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To: Howlin; dansangel; leadpenny
They were real people with real families and friends. Thank you for honoring them on this thread and the others.

Here is more info.

Black Hawk battalion remembers fallen friends

By Steve Liewer , Stars and Stripes

European edition, Thursday, February 27, 2003

(More about the four Black Hawk copter crash victims at the bottom of the story.)

CAMP UDAIRI, Kuwait -- Chief Warrant Officer 2 Tim Moehling should have been sitting in a camp chair puffing on his pipe. Spc. Rodrigo Gonzalez-Garza should have been cracking people up with his jokes. Chief Warrant Officer 2 J.D. Smith should have been telling rock-climbing stories. And Spc. Will Tracy should have been celebrating his 28th birthday.

Instead, the other soldiers of the 5th Battalion, 158th Aviation Regiment stood stiffly at attention inside a hangar Wednesday, blinking back tears as they remembered their fallen friends.

The four men all were killed barely 36 hours earlier, when a sandstorm engulfed their UH-60 Black Hawk about 12:30 a.m. Tuesday as they flew just above the desert floor. The helicopter slammed into the ground moments later.

"We don't know how, or why, this tragic thing happened," said Capt. Martin Kendrick, the battalion's chaplain, during the service. "We can't bring these soldiers back, but we can remember the happy times with them."

Friends say Moehling and Gonzalez loved flying together. They were pilot and crew chief from the unit's Company A in Giebelstadt, Germany. Someone was going to switch Gonzalez to another flight Monday night, but he insisted on sticking with his pilot.

Buddies describe Gonzalez &emdash; known to everyone in the unit as "Gonzo" &emdash; as a talkative joker who kept his tent mates laughing. A bundle of energy, he rarely sat still.

One of his closest friends, Spc. Eric Holmes of Modesto, Calif., said Gonzalez spent lots of time at his home. Gonzo pitched in with the cooking and did the dishes, and the two men would stay up late playing video games.

"He slept in the spare bedroom, which was the baby's room. If the baby would cry during the night, he would just get up and take care of him," Holmes said. "My wife loved him to death."

Moehling devoted every spare moment to his wife and three children. He took them in the family minivan on marathon vacations across Europe.

In camp, he was perpetually laid-back. He preferred sitting in a sauna to physical training. Since arriving in Kuwait in early February, he had earned the nicknames "Puff Daddy" and "Mr. Howell" because he would sit outside his tent in a camp chair, his feet up, wearing a hat and smoking his aromatic pipe.

"He was great to fly with," said Chief Warrant Officer 3 Paul Cahill, 34, another Company A pilot. "He was real relaxed all the time."

Smith and Tracy were members of the 5-158 Aviation's Company B, based at Aviano Air Base in Italy. Both had volunteered for duty in Kuwait, and both insisted on staying even after replacements had arrived for them from Germany.

"Both of these guys volunteered to be with you," Company B commander Maj. Chris Speer said at the ceremony. "That speaks volumes about them."

Tracy, in fact, had done six deployments in 3? years with the 5-158 Aviation, extending with the unit last fall so he could move from Germany to Italy. He racked up more than 500 hours as a crew chief, an impressive number for such a short time. He was close to achieving his goal of making sergeant.

"He went out on every single mission," said Capt. Michael Cushwa, 25, a Company C pilot. "He wanted to be there, where the action was."

Smith found some of his action from mountain faces, where he honed his skills as a devoted rock climber. He kept himself in tip-top shape, even by Army standards.

Smith loved his wife and two daughters, and he loved flying. He was a fixed-wing pilot before joining the Army to fly Black Hawks, and had spent some 30 hours in a Boeing 767 flight simulator. He spoke fluent Italian and served as his unit's translator.

Just before his final flight, Smith and Gonzalez played spades with Chief Warrant Officer 2 Sean Davis, 34, and another soldier.

"After the game, he had to go out and get his gear. He was flying," Davis said. Nothing at all seemed amiss. Then he and his crewmates were off on their fateful flight.

Some 300 soldiers from their battalion turned out to hear the tributes. Lt. Gen. William Wallace, the V Corps commander, was among those paying respects.

After hearing the tributes, 1st Sgt. Phillip Webb read the ceremonial roll call, including the absent soldiers. A rifle team fired three volleys in their honor. A bugler played Taps. Senior officers and soldiers alike shared hugs of condolence with the 5-158 Aviation's battalion and company commanders.

"We need to pack our shattered emotions," the chaplain said, "and get on to the task ahead."


Steve Liewer / S&S

The boots, rifles, helmets and patches of four soldiers from the 5th Battalion, 158th Aviation Regiment who died when a UH-60 Black Hawk crashed this week rest above their photos at Wednesday's memorial service.


Steve Liewer / S&S

Chief Warrant Officer 5 Bobby McNeal, right, of the 11th Aviation Regiment &emdash; an attack helicopter pilot since the Vietnam War &emdash; hugs Lt. Col. Pete Franks, commander of the Giebelstadt-based 5th Battalion, 158th Aviation Regiment, following the memorial service.


