Army Spc. Jarrett P. Griemel

Died June 3, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

20 year old Jarrett Griemel, of La Porte, Texas; assigned to the 425th Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, Fort Richardson, Alaska; died June 3 at Forward Operating Base Salerno, Afghanistan, of injuries suffered from a noncombat-related incident.

SPC Jarrett Pearson Griemel graduated  with honors from La Porte High School in 2006. Jarrett was on the swim team and was active in the surf club. After graduation he enlisted in the US Army with the hope and expectation that military service meant seeing the world and finding a variety of adventures. Jarrett liked taking risks. He was a daredevil growing up indulging in skydiving and cliff diving. He had a great sense of humor. Jarrett was extraordinarily caring and kind and liked expressing his affection for people by giving loving hugs.

Army Sgt. Justin J. Duffy

Died June 2, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

31 year old Justin Duffy, of Cozad, Neb.; assigned the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, N.C.; died June 2 in Baghdad when an improvised explosive device detonated near his vehicle.


Memorial service scheduled for Duffy

The Associated Press

COZAD, Neb. — More Nebraska memorial arrangements have been made by the family of an Army sergeant who was killed in Iraq.

The Defense Department says Sgt. Justin Duffy of Cozad died June 2 in Baghdad after a bomb exploded near his Humvee.

Duffy’s body was buried near Moline, Ill., where he grew up and started school. The family moved to Cozad when Justin was in sixth grade.

Duffy graduated from Cozad High School in 1995 and later from the University of Nebraska at Kearney. He joined the Army in June 2007.

Lt. Col. Bob Vrana of the Nebraska National Guard says a memorial service is set for 2 p.m. July 12 at the Cozad High School gymnasium.

Army Pfc. Matthew W. Wilson

Died June 1, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

19 year old Matthew Wilson, of Miller, Mo.; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry) Fort Drum, N.Y.; died June 1 in Nerkh, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when an improvised explosive device detonated near his vehicle. Also killed were Pfc. Matthew D. Ogden and Staff Sgt. Jeffrey A. Hall.


Army pays for father to attend son’s funeral

By Jaime Baranyai

Springfield (Mo.) News-Leader / Gannett News Service

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — The father of a slain soldier will get his two wishes — to attend his son’s funeral in Washington, D.C. and meet his daughter-in-law and grandson for the first time.

When James “Jim” Wilson made a plea for financial help to get to his son’s funeral, he never imagined the response he would get from the military and even complete strangers.

“It means a lot,” Wilson said, wiping tears from his eyes. “I want to make sure everyone gets a thank you.”

Pfc. Matthew Wilson, 19, was killed June 1 in Afghanistan by a roadside bomb.

A funeral service with full military honors is set for Aug. 19 at Arlington National Cemetery.

Although others offered to help the father get to Washington, the Army has agreed to pay for his airfare and two nights of lodging. He couldn’t afford the trip because he lives on Social Security, and extra money is scarce.

Jerry Potter of Springfield was willing to help Jim Wilson.

He didn’t know the man but was so moved by a story in the News-Leader about Wilson’s desire to attend the funeral, he offered to pay for a round-trip bus ticket.

“I just feel sorry for him,” he said.

Calls poured into the Golden Living Center in Branson where Jim Wilson resides, inquiring about how to help.

The sentiment was not lost on Jim Wilson. Because the Army will be paying his way to the funeral, he’s directing that all other donations go to a trust fund being set up for his 6-month-old grandson, Matthew Gunnar Wilson.

“It means my grandson is going to have a bigger nest egg,” he said.

Matthew Wilson went into foster care at the age of 13. His mother died in 2003, and his father had a stroke and could no longer care for him.

“That just threw his whole world upside down,” said Jeff Wilson, of Mount Vernon, Matthew’s half-brother.

He joined the military Jan. 3, 2008.

Jeff Wilson said the fact that two of Matthew’s stepbrothers are in the Air Force likely had something to do with his wanting to join the military.

“That’s all he ever wanted to do [was join the military],” he said. “Even when he was young … it was just something he really wanted to do.”

Jim Wilson said he’s proud of his son’s military service.

“He died doing what he wanted to do,” he said.

Ashlynn Wilson of New York, Matthew Wilson’s wife, said that it was a desire to belong to a group that drew her husband to the ranks of the Army.

“He didn’t really grow up in the best setting and he wanted to be part of something, and he wanted to do something for his country,” she said.

Ashlynn Wilson recalled fond memories of her husband, who was a friend of her brother’s when the two met early last year. They were married Aug. 7, 2008.

She remembered the Chinese restaurant they went to the night they met and how he asked her father for her hand in marriage before he proposed. She said there’s a million reasons why her husband was so special, but struggled to find the words to speak.

Ashlynn Wilson said she is reminded of her husband every time she looks at her son.

“He has his nose,” she said. “He pretty much has everything from me, but he has his nose and his feet.”

Jim Wilson said he’s looking forward to meeting his daughter-in-law and grandson, who he didn’t even know existed until he learned of his son’s death. He and his son had lost touch after he joined the military.

He spoke lovingly of his son.

“He liked to fish and hunt just like me,” Jim Wilson said. “He was a good boy.”

Marine Lance Cpl. Dustin L. Sides

Died May 31, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

22 year old Dustin Sides, of Yakima, Wash.; assigned to 9th Communications Battalion, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif.; killed May 31 by hostile fire in Anbar province, Iraq.

Dustin L. Sides joined the Marines following an older brother and a cousin. “He was proud to be there, proud to be a Marine _ and we are proud of him,” said Nancy Sides, his stepmother. Sides, 22, of Yakima, Wash., was killed May 31 in an ambush near Fallujah, Iraq. He was based at Camp Pendleton. He graduated from a Yakima high school in 2001.

His father, John Sides, said he spoke with his son by phone just two hours before his death. Dustin told his father he had just completed a mission and was on his way back to base. Friend Amie Wakefield said she last spoke to Sides a few weeks before he died, when he telephoned from Iraq. “He wanted to be there, and he wanted people to be proud of him,” she said.

Sides is also survived by his mother. He had intended to marry a girlfriend in California when his duty in Iraq ended, relatives said.

Army 1st Lt. Kenneth Michael Ballard

Died May 30, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

Kenneth M. Ballard 5/30/04 Iraq

26 year old Kenneth Ballard, of Mountain View, Calif.; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 37th Armored Regiment, 1st Armored Division, from Friedberg, Germany; killed May 30 during a firefight with insurgents in Najaf, Iraq.


Calif. mother remembers son killed in Iraq

Associated Press

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — A 26-year-old Army officer had been scheduled to return from Iraq eight days before he was killed by small arms fire, his single mother said of her only child.

Lt. Ken Ballard, a tank platoon leader, died May 30 in Najaf, where U.S. troops had halted offensive operations Thursday as peace talks continued with Shiite militia leaders, said Karen Meredith, Ballard’s mother.

In one of the last e-mails Meredith received from Iraq, her son wrote, “Don’t worry about us. We know what we’re doing.”

Ballard originally had been scheduled to return from a little more than a year in Iraq on May 22, but Meredith said she rescheduled his “welcome home” party to Labor Day weekend after his stay was extended. The timing of his death made the news even more painful, she said.

Mother and son chatted, online or over the telephone, almost every day. The pair last talked Thursday, “a bonus day” because Meredith received both a letter and a phone call from her son.

“He was an only child. I was a single mom. He knew how important it was for me to hear from him,” Meredith said.

In his absence, Meredith began posting his photos from Iraq on her Web site, to keep friends and family updated about his daily activities and to remind the world “there are real people over there.” Ballard’s favorite picture shows him pointing to the fist-sized hole left by the sixth rocket-propelled grenade to hit his tank.

“It was important that people see his smiling face and for people to know what was going on in Iraq, that it wasn’t just a news story,” she said.

Born in Mountain View, Ballard joined the Army after graduating from Mountain View High in 1995. He served in Bosnia and Macedonia before taking a leave to attend Middle Tennessee State University, where he earned a degree in international relations in 2002.

Ballard planned to serve in the Army for two more years, then to earn a master’s degree and work in Washington, D.C. Now, Meredith said, “it’s going to be a different kind of welcome home.”

Navy Boatswain’s Mate 1st Class (SEAL) Brian J. Ouellette

Died May 29, 2004 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

37 year old Brian Ouellette, of Needham, Mass.; assigned to Navy Special Warfare Group Two, Little Creek, Va.; killed May 29 while on mounted patrol near Jahak and Seleh, Afghanistan.


SEAL among those killed in explosion

Associated Press

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — A Navy SEAL based in Virginia Beach was one of four U.S. special forces members killed in an explosion in Afghanistan, Navy officials said.

Petty Officer 1st Class Brian Ouellette and three other service members traveling in a Humvee were killed in Zabul province, about 240 miles southwest of Kabul, the nation’s capital. The four were members of the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force Afghanistan.

Ouellette, 37, was a member of Navy Special Warfare Group Two at Little Creek Amphibious Base and is the fifth SEAL from Virginia Beach to die in Afghanistan.

Naval Special Warfare spokesman Chief Petty Officer Tom Jones said that Ouelette was on a mounted patrol near the cities of Jahak and Seleh.

A native of Needham, Mass., Ouellette enlisted in the Navy in 1990 and became a SEAL in 1991, the Navy said.

Ouellette grew up in Waltham, Mass., and graduated from Waltham High School, but his mother now lives in Maynard, Mass..

He was remembered at Memorial Day ceremonies in both communities.

“It’s devastating,” the Rev. Kenneth Quinn said at a small ceremony at St. Bridget’s cemetery in Maynard. “This brings home what’s going on.”

In Waltham, Ouellette was remembered as a dedicated member of the SEALs, an elite fighting force that undergoes some of the toughest military training in the world.

