Posted on 04/10/2003 8:55:54 PM PDT by null and void
I bet you know why you are here! ;o)
Ya don't suppose they were being blackmailed to not know?
Nahhhh!
A sailor from Wisconsin, was killed by these animals. When the Cole was repaired and went back out to sea, his ashes went with her, to be scattered at sea. He was two weeks from the end of his tour and was engaged to be married. I can barely speak about this--I am SO damn angry that these pigs escaped from prison, probably with help from their al Qaeda buddies in and out of the Yemeni government.
Sharon Priepke of Fond du Lac., Wisconsin -- who son, 24-year-old Marc Nieto, was among the dead -- probably spoke for all the grieving families.
"He had goals to the sky and he was going to achieve those goals," she said, clutching some of her son's commendations. "He was just starting to live his life."
A brief look at the Cole victims:
Lakeina Monique Francis, 19
Woodleaf, North Carolina
A mess management specialist aboard the Cole, Francis graduated from high school last year and followed her father into the Navy. "She's a young African-American woman who was pursuing her career and continuing her education," said her father, Ron Francis. "I'm proud of how raised her to be a Christian and a lovable person." Two of Francis' brothers, James and David, play football at West Rowan High School. "We're just going to work with the boys, help them through the day," said the principal, Henry Kluttz.
Information Systems Technician Tim Gauna, 21
Rice, Texas
Gauna was a 1997 graduate of Ennis High School. Teachers said he was a quiet student who excelled in baseball and art. In 1999, he joined the Navy as a radio man. "He went there to better himself, to make a better life for himself," said his mother, Sarah Gauna. The family last heard from Gauna by phone a few days ago as the Cole headed for a secret destination. "He just kept saying, 'We're in dangerous waters, Mom, but we're OK. I'll be OK. I promise you,"' Sarah Gauna said.
Signalman Seaman Recruit Cherone Louis Gunn, 22
Rex, Georgia
Gunn grew up in Virginia Beach, Virginia, but lived with an aunt and uncle in Georgia in recent years. He enrolled in the Navy in January because he wanted to be a policeman someday, said Brandon Ervin, a former neighbor in Rex. Ervin said Gunn used to baby-sit for his children. "Most guys his age, their thing is to go out and party, not to give their time to anyone else," Ervin said. "To see a guy like him be able to share his time with children, that was really great."
Ensign Andrew Triplett, 30
Macon, Mississippi
Triplett had been in the Navy for 13 years. "He was a good family man. He had two children and he was just a likable person," said his mother, Savannah Triplett, a cook at C&K Super Stop in the small Mississippi town of Shuqualak. "He just loved the Navy. That's all he used to talk about." Triplett, lived with his wife, Laurie, and their children.
Petty Officer 3rd Class Ronchester Santiago, 22
Kingsville, Texas
Santiago had been in the Navy since graduating in 1996 from H.M. King High School. He was scheduled to get out of the service in December and planned to study electrical engineering at the University of Texas at Austin. "He was attracted to the adventure in the Navy," said his father, Rogelio Santiago, a retired Navy petty officer first class. "He wanted to see the world. He just wanted the experience."
Seaman Craig Wibberley, 19
Williamsport, Maryland
Wibberley's duties included raising and lowering the destroyer's small anchor. "He was a good all-American boy," said the Rev. Anne Weatherbolt, the Wibberley family minister. "Any time there's a loss on a small community everybody feels it." His father, Tom Wibberley, said: "It's a terrible thing that people would take human lives the way they did. They took a son away from me." His mother, Patty Wibberley, is a nursing assistant at an assisted-living center. "I'm just numb. It hasn't sunk in yet," she said. One of Wibberley's friends, Tyler Growden, 19, said the two liked to fish in the Potomac River. He and others described Craig -- who graduated from Washington Technical High School last year -- as someone who had no enemies.
Kevin Shawn Rux, 30
Portland, North Dakota
Rux was an electronics warfare technician on the Cole, and son of a Navy veteran. "He was career Navy. His dad was career Navy, his uncle was career Navy," said his mother, Saundra Flanagan, of Bridgeport, West Virginia. "He loved the travel. He used to smile and he had a twinkle in his eye when he'd tell us about a certain port he'd been in." Rux joined the Navy after high school, stayed about 10 years, then tried being a policeman, but decided a year ago to re-enlist. Rux was married; his wife lives near where the Cole is based in Norfolk, Virginia.
Seaman Recruit Lakiba Nicole Palmer, 22
San Diego, California
Palmer graduated in 1996 from San Diego High, where she was a stalwart on the track team. "She was a hard worker and a dedicated athlete, well-liked by the rest of her teammates," said Paul Locher, her former coach. Palmer specialized in the sprints and 400-meter relay. "We're all saddened by this," Locher said.
