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May 17, 2008

God speed, Sgt. Daggett

I am sad to report that Sgt. John Kyle Daggett died Thursady, May 16th in Hallifax Nova Scotia from wounds suffered during an RPG attack in Iraq on May 1st.

Sgt_daggett

The Arizona Republic reports

Medical teams worked for two weeks to save Army Sgt. John Kyle Daggett, a 2005 high-school graduate from Phoenix, but the wounds he suffered from a rocket-propelled grenade were too great...

Although John was his first name, most everyone called him Kyle at Pinnacle High School in north Phoenix.

“He was just a phenomenal, a phenomenal kid,” said Dana Zupke, who coached Daggett on the school's varsity football team. “He was very outgoing and very bright and articulate. “He was definitely a pleasure to be around.”

Zupke said Daggett may not have been one of the strongest players on the team but had one of the best work ethics. “He was the kind of kid you loved to coach football,” he said. “He gave 110 percent.”

Zupke, who also teaches business classes at Pinnacle, knew Daggett off the field. “He applied the same ethic in the classroom. He was always very outgoing and contributed a lot to the class. Just an all-around joy.”

Gina Fiore, an administrative assistant at Pinnacle, remembers Daggett as being very kind. “He was a nice boy and this is a great loss,” she said.

It's the first time Zupke has heard of one of his former students dying while serving in the war. “It throws you for a loop,” he said. “I knew he was over there and knew he was in a high-risk position. But he chose to be in that position and felt very strongly about serving his country.”

Daggett is survived by his parents, Jack and Colleen Daggett, and his sister, Kendall. Family members were not available for comment.

I want to express my condolences to the family, friends and comrades he left behind. I am so sorry for your loss.

God speed Sgt Daggett. You are a hero.

April 02, 2006

God Speed, SSgt Rodriguez

March 17th - SCHOFIELD BARRACKS – A 1-14th Soldier was killed Friday afternoon while conducting live-fire training at Pohakuloa Training Area on the Island of Hawaii. The cause of the accident is under investigation.
    Staff Sgt. Oscar Rodriguez, 27, a Beeville, Texas native was assigned to the 25th Infantry Division’s 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry Regiment.
    Rodriguez was transported via Blackhawk to Hilo Community Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 5:35 p.m.
    Rodriguez joined the Army in January 1996 and was assigned to Schofield Barracks in October 2002. He deployed to Iraq with the 2nd Brigade in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
    Rodriguez is survived by his wife and son.
    A memorial service was held on Thursday at the Post Main Chapel.

Body of soldier killed in training accident returns home


KRIS-TV

SAN DIEGO - An impressive military career came to an abrupt end last Friday when Army Staff Sergeant Oscar Rodriguez died in a training accident in Hawaii. Saturday afternoon, the body of the Coastal Bend native and Iraqi war veteran returned home.

         

At just 26, Staff Sgt. Rodriguez managed to rise through the ranks at a remarkable pace which his family attributes to his dedication as a soldier. The Beeville native already served one tour in Iraq and was training for another, when something went terribly wrong.

Staff Sergeant Oscar Rodriguez specialized in using mortars to escort and assist convoys in Iraq. It was during a live fire exercise at a Hawaii barracks that Rodriguez was fatally wounded after a mortar exploded prematurely.

         

Before his death, Rodriguez chose to be buried alongside relatives in San Diego if anything ever happened. That's where residents lined the streets for his arrival.

         

"It's kind of painful, you know," said Juan A. Perez. Painful partly because San Diego is now the resting place for three soldiers killed in the Iraqi war effort.

         

The first was Jose Amancio Perez, III - killed in May of 2003. The second, Ruben Valdez, Jr. in April of 2004 and now Rodriguez, who despite having few connections to the town of roughly 5,000, still brought signs up support. Styrofoam cups on a chain-linked fence and a parade of flags to pay their respect.

         

  "We welcome them with open arms, the family, to show that we do support them...whether we know them or not," Perez said.

         

"When they're from around the community, or this area, we have a tendency to go out there and give our support to the family and friends," said veteran Chevy Reyes. Supporters believe a soldier's sacrifice should be honored by all who can.

         

Oscar's brother said he thanks the town of San Diego for the kind of support he's never seen before. A rosary is scheduled for Sunday night at 7 p.m. at the Garza Funeral Home in San Diego. The funeral service will be held Monday at 10 a.m. at St. Francis De Paula Church followed by burial at the San Diego Cemetery.

         

Staff Sgt. Rodriguez leaves behind a wife and a five-month-old son.