“Once he got in there and got a taste of it, he wouldn’t be denied,” Jim Stanley, a friend and former roommate told WBZ-TV. “That’s really what he wanted to do.”

Ouellette was one of eight children and the family remained in seclusion over the weekend. His mother, Peg, said she was too distraught to talk when contacted by The Associated Press on Sunday and would only say “I loved him dearly.”

The other Special Forces soldiers who died in the incident, according to the Pentagon, were Army Capt. Daniel W. Eggers, 28, of Cape Coral, Fla.; Staff Sgt. Robert J. Mogensen, 26, of Leesville, La.; and Pfc. Joseph A. Jeffries, 21, of Beaverton, Ore.

At least 89 American service personnel have died in and around Afghanistan since the start of the U.S. war on terrorism following the Sept. 11 attacks, including 55 killed in action.


Navy SEAL from Massachusetts killed in Afghanistan

WALTHAM, Mass. — Memorial Day services in two Massachusetts communities were made even more somber on Monday with news that a Navy SEAL with ties to those towns had died fighting the war of terror in Afghanistan.

Petty Officer 1st Class Brian J. Ouellette, 37, a 15-year Navy veteran, was one of four servicemen who died when the Humvee he was in ran over a mine.

Ouellette grew up in Waltham and graduated from Waltham High School, but his mother now lives in Maynard.

He was remembered at ceremonies in both communities.

“It’s devastating,” the Rev. Kenneth Quinn said at a small ceremony at St. Bridget’s cemetery in Maynard. “This brings home what’s going on.”

In Waltham, Ouellette was remembered as a dedicated member of the SEALs, an elite fighting force that undergoes some of the toughest military training in the world.

“Once he got in there and got a taste of it, he wouldn’t be denied,” Jim Stanley, a friend and former roommate told WBZ-TV. “That’s really what he wanted to do.”

Ouellette was one of eight children and the family remained in seclusion over the weekend. His mother, Peg, said she was too distraught to talk when contacted by The Associated Press on Sunday and would only say “I loved him dearly.”

Steve Duffy, head lacrosse coach and assistant football coach at Waltham High, played football with Ouellette in the mid-1980s.

“He was a great teammate, a year older, and always good to the younger guys,” Duffy told The MetroWest Daily News of Framingham. “He was just a tough, no-nonsense type of guy who would smack you in the mouth between the whistles. A tough guy.”

Ouellette was assigned to the Naval Special Warfare Group Two based in Little Creek, Va., according to the Navy, which announced the death on Monday.

The Special Forces soldiers who died in the incident, according to the Pentagon, were Army Capt. Daniel W. Eggers, 28, whose home town was listed as Cape Coral, Fla., but who was originally from New Hampshire; Staff Sgt. Robert J. Mogensen, 26, of Leesville, La.; and Pfc. Joseph A. Jeffries, 21, of Beaverton, Ore.

At least 89 American service personnel have died in and around Afghanistan since the start of the U.S. war on terrorism following the Sept. 11 attacks, including 55 killed in action.

Ouellette is the third Massachusetts resident to die in Afghanistan. Army Sgt. 1st Class Daniel Petithory, 32, of Cheshire, was killed on Dec. 5, 2001 along with two other soldiers when a U.S. bomb landed about 100 yards from their position. Pfc. Evan W. O’Neill, 19, of Haverhill died Sept. 29.

Army Pfc. Chad M. Trimble

Died May 28, 2008 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

29 year old Chad Trimble, of West Covina, Calif.; assigned to the 1st Squadron, 61st Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), Fort Campbell, Ky.; died May 28 near Gardez, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when his vehicle encountered an improvised explosive device.


Army Pfc. Chad M. Trimble remembered

The Associated Press

Chad M. Trimble’s mother said that after the terrorist attacks on New York on Sept. 11, 2001, her son started to take an interest in joining the Army.

After several years of growing interest, he signed up in 2007.

“I think it was something he wanted to do since he was a little boy,” Nancy Trimble said.

Trimble, 29, of West Covina, Calif., was killed by a roadside bomb May 28 near Gardez, Afghanistan. He was assigned to Fort Campbell, Ky.

He was known as a social guy. “This home was where all the kids would come,” said Tim Trimble, his father. “It was incredible to see the energy of all those young people.”

“He was the smallest boy in the neighborhood,” said Gaye Wingfield, a neighbor. “He had the cutest giggle and would run around the neighborhood with a group of older boys.”

Trimble’s family and friends all said they were proud of the choices he made. “I hope all of America and the world will take a minute to pray for Chad,” said his father. “He paid the ultimate price for us.”

He also is survived by his wife, Rosanna, and two daughters, Steffani and Micaela.

Army Spc. Chad A. Edmundson

Died May 27, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

20 year old Chad Edmundson, of Williamsburg, Pa.; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 112th Infantry, 56th Stryker Brigade, Pennsylvania Army National Guard; died May 27 in Baghdad of wounds sustained when an improvised explosive device detonated near unit while on a dismounted patrol.


Maj. Gen. tells of man of ‘enormous potential’

The Associated Press

Chad A. Edmundson helped build a foundation of teamwork and camaraderie by aggressively completing any mission without hesitation or complaint.

“Spc. Chad Edmundson was a builder. By the work of his hands and his winning spirit he built up those around him,” said Capt. Jason Hoffman. “He lifted up his squad and platoon with his high motivation.”

Edmundson, 20, of Williamsburg, Pa., died May 27 when a bomb went off while his squad was in Abu Ghraib, Iraq. He was a 2008 high school graduate and was assigned to Altoona, Pa.

“He was an outgoing, great, really good kid. He just liked to make everybody happy,” said his cousin, Justin Swartz.

Maj. Gen. Jessica L. Wright said: “Spc. Edmundson was a dynamic, young soldier who had enormous potential in the military or any other career field he would have chosen.”

His sister, Jessica Miller, said he loved “skateboarding, bowling, golfing, fishing, wrestling, being with friends and family, and making his own rules.”

He is survived by his mother, Karen Cornell; his father, Roy Edmundson; and his fiancée, Jessica Welch.

Air Force Senior Airman Ashton L.M. Goodman

Died May 26, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

21 year old Aston Goodman, of Indianapolis; assigned to the 43rd Logistics Readiness Squadron, Pope Air Force Base, N.C.; died May 26 near Bagram Air Field, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained from an improvised explosive device. Also killed was Lt. Col. Mark E. Stratton II.


Roadside bomb kills PRT commander, airman

By Bruce Rolfsen

Staff writer

Senior Airman Ashton L. M. Goodman was 21 years old and in the Air Force for less than three years; Lt. Col. Mark E. Stratton came up through the ranks as a navigator and left his Pentagon desk job for a year in Afghanistan.

On Tuesday, both died when a roadside bomb exploded as they drove in Afghanistan near Bagram Airfield.

A third person also died in the attack, but as of Wednesday afternoon had not been identified by the Pentagon.

Goodman, a vehicle operator dispatcher, was assigned to the Panjshir Provincial Reconstruction Team and deployed from the 43rd Logistics Readiness Squadron at Pope Air Force Base, N.C. She grew up in Indianapolis.

Stratton, 39, commanded the PRT. He was deployed from the Joint Staff’s plans and program office at the Pentagon, an Air Force spokesman said.

Provincial reconstruction teams specialize in helping Afghan communities with development projects such as building roads and schools, expanding medical services and providing electrical power. Panjshir Province is located in the mountains north of Bagram Airfield.

A Pope spokesman said Goodman enlisted in July 2006 and arrived at the base in October 2006. She had already been on one deployment prior to joining the Panjshir team in June 2008 for a yearlong stay in Afghanistan.

“We will all feel sorrow as a result of her death, but should celebrate in how she chose to live her life, her commitment and dedication,” said Col. John McDonald, 43rd Airlift Wing commander.

Before starting the Pentagon staff post, Stratton flew as a senior navigator onboard RC-135 Rivet Joint reconnaissance aircraft. On the Joint Staff, he served as an executive assistant for the deputy director for politico-military affairs-Asia.

Stratton’s Air Force career began in 1992 after receiving his commission through the Reserve Officer Training Corps and graduating from Texas A&M University in 1991.

He was raised in Foley, Ala.

Stratton’s survivors include a wife and three children in the Washington area.

“Mark was just an all around wonderful person,” Stratton’s step-father, Buddy York, told WKRG-TV. “The three things that were more important to him were God, his family and the military.”


Goodman served as role model for Afghan women

The Associated Press

If Ashton L.M. Goodman had a choice of driving a sedan or a 40-foot tractor-trailer, she’d pick the tractor-trailer.

“She was a work-hard, play-hard girl,” said a friend, Airman 1st Class Vrajhi Brisby. “She didn’t care if she broke a nail, got greasy, got sweaty. If she messed up her hair, she didn’t care. Even if you were sitting in the truck, she got dirty.”

Goodman, 21, of Indianapolis died May 27 near Bagram Air Field of wounds from a roadside bomb. She was a 2006 high school graduate and was assigned to Pope Air Force Base, N.C.

She mentored Panjshir’s female Afghan leadership, advancing the economic and social development of women in the province. On May 18, she helped deliver much-needed food and house supplies to more than 100 poor women.

“Her vivacious spirit, zest of life, and eagerness to experience it all will forever be remembered by our team,” said Capt. Stacie N. Shafran.

In high school, she was member of the Japan Club and participated in the Zoo Teen Club, in which she volunteered at the Indianapolis Zoo. She was training to become a biologist.

She is survived by her parents, Vicki and Mark, and stepmother, Chasity.

Navy Cmdr. Duane G. Wolfe

Died May 25, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

54 year old Duane Wolfe, of Port Hueneme, Calif.; assigned to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Gulf Region Division, Baghdad; died May 25 southeast of Taqaddum, Iraq, of wounds sustained from an improvised explosive device.


