father, retired Air Force Master Sgt. Louis Bowles.

Bowles, an Air Force staff sergeant, was sent to Afghanistan in November, his father said.

It was his first tour in a war zone. He was a fire engine mechanic, the senior Bowles said.

“He volunteered to go on that mission that day to take the place of a comrade who was sick. I just learned that today (Monday),” he said.

Bowles and four other airmen were killed by a roadside bomb in Eastern Afghanistan, according to an Air Force release and an article Monday in The New York Times. The names and hometowns of the other victims were not immediately available.

Bowles was assigned to the 755th Air Expeditionary Group’s Nangarhar Provincial Reconstruction Team in Jalalabad, his father said. His home base was Elmendorf Air Force Base near Anchorage, Alaska.

Louis Bowles said his son was sent to Afghanistan at the same time his sister’s husband was sent to Iraq.

The senior Bowles said his son worked at the Tucson Medical Center cafeteria while taking classes at Pima Community College for a year after his 2002 graduation from Tucson High.

“He never said what he was studying.”

When Timothy enlisted in the Air Force, Bowles said he was “stunned” but “I was all for it.”

He said Louis confided in his mother, Lisa, that he was unhappy at times growing up, as his father left for one deployment after another.

He didn’t understand his father’s military career was what took him away from home.

“He didn’t comprehend why I had to leave. He thought, ‘Dad was mad at us,’” he said.

The elder Bowles served in the first Gulf War in 1990 and 1991, he said.

In addition to his parents, who now live in Glorietta, N.M., he is survived by his older sister, Heather Ketchmark, who lives at Hunter Army Airfield in Georgia.

Timothy Bowles would have completed six years in the Air Force on May 13, his father said.


Fallen airman was ‘always unselfish’

The Associated Press

As a youngster growing up on base, Staff Sgt. Timothy L. Bowles took a special interest in elderly veterans who attended chapel services on Sundays.

He made a point of paying attention to them and assisting them if they needed help, said his father, Air Force retiree Louis Bowles. “He was loving and loyal, a son you could trust.”

Bowles, 24, born in Anchorage, Alaska, and raised in Tucson, Ariz., died March 15 near Kot after his vehicle encountered an improvised explosive device. He was assigned to Elmendorf Air Force Base and volunteered for his final mission to take an ill colleague’s place on patrol.

“That was Tim,” Air Force retiree Louis Bowles said of his son’s offer to fill in for someone. “He was always unselfish, wanting to help people any way he could.”

Bowles graduated from Tucson High School in 2002 and attended Pima Community College before joining the Air Force.

“Raised in a military family, he knew the cost of freedom. He did not falter and he did not fail,” said Col. Richard Walberg.

He also is also survived by his mother, Lisa.

Army Sgt. 1st Class Collin J. Bowen

Died March 14, 2008 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

38 year old Collin Bowen, of Millersville, Md.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 175th Infantry Regiment, Maryland Army National Guard, Towson, Md.; died March 14 at Brooke Army Medical Center, San Antonio, Texas, of wounds sustained Jan. 2 in Khowst Province, Afghanistan, when his vehicle encountered an improvised explosive device.


Soldier injured in Afghanistan bombing dies in Texas hospital

The Associated Press

MARION, Ind. — An Army sergeant from Indiana injured in a roadside bombing in Afghanistan that killed two other soldiers died March 14 at a Texas military hospital, relatives said.

Sgt. 1st Class Collin J. Bowen, 38, a Marion native, was critically injured Jan. 2 in Afghanistan’s Khowst province, a troubled region on the Pakistani border. The Army reservist had been hospitalized at Brooke Army Medical Center in Fort Sam Houston, Texas, since Jan. 6.

Bowen graduated in 1988 from Marion High School. He had lived in Maryland with his wife, Ursula, their daughter and his two stepdaughters.

Bowen’s uncle, Dean Neal, said he received a call about his nephew’s death about 2 a.m. March 14. He told the Chronicle-Tribune that he was grateful he was able to visit Bowen at the Texas hospital about two weeks ago.

“Collin passed away peacefully … with his family holding his hands at his bedside,” Bowen’s brother Justin wrote in an online journal. “May he rest in peace.”

The online journal had reported during the past two weeks that Bowen’s condition had deteriorated. He had his final of many emergency surgeries March 11 to repair damage to abdominal tissue that had become infected.

