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Run for the Fallen: Those we'll remember, kilometers 1-11

July 30, 2011
1. Lieutenant Commander Ronald J. Vauk, Nampa, September 11, 2001
Commander Vauk, 37, was beginning two weeks of annual active duty for the Naval Reserve and serving as watch commander in the Naval Command Center at the Pentagon when a hijacked plane struck the building. Since 1997, he had been an assistant group supervisor in submarine technology at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel.

Born in Nampa, Idaho, Ron was a 1987 graduate of the Naval Academy, where he earned a degree in political science. He served on the submarines USS Glenard P. Lipscomb and the USS Oklahoma City, attaining the rank of Lieutenant Commander and receiving several medals and commendations. After about seven years of active duty, he entered the reserves and began working for Delex Corp. in Tyson's
Corner, Virginia, where he was project manager for naval contracts.

A devoted family man, Commander Vauk also enjoyed woodworking and golf. Beloved husband of Jennifer M. Vauk, devoted father of 3 year old Liam and yet to be born baby; devoted son of Hubert and Dorothy Vauk of Nampa, ID; brother of Charles, David, Gary, Dennis Vauk, Teri Masterson, Celia Shikuma, Lynne Caba, and Patricia Vauk; son-in-law of Carol and Patrick Mooney, brother-in-law of Alissa and Chris DeBoy. Ron is also survived by 18 nieces and nephews.
2. Major Gregory Stone, Boise, March 25, 2003
Major Gregory Stone died March 25, 2003, from injuries he incurred from hand grenades thrown into several command tents in Kuwait.

“He had that kind of caring attitude,” said Air Force Capt. Kim Gibeling, who knew Stone since they trained on B-1s together in 1996. Stone lived in Boise and had worked at the Air Expeditionary Force Battlelab at Mountain Home Air Force Base. He left the Air Force in 2000, but was an Air
National Guardsman.

He liked to camp, to ski, to read military history, and to spend all the time he could with his two sons, ages 11 and 7, said his father, Richard
Stone of Riggins, Idaho.

When Richard Stone had a heart attack in 1999, Greg came home to look after him.

“We were just kind of getting to know each other. I had a lot of concern when he was sent to the Middle East,” said his father, who had served in the Marines. “I know it was something he felt very strongly about and wanted to do. But you hate to see your kids do that.”

He is loved and missed by all who knew him.
3. Sergeant Richard P. Carl, King Hill, May 9, 2003
Richard P. Carl served with the 571st Air Medical Company out of Fort Carson, Colorado and was posthumously promoted from corporal to sergeant in a ceremony in Iraq. He died May 9, 2003, when his Black Hawk air medical helicopter snagged a power wire across the Tigris River as it took off during the rescue of a wounded Iraqi child, and flipped over into the water.

“Corporal Carl is a tremendous example of our military’s commitment to risk life and limb to help the innocent Iraqi civilians wounded in the war,” said U.S. Senator Michael Crapo. “He went to the Middle East to fight for our freedom with valor and courage in this time of national crisis and died in defense of his country.”

He leaves behind his wife, a daughter and son.
4. Specialist Robert T. Benson, Coeur d'Alene, November 4, 2003
Specialist Robert T. Benson, 20, died November 4, 2003, of a gunshot wound sustained at a checkpoint in Iraq.

He was born in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, and attended schools in Spokane, Washington.

All through his adolescence he loved the outdoors and anything that put him in the woods or on a lake. His mother said that “Bobby would always bring his fishing pole and gear to where ever our weekend took us. Of course, he was always the first to catch a fish."

His step-father Dan and he would take off on four-wheelers in hope of getting their limit of grouse or turkeys. Bobby had taken his classes to get his hunting license when he was of age and passed it with flying colors. Dan took him out and let him shoot the first grouse they saw that day. He was so proud of himself when they got back and couldn’t wait to show his mother what he had shot. His mother said, “All-in-all, Bobby got to experience the outdoors all his life, living in Idaho and enjoying the outdoors with his family.”

"He was a good man and an excellent soldier," said a fellow soldier. "He will never be forgotten."

Robert joined the Army in July 2001, shortly after graduating from high school. He married a high school classmate, Aimee Hiatt. "I wish Bobby could have had children," his stepsister, Alexandra, said. "I wish he could have seen his brothers and sisters get married."
5. Private First Class Jerrick Petty, Idaho Falls, December 10, 2003
PFC Jerrick Petty was assigned to Company B, 3rd Battalion, 502 Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Kentucky. He was killed December 10, 2003, when his position guarding a gas station was attacked by enemy forces in Mosul, Iraq.

Jerrick made it his mission to look out for others. When he was ten years old he beat up neighborhood bullies who were picking on other children. In high school he screened his little sisters’ suitors to make sure they were good people. Jerrick joined the Army to earn more money to support his young family.

“The last thing he said to me was, ‘I love you Dad,'” his father, Jerald Petty, said. “And the last thing I said to him was, ‘I love you, son.’”

Jerrick was posthumously awarded the Bronze Star and Purple Heart for his service.
6. Private First Class Cleston Raney, Rupert, March 31, 2004
Private First Class Cleston Raney, 20, of Rupert, Idaho, was one of five members of the Army's 1st Engineer Battalion, 1st Brigade of the 1st Infantry Division, based at Fort Riley, Kansas, killed March 31, 2004, in Habbaniyah, Iraq, when an improvised explosive device hit their armored personnel carrier.

Cleston was born May 12, 1983, in Twin Falls. Raised by Gordon and Gloria Trivitt for many years of his short life, he attended schools in Rupert and Burley, and graduated from Burley High School in May 2001. He joined the Army in November of 2002, and completed basic training at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. He began his military career as a combat engineer in Fort Riley, Kansas, in April 2003, and was deployed to Iraq in September 2003, where he served proudly, bravely, and with honor until the time of his death.

Cleston was an avid movie buff, and enjoyed watching football (especially the 49ers) and basketball (especially the Bulls.) He loved listening to music, and was a video game expert (Nintendo, Playstation, X-Box, you name it). He enjoyed fishing and any board games, but one of his greatest joys was beating his cousin Gina at pool and bowling.
7. Private First Class Christopher Reed, Craigmont, July 10, 2004
Christopher Reed died July 10, 2004 in the Anbar Province of Iraq after the Humvee he was riding in rolled over. He was based at Camp Pendleton, California. Chris loved hunting and fishing with his brother and wanted to use his military experience to get a job with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.

He had been in Iraq only three weeks when the vehicle he was riding in overturned. Reed graduated high school in 2003 and almost immediately joined the Marine Corps. His departure was delayed because on graduation night Chris and his brother got into a wrestling match and Chris ended up hurting some ribs.

Before his deployment, Chris spent most of his time visiting friends and family.

"When it came to his family, he put them before everything else," said his good friend Beth Pratt, who remembered him as a lively presence. "Even when there was nothing to do Chris would turn a boring evening into an unforgettable memory."

Reed is survived by his brother Brian and parents, Keith and Tammy Reed.
8. Specialist Brandon Titus, Boise, August 17, 2004

Specialist Brandon Titus was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 14th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry), Fort Drum, New York.

 

He was killed on August 17, 2004, when an improvised explosive device detonated near his checkpoint in Baghdad. Brandon had served in Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom for only a few months.

 

He graduated from Borah High School where he played varsity football and enlisted in the Army on a delayed entry program. As a machine gunner, Brandon often stood in the turret of his Humvee; he knew that made him a target but he also knew what would happen if he chose not to do it. “Then one of my buddies is going to go up there. And if he gets hit that is