IA commander killed by bomb in Fallujah

By Andrew Scutro

Staff writer

A Navy Reserve officer serving in Iraq as an individual augmentee died Monday after his convoy was hit by a roadside bomb outside Fallujah, the Defense Department announced Wednesday.

Cmdr. Duane G. Wolfe was 54. According to a spokeswoman at Naval Base Ventura County, Wolfe worked in civilian life at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., as the civilian deputy commander at the 30th Space Wing Mission Support Group. In Iraq, he was attached to the Army Corps of Engineers.

Two others were killed and two were wounded in the attack, although they were not identified in the news release.

Wolfe was the officer-in-charge of the Anbar area office, overseeing $300 million worth of construction projects in the formerly volatile province. Most projects were for local Iraqis, including “the first ever waste treatment facility for Fallujah,” according to the news release.

A former Seabee chief who signed up in 1972, Wolfe was commissioned in 1990 and was assigned to several California-based units in his career, as well as Naval Engineering Force, Korea.

Wolfe joins six other Navy personnel who have been killed in the war zone on IA tours. Other recent IA deaths:

* On May 11, Cmdr. Charles Springle, 52, was shot and killed with four other service members at stress control clinic on Camp Liberty in Iraq, allegedly gunned down, by a U.S. soldier who is now in custody.

* On March 27, Lt. Florence Choe and Lt. j.g. Francis Toner were shot and killed in Afghanistan, reportedly by an insurgent posing as a soldier. They were assigned to Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan at Camp Shaheen, Mazar-E-Sharif.


Jovial nature made Wolfe stand out

The Associated Press

Duane G. Wolfe was described as having an incredible sense of humor, despite being very soft-spoken in many situations.

“He was a real jovial, fun-loving kind of guy. He loved to laugh and even play jokes on people. He was just a person the kids were really drawn to because of his personality,” the Rev. Brent Willey said.

Wolfe, 54, of Port Hueneme, Calif., died May 25 after his convoy hit an improvised explosive device southeast of Fallujah, Iraq.

Wolfe worked as a civilian at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., for 24 years. He was in the reserve for 31 years after five years of active duty.

He was working at Vandenberg as the civilian Deputy Commander of the 30th Space Wing Mission Support Group.

Wolfe and his staff were responsible for overseeing nearly $300 million in construction projects that included a wastewater treatment facility for Fallujah.

“Duane’s death will leave a hole in the Mission Support Group that can never be filled,” said Col. Rick Wright. “He was a great team member and an even greater friend.”

He is survived by his wife, Cindi, and three children — daughters Carrie and Katie, and son Evan.

Army Staff Sgt. Conrad Robinson

Died May 24, 2018 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

36 year old Conrad Robinson, of Los Angeles, died May 24 from a non-combat related incident at Camp Bondsteel, Kosovo. Robinson was assigned to the 155th Medical Detachment, 261st Medical Battalion, 44th Medical Brigade, Fort Bragg, North Carolina.


A U.S. Army soldier supporting Operation Joint Guardian in eastern Kosovo died Thursday, the Department of Defense announced late Friday afternoon.

Staff Sgt. Conrad Robinson, 36, died at Camp Bondsteel, Kosovo, from a non-combat related incident, Pentagon officials said in a press statement.

Robinson was a preventive medicine specialist assigned to the 155th Medical Detachment, 261st Medical Battalion, 44th Medical Brigade, out of Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

His awards include 5 Army Commendation Medals, 6 Army Achievement Medals, 2 Meritorious Unit Citations, 1 Korean Defense Service Medal and the Nato Medal, according to the Army.

The incident is currently under investigation, according to the statement.

Robinson’s battalion commander, Lt. Col. Kevin Kelly, offered his condolences in a statement to Army Times.

“We’re extremely saddened by the death of Staff Sgt. Conrad Robinson,” Kelly said. “Staff Sgt. Robinson was known around the battalion for his infectious smile, humor and kind heart. He was the definition of selfless service and took the time every day to listen and mentor soldiers.”

“Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends during this difficult time,” Kelly added.

The mission Robinson was supporting — Operation Joint Guardian — is a NATO-led international peacekeeping force that is responsible for ensuring a secure environment in Kosovo. The mission began in 1999 and is ongoing today, though with a much smaller presence of U.S. forces.

Robinson’s death appears to be the second of a U.S. soldier in Kosovo this year. Spc. Robert Jones, a military police working dog handler, also died at Camp Bondsteel in January.

Marine Staff Sgt. Jorge Molina Bautista

Died May 23, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

37 year old Jorge Molina Bautista, of Rialto, Calif.; assigned to 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marine Division, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif.; killed by hostile action May 23 in Anbar province, Iraq.


Jorge A. Molinabautista wanted to become a Marine since his childhood. “He believed in what he was doing,” said his sister, Connie Molina. “He was so proud. He’s a hero.” Staff Sgt. Molinabautista, 37, of Rialto, Calif., spent 13 years in the Marine Corps and had trained as a drill sergeant at Camp Pendleton, Calif., where he was based.

He was killed May 23 by hostile fire in Iraq’s Anbar province. He had asked the Marines to change his last name from Molina to Molinabautista to honor his mother, Maria Bautista, and the military accommodated his request.

Molinabautista is survived by his wife, Dina, and three sons.

Army Master Sgt. Brian Naseman

Died May 22, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

36 year old Brian Naseman, of New Bremen, Ohio; assigned to the 108th Forward Support Company, attached to 2nd Battalion, 127th Infantry, 32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Sussex, Wis.; died May 22 in Taji, Iraq of a noncombat-related incident.


Wife remembers fallen husband

The Associated Press

CALEDONIA, Wis. — A Racine soldier who was killed in Iraq last week was always a comic, the life of the party whose two young sons adored and idolized him, his wife said.

Sgt. 1st Class Brian K. Naseman died May 22 of injuries described as noncombat-related, according to the Department of Defense.

Peggy Naseman said their boys, ages 9 and 7, wanted to be just like their father.

“They wanted to be career military just like their dad,” Naseman said Monday. “They knew that what he was doing was a good cause.”

Now they don’t understand why he won’t be coming home, she said.

Brian Naseman, 36, was assigned to the 108th Forward Support Company, attached to 2nd Battalion, 127th Infantry, 32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team out of Sussex.

He died in a rural region 20 miles north of Baghdad, where he was stationed with the Wisconsin Army National Guard. Military officials are still investigating the circumstances surrounding his death.

He was born to serve, Peggy Naseman said, always ready to give. He would help a friend or neighbor at any time, day or night.

“I can’t even tell you how many lives Brian has changed,” she said. “If you needed something, he was there.”

Friends and neighbors spent Memorial Day with Peggy Naseman, helping around the house and tying yellow ribbons around the trees in their yard.

Brian Naseman grew up in Ohio and met his future wife at a barn dance, where he taught her to line dance. Sparks didn’t immediately fly, but Peggy Naseman soon realized how funny he was.

When he moved from Ohio to Wisconsin, he transferred from the Ohio National Guard to the Wisconsin National Guard, with which he served one tour of duty in Kuwait before his stint in Iraq.

Peggy Naseman said she still doesn’t know when she can plan a funeral for her husband of 10 years. She was told his body might be returned to the U.S. as soon as this week.

The last time the Naseman family was together was in April when Peggy Naseman and the boys traveled to New Mexico to see Brian Naseman before he shipped off to Iraq.

They spent one of their final days together on a hot-air balloon.

“We got as close to heaven as we wanted to be at the time,” Peggy Naseman said.


Nasemen never turned his back on others

The Associated Press

Brian Naseman never explained to his wife exactly why he wanted to join the military. He just did. He was a born leader, Peggy Naseman said.

When he moved from Ohio to Wisconsin, he transferred from the Ohio National Guard to the Wisconsin National Guard, with which he served two tours of duty, once in Kuwait and most recently in Iraq.

Brian would help a friend or neighbor at any time, day or night.

“I can’t even tell you how many lives Brian has changed. If you needed something, he was there,” she said.

Naseman, 36, of Racine, Wis., died May 22 in a noncombat-related incident in a rural region about 20 miles north of Baghdad.

He also is survived by two sons, Cole, 9, and Carter, 7. Naseman grew up in Ohio and met his future wife at a barn dance, where he taught her to line dance.

The Naseman family was last together in April when Peggy and the boys traveled to Albuquerque, N.M., to say goodbye to Brian before he shipped off to Iraq.

They spent one of their final days together on a hot air balloon.

“We got as close to heaven as we wanted to be at the time,” Peggy Naseman said.

Army 1st Lt. Leevi K. Barnard

Died May 21, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

28 year old Leevi Barnard, of Mount Airy, N.C.; assigned to the 252nd Combined Arms Battalion, Fayetteville, N.C.; died May 21 near Baghdad of wounds sustained from an improvised explosive device. Also killed were Maj. Jason E. George and Sgt. Paul F. Brooks.


Interests spanned from philosophy to war

The Associated Press

Leevi K. Barnard’s family described him as a quiet man with a dry sense of humor, a very private but thoughtful person who liked to read Plato and “The Art of War.” He also enjoyed sports, particularly playing on the church softball team and fantasy football.

“To me, if there ever was a hero, he was a hero,” said Thomas Barnard, his grandfather.

Barnard, 28, of Mount Airy, N.C., died May 21 near Baghdad of wounds suffered when his unit was attacked. He was assigned to Fayetteville, N.C.

He graduated from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte in 2007 with a bachelor’s degree in political science and a minor in Arabic studies.

“He knew how to make you laugh, and if he didn’t make you laugh, he knew how to make you smile,” said Dianne Orr, a friend.

He also is survived by his mother and stepfather, Pam B. and Larry Payne; his father, Geoffrey Gordon; and his stepmother, Gloria Gordon.

“It was a privilege to have Leevi as a friend,” said Sgt. 1st Class Michael Street. “All the things that made him a good officer made him an even better friend.”