Relatives said Bowen, who earned a Purple Heart after being wounded, had volunteered to go to Afghanistan.

His other survivors include his parents, who live in Marion, and two brothers who live in the Indianapolis area. Funeral services were pending March 14.

Two other soldiers — Lt. Col. Richard Berrettini, 52, of Wilcox, Pa., and Sgt. Shawn Hill, 37, of Wellford, S.C. — died in the Jan. 2 bombing, along with an Afghani interpreter.


Soldier wanted to ‘do his part’

By Cathy Kightlinger

Indianapolis Star

MARION, Ind. — Army Staff Sgt. Collin J. Bowen’s mother referred to her boy as “America’s son” during his funeral service Thursday.

“I really share this sadness and pride with everyone,” Carolyn Smith said while greeting mourners who waited in line to comfort her. “He is not just mine. He belongs to everybody.”

Bowen, a 38-year-old Maryland National Guardsman, died a week ago at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.

The soldier who grew up in Indiana suffered fatal wounds Jan. 2 in Khowst province, Afghanistan, when the vehicle in which he was riding encountered an improvised explosive device, according to the Department of Defense.

The veteran soldier was at the end of a year’s time in Afghanistan when he agreed to go on his final mission. He volunteered when asked by a new and inexperienced commander who wanted help, family members said. When the fatal explosion occurred on the last day of a 10-day mission, Bowen and others in a convoy were on their way back to base, the family said.

The explosion also killed the three others, including an Afghan interpreter, in the vehicle.

Bowen suffered burns on 50 percent of his body and spent the last weeks of his life on ventilators and dialysis machines, family members said.

“Collin did not want to die,” said his younger brother Justin Bowen, 36, Indianapolis. “He wanted to contribute and do his part.”

Bowen — who grew up in Marion and was known for his competitive spirit, loyalty and tenacity — fought to live, even in the end, said Justin. He and Bowen’s other brother, Shelby, 33, Carmel, gave eulogies in front of about 500 people at Grace Community Church in Marion on Thursday. The family said about 300 more people attended a visitation after the service.

Although he is gone, Justin said, his brother’s heart beats inside him, their family members and, they hope, everyone who honored him at the service.

“I hope a part of Collin’s heart continues in all of you,” he said.

There were a few laughs during the service, too: when the “Rocky” movie theme played as pictures of Bowen’s teenage years flashed on a screen, and as Shelby recalled the Bowen brothers’ childhood antics.

“His life should be celebrated and his memories cherished,” said Shelby.

After the service, Collin’s wife, Ursula Bowen, Nottingham, Md., remembered the last words she exchanged with her husband: “Te amo. Chau” — Spanish words for “I love you. Bye.”

Bowen met his wife when she was his Spanish teacher.

“I’m very proud of him — extremely proud of being his wife,” said Ursula, adding that Bowen always tried to help others.

That included asking family members to send him candy, paper and pencils to distribute to the children in Afghanistan, said Justin.

But Bowen’s courage did not mean he wasn’t frightened in Afghanistan.

“He called my mother and said, ‘I’m afraid,’” said Justin. “That didn’t stop him from doing it.”

Bowen, who earned a Bronze Star for bravery in combat, is the 17th service member with Indiana ties to die of injuries suffered in Afghanistan since U.S. troops were sent there after the Sept. 11 attacks, and the first this year.

Other survivors include three daughters, Gabriela and Katelyn Bowen and Erin McDermott; his stepfather, Richard Smith; and his father and stepmother, Michael and Beverly Bowen, Marion.

Bowen will be buried in Arlington National Cemetery on Tuesday.

Army Pfc. Erin L. McLyman

Died March 13, 2010 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

26 year old Erin McLyman, of Federal Way, Wash.; assigned to the 296th Brigade Support Battalion, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash.; died March 13 in Balad, Iraq, of wounds sustained when enemy forces attacked her base with mortar fire.


Lewis soldier had ties to Washington state, Oregon

Staff and wire reports

TACOMA, Wash. — An Army specialist with ties to Washington and Oregon has died in Iraq.

The body of Spc. Erin L. McLyman, 26, arrived March 15 at Dover Air Force Base, Del. Her identification was released by the Air Force Mortuary Affairs Operations Center at Dover.

She died March 13 of wounds sustained when enemy forces attacked her base with mortar fire.

She lived most recently in Federal Way. She graduated from Sheldon High School in Eugene, Ore.


