Our American Hero's

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Marvin Leslie Best
Prosser, Washington
June 20, 2004

 
Died due to hostile action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq.
 

Age Military Rank Unit/Location
33 Marine SSgt
2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force
Twenty-nine Palms, California





Jeremy E Christensen
Las Vegas, Nevada
November 27, 2004
Age Military Rank Unit/Location
27 Army Spc
1st Squadron, 4th Armored Cavalry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division

Schweinfurt, Germany

Killed in Ad Duilayah, Iraq, when an improvised explosive device detonated near his patrol vehicle.



From AP:
Jeremy E. Christensen never did anything halfway, either in work or in play. Take Thanksgiving: His preferred activity wasn't a relaxed game of tossing the pigskin with the family. "Full-contact football," said his younger brother, George Hunt Jr. "No pads." Christensen, 27, of Albuquerque, N.M., died Nov. 27 when his tank was destroyed by a roadside bomb during a combat patrol north of Baghdad. He was based at Schweinfurt, Germany. He grew up in the Portland area and signed up with the Army National Guard at age 18 and attended Mt. Hood Community College. Once Christensen was a civilian again, he moved to Idaho to work as bail bondsmen and later moved to Albuquerque to serve as office manager with the company. After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Christensen decided to re-enter the military. He said "that's too close to home. I need to go and serve my country, and keep you guys safe," said Gerri Jimenez, a co-worker and friend. "He was prepared for the war. He wasn't scared."


Joseph Allen Jeffries
Beaverton, Oregon
May 29, 2004
Age Military Rank Unit/Location
21 Army Pfc
Army Reserve’s 320th Psychological Operations Company

Portland, Oregon
Died in Kandahar, Afghanistan, when their vehicle hit a land mine.

DATE POSTED: MAY 31, 2004

PRESS RELEASE: 3 USASOC Soldiers killed in Afghanistan

U.S. Army Special Operations Command Public Affairs Office


FORT BRAGG, N.C. (USASOC News Service, May 31, 2004) — Three U.S. Army Special Operations Command Soldiers were killed in southern Afghanistan May 29 when their vehicle hit an improvised explosive device there.

Capt. Daniel W. Eggers, Sgt. 1st Class Robert J. Mogensen and Spc. Joseph A. Jeffries were fatally wounded while returning to their base of operations near Kandahar when the IED detonated as they tried to avoid another explosive device in the road.

Eggers, 28, a Special Forces detachment commander, and Mogensen, 26, a Special Forces weapons sergeant, were both assigned to 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group (Airborne) at Fort Bragg, N.C. Jeffries, 21, was a psychological operations specialist assigned to the 320th Psychological Operations Company, an Army Reserve unit based in Portland, Ore.

The explosion also killed a U.S. Navy Sailor. All four service members were attached to the Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force – Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

The incident is under investigation.

Eggers, a native of Cape Coral, Fla., graduated from The Citadel Military College of South Carolina in May 1997 and was commissioned as a second lieutenant. He completed Special Forces training in 2002 and was assigned to 1st Bn., 3rd SFG in May 2003 following Arabic language training. He is survived by his wife, Rebecca, and his sons, John, 6, and William, 3.

A native of Leesville, La., Mogensen enlisted in the Army in 1995 and served in a number of Special Forces assignments with the 3rd SFG. He was a senior Special Forces noncommissioned officer and spoke French. Mogensen is survived by his wife, Tanya, and three children, Joshua, 10, Vanessa, 6, and Leilani, 8 weeks.

Jeffries, of Beaverton, Ore., joined the Army in October 2001 and completed the Psychological Operations Specialist Course at Fort Bragg, N.C. He is survived by his wife, Betsy, of Beaverton, and his parents, Mark and Linda Jeffries, also of Beaverton.






Dustin Lee Sides
Yakima, Washington
May 31, 2004
Age Military Rank Unit/Location
22MarineCpl
9th Communications Battalion, I Marine Expeditionary Force

Camp Pendleton, California
Died from hostile fire in Al Anbar Province, Iraq.

'The War's Hit Home' -- Dustin Sides Laid to Rest
By ED STOVER

and MARK MOREY

YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC

Three rifle volleys — crack, crack, crack — fired by seven Marines in full dress uniform.