         

Online Reporter:  Bart Bedsole

Soldier killed in training accident laid to rest


KRIS-TV

SAN DIEGO - Friends, family and fellow soldiers were in San Diego Monday to say goodbye to Staff Sergeant Oscar Rodriguez. He died nearly two weeks ago in a training accident in Hawaii.

         

As the body of Staff Sergeant Oscar Rodriguez made its way inside this tiny San Diego Church, mourners followed behind, remembering the 26-year-old Beeville native and Iraqi war veteran, who was training in Hawaii for another tour in the Middle East.

         

"Everything is finished for him right here in this world. Now taking a place that Jesus Christ preferred in the kingdom of the father for all the people that believe in him," said Father Epifanio Rodriguez.

         

There was very little talk about his work on the battlefield, escorting and assisting convoys in Iraq, but plenty of talk about the memories he leaves behind.

         

"He was an inspiration for everything good he has done in these short years he has given to the world." 

         

Eternal life was the theme of the mass and everyone who came to pay their final respects, will never forget the father, husband and soldier, Staff Sergeant Oscar Rodriguez.

         

"His memory will continue in new life," said Fr. Rodriguez.

         

After the funeral mass, Staff Sergeant Rodriguez was buried at the cemetery in San Diego. Stephanie Rodriguez said one final goodbye to her husband, Staff Sergeant Oscar Rodriguez. Other family members mourned along with her - most in shock.

         

"I just can't believe it's real. It'll take a while to get over it...never over but you know remember him and know he's in a good place. He served his country and that's what he wanted to do," said Amy De La Garza.

"He was a caring loving person and he loved being in the Army, I mean he really loved being in the army. He was a good cousin, he was a good brother, a good husband and he loved being a father," said Jessica Rodriguez.

         

Staff Sergeant Rodriguez leaves behind a four-month-old son named Jacob.

         

"He was a wonderful person and that he was happy where he was and he loves his family and his wife and his baby and he'll always watch over them and us," De La Garza said. After surviving a tour of duty in Iraq, he was in Hawaii for more training to eventually return to the battlefield.

"It's just weird, he went to war and he came back and dies in an accident. I think that's the hardest part for us," Jessica said.

Now his fellow soldiers will go on without a comrade in battle. A mother will go on without her son and a wife will go on without her husband and the love of her life.

         

Online Reporter:  Shaun Hegarty

February 03, 2005

Pfc Stephen Anthony Castellano

Castellano

L.B. soldier paid ultimate price for freedom

Loved ones remember Pfc. Stephen Castellano, who died in Iraq.

By Tracy Manzer Staff writer

LONG BEACH — Army Pfc. Stephen Anthony Castellano was always a fighter, from his birth until the day he died.

And he was always on the side of the good fight, his family said in a joint statement Wednesday, whether it was something as simple as a personal disagreement, or the defense of an entire nation.

"Stephen gave his life protecting the most basic rights of a formerly oppressed people; the right to live in freedom and their right to express that freedom by exercising the right to participate in the formation of the government that will ultimately rule over them."

"Men and women in a country that didn't recognize women as anything more than property as recently as two years ago will be involved in the creation of a fledgling democracy. They will struggle. They will stumble and fall. It will not be perfect, but it will be free. Stephen knew this and sacrificed his freedom for their freedom. Steve paid the ultimate price to defend our freedom here in the United States and give liberty a chance to grow throughout the world."

Such are the words of Castellano's family, who banded together to write a tribute to their son, brother, nephew and hometown hero who was killed in Iraq on Friday.

Details released by the Pentagon regarding his death were sketchy, and government officials Tuesday would say only that the infantryman was killed in a non-combat-related incident.

His family, however, was told that Stephen, assigned to C Company of the 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry Regiment out of Schofield Barracks in Hawaii, and another soldier were in a sniper position when they were discovered. A firefight broke out, and Stephen was shot in the head. He was pronounced dead at a military hospital.

Tuesday would have been the young soldier's 21st birthday. Instead of celebrating her eldest child's milestone day, however, Susan Moncure spent Feb. 1 preparing to bury her boy.

She hopes that her son's body will be returned home in time for a funeral service Friday. As of Wednesday, she was still awaiting news from the Army.

Services will be held at Faith Presbyterian Church, 500 E. San Antonio Drive, in Long Beach, and the burial will follow at nearby All Souls Cemetery, 4400 Cherry Ave. But it is not yet clear what time and what day, she said.

Moncure was not able to speak to her son for several weeks before he was killed, she said Wednesday. Although she clearly remembers their last three conversations, and she said the family was able to spend two weeks with Stephen over the Thanksgiving holiday when he was on leave.

"It was such a happy time," she recalled Wednesday, her voice revealing her grief and exhaustion. "I'm trying to think of the happy times."