Memorial honors Ore. soldier killed in Iraq

The Associated Press

EUGENE, Ore. — Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski joined about 300 relatives, friends and community members on Thursday at a Eugene memorial service for a 26-year-old soldier killed in Iraq.

Pfc. Erin McLyman died March 13 in Balad, Iraq, from injuries sustained when enemy forces attacked her base with mortar fire. She was a 2001 graduate of Eugene’s Sheldon High School.

The governor had ordered flags at all public institutions to be flown at half-staff Thursday in her memory.

McLyman’s husband, Brian Williams, tucked a folded U.S. flag under his arm and followed the soldiers who carried his wife’s casket out of the Eugene Faith Center.

Williams stopped to watch an ivory-colored hearse led by police officers and Patriot Guard Riders transport the casket down Polk Street. He watched until every motorcycle was out of sight, then murmured, “That’s so awesome.”

Based out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Wash., McLyman was part of the 296th Brigade Support Battalion, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division. Her deployment to Iraq in August was her first.


Fallen soldier had turned life around

The Associated Press

Erin McLyman emerged from high school a confident, good student who before graduating had overcome a severe, years-long drug addiction.

“My grades were dropping, I wasn’t going to class, weird people would come over to the house and drop by in the middle of the night. I’d leave and not come back,” a 17-year-old McLyman said nine years ago in an interview with KVAL-TV in Eugene, Ore.

She was sharing her success story of kicking a habit she said had involved using marijuana, cocaine and methamphetamine. After graduating from Sheldon High School in Eugene, where she was a member of a dance team, she enlisted in the Air Force.

She later re-enlisted with the Oregon National Guard and returned to active duty with the Army.

“She lived every moment like she didn’t have a second to spare,” her family wrote.

McLyman, 26, of Federal Way, Wash., was killed March 13 in Balad, Iraq, in a mortar attack. She was assigned to Joint Base Lews-McChord.

“We will miss her — our state and nation will never be quite as good without her,” Gov. Ted Kulongoski said at a memorial service in Eugene.

She is survived by her husband, Brian Williams; her parents, Robert and Flora McLyman; two sisters; and a grandmother.

Army Sgt. 1st Class Glen J. Whetten

Died March 12, 2010 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

31 year old Glen Whetten, of Mesa, Ariz.; assigned to the 1st Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kan.; died March 12 near Kandahar, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device.


Soldier remembered as movie buff who loved his job

The Associated Press

Glen “Jake” Whetten was such a big fan of cinema, especially war movies, that he could communicate with his brother using popular movie lines.

“He wasn’t critical of them but liked reality over bravado,” said Whetten’s older brother, Jed. “You could never beat him at movie trivia because he knew everything. He knew all the lines.”

On March 12, the 31-year-old soldier from Mesa, Ariz., was killed near Kandahar, Afghanistan, when his vehicle hit a roadside bomb. He was assigned to Fort Riley.

Whetten enlisted in the Army in 1996, the same year he graduated from South Mountain High School in Phoenix.

Jed Whetten told the East Valley Tribune in Mesa that before his brother deployed to Afghanistan, he served a year in Iraq when the war started in 2003.

“He was very patriotic, and he translated that to other soldiers when it came to educating them on the importance of their jobs,” Jed Whetten said. “If there’s any consolation in this, he died doing what he loved.”

The youngest of four children, Glen Whetten is survived by his mother, Amy Whetten of Mesa; brother, Jed; sisters Melinda Pink and Julie Lee; 11-year-old daughter, Arianna; and fiancee, Megan Hughes.

Marine Lance Cpl. Garrett W. Gamble

Died March 11, 2010 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

20 year old Garrett Gamble, of Sugar Land, Texas; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died March 11 while supporting combat operations in Helmand province, Afghanistan.


Lance corporal ‘was always competing’

The Associated Press

Garrett W. Gamble was a sportsman with a deep sense of adventure, the son of a former NHL goalie and an avid hockey player himself. He also had a big stomach.

He “ate like crazy,” friend Jason Williams said at a memorial for the 20-year-old. “Don’t take him out unless it’s a buffet,” Williams joked.

Gamble, of Sugarland, Texas, died March 11 after reportedly stepping on a mine while on patrol in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was assigned to Camp Lejeune.

Gamble began considering joining the military years before his 2008 graduation from Stephen F. Austin High School in Sugarland, said friend Bryce Ritzen, who enlisted with Gamble in 2007.