The 24 golden notes of "Taps" being mournfully played.

The red, white and blue stars and stripes of two American flags being slowly folded and presented, one to each parent.

A dozen white doves flashing as one across a sun-drenched green lawn, then wheeling upward into a brilliant blue sky.

With those lasting images, an estimated 400 relatives, friends, comrades and admirers gathered Saturday morning at Yakima's Tahoma Cemetery to bid farewell to U.S. Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Dustin Lee Sides.

Sides, 22, is the Yakima Valley's first casualty of the war in Iraq. He was killed in an ambush May 31, Memorial Day, while returning from a mission to Fallujah, one of the hot spots of the war.

That conflict seemed suddenly much closer Saturday morning as nearly 100 Marines, some of them Iraq war veterans, performed the solemn ritual of burying their fallen comrade as Sides' friends and family looked on.

"It's our responsibility as Marines," said Gunnery Sgt. David Gregory, who led the detail of seven pallbearers who bore Sides' flag-draped coffin the 200 feet from a silver Keith & Keith Funeral Home hearse to his final resting place adjacent to the Yakima Valley Veterans Memorial, which overlooks the military section at Tahoma.
Gregory, an adviser to the Marine Corps Reserve's Bravo Company, 4th Tank Battalion in Yakima, said he and his men had practiced all week for Saturday's 45-minute ceremony. "It's how we take care of our own," he said.

"... And Dustin did love the Marine Corps," Rear Adm. Darold Bigger told Sides' mother and father, Wendy Billings and John Sides, who sat facing the grave site with other family members and close friends.

Bigger, of Walla Walla, is deputy chief of Navy chaplains for U.S. Naval Reserve matters for the United States. He officiated at the ceremony, which also included the presentation of the Purple Heart Medal, the Good Conduct Medal and the National Defense Service Medal to Sides' parents.

Bigger, a pastor in civilian life who teaches religion at Walla Walla College, said he travels all over the country as part of his reserve duties, and he visited Iraq last summer.

"These young men and women do us proud," he declared following the ceremony, referring to the Marines at the ceremony and the military personnel he sees elsewhere.
"Most people I see wherever I go are grateful we're there (Iraq). It's a very small number who create the kind of sensations you hear about in the news." One who attended Saturday's burial service who expressed gratitude was William Craven, who with his wife Virginia made the journey all the way from Roslyn. The Cravens know what it's like to lose a loved one; their son, Tom, 30, was one of four U.S. Forest Service firefighters to die in the Thirtymile Fire on July 10, 2001.

"I just saw it (funeral notice) in the paper and we thought we'd attend," said Craven. "Everybody should be here. It's because of him (Sides) that we can stay home and be safe."

Craven surveyed a photo display of Sides at various stages of his life that stood near the grave site. He shook his head.

"Another young kid gone," he said. "It's a long way down here, but it's worth it. After all, he (Sides) went a long way for us."

There were those, too, who expressed frustration with a war that has now spilled the blood of a native son.

"It's nonsense," said Frank Beard, 78, a World War II Navy veteran who served in the South Pacific and is immediate past commander of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 379.

"It's different now," said Beard, who was attending with another veteran, Herbert Matsen, 78, who also served in the South Pacific. "They don't fight to win anymore, just to pacify. When we went in, we went to win, to whip their fannies. This is nonsense."

"But we're here on behalf of our post to pay our respects to this young fellow."

Kathy Garlock, a friend of Sides' mother, said it's a "terribly difficult time" for Wendy Billings and John Sides and their surviving children. She said she supports the troops in Iraq.

"That's not to say I'm particularly happy with the situation — anything that kills our children is not a good thing," she said.

Garlock's husband, Duane, a Vietnam veteran, said he, too, supports the troops. In some ways, though, the situation in Iraq is worse than Vietnam, he said, because the troops are so vulnerable.

"Me? I'd rather fight in the jungle. This (Iraq), it's so difficult to see the end of it. But we've got to support our people there."

One woman who came, Paige Olney-Hammond of Wiley City, presented the family with an eagle feather wrapped at the base with red, white and blue beads. Olney-Hammond, whose husband is serving his second tour in Kuwait with the Navy, said she felt the feather honored Sides' service.