Air Force 1st Lt. Roslyn L. Schulte

Died May 20, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

25 year old Roslyn Schulte, of St. Louis; assigned to the Headquarters, Pacific Air Forces Command, Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii; died May 20 near Kabul, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained from an improvised explosive device.


Mo. town says farewell on Memorial Day

The Associated Press

CREVE COEUR, Mo. — On the day America honored its fallen war heroes, one of the latest of those heroes was remembered at a funeral service in suburban St. Louis.

Air Force 1st Lt. Roslyn Schulte, who was stationed at Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii, was buried May 25, five days after she was killed by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan. She was 25.

“Memorial Day will never be the same,” Rabbi Mark Shook told the hundreds who filled Congregation Temple Israel. “No one in this place will ever take Memorial Day for granted again.”

Officials say Schulte was the Air Force Academy’s 10th graduate — and first female graduate — killed in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

Schulte grew up in Ladue. She captained a state championship lacrosse team at John Burroughs School in a wealthy area of St. Louis County. Friends described her as smart, compassionate and determined.

“It’s totally going to change our community,” said a friend, 27-year-old Elise Berger. “When someone that close to you dies, you have a new appreciation.”

Schulte dreamed of being a fighter pilot since age 12. At the academy, she was among the top in her class.

In her third year, she decided to pursue military intelligence instead of aviation, believing she could do more for her country in that role, said her brother, Todd, 28.

She was sent to Afghanistan in February. There, her parents said, she helped teach Afghan military officials how to gather and interpret intelligence. She was traveling in a convoy from Camp Eggers, Kabul, to Bagram Airfield when she was killed.

Schulte met her boyfriend, Air Force Capt. Bruce Cohen, at Hickam, where both were stationed. At the funeral, he tearfully revealed how he planned to propose when she returned to the United States in August.


Leadership was where Schulte excelled

The Associated Press

Robert Schulte remembers how his daughter, as a young girl, organized a group of her peers on the first day of summer camp to perform a play. In high school, Roslyn L. Schulte also captained the lacrosse team and became an all-American lacrosse player.

“She wanted to be in charge. And she was,” he said.

Schulte, 25, of St. Louis died May 20 near Kabul of wounds suffered from an explosive. She was assigned to Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii.

Friends remembered how some had questioned her about the idea of working in a group made up mostly of men. “Do you think they are going to bully me?” she would defiantly respond.

At the Air Force Academy, Roslyn Schulte majored in political science, interned for former Sen. Alan Allard, R-Colo., became a group commander — one of the academy’s highest positions — and captained the lacrosse team, said her mother, Suzie.

Schulte graduated in 2006 and went into military intelligence instead of aviation. She went to Afghanistan in February.

“She knew how to talk to chiefs of staff, to generals, to privates, and they listened,” Robert Schulte said. “And that’s what we needed, a great leader of people.”

Army Spc. Michael C. Campbell

Died May 19, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

34 year old Michael Campbell, of Marshfield, Mo.; assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, Schweinfurt, Germany; killed May 19 when his convoy hit an improvised explosive device in Samarra, Iraq.


In the months after the 2001 terror attacks, Michael C. Campbell drove trucks hauling debris from what used to be the World Trade Center. “That really played hard on him,” said Donna Gann, who with her husband took in Campbell during his high school years in the mid-1980s. The lack of blood relation to the Ganns didn’t matter, said their daughter, Sherry Wilson, “He was our brother and my mom’s son,” she said.

A Navy and National Guard veteran from Marshfield, Mo., Spc. Campbell, 34, deployed to Iraq with the Army. He was killed May 19 by a roadside bomb in Samarra. The decision to serve in Iraq wasn’t easy for Campbell, Wilson said. “He made sure it was OK with the family and that everybody was all right with it,” she said. “We didn’t like it, but we supported him 100 percent.”

Campbell last spoke to his family after Mother’s Day and thanked Gann for sending packages with candies and cookies, which he shared with fellow soldiers and Iraqi children.

Marine Pfc. Michael M. Carey

Died May 18, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

20 year old Michael Carey, of Prince George, Va.; assigned to 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, at Camp Pendleton, Calif.; died May 18 after he apparently fell into a canal in Iraq and did not resurface. His body was recovered the same day.


Serendipity brought Michael Carey to a Marine Corps recruiting office when he was 17. The Army recruiter wasn’t there when Carey and his grandfather stopped by, so they checked next door with the Marine recruiting office.

A Marine combat engineer from Hopewell, Va., Carey, 20, drowned May 18 in the Euphrates River while trying to defuse a bomb under a bridge.

“He was a brave man,” his brother, Kristopher, said. “I love you, Mikey. Thank you for making me what I am.”

Carey also is survived by his wife. He never met his daughter, Mia, who was born May 5.

Marine Lance Cpl. Bob W. Roberts

Died May 17, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

30 year old Bob Roberts, of Newport, Ore.; assigned to 1st Combat Engineer Battalion, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif.; killed May 17 by hostile fire near Fallujah, Iraq.


Oregon Marine killed in Iraq

Associated Press

PORTLAND, Ore. — A Marine from Oregon was killed by hostile fire in Iraq, the Defense Department said Tuesday.

Lance Cpl. Bob W. Roberts, 30, of Newport, died Monday in Al Anbar province.

He was assigned to the 1st Combat Engineer Battalion, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, out of Camp Pendleton, Calif.

Roberts is the 19th service member with strong Oregon ties killed in the Iraq war.

Roberts’ mother, who would not give her first name, told KATU-TV that her son graduated from Portland’s Madison High School in 1992.

She said her son, the second youngest of five children, called late last week. She said that even though he had two years left in the Marines, he told her that he may re-enlist.

“He was the adventurous one of the family,” she said.

Roberts worked as a plumber in Newport before joining the Marines after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11.

“It’s sad what happened,” Newport Mayor Mark Jones said Tuesday night. “The community is pretty tight, and we’re really saddened by the loss of any of our sons and daughters.”

Roberts was among more than 125 people from the Newport area serving in Iraq, Jones said.

Just on Monday, the city council accepted a flag flown in an Air Force jet over Iraq as a gift from the father-in-law of a pilot serving in the region, Jones said.

“We have a lot of kids in and out of there and we worry,” Jones said.

A memorial service has not been scheduled, but the family said Roberts will be buried at Willamette National Cemetery.

Army Spc. David A. Schaefer Jr.

Died May 16, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

27 year old David Schaefer, of Belleville, Ill.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment, 172nd Infantry Brigade, Schweinfurt, Germany; died May 16 in Baghdad of wounds sustained when an improvised explosive device detonated near his unit.


‘He was born to serve his country’

The Associated Press

David A. Schaefer Jr.’s aunt and uncle, Karen and Danny Schaefer, said their nephew visited them before he enlisted, and his excitement about joining the military was tangible.

“Like all young men, he got himself all ripped up and excited about going into the Army,” Karen Schaefer said. “I answered the door and didn’t recognize him. He said, ‘Aunt Karen, it’s Little Davey!’ and I gave him a big ol’ hug. He did good for himself.”

Schaefer, 27, of Belleville, Ill., died May 16 in Baghdad when an improvised explosive device detonated near his unit. He was assigned to Schweinfurt, Germany.

“He was born to serve his country,” said his wife, Shelly. “He wanted to be a soldier — that’s all he talked about when he was younger — and that’s what he did.”

After getting his GED, he worked as a diesel mechanic.

“There was never a challenge David wouldn’t take on, and he always took the heavy end of the load. He was a soldier’s soldier, and he will be missed,” Maj. Gen. William Enyart said.

He also is survived by three children, Jason Phillips, 13, Logan Schaefer, 7, and Savanna Schaefer, 6.

Army Staff Sgt. Esau L. De la Pena-Hernandez

Died May 15, 2009 Serving During Operation Enduring Freedom

25 year old Esau Dela Pena-Hernandez, of La Puente, Calif.; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry), Fort Drum, N.Y.; died May 15 at Forward Operating Base Shank, Afghanistan, of wounds sustained when his patrol was attacked by enemy forces using small-arms fire in Chak, Afghanistan. Also killed was Sgt. Carlie M. Lee III.


Fort Drum soldier from California dies in combat

The Associated Press

FORT DRUM, N.Y. — The Army says a Fort Drum soldier from California has died from injuries suffered in a firefight last week in Afghanistan.

The Pentagon identified the soldier Monday as 25-year-old Staff Sgt. Esau Delapena Hernandez of La Puente, Calif.

Delapena Hernandez and Sgt. Charlie Lee III, 23, of Birmingham, Ala., died from their wounds on May 15 at Forward Operating Base Shank and were with the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment.

Delapena Hernandez joined the Marine Corps in 2002 and signed up for the Army in April 2006. He had previously served in Iraq and Afghanistan. He is survived by his wife.

The 3rd Brigade was the first Army unit to deploy to the country as part of a surge of troops started by President Bush last fall.


Soldier never mentioned his honors

The Associated Press

Esau Ivan De La Pena-Hernandez poured his whole heart into his military service, family members said.

He was a fan of military-themed video games and movies and knew the film “Full Metal Jacket” word-for-word. His love for soccer was a close second.

“He used to always call me and ask ‘Are you proud of me?’ ” said his father, Mario De La Pena. “I told him ‘You are my hero.’ ”

De La Pena-Hernandez, 25, of La Puente, Calif., died May 15 after his patrol was attacked in Chak, Afghanistan. He was assigned to Fort Drum, N.Y.

The oldest of three children, he was born in Mexico and moved to America with his family when he was 11. Previously a legal resident, he had recently earned his citizenship.

Family members were shocked to discover after his death that he had earned nearly 20 decorations during his service.

“He wasn’t a flashy person,” said sister Denise. “We never knew he had all these medals.”

De La Pena-Hernandez previously deployed to the Philippines in 2002, to Kuwait in 2004, to Iraq from December 2004 to March 2005 and to Afghanistan from September 2006 to May 2007.