His unit, the 1-14 "Golden Dragons," were set to leave Iraq in a few weeks after 12 months crisscrossing the country, fighting Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi army in Najaf in April, and serving in Kirkuk, Samarra and Mosul, said Army Sgt. T. Washington, of Schofield Barracks, on Wednesday.

The battalion was so traveled that soldiers dubbed their deployment the Golden Dragons Iraq Tour 2004. Despite the combat, Schofield Barracks officials said 1-14 had not lost a soldier until now. Battalion representatives declined to comment about Stephen's death Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered flags at the state Capitol flown at half-staff.

"Pfc. Castellano served his country with honor," Schwarzenegger said in a statement. "Maria and I send our heartfelt sympathies and gratitude to Stephen's family and friends. His selfless service to our country will be remembered and our prayers are with his loved ones at this time."

Stephen joined the Army on Feb. 11, 2003, fresh from his high school graduation. His enlistment followed a proud family tradition of military service; his mother had been in the Navy and his father was a Marine.

Stephen is the fourth member of the armed forces from Long Beach killed since the start of the war, and his death brought the number of U.S. military fatalities to 1,434 Tuesday. Since the start of the Iraq war in March 2003, at least 1,096 have died as a result of hostile action, the Defense Department stated.

Relatives said Wednesday that Stephen had done more in his 20 short years than most people accomplish in full lifetimes. He was forever putting others before himself, and he was always ready for the call of duty, they said.

He is survived by his grandmother, Cecelia Moncure; his mother, Susan Moncure; his father, Paul Castellano; his brother, Timothy Castellano and a host of aunts, uncles, cousins and friends.

"Our family, and our friends, have been so supportive, so wonderful," Susan said. "If it weren't for them, I don't know how I would manage."

 

February 01, 2005

Fallen Dragon

I have some sad news to report.


L.B. soldier fatally injured in Iraq

Pfc. Stephen Castellano dies Friday, 4 days before his 21st birthday.
By Tracy Manzer Staff writer

LONG BEACH — Tuesday should have been a day of celebration for a Long Beach soldier fighting in Iraq.

Instead, the family of Pfc. Stephen Anthony Castellano had to take on the grim task of preparing for the young man's funeral after he became one of the latest casualties of the war Friday, just four days shy of his 21st birthday.

Castellano was killed in Mosul by a noncombat-related injury, according to the Army. The military would not release any specifics about Castellano's death Tuesday, and his mother, Susan Moncure, said that she had only been told her son had suffered a fatal gunshot wound.

It was on Friday that Moncure learned of her son's death, and since then she and her family have been struggling to cope with the devastating loss.

"I had a lot of tears Friday," she said Tuesday. "I've had a lot of tears today and every day in between."

The last time the young soldier's family saw him was on Thanksgiving, when he was home for a two-week leave. Castellano enlisted in the Army on Feb. 11, 2003, according to Army headquarters, and was assigned to Company C, 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry Regiment of the 25th Infantry Division (Light) based at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii.

Now, Moncure is trying to put aside as much of her grief as she can in order to plan for her son's funeral service. Castellano's brother has written a eulogy for the hometown hero, and several other family members and friends will likely speak at the service, scheduled for Friday at Faith Presbyterian Church, 500 E. San Antonio Drive, in Long Beach.

The service will be followed by a burial at All Souls Cemetery, 4400 Cherry Ave., in Long Beach. Times for the services were still pending Tuesday, said Susan Robinson, a spokeswoman for All Souls Mortuary and Cemetery.

Castellano's death brought the number of U.S. military fatalities to 1,434 Tuesday, according to an, Associated Press count. Since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, at least 1,096 have died as a result of hostile action, the Defense Department stated.

The Associated Press count includes four military civilians and is three higher than the Defense Department's tally, last updated Tuesday morning.

Castellano is the fourth member of the armed forces from Long Beach killed since the start of the war.

Army Spc. Edgar P. Daclan Jr. was killed Sept. 10, 2003, when a hidden explosive device detonated hear his unit in the central Iraqi city of Balad, north of Baghdad. Army Pfc. Lyndon Ason Marcus Jr. died in a May 3, 2003, car accident in Balad, and Marine Pfc. George Torres was killed April 11, 2003, in a gunfight west of Baghdad.

Since May 1, 2003, when President Bush declared that major combat operations in Iraq had ended, 1,296 U.S. military members have died, according to the AP. That includes at least 987 deaths resulting from hostile action, according to the military's numbers.

Anyone with questions about Castellano's services can all All Souls at (562) 424-8601. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

I am so sorry for the loss suffered by Pfc. Castellano's family and friends.

He will be remembered for the hero that he was.