“He beat me running; I beat him in sit-ups,” Ritzen said. “Garrett was always competing.”

One of his elementary school teachers said Gamble had shown bravery and determination from a young age and had persevered despite struggling with dyslexia.

“He might have sometimes been a little mischievous, but he was never, ever mean-spirited,” Carolyn McCrory said.

Survivors include his parents, Michelle and Brad Greer and Troy Gamble, and younger brothers, Cody Gamble and Gunner Greer.

Marine Lance Cpl. Patrick A. Malone

Died March 10, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

21 year old Patrick Malone, of Ocala, Fla.; assigned to 2nd Tank Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; died March 10 as a result of a non-hostile incident in Saqlawiyah, Iraq.


Visit to Lejeune inspired lance corporal to become Marine

Lance Cpl. Patrick A. Malone wanted to be a Marine throughout his childhood. But it was at the age of 11, during a visit to Camp Lejeune, where his big sister was a Marine, that the dream took root.

“He never wanted to be a hero,” said his sister, Jennifer Hopper. “He just wanted to be a part of something bigger than himself. He wanted to help people. He wanted to protect people.”

Malone, 21, of Ocala, Fla., was killed in a non-hostile incident March 10 in Anbar province. He was assigned to Camp Lejeune.

Even in Iraq, he was constantly online and on the phone with friends and family catching up. He sent his friend, Clare Canon, three dozen roses on Valentine’s Day.

Even on the day he died, Patrick made a flurry of calls to family members to say hello and to apologize for missing his grandmother’s birthday party.

Malone’s eclectic interests included reading philosophy and meditating. He loved adventure, too. For his 22nd birthday in May, Hopper planned to take him sky diving near her home when he came to visit during a scheduled break.

Patrick is survived by his parents, Neida and Damian.

Army Pfc. Jason M. Kropat

Died March 9, 2010 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

25 year old Jason Kropat, of White Lake, N.Y.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), Fort Campbell, Ky.; died March 9 at COP Chergataw, Afghanistan, from wounds sustained when a suicide bomber attacked his unit. Also killed was Sgt. Jonathan J. Richardson.


2 Fort Campbell soldiers killed in Afghanistan

By Chris Smith

The (Clarksville, Tenn.) Leaf-Chronicle

The Defense Defense announced March 11 the deaths of two 101st Airborne Division soldiers who were supporting Operation Enduring Freedom.

They died March 9 in Khowst province, Afghanistan, from wounds suffered when a suicide bomber attacked his unit.

They were assigned to the 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team.

Killed were Sgt. Jonathan J. Richardson, 24, of Bald Knob, Ark., and Pfc. Jason M. Kropat, 25, of White Lake, N.Y., DoD said in a news release.

Richardson was a fire support specialist assigned to C Company. He joined the Army in June 2006 and arrived at Fort Campbell in January 2007, according to a news release from post.

His awards and decorations include: Army Commendation Medal; Army Good Conduct Medal; National Defense Service Medal; Iraq Campaign Medal; Global War on Terrorism Service Medal; Noncommissioned Officers Professional Development Ribbon; Army Service Ribbon; Overseas Ribbon; and Weapons Qualification, M4, expert.

Richardson is survived by his wife, Rachel Richardson, of Clarksville; mother Sharon Dunigan, of Bridgeport, W.Va.; and father, Jeffery Richardson, of Germany.

Kropat was an infantryman assigned to C Company. He joined the Army in November 2008 and arrived at Fort Campbell in March 2009, according to a news release from post.

His awards and decorations include: Army Commendation Medal; Army Good Conduct Medal; National Defense Service Medal; Afghanistan Campaign Medal; Global War on Terrorism Service Medal; Army Service Ribbon; and Weapons Qualification, M4, expert.

Kropat is survived by his parents, Kathleen and Glenn Kropat, of Fredericksburg, Texas.

A memorial service for the fallen soldiers will be held in Afghanistan.

* * * * *

Soldiers remembered by Campbell community

By Jake Lowary

The (Clarksville, Tenn.) Leaf-Chronicle

The fellow soldiers of Pfc. Jason Kropat will remember him as “the battle buddy that everyone wanted,” and Sgt. Jonathan Richardson was the “kind of leader soldiers strive to emulate.”

Kropat and Richardson were killed March 11 in Khost province, Afghanistan, when a suicide bomber attacked his unit.

Both were members of C Company, 1st Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team.