He also is survived by his wife.

Army Command Sgt. Maj. Edward C. Barnhill

Died May 14, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

50 year old Edward Barnhill of Shreveport, La.; assigned to the 431st Civil Affairs Battalion, Army Reserve, North Little Rock, Ark.; died of a heart attack May 14 in Baghdad.


Shreveport man, husband, father, grandfather, deacon and soldier dies in Baghdad

By Francis McCabe

Shreveport (la.) Times

Friends described Edward “Carl” Barnhill as a superman often disguised in Clark Kent clothes. His wife of 28 years says “he was just a good man.”

Barnhill, a command sergeant major with the Army Reserve’s 431 Civil Affairs Battalion based in North Little Rock, Ark., and serving in Iraq, died in Baghdad on Friday. He was 50.

Barnhill of Shreveport leaves behind his wife, Paula, two sons, Jason, 24, and Marcus, 26, two grandchildren, his mother, two sisters and two brothers.

Army officials told Paula Barnhill her husband had a heart attack and could not be resuscitated, she said.

Sunday, sitting in an arm chair in the living room of their home on Pebble Beach Drive, wearing a black dress and holding a blanket over her lap, Barnhill’s wife was having a hard time coming to terms with his death.

“It really doesn’t seem real. I know it is real, it just doesn’t feel real,” she said staring at a picture of her and her husband taken during a 21-day leave in March. “It still seems like he should be coming home anytime now.”

The last time Paula Barnhill spoke to her husband was on May 9. “He called and wished me a happy Mother’s Day,” she said.

Support has been constant in the form of visits from friends and neighbors, fellow Greenwood Acres Full Gospel Baptist Church members where Barnhill served as a deacon, said Paula Barnhill, who works at the Riverside Elementary School.

“Carl was a good friend and a good family man,” said Leo Davis, a friend of the family. “He was like Clark Kent. Mild-mannered.”

“He was a good example to follow. Anybody who knew him will tell you what a fantastic man he was. He will be missed by everybody,” said Davis’ wife, Peggy.

Barnhill, a 32-year veteran of the Army Reserves, was called to active duty in February 2003 and left for Iraq in March 2003.

He was very proud to serve the nation, Paula Barnhill said. Their 28th anniversary was Feb. 14, Valentine’s Day.

The couple met nearly 30 years ago at a church in Tennessee, where Barnhill was from. Paula Barnhill, originally from Illinois, had traveled down to Tennessee with her own church to visit. “He wrote me (letters) for a while,” she said, before they officially started dating.

They moved to Shreveport 14 years ago for a job Barnhill had gotten with Poulan Weed Eater.

“He always made time to come to my (football) games,” Barnhill’s son, Jason, said. “He was there at the right times. When I needed him.”

Barnhill was most recently employed as an engineer with the state Department of Transportation and Development and was a graduate of Western Kentucky University, Paula Barnhill said.

The U.S. Department of Defense listed Barnhill’s death as noncombat related and under investigation and would not give any further information when contacted Sunday.

Barnhill was awarded the Bronze Star in July 2003 while serving in Iraq, Paula Barnhill said.


Louisiana soldier dies of heart attack in Iraq

SHREVEPORT, La. — The last time Edward “Carl” Barnhill spoke with his wife of 28 years was during a phone call from Iraq on May 9.

“He called and wished me a happy Mother’s Day,” said Paula Barnhill, still struggling to accept the news she received of her husband’s death in Baghdad on Friday.

Barnhill, a 50-year-old father, grandfather, and deacon at his Shreveport church, had been awarded a Bronze Star — given for heroic or meritorious achievement — for his efforts in Iraq.

He died of a heart attack, not in combat, the U.S. Department of Defense told his wife.

“It really doesn’t seem real. I know it is real, it just doesn’t feel real,” she said staring at a picture of her husband and her taken during a 21-day leave in March. “It still seems like he should be coming home anytime now.”

Barnhill, a 32-year veteran of the Army Reserves, was called to active duty in February 2003 and left for Iraq in March 2003. He was a command sergeant major with the Army Reserve’s 431 Civil Affairs Battalion based in North Little Rock, Ark.

He was proud to serve, his wife said.

The couple met nearly 30 years ago at a church in Tennessee, Barnhill’s home state. Paula Barnhill, originally from Illinois, had traveled there with her own church group.

“He wrote me (letters) for a while,” she said, before they officially started dating. Their 28th anniversary was Valentine’s Day. They had two sons — Jason, 24, and Marcus, 26 — and two grandchildren.

“He always made time to come to my (football) games,” Barnhill’s son, Jason, said. “He was there at the right times. When I needed him.”

They moved to Shreveport 14 years ago for a job Barnhill had gotten with Poulan Weed Eater. Barnhill most recently worked as an engineer with the state transportation department and was a graduate of Western Kentucky University, his wife said.

Army Cpl. Ryan C. McGhee

Died May 13, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

21 year old Ryan McGhee, of Fredericksburg, Va.; assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, Fort Benning, Ga.; died May 13 from wounds sustained when his unit came in contact with enemy forces while conducting combat operations in Balad.


McGhee made impact on classmates, friends

The Associated Press

Ryan C. McGhee, who was born in Pennsylvania, lived the majority of his life in Vermont. He was on his fourth tour of duty — his first three were in Afghanistan and his latest was in Iraq.

“I lost my soul mate. I don’t know what else to say. He was my one and only, so it’s been difficult for all of us,” said Ashleigh Mitchell, his fiancée.

McGhee, 21, of Fredericksburg, Va., died May 13 of wounds suffered during a firefight with enemy forces in central Iraq. He was a 2006 high school graduate and was assigned to Fort Benning, Ga.

“He was an all-around great person and he loved what he did,” said McGhee’s brother, Zachary. “I talked to him two weeks ago. He called to wish me a happy birthday. He said he loved me and he missed me.”

He was chosen by his classmates for two senior superlatives — friendliest and most charming.

“He always had a lot of friends,” classmate Tim Putnam said.

He had planned on returning to Vermont this year, to introduce his Virginian fiancée to his childhood friends.

He also is survived by his father, Steven; stepmother, Kristie; and his mother, Sherrie Battle-McGhee.

Marine Lance Cpl. Jeremiah E. Savage

Died May 12, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

21 year old Jeremiah Savage, of Livingston, Tenn.; assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, at Camp Pendleton, Calif.; died May 12 of wounds received due to hostile action in Ramadi, Iraq.


Jeremiah E. Savage had dreamed since grade school of becoming a Marine.

“And that’s exactly what he did,” his mother, Eva Savage, said.

“When he wanted to talk to me, it was usually about the military,” said his high school principal, Gary Ledbetter.

Savage, 21, of Livingston, Tenn., died May 12 from hostile fire in Iraq. He was based at Camp Pendleton, Calif.

His wife, Kassandra, talked to Savage the day before he died and told him she had sent pictures of their newborn son. “I told him the pictures were in there with his cigarettes and he should be getting them any day now,” she said. “I’m pretty sure he never got them.”

He is also survived by a daughter and two stepchildren.

Navy Cmdr. Charles K. Springle

Died May 11, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

52 year old Charles Springle, of Wilmington, N.C.; assigned as an Individual Augmentee to the Army’s 55th Medical Company; died May 11 from injuries sustained in a shooting by a U.S. soldier at Camp Liberty, Iraq. Also killed were Army Spc. Jacob D. Barton, Army Sgt. Christian E. Bueno-Galdos, Army Maj. Matthew P. Houseal and Army Pfc. Michael E. Yates Jr.


Army IDs soldiers shot at Camp Liberty

By Michelle Tan

Staff writer

The Defense Department has identified the four soldiers killed Monday when a fellow soldier fired into a combat stress clinic on Camp Liberty, Iraq.

They are Maj. Matthew P. Houseal, 54, of Amarillo, Texas; Sgt. Christian E. Bueno-Galdos, 25, of Paterson, N.J.; Spc. Jacob D. Barton, 20, of Lenox, Mo.; and Pfc. Michael E. Yates Jr., 19, of Federalsburg, Md.

Houseal was assigned to the 55th Medical Company of Indianapolis, Ind.

Bueno-Galdos and Yates were assigned to 3rd Battalion, 66th Armor Regiment, 172nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team of Grafenwoehr, Germany. Barton belonged to the 277th Engineer Company, 420th Engineer Brigade of Waco, Texas. Bueno-Galdos was posthumously promoted Wednesday to staff sergeant.

The fifth service member killed Monday was identified Tuesday. He was Navy Cmdr. Charles K. Springle, 52, of Wilmington, N.C. He also was assigned to the 55th Medical Company.

As part of the medical company, Springle and Houseal both worked at the Liberty Combat Stress Control Center.

A sergeant from the Bamberg, Germany-based 370th Engineer Company, 54th Engineer Battalion, has been charged in the shootings.

Sgt. John M. Russell, 44, first joined the Army National Guard in 1988; he went into the active Army in 1994. He is charged with five counts of murder and one count of aggravated assault.

Russell, who was on his third Iraq deployment, remains in custody in Iraq.

Special agents from Army Criminal Investigation Command continue to investigate the shootings.

The Army also has initiated an AR 15-6 investigation to determine if there are adequate mental health facilities in Iraq, said Lt. Col. David Patterson, a spokesman for Multi-National Corps-Iraq.

The suspect was referred to counseling the week before the shootings and his commander determined that it was best for him not to have a weapon, said Maj. Gen. David Perkins, a spokesman for Multi-National Force-Iraq.

According to an Army official who spoke on condition of anonymity, preliminary reports show the suspected shooter was unarmed when he was escorted to the combat stress clinic at Camp Liberty, a sprawling U.S. base near Baghdad’s international airport. Once inside, he got into a verbal altercation with the staff and was asked to leave. The soldier and his escort got back into their vehicle and began to drive away, according to the Army official.