"He gave his life for all of us. He gave his life for our children," said Olney-Hammond, whose 4-year-old son, Tanner, had Nancy Sides (Sides' stepmother) as a teacher's aide. "He gave the ultimate sacrifice."

Olney-Hammond said Saturday's funeral magnified the scary prospect that her own husband might not return alive.

"The war's hit home. It's a reality check," she said.

Yakima resident Saul Chacon, a former Marine sergeant who left the service last year after spending six months in Iraq, said he considered Sides' fate next to his own. "I've been thinking about that all day," Chacon said at a reception after the funeral at Eisenhower High School, where Sides went to school.

"It's kind of weird. I can't explain it," Chacon said, noting that the environment around Fallujah has grown even more tense and violent since he left.

Tesa Peterson, 23, of Yakima said Sides' youth added an extra element to her feelings about his death.

Peterson and Sides knew each other from when they attended Wilson Middle School. She last saw him at a party before he headed off to boot camp.

"It makes me sad to think about how young he was, but it sounds like he was having fun being over there, so that was important to him," Peterson said.

By all accounts, Sides did enjoy the service, even his time in Iraq, where he served with the 9th Communication Battalion from last February until he was killed. He drove a specialized wrecker that was used to keep the battalion's equipment on the move in difficult places.

"He was willing to take the risks," said Bigger at the funeral.

"He had that look of happiness, of joy, of excitement," said Master Sgt. Kevin Berry, who was Sides' motor transport chief and is stationed at Camp Pendleton in California. Berry was one of several Marines from Camp Pendleton who attended Saturday's service.

Not that Sides was oblivious to the danger he was in. John Sides said his son had arranged beforehand for his younger sister, Katie, to receive part of his life insurance toward her education in case of his death.

"He didn't want his sister going into the military to get money for school," Sides said.

In brief comments Friday, Sides also repeated his gratitude for the support shown to his family.

"I can't thank them enough," Sides said. "What this community has said and done for my family — and the biggest thing is the honor for my son — is just unbelievable."

Trying to keep track of those to thank became impossible after the list of names he was making grew to six pages long, he said.

Notes of sympathy have poured in from across Washington, Oregon and California, among other states. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and his wife, Maria Shriver, even sent a letter.


A Tribute to Dustin Sides

U.S. Marine Corps Master Sgt. Kevin Berry flew up with several other Marines from Camp Pendleton, Calif., to attend the funeral of Lance Cpl. Dustin Lee Sides on Saturday. At the funeral, Berry read the following tribute, which he said he was moved to write Friday after meeting with members of Sides' family:


To Dustin:

When you checked in to the unit, I knew you were different — you had that look in your eye, that look of happiness, joy and excitement.

And I said to myself, "What is it about this young man? How can he smile when there's so much he doesn't know? So much more he needs to see, and, as a Marine, he must grow."

But that's how Dustin lived — happy to not know.

Dustin taught me to seize the day! Take a chance on love, friendship and life. So because of you, Dustin, I'm a better husband, father and Marine master sergeant.

I'll live each day to the fullest. Yes, each and every one. Just like my brother Dustin, not knowing if tomorrow will come.

God bless all your family and friends.




Mark C Warren
La Grande, Oregon
January 31, 2005
Age Military Rank Unit/Location
44ArmySgt 1st Calss
3d Battalion, 116th Armor Cavalry Regiment, 116th Brigade Combat Team (Forward)

LaGrande, Oregon
Died at Kirkuk Air Base, Iraq from non-combat related injuries.

La Grande, ORE. -- A soldier laid to rest a fellow soldier, his father, in a private ceremony held at the Veteran's Circle at the Grandview Cemetery here today.

Sgt 1st Class Mark C. Warren died Jan. 31 from non-combat related causes while on duty in Iraq with eastern Oregon's 3rd Battalion, 116th Cavalry Armored. The sergeant's son, 1st Lt. Christopher Warren was also on duty with the 3rd Battalion in Kirkuk, Iraq, and he escorted his father home to render full military honors and bid a final farewell with his family.

Nearly four hundred friends, family, and military and civilian coworkers attended a late-morning memorial service held at the Oregon National Guard Armory in La Grande. Warren, who became a Marine and served a four year active duty tour starting in 1981, joined the Oregon National Guard in 1990.

Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski, a fellow Marine, said Warren was, “a shining star of the Oregon National Guard and heroic son of La Grande.”

The governor also noted that Sgt. Warren will be remembered for his hard work, loyalty, leadership, patriotism, and for taking care of his soldiers and coworkers.

“Although he is gone, his good deeds remain” said Kulongoski.

Also attending the service were Maj. Gen. Lawrence F. Lafrenz, Adjutant General of the Idaho National Guard, and Brig. Gen. Raymond C. Byrne, Jr., acting Adjutant General of the Oregon National Guard. The 3rd Bn., 116th Cav. is assigned to the 116th Armored Brigade of the Idaho National Guard in Iraq.

Warren is survived by his sons 1st Lt. Christopher Warren, Michael Warren, and Ryan Warren, his former wife Carol Anne Warren, and his mother Wanda Davies, all of La Grande.

BIOGRAPHICAL INFORATION ON SGT 1ST CLASS MARK WARREN TAKEN FROM THE MEMORIAL PROGRAM.

Mark Carlyle Warren, age 44, of La Grande, died Jan. 31, 2005 in Kirkuk, Iraq. A memorial service was held Friday, Feb. 11, 2005 at 11 a.m. with full military honors.

Mark was born on May 17, 1960, the son of Howard Warren and Wanda nee Sutton in Hermiston, Ore. He attended schools in La Grande and graduated from high school in 1979. In 1979 he married Carol Ann DuBosch in La Grande. In 1981 he entered into the U.S. Marine Corps and served until 1985. In 1985 he returned to La Grande. He worked as a conductor for the Union Pacific railroad, and since 1990 he served with the Oregon National guard. His battalion was deployed last summer.

Mark enlisted in the Marine Corps on Sept. 24, 1981 and served a four you tour of active duty which included tours in Lebanon and Grenada. Mark joined the ORNG on Feb. 9, 1990. Throughout the 90's he progressed through the ranks to the rank of Sgt. 1st Class on Jul. 18, 2002. During this timeframe, he held positions such as assistant squad leader in a scout platoon, M1A1 tank gunner and tank commander, as well as a platoon sergeant. Sgt. 1st Class Warren was known for his outstanding marksmanship and his ability to teach others the skills needed to become fine marksmen. Because of this, he was given the additional duties as the Battalion Marksmanship Coordinator. In this duty, he helped organize, conduct, and participate in rifle marksmanship matches throughout the United States, including 29 Palms, Calif., and Little Rock, Ark. He also took great pride in helping train young soldiers in and additional role as the Noncommissioned Officer in Charge of the recruiting training company and developing future officers as NCOIC and Associate Professor of Military Science of the Guard Officer Leadership Detachment (GOLD) program at Eastern Oregon University.

Sgt 1st Class Warren's awards include:

The Combat Action Ribbon (Marine Corps),
Army Commendation Medal,
Army Achievement Medal,
Army Service Ribbon,
National Defense Service Medal,
Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal,
Marine Corps Expeditionary Medal,
NCO Professional Development Ribbon,
and four Army Reserve Component Achievement Medals.

Mark was a life member of the NRA, a member of the VFW, American Legion, Marine Corps Cryptological Society, and the United Transportation Union. He enjoyed marksmanship, hunting, and woodworking.

Survivors include his sons, Christopher Warren, Michael Warren, and Ryan Warren, and former wife Carol Ann Warren all of La Grande; mother and stepfather Richard and Wanda Davies also of La Grande; sister, Tara Warren, niece Erin and nephews Cole and Jack burgess; Uncle Aaron and Donna Sutton of Stanfield, Ore.; Aunt Bev and Ben Schatz of Olympia, Wash.; Uncle Gary and Frankie Sutton of Fremont, Neb.; Aunt Iva an Ben Collins of Buhl Ida.; Uncle Vern Sutton of Hermiston, Ore; Uncle Cecil Sutton of Puyallup, Wash; Aunt Ina Beck of Federal Way, Wash.; Aunt Maurine and Harry Hansen of Stanfield, Ore. ; and his fiancée Mary Calloway. His father Howard Warren, sister, Angela Warren, and Uncle Robert Ernest Warren preceded him in death.

Don't Let The Memory Of Them Drift Away, Honor It!