First Lt. John Limauro, the company’s executive officer, said Kropat was “an excellent soldier in every capacity,” and was the first to cheer up his fellow soldiers.

“Jason was always quick with a joke when everyone was down and the situation was undesirable,” Limauro said.

Limauro said Kropat, who came to Fort Campbell in March 2009, was also proactive in his efforts to spread the cheer.

“Jason was the battle buddy that everyone wanted,” Limauro said. “His ability to see his comrades down without words would allow him to cheer anyone up no matter the time of day.”

Limauro said Richardson, as a noncommissoned officer, was an example for the rest of his comrades.

“His professionalism and appearance set the standard for others to follow,” he said.

Richardson died after being medevaced from the scene.

Richardson’s and Kropat’s deaths are the second and third for the Rakkasans, who took over their area of operations late last month.


Soldier was most at home in the outdoors

The Associated Press

Jason Kropat loved the outdoors. Many of the activities he did outside centered on White Lake, which flows alongside the New York hamlet of the same name where Kropat lived.

“Everyone who knew him knew he loved White Lake,” said his former girlfriend, Shannon Kinne. “All of us who were friends and close to him all have some memories of him on White Lake, be it fishing … trying to wake board off the back of the boats (or) sitting on the porch drinking a beer relaxing, watching the people go by on their boats.”

His fishing skills were chronicled in the local newspaper two years ago — a photo of him proudly displaying a 22-inch trout.

Kropat enlisted in the Army in November 2008, partly to prove that he could succeed there, Kinne said. He was deployed to Afghanistan in January and was killed in combat March 9. He died in Khowst province after an attack on his unit. He was assigned to Fort Campbell.

“He understood the cause. He believed in what he was fighting for,” said his sister, Kimberley.

Kropat attended Monticello High School and later earned his GED.

Other survivors include his parents, Glenn and Kathleen Kropat, and sisters Kristina and Courtney.

Army Pfc. Patrick A. Devoe II

Died March 8, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

27 year old Patrick Devoe, of Auburn, N.Y.; assigned to 40th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, Fort Richardson, Alaska; died March 8 in Kandau Kalay, Afghanistan, of wounds suffered when his vehicle was struck by an improvised explosive device.


Father: Son loved adventure

The Associated Press

FORT RICHARDSON, Alaska — The father of an Alaska-based soldier from Auburn, N.Y., who’s been killed in Afghanistan says his son loved adventure.

Patrick Devoe Sr. says his son, Pfc. Patrick A. Devoe II, “had a great love for life.”

The 27-year-old Fort Richardson soldier was killed March 8 by a roadside bomb in Kandau Kalay. He joined the Army in January 2008.

He was assigned in July to the 1st Squadron, 40th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, at the Anchorage base.

Devoe’s father says his son spent a few years as a contractor and studied culinary arts at a New York state university.

He is survived by a girlfriend and 1-year-old daughter.


Hundreds gather for fallen soldier’s send-off

The Associated Press

AUBURN, N.Y. — Family and friends remembered a central New York soldier killed in Afghanistan earlier this month as someone who made those around him laugh and feel good.

As many as 300 people gathered March 16 at St. Mary’s Church for a memorial service for Army Pfc. Patrick Devoe II, who was killed March 8 by a roadside bomb while on patrol in Kandau Kalay.

Devoe’s smile “would light up a room, his laugh was infectious,” said Army Maj. Kevin Swab, reading a letter from one of Devoe’s friends.

Many people wept as Devoe’s flag-draped coffin was brought out of the church. Police and members of the Patriot Guard stood by to escort Devoe’s coffin to a private burial at St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Owasco. A bell rang at Auburn’s Memorial City Hall in Devoe’s honor as the funeral procession passed.

Marine Lance Cpl. Jason Cooper, 19, of Auburn stood outside the church with his mother, Cindy, to salute the fallen soldier. Neither knew the 27-year-old Devoe.

“But we lost a brother and I wanted to pay my respects,” said Cooper, who just returned Saturday from a seven-month deployment to Iraq and is heading to Afghanistan in November.

Devoe joined the Army last year and was planning to make a career of it, his family said.

“He loved it. He said it was the best thing that ever happened to him,” said Patrick Devoe Sr.

Devoe was assigned to the airborne division of the 40th Cavalry Regiment at Fort Richardson in Alaska. He had been in Afghanistan for less than a month when he was killed.