At some point during the drive, the soldier got control of his escort’s weapon and ordered the escort out of the vehicle, the Army official said. The soldier then drove back to the clinic, walked in and began shooting, the official said.

Soldiers from the 55th Medical Company provided immediate counseling for those who witnessed the shooting and were at the center at the time of the incident, Perkins said.

“Anytime we lose one of our own, it affects us all,” MNC-I spokesman Col. John Robinson said. “Our hearts go out to the families and friends of all the service members involved in this terrible tragedy.”

According to Army records, Russell, of Sherman, Texas, first deployed to Iraq in April 2003. He returned for a second tour in May 2005. Before that, he deployed for six months in 1996 to Serbia and for seven months in 1998 to Bosnia.

During a press briefing Monday afternoon at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Robert Gates expressed his “horror and deep regret” over the shooting, adding that officials are still in the process of gathering information on exactly what happened.

“Such a tragic loss of life at the hands of our own forces is a cause of great and urgent concern,” he said.

When asked if the suspected gunman had been deployed multiple times, Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Monday he did not have that information. However, he said, the tragedy occurred while service members were seeking help at the clinic.

“It does speak to me for the need for us to redouble our efforts in terms of dealing with the stress [of combat],” Mullen said. “It also speaks to the issues of multiple deployments [and] increasing dwell time.”

The death toll from the Monday shooting was the highest for U.S. personnel in a single attack since April 10, when a suicide truck driver killed five American soldiers with a blast near a police headquarters in Mosul, in northern Iraq.


Liberty shooting victims united by circumstance

By Allen G. Breed

The Associated Press

The paths that brought six men together in a Baghdad military clinic traced across the globe, from South America to rural Missouri, from the islands of Alaska to deepest Antarctica, before intersecting in a tragic shooting spree.

Authorities say Sgt. John M. Russell, who was nearing the end of his third tour in Iraq, was deeply angry at the military when he walked into the combat stress clinic at Camp Liberty on Monday and opened fire.

Two of the men who died devoted their careers to helping men like Russell: soldiers suffering from the stress of combat and repeated deployments to dangerous overseas war zones.

Keith Springle, a Navy commander who grew up swimming and fishing off the North Carolina coast, was in Iraq because it was his duty as a military psychologist. Dr. Matthew Houseal, a psychiatrist and major in the Army Reserve, was there because he felt he needed to be.

The three other victims were Russell’s comrades. Soldiers like the Maryland rebel who liked tinkering with guns and despised “pencil pushers.” A Peru native who, whether walking the streets of New Jersey or the dirt roads of Iraq, was a magnet for candy-seeking kids. And the shy video gamer from Missouri whose refusal to back down probably cost him his life.

Killed were Springle, 52, from Beaufort, N.C.; Houseal, 54, of Amarillo, Texas; Army Sgt. Christian E. Bueno-Galdos, 25, of Paterson, N.J.; Spc. Jacob D. Barton, 20, of Lenox, Mo.; and Pfc. Michael E. Yates Jr., 19, of Federalsburg, Md., who had met Russell shortly before the shootings.

The remains of Houseal, Yates and Bueno-Galdos were brought to Dover Air Force Base Wednesday night with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, attending. The three transfer containers were lowered down on a lift from a 747 commercial airplane, and six military personnel carried them onto a white truck. The families chose not to give interviews.

Family and teachers said Jacob Barton was a quiet student who loved graphic novels and science fiction. Growing up with his grandmother in the house, he sometimes had trouble relating to kids his own age.

“His grandmother was foremost on his mind at all times,” said Rod Waldrip, Barton’s high school English teacher at Rolla High School, where Barton graduated last year. “He sometimes wouldn’t do after-school activities because he had to see if she was OK.”

Barton’s older sister had been in the Army, and by graduation he’d already made up his mind to follow her. The grandmother he rushed home to see, Rose Coleman, said he was adjusting to life in the Army and that he “seemed to like it.”

Although he was reserved, he wasn’t afraid. Waldrip remembers seeing Barton come to the rescue of somebody who was getting bullied.

“He wouldn’t say much unless there was some injustice being done, and then he would speak up.”

Coleman said the Army told the family that Barton died trying to shield another man from the shooting.

“And he tried to talk the guy with the gun to put his gun down,” she said.

Springle, whose first assignment with the Navy was in the Aleutian Islands off Alaska, wanted to be make sure mental health issues faced by soldiers and their families were treated properly, said Staff Sgt. Robert Mullis from the 1451st Transportation Company of the N.C. National Guard, who was part of a civilian outreach program with Springle.

“He saw it as preventive maintenance,” Mullis said. “They’ve just been through some tough experiences. He was reaching out trying to try and stop a big beast before it got started.”

Springle grew up in the little fishing village of Lewiston, N.C., just east of Beaufort. Cousin Alton Dudley said the pair were a kind of saltwater Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer.

“It was a carefree life,” said Dudley, a fishing boat captain who was nine years older than Springle. “I am sure that he joined the Navy so that he could be at sea or close to it.”

All who knew him talked about Springle’s sense of humor and upbeat attitude. But Springle — whose son and son-in-law have each done a tour in Iraq — took the issue of combat stress very seriously. His work on the homefront with the Citizen-Soldier Support Program was a labor of love.

“This was volunteer work,” said Bob Goodale, director of behavioral mental health for the program. “He was doing this because it was the right thing to do — training civilian providers so they were better equipped to serve the families and the service members.”

Houseal was under no obligation to go to Iraq, but he was already something of an adventurer.

In 1991, the University of Michigan graduate was a physician at the Amundsen-Scott Station near the South Pole in a climate research project, said Mike O’Neill, the group’s electronics technician.

“He came in at the last minute not knowing anybody,” O’Neill said. “That’s one of the reasons I really respected him.”

Houseal was inquisitive, always checking on people at the station, even if it meant braving temperatures that dropped to minus-107 degrees that year.

The Amarillo man had worked for a dozen years at the Texas Panhandle Mental Health and Mental Retardation clinic, said executive director Bud Schertler. He left Texas for Iraq in late January and was assigned to the 55th Medical Company in Indianapolis, which ran the clinic where the shootings occurred.

Bueno-Galdos couldn’t wait to serve his adopted country and did so exceptionally, earning three Army Commendation Medals.

He was 7 when his family emigrated from Mollendo, Peru. The youngest of four children, he became a U.S. citizen in high school and joined the Army as soon as he graduated.

Back home in Paterson, he never made a trip to the corner bodega without a group of neighborhood children tailing him, knowing he would buy them candy or soda, his family recalled. It was the same in Iraq, where he was on his second tour.

On Mother’s Day, Eugenia Gardos made a small shrine to her recently deceased mother, placing her photograph on a small glass table surrounded by silk roses, a rosary necklace, votives and a prayer card of Senor de los Milagros — patron saint of Peru. The next day, she added a photo of her son Christian to the memorial.

“We want people to know we’re proud of our son’s Army, but if my son had died in war we would be able to handle that,” said his father, Carlos Bueno. “But not to die in this manner.”

Yates displayed zeal for serving in the Army, but perhaps not his locale, as evidenced by his MySpace page.

His profile lists his location as “[expletive], Iraq.” For his education, he listed his major as “KILLING F…ERS” and his minor as “SHOOTING THEM IN THE FACE.” Under clubs, he declared himself a member of “THE US ARMY THE BEST ORGINIZATION.”

Yates’ mother, Shawna Machlinski, said her son joined the Army not out of a sense of duty, but because he didn’t see many other options. Besides, his stepfather and two stepbrothers were military men.

“Michael was a hands-on person who didn’t like book work,” she said. “He liked putting guns together … He just wanted to do something that he thought he would be good at, and he always liked guns and that kind of stuff.”

So two years ago, he got his GED and signed up.

Alexis Mister, 18, of Seaford, Del., and the mother of Michael Yates’ son Kamren, said he was an extremely caring father. “He was always was concerned with Kamren so much,” she said. “He loved him.”

Mister said Yates came home in April for the boy’s first birthday party and doted on his son by buying him a four-wheeler. “It’s absolutely devastating,” Mister said, choking up during a telephone interview discussing Yates’ death. “My son doesn’t have a father anymore.”

Yates’ mother said that April trip left him anxious. He wasn’t home long enough, but he’d still been away from “my military family” too long. Once back in Iraq, his mother said he began to think about things he wished he’d done while visiting Maryland.

When the strong emotions began surfacing, she said, he was transferred to headquarters company “so he could stay out of combat.”

“He didn’t like headquarters at all,” said Machlinski. “He said they’re stupid pencil pushers.”

Despite the stigma, Yates volunteered to go to the stress clinic.

“I need help dealing with this,” he told his mom.

Yates had been at the clinic nearly a week when he told his mother he bumped into Russell. Yates told her Russell seemed like a nice enough guy. But after three tours, he clearly hated the Army.

“Man, this guy’s got issues,” she remembers him telling her.

Russell, 44, who just shy of finishing his third tour, told his family that the clinic was hurting more than helping. Now, he is facing charges of murder and aggravated assault.

As angry as Machlinski is at Russell for taking her boy, she’s angrier at the military.

“My heart goes out to him, too,” she said of Russell. “Someone should have helped this sergeant way before he got this bad. I would rather have my son doing his job in combat, I would rather him have been blown up by a bomb … than be shot by friendly fire.”

———

Breed reported from Raleigh, N.C. Contributing to this report were Associated Press Writers Maria Sudekum Fisher in Kansas City, Mo.; Samantha Henry in Paterson, N.J.; Kevin Maurer in Wilmington, N.C.; Brian Witte in Seaford, Del.; Betsy Blaney in Lubbock, Texas; and Linda Franklin and Regina L. Burns in Dallas.


Water-loving kid turned into mental health advocate

The Associated Press

Charles K. Springle wanted to be make sure mental health issues faced by soldiers and their families were treated properly.