Steve Liewer / S&S

Capt. Octavious Gibbons, commander of the 5th Battalion, 158 Aviation Regiment's Alpha Company, eulogizes a soldier from his command who was killed Tuesday in the Black Hawk copter crash.


Steve Liewer / S&S

Col. William Wolf, left, of Task Force 11th Aviation hugs Maj. Chris Speer, Bravo Company commander from the 5th Battalion, 158th Aviation Regiment, following a memorial service Wednesday for four of the battalion's soldiers who died this week in the crash of a UH-60 Black Hawk near Camp Udairi, Kuwait. Two of the men served in Speer's Bravo Company, based in Aviano, Italy.

 

 

 

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Timothy W. Moehling


Moehling

PROFESSIONAL: UH-60 Black Hawk pilot, Giebelstadt, Germany. Instructor pilot, personal pilot to V Corps deputy commanding general.

AGE: 36

FAMILY: Wife, Lisa; children, Alex, Sarah and Noah

HOME: Panama City, Fla.

Friends say Moehling was utterly devoted to his family, driving them all over Europe in the family minivan. On nonflying days, they invariably saw him carrying his infant son in a backpack baby carrier. Quiet and unruffled, he smoked a pipe and wore a hat, earning him the nickname "Mr. Howell."

"You could never overtask him. He could handle everything. It was kind of hard not to like him."

-- Chief Warrant Officer 2 Shawn Holmes, fellow Black Hawk pilot

 

Spc. William J. Tracy


Tracy

PROFESSIONAL: UH-60 Black Hawk crew chief, Aviano Air Base, Italy. Served in Marine Corps before joining Army in 1999. Deployments to Atlas Drop, Tunisia; Flintlock, Mali; Strong Resolve, Norway; Lariat Response, Hungary; Victory Strike III, Poland; Enduring Freedom, Kuwait.

AGE: 27

FAMILY: Single.

HOME: Manchester, N.H.

Tracy was a soldier to the core, volunteering for every mission. He disliked garrison life and loved deployments, which is why he went on so many missions. He loved to travel and rarely stayed home on weekends. He wanted to be a noncommissioned officer and was just shy of qualifying.

"He was a lover man. Every time we turned around, he had a different girlfriend in a different country."

-- Chief Warrant Officer 2 Javier Gutierrez

 

Chief Warrant Officer 2 John D. Smith


Smith

PROFESSIONAL: UH-60 Black Hawk pilot, Aviano Air Base, Italy. Deployments to Veneto Rescue, Italy; Atlas Drop, Tunisia; Victory Strike III, Poland; and Enduring Freedom, Kuwait.

AGE: 32

FAMILY: Wife, Meredith; daughters, Kiara and Madeline.

HOME: Salt Lake City, Utah

Smith loved mountain and rock climbing. He would rise early on Saturdays to climb in a nearby park, returning home in time to play with his daughters &emdash; before his wife even got up. He had served a mission with the Latter Day Saints church in Italy, spoke fluent Italian and had many Italian friends.

"He was a very self-contained person. He was happy by himself. He wrote to his wife every single day."

-- Chief Warrant Officer 2 Sean Davis

 

Spc. Rodrigo Gonzalez-Garza


Gonzalez- Garza

PROFESSIONAL: UH-60 Black Hawk crew chief, Giebelstadt, Germany. Joined Army in 1997. Started out as airborne infantryman, later reclassified. Crew chief for V Corps deputy commanding general. Deployments to Victory Strike III, Poland; Enduring Freedom, Kuwait.

AGE: 26.

FAMILY: Single.

HOME: San Antonio.

Known universally as "Gonzo," Gonzalez was popular, funny and well-liked. Loved children. When he stayed at the home of a friend with a small baby, Gonzo would get up during the night to change his diapers or play with him. Loved NASCAR and racing video games.

"You would never get tired of being around him; he was a guy you could count on completely. Gonzo was always in the middle of everything."

-- Spc. Eric Holmes


13 posted on 02/26/2003 5:30:36 PM PST by LBGA
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To: LBGA
Bump

Thank you for this post from the parents of a deployed Blackhawk pilot.

24 posted on 02/26/2003 6:07:54 PM PST by B-Cause
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To: LBGA
These brave men died in the process of protecting our freedom and way of life, we should all feel indebted to them.
May God bless their families.
31 posted on 02/26/2003 6:14:40 PM PST by Aquamarine
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To: LBGA
Thanks for posting these bios. Prayers of comfort for the families and loved ones left behind. God bless our troops.
32 posted on 02/26/2003 6:14:50 PM PST by CheneyChick
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To: LBGA
Bump...
69 posted on 02/26/2003 7:56:23 PM PST by Libloather
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To: LBGA
Thank you for the ping. It makes it all too real to read about these brave soldiers.
May their families and loved ones be comforted.
76 posted on 02/27/2003 3:04:04 AM PST by leadpenny
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To: LBGA
Thank-you for the ping. This is so sad. These men and their families are in my prayers.

May God shed his blessings on our armed forces.
81 posted on 02/27/2003 4:05:08 AM PST by dansangel (America - love it, support it, or LEAVE IT!)
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