“If it wasn’t him, it would be someone else. I’m not upset about it. It’s the way of life, I guess,” his father said. “They’re soldiers. They know what they’re getting into. There’s always that chance no matter who you are.”

Susan-Kealoha Capone said she was worried when her son enlisted in January 2008, but said she was proud of his decision to serve his country. Like any mother, Capone said, she feared the worst.

“I was scared to death because of something like this. But in the long run, it was his decision and I am very proud of the choice he made,” Capone said.

Pat Devoe said his son loved collecting baseball cards and enjoyed playing goalie on youth soccer teams and camping with his family as a youngster. He was working construction when he decided to enlist.

Joe Devoe said his brother always seemed happy.

“He just had no cares in the world. You could talk to him about anything in the world,” Joe said.

Devoe spent three weeks at home on leave in December. Capone said it was the first time her son was able to spend time with his 16-month-old daughter. He cherished the opportunity and doted on her.

Capone said when her son left, she promised him to show his daughter pictures of her father to keep his memory alive. She plans to follow through on that promise.

“When she gets older, she’ll know. She’ll know what kind of dad, what kind of person he was. She’ll know all about him,” Capone said.


Fallen soldier was looking to make Army his career

The Associated Press

Pfc. Patrick A. DeVoe II loved eating and he loved preparing dishes.

Devoe even loved food enough to briefly study culinary arts before joining the Army.

“He could take cottage cheese and burgers, mix them together, and make it sound good,” said his mother, Susan-Kealoha Capone.

DeVoe, 27, of Auburn, N.Y., died March 8 in Kandau Kalay when his vehicle was struck by an improvised explosive device. He was a 2000 high school graduate and was assigned to Fort Richardson.

DeVoe joined the Army last year and was planning to make a career of it, said his father, Patrick DeVoe. “He wanted to be a lifer. He loved it. He said it was the best thing that ever happened to him,” he said.

DeVoe loved collecting baseball cards and enjoyed playing goalie on youth soccer teams and camping with his family as a youngster.

He was working construction when he decided to enlist.

“He was really kind, smart and funny. He could always make you laugh. No matter what, he could always make you smile,” said Kimberly Harkness, the soldier’s aunt.

He also is survived by his stepmother, Karen, and a 16-month old daughter, Jazzibell.

Army 1st Lt. Daniel B. Hyde

Died March 7, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

24 year old Daniel Hyde, of Modesto, Calif.; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii; died March 7 in Tikrit, Iraq, of wounds sustained when an explosive device struck his unit vehicle.


Officer remembered for energy, optimism

First Lt. Daniel B. Hyde didn’t throw in the towel. A high school football teammate shared one story about how, coming into a huddle even 30 to 40 points behind, “Daniel would say, ‘We can still get back into it!”‘ Brian Hyde said. “He was never a ‘give up’ type.”

Hyde, 24, of Modesto, Calif., died March 7 after an explosive device struck his vehicle in Tikrit. He was assigned to Schofield Barracks.

Hyde played football, basketball and golf in high school, and was a member of at least two academic honor societies, maintaining a 4.20 GPA. He volunteered at Delta Blood Bank and worked at a golf course.

He graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 2007.

“Dan was a great soldier, leader and human being, a natural leader who had an immediate and profound impact on everyone he came in contact with,” Maj. Gen. Robert Caslen said.

Frank Bispo was Hyde’s head football coach. “You don’t coach too many kids like him. He was a good athlete, a good student, a good person. He had it all,” Bispo said. “I have four daughters and there’s very few young men I would want to marry them. But he’s that kind of man.”

He is survived by his parents, Glenda and Brian.

Marine Cpl. Adam O. Zanutto

Died March 6, 2006 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

26 year old Adam Zanutto, of Caliente, Calif.; assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; died March 6 at National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md., of wounds sustained Feb. 25 when an improvised explosive device detonated in Anbar province, Iraq.


Marine dies from injuries at Bethesda medical center

Associated Press

WALKER BASIN, Calif. — A Marine on his third tour of duty in Iraq died from injuries sustained in a roadside bombing just weeks before returning home, his family said.

Marine Cpl. Adam Zanutto, 26, died March 6 at the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., where he was being treated for injuries he suffered Feb. 25 outside Baghdad.

Zanutto’s wife, Amber, whom he married on the Fourth of July, and his mother were at his side when he died.

“He made the ultimate sacrifice,” his brother, Scott Zanutto, said.