“He saw it as preventive maintenance,” Army Staff Sgt. Robert Mullis said. “He was reaching out trying to try and stop a big beast before it got started.”

Springle, 52, of Wilmington, N.C., was one of five killed May 11 by an Army sergeant at a mental health clinic at Camp Liberty. He was stationed at Camp Lejeune, N.C.

Springle grew up in the little fishing village of Lewiston, N.C., just east of Beaufort. Cousin Alton Dudley said the pair were a kind of saltwater Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer.

“It was a carefree life,” said Dudley, a fishing boat captain who was nine years older than Springle. “I am sure that he joined the Navy so that he could be at sea or close to it.”

He received his Ph.D. in social work from the University of Alabama.

All who knew him talked about Springle’s sense of humor and upbeat attitude. But Springle took the issue of combat stress very seriously. His work on the homefront with the Citizen-Soldier Support Program was a labor of love.

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

Army Maj. Steven Hutchison

Died May 10, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

60 year old Steven Hutchison, of Scottsdale, Ariz.; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 34th Armor Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kan.; died May 10 in Basra, Iraq, of wounds sustained when an improvised explosive device detonated near his vehicle.


Riley major, 60, is oldest soldier to die in Iraq

By Amanda Lee Myers

The Associated Press

PHOENIX — A 60-year-old Vietnam War veteran killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq has become the oldest Army soldier to die in that conflict, the military said Thursday.

Maj. Steven Hutchison, of Scottsdale, Ariz., served in Vietnam and wanted to re-enlist immediately after the 9/11 terror attacks, but his wife was against it, his brother said.

Richard Hutchison told The Associated Press on Thursday that when she died, “a part of him died” so he signed up in July 2007 at age 59.

“He was very devoted to the service and to his country,” Richard Hutchison said.

He described him as a great big brother and friend. “I didn’t want him to go,” he said through tears, adding that he loved his brother “so much.”

The Pentagon said Steven Hutchison was killed in Iraq on Sunday. Army spokesman Lt. Col. Nathan Banks said Thursday that Hutchison was the oldest Army soldier killed in Iraq.

An Associated Press database of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan shows that Hutchison is the oldest member of any service branch killed since the wars broke out.

Hutchison served in Afghanistan for a year before deploying to Iraq in October, heading a 12-soldier team that trained the Iraqi military, his brother said. Later, he was assigned to help secure Iraq’s southern border.

Hutchinson, who grew up in California, taught psychology at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles on and off between 1988 and 1996, and lectured and taught at two other colleges, according to school records. He then worked at a health care corporation in Arizona before retiring and re-entering the service, his brother said.

He was part of the 2nd Battalion, 34th Armor Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division at Fort Riley, Kan.


Inspired to re-enlist by 9/11

The Associated Press

Steven Hutchison served in Vietnam and wanted to re-enlist immediately after the 9/11 terror attacks, but his wife was against it, his brother said.

Richard Hutchison said that when his sister-in-law died of breast cancer in 2006, “a part of him died” so Steven signed up in July 2007 at age 59.

“He was very devoted to the service and to his country,” Richard Hutchison said.

Hutchison, 60, of Scottsdale, Ariz., died May 10 of wounds suffered when an improvised explosive device detonated near his vehicle in Al Farr. He was assigned to Fort Riley, Kan. He became the oldest Army soldier to die in Iraq.

Hutchison served in Afghanistan for a year before deploying to Iraq in October, heading a 12-soldier team that trained the Iraqi military, his brother said. Later, he was assigned to help secure Iraq’s southern border.

Hutchinson, who grew up in California, taught psychology at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles on and off between 1988 and 1996, and lectured and taught at two other colleges. The Vietnam War veteran then worked at a health care corporation in Arizona before retiring and re-entering the service.

Army Spc. Omar M. Albrak

Died May 9, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

21 year old Omar Albrak, of Chicago; was an Individual Ready Reserve soldier assigned to the Headquarters, Multi-National Forces Iraq; died May 9 in Baghdad of injuries sustained during a motor vehicle accident.


Family meets soldier’s remains at Dover

The Associated Press

DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. — Twenty-one years after Army Spc. Omar M. Albrak’s birth, his mother, aunt and uncle traveled to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware on Tuesday to meet a flag-draped transfer case containing his body.

Albrak’s mother, Susan Atooli of Escondido, Calif., said she attended the ceremony Tuesday to be close to her son.

“It was a lot harder than I thought just to see somebody come back,” Atooli said. “You think you can handle it, but it hits you a lot harder than you think.

She was sorry that she was not able to see her son’s body during the trip to Dover, but officials told her his body would be released within 72 hours.

Atooli said she last talked to her son on Friday about a credit card problem.

“We were at Disneyland, and he didn’t want to keep us,” she said. “He said he’d call tomorrow, and that didn’t happen.”

Instead, she was met at her home Saturday by an officer who told her of her son’s death.

Atooli said military officials told her that Albrak was killed earlier that day in a crash at Camp Victory in Iraq and an investigation will take about six months. A spokeswoman at the Dover base said Tuesday that details of Albrak’s death had not be released, pending notification of some of his next of kin.

Albrak’s father, Omar Albrak, lives in New York.

Albrak, who is of Yemeni ancestry, worked as a translator, she said. Some Iraqis gave him a tough time because he was of Middle Eastern descent and fighting for the United States, she said. But Atooli said he but didn’t want to be an enemy to anyone despite his Yemeni ancestry.

Atooli’s sister Helen, of Maui, Hawaii, brought a sign wishing Albrak a happy birthday. She said she wanted to show it to the media covering the ceremony.

“We wanted people to know that he came home in a casket on his birthday,” Susan Atooli said.

For 18 years, media was not allowed to cover the return of overseas casualties to Dover Air Force Base. The mortuary there is the entry point for service personnel killed overseas.

Some critics saw the ban, imposed by President George H.W. Bush in 1991 during the Persian Gulf War, as an attempt to hide the human cost of war, but officials cast it as a way to protect grieving families’ privacy.

Since the ban was lifted last month, many families, like Albrak’s, have agreed to media coverage of their loved ones’ returns.

The remains of Spc. Lukasz Saczek of Lake in the Hills, Ill., who died in Afghanistan on Sunday, arrived during the same Tuesday morning ceremony as Albrak’s.


Translator wanted to build bridges with Iraqis

The Associated Press

When Omar M. Albrak’s body returned to America, his family brought a sign wishing him a happy birthday. They said they wanted to show it to the media covering the ceremony.

“We wanted people to know that he came home in a casket on his birthday,” said his mother, Susan Atooli.

Albrak, 21, of Chicago died May 9 in Baghdad in a motor vehicle accident. His mother was told he was driving in the rain near Camp Victory when his vehicle flipped.

Helen Atooli, Albrak’s aunt, would often chat with him online or by phone.

“He loved his job. I remember when he told me he was going to extend his contract. He said ‘Don’t tell my mom.’ He felt like he was accomplishing something. He was all about bettering himself,” Helen Atooli said.

His time in the Army seemed to help him appreciate family.

“He was very loving and liked spending time with family and playing with his cousins,” his aunt said.

Albrak, who is of Yemeni ancestry, worked as a translator. Some Iraqis gave him a tough time because he was fighting for the United States, but Atooli said he didn’t want to be an enemy to anyone.

He also is survived by his father, Omar Albrak.

Army Staff Sgt. Randy S. Agno

Died May 8, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

29 year old Randy Agno, of Pearl City, Hawaii; assigned to the 325th Brigade Support Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, Schofield Barracks, Hawaii; died May 8 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington of wounds sustained April 27 from a noncombat-related incident at Forward Operating Base Olsen, Samarra, Iraq.


Schofield soldier, hurt in Iraq, dies

By William Cole

Honolulu Advertiser

A Schofield Barracks soldier from Pearl City died Friday at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington of a noncombat injury in Iraq, the Pentagon said yesterday.

Staff Sgt. Randy S. Agno, 29, died from wounds received April 27 at Forward Operating Base Olsen in Samarra, Iraq, the Pentagon said.

Agno was assigned to the 325th Brigade Support Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division at Schofield Barracks.

The circumstances surrounding the incident are under investigation, the military said. It was the 3rd Brigade’s fourth noncombat death, and seventh overall, since the unit was deployed last fall.

Agno, a 1997 graduate of Pearl City High School, joined the Army in 1998 and was assigned to Hawaii in 2001.

He was a food service specialist. In 2006, Agno was named Junior Army Chef of the Year at the Army’s 31st Annual Culinary Arts Competition.

Agno earned numerous awards during his career, including the Army Commendation Medal, Army Achievement Medal, Meritorious Unit Commendation, Army Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Afghanistan Campaign Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal with Arrowhead, and the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal.

Schofield’s 3rd Brigade, with 3,500 soldiers, has experienced a spate of noncombat deaths in Iraq since it deployed in October and November on a 12-month tour.

There have been four noncombat deaths compared to three deaths related to combat.

Noncombat deaths can be due to natural causes, a vehicle or other accident, friendly fire, homicide or suicide. Eight out of 11 deaths in a combat zone this year involving troops with Hawaii ties have been as a result of noncombat causes, which largely go unexplained.

A Schofield Barracks soldier was charged last month with involuntary man-slaughter in one of those deaths — the January shooting of a fellow Hawaii soldier in northern Iraq, the U.S. military said.

The death of Pfc. Sean P. McCune was the result of a “negligent discharge” of Sgt. Miguel A. Vegaquinones’ weapon, the military said.

McCune, 20, of Euless, Texas, died after allegedly being shot by Vegaquinones following the completion of their guard-shift duty in Samarra on Jan. 11, according to a Multi-National Corps-Iraq news release.


Father of 2 enjoyed serving as chef

The Associated Press

Randy S. Agno, a food specialist, was named Junior Army Chef of the Year at the Army’s 31st annual Culinary Arts Competition. He wanted one day to open his own restaurant.