Hull Maintenance Technician 3rd Class Kenneth Eugene Clodfelter, 21
Mechanicsville, Virginia
Clodfelter was planning to sign up for another tour of duty in January. He was the father of a 2-year-old boy, Noah. Clodfelter graduated from Lee-Davis High School in Mechanicsville in 1997, and was described as a good student who wrestled and played football. He was an Eagle Scout.
Engineman 2nd Class Marc Nieto, 24
Fond du Lac, Wisconsin
Nieto joined the Navy six years ago and was just two weeks away from finishing his stint in the service. His mother, Sharon Priepke, said Nieto worked in the engine room on the Cole and loved repairing machinery. "His biggest joy in life was his vehicles, working on the engines. He was always into engines and repairing," she said. "He had himself a truck and he had himself an '81 Camaro that he had been working on and rebuilding the engine."
Electronics Warfare Technician 3rd Class Ronald Scott Owens, 24
Vero Beach, Florida
Owens was married, with a 4-year-old daughter. He graduated from Vero Beach High in 1994, joined the Navy in 1998 and had shipped out in August for his first tour. He planned to go to college and study computers after serving his time in the Navy. On Wednesday, he e-mailed home about plans for a vacation to the beach when he returned in February. "He told me how much he loved us, and said at the end, 'Keep smiling. I'll be home soon,"' said his 23-year-old wife, Jaime.
Electronics Technician 1st Class Richard Costelow, 35
Morrisville, Pennsylvania
Costelow was from a blue-collar suburb across the Delaware River from Trenton, New Jersey. His wife and three children had been staying at the Paxtuxent River Naval Air Station in Lexington Park, Maryland. One of teachers and coaches from Morrisville's high school remembered Costelow vividly. "He gave 100 percent everyday. That kind of kid doesn't come along too often," said Bernard Derby. Ivan Colon, 35, graduated with Costelow and remembers him as a prankster who wasn't afraid to be the brunt of jokes. "People say there's always a bad side to everyone -- I can't find one in him," Colon said.
Fireman Apprentice Patrick Roy, 19
Keedysville, Maryland
Roy was from a town of 500 with a downtown boasting little more than a post office and a church. He attended boarding school at the Storm King School in Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York, where he captained the lacrosse team, managed the wrestling team and acted in school plays. He enlisted after graduating last year. "He was a nice kid who wanted to serve his country," said Michael Walsh, a family friend. "It was something that he wanted to do. We are trying to take some solace from that."
Engineman Fireman Joshua Parlett, 19
Churchville, Maryland
Parlett joined the Navy last year after graduating from high school. "He believed in what he was doing," said his father, Leroy Parlett.
Fireman Gary Graham Swenchonis, 26
Rockport, Texas
Swenchonis joined the Navy two years ago after four years in the Army. His parents, Gary and Deborah Swenchonis, said he planned to make the Navy his career.
Seaman James Rodrick McDaniels, 19
Norfolk, Virginia
McDaniels was on his first overseas deployment. He planned to stay in the Navy for three years, then use the money he saved to attend college, said his mother, Diane McDaniels. The 6-foot-4 McDaniels -- "Little Mac" to his friends and family -- played basketball at Norview High School and enjoyed pickup games with his Navy buddies. The day before the explosion, he sent an e-mail to his girlfriend, asking her to tell his mother to mail him combat boots to replace his worn out pair.
Operations Specialist 2nd Class Timothy Lamont Saunders, 32
Ringgold, Virginia
Saunders was a former track and football star at Dan River High School. Principal Carissa Knight remembered him as a kindhearted person involved in a lot of activities. Saunders, a career Navy man, was married and the father of two daughters, ages 10 and 7.
Awww, Breaks my heart. Has he surrendered to the press yet???
The corner 7-11???
Someone posted a story yesterday where a UN type stated that was his guess. It was outrageous, as there is zero evidence that our troops don't know how to handle what they find, and nothing to indicate they did anything more than take readings.
I hopped to the end of the this thread and followed who you were replying to, so gather Fox and Friends presented this story to their viewers. I am sorry to hear they would propagate such a baseless story. The story before this "broken seal" theory was floated by this guy, was the underground area had never been known of, much less entered, by the UN inspectors. And that is a key element of the story.
The media can be so frustrating when some story like this is floated and they run with it.
Is David Gregory usually this rude to Ari at the WH presser? I can't watch. Gregory practically spitting in his angst that President Bush hasn't named a day for the war to end. Is he mentally ill? Seriously? Did he ever ask Clinton about the end of Kosovo? Does he listen to the daily CENTCOM or Pentagon briefings? Does he have a clue about history, warfare, freedom, decency? Lord, I would strip these contemptuous nitwits of their press passes so fast - and hand them over to adults - to make sure the world hears the truth about America, bad AND good.
This is why I avoid WH pressers.
You're quite welcome. We just post the thread. You (all) MAKE the thread.
THANK YOU!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.