Spc. Erika Rivera said Agno “was the type of person that would go out of his way to do something nice for somebody else, not asking for anything in return.”

Agno, 29, of Pearl City, Hawaii, died May 8 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center of wounds suffered April 27 from a noncombat incident in Samarra, Iraq. He was a 1997 high school graduate and was assigned to Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.

This was his second deployment to Iraq. He also spent a year in Afghanistan.

“It is hard to grasp the reality of losing someone who has had such a positive impact on the mission and so many of his fellow soldiers,” said Capt. Christopher Denton. “How he took such pride in his work, how he tried to do whatever he could do to better serve the soldiers around him, and how he did it all with a positive attitude and a smile on his face. He made an impact on everyone he came in contact with.”

He was the father of two children, ages 5 and 3.

Army Spc. Shawn D. Sykes

Died May 7, 2009 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

28 year old Shawn Sykes, of Portsmouth, Va.; assigned to 215th Brigade Support Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, Fort Hood, Texas; died May 7 at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Landstuhl, Germany, of wounds sustained from an accident that occurred May 5 at Combat Outpost Crazy Horse, Iraq.


Sykes promised to take care of family

The Associated Press

When Shawn D. Sykes came home in April for a two-week break from his second Iraq deployment, he and his family went out to eat and went bowling.

“We just had so much fun,” said his mother, Marion Cotton.

Sykes gave her $200 for groceries, $200 to go shopping for herself, bought her a freezer and gave gifts to his sisters. He told his two youngest sisters, ages 7 and 10, that he would start an allowance for them if they did well in school.

“That was the kind of person my son was,” Cotton said. “We have so much fun when we get together, and we love each other.”

Sykes, 28, of Portsmouth, Va., died May 7 at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, Germany, of wounds suffered when a propane tank exploded in his face May 5 at Combat Outpost Crazy Horse. He was assigned to Fort Hood, Texas.

Sykes was in the Marine Corps before enlisting in the Army.

A family friend recently pointed Cotton to something on her son’s MySpace page that she hadn’t seen. His heroes, he wrote, were “My Momma and grandma.”

“He always had something encouraging to say to make me feel better,” she said.

Army Staff Sgt. Hesley Box Jr.

Died May 6, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

24 year old Hesley Box Jr., of Nashville, Ark.; assigned to 1st Battalion, 153rd Infantry, 39th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, Arkansas National Guard, Texarkana, Ark.; killed May 6 when a car bomb detonated near his guard post in Baghdad.


Funeral set for Arkansas soldier killed in Iraq

Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Ark. — A funeral will be held May 15 in Camden for Staff Sgt. Hesley Box Jr., 24, of Nashville, who was killed in Iraq.

The funeral is scheduled for 11 a.m. at the Camden High School gymnasium. Organizers expect a large crowd of mourners to be on hand to pay their respects to Box and his family.

Box died May 6 in a car bombing in Baghdad. He became the seventh Arkansas member of the 39th Infantry Brigade to be killed by Iraqi insurgents in the past month. An eighth member of the brigade who was killed was from Simsbury, Conn. Box’s unit was based in Texarkana.

Box is survived by his wife, Alexia Johnson Box; and two children, 5-year-old T’Darius and 20-month-old Zacheas, all of Nashville. His mother and father live in Chidester, near Camden.

Sherry Johnson, the sister of Box’s widow, said the fallen soldier was honorable in both the military and in civilian life.

“Hesley was a good person, period. He was always giving of his time, always honest with you, always willing to help you out, always willing to go the extra mile to help somebody out,” Johnson said.

“I was with her (Alexia) when they came to tell her that Hesley had been killed,” said Sherry Johnson, the oldest sister of five siblings including Alexia. “There were two men the Army sent to give her the news.”

There will be no viewing of Box’s body, but his remains were transported to Hicks Mortuary in Hope, said casualty assistance officer Sgt. 1st Class Joyce Truitt.


Soldier killed in Iraq remembered for attentiveness to younger soldiers

CAMDEN, Ark. — The mother of a soldier who served in the 39th Infantry Brigade with 24-year-old Staff Sgt. Hesley “Tank” Box Jr. said Box looked after younger members of the unit.

Among those Box kept his eye on, Sarah Green said Saturday, was her son, Spc. Charles Green.

“He placed him under his wings of care,” she said.

In doing so, Box was extending to his fellow soldiers the love he felt for his wife and children, others attending Box’s funeral said.

Killed on May 6 in a car bombing in Baghdad, Box is survived by his wife, Alexia Johnson Box, and two children, 5-year-old T’Darrius, and 20-month-old Zacheas. The family lived in Nashville, Ark., but after the funeral, his remains were returned to his hometown of Chidester for burial.

More than 500 people showed up for the funeral in the gym of Camden Fairview High School, where he graduated in 1998.

Box was the seventh Arkansas member of the 39th to be killed in Iraq in the past month. An eighth soldier who was killed was from Simsbury, Conn.

Box began his service in Iraq about seven weeks before he was killed. Maj. Gen. Don Morrow, adjutant general of the Arkansas National Guard, was among those attending the funeral.

“He was truly an outstanding soldier and I know his loss weighs so heavily on his family’s hearts,” Morrow said. “I can say to his family that he didn’t die in vain.”

Morrow said he had been told that, if Box hadn’t died in the bombing on a Baghdad street, others would have.

Darrell Marks, a member of the Roadside Church of God in Christ at Ozan that Box’s family attended, offered comfort to mourners. He compared Box’s passing to “slipping into a bedroom to rest.”

“He will join his friends and family later,” Marks said. “Just live your life so you will be able to see Brother Tank again.”

Earlier, Marks read excerpts from expressions of sympathy sent to the family by churches, officials and organizations.

Several in the audience shed tears when Box’s sister-in-law, Shalunda Johnson, sang the Mariah Carey song “Hero.” A woman walked among those seated in bleachers and folding chairs, handing out tissues.

Superintendent Theodore Marks of the Roadside Church said Box took advantage of opportunities the Army could provide and always retained his faith in God.

“He had insurance. If something happened, he was covered,” Marks said.

Box joined the National Guard in 1997. Before his deployment to Iraq, he had served in Saudi Arabia and Bosnia. As a civilian, he worked for the Potlatch Corp. sawmill in Prescott.

Box was buried at Pleasant Hill Cemetery in Chidester.

Army Pfc. Jesse R. Buryj

Died May 5, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom

21 year old Jesse Buryj, of Canton, Ohio; assigned to the 66th Military Police Company, Fort Lewis, Wash.; killed May 5 when his military vehicle was struck by a dump truck whose driver had been shot while trying to run through a control point in Karbala, Iraq.


Ohio soldier killed in attack at checkpoint in Iraq

Associated Press

CANTON, Ohio — An Ohio soldier killed in Iraq died while heroically trying to stop an attack on an Army checkpoint, family members said.

Jesse Buryj, 21, of Canton, fired more than 400 rounds at a dump truck trying to crash the checkpoint near Karbala. He shot the driver of the truck, which then crashed into the Humvee in which he was riding, an Army sergeant told his mother, Peggy Buryj, on Wednesday morning.

“Everyone was fine, but Jesse’s stomach was hurting him,” she was told. “They took him to a hospital where they found he had massive internal injuries, and he died on the operating table.”

His mother said Army representatives were expected to tell her more Thursday.

Buryj was a soldier with the 66th MP Company at Fort Lewis, Wash., in October when he married his high school sweetheart, Amber Tichenor.

“They were just married a few months and he had to leave,” she said.

Buryj was a member of the Canton City Police Youth Corps before he joined the Army during his senior year.

“He told the Army, ‘If I can’t be an MP (military police officer) and a paratrooper, I’m not going,”’ she recalled. “He went to jump school and he got his wings.”

His mother said he wanted to be a military police officer so he could become a Canton police officer.

“That’s all he wanted — to be a Canton police officer. But he couldn’t be a Canton police officer until he was 21. So he joined the Army,” she said, adding that to her, “My son was a police officer — always.”


Ohio soldier remembered for his bravery, compassion

CANTON, Ohio — Pfc. Jesse Buryj was remembered at his funeral Saturday for his life-saving bravery and friendly, caring personality.

Buryj, 21, of Canton, died May 5. He was credited with saving at least three lives when he fired more than 400 rounds at a dump truck trying to crash a checkpoint near Karbala, the military and family members have said.

An Army sergeant said Buryj shot the driver of the truck, which then crashed into his Humvee, said Peggy Buryj, the soldier’s mother. He later died of injuries from the crash.

Buryj was with the 66th Military Police Company at Fort Lewis, Wash., and was one of 24 Ohioans who have been killed in Iraq.

“He is a soldier. He is too young to be gone,” Gen. Dennis Moran told about 250 mourners inside Eleventh Street Church of God.

“As a military police officer, his first job was to serve and protect” fellow soldiers, Moran said. “He trusted his life to those soldiers as they trusted theirs to him.”

Moran presented Buryj’s family with his medals — the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart.

Matthew Beadoin, who was best man at Buryj’s wedding, gave the eulogy and said Buryj was “the bravest person, friend and soldier” he had ever known.

The Canton McKinley High School graduate enlisted in the Army out of high school because he was too young to be a Canton police officer, which remained his career goal. Buryj married his high school sweetheart, Amber Tichenor, in October.

Outside the church, people waited in the rain with flags and signs to show their support for Buryj’s family. Among them were family and friends of Cpl. Andrew Brownfield, of nearby Akron, who was killed in Iraq on March 18.

“We’re here to support this family,” said Brownfield’s mother, Melody Roop. “They’re going through what we went through, and we’re here for them.”

A few minutes later, she and her family burst into tears when the song “You Raise Me Up” blared from the church’s loudspeakers across the street. The same song was played at her son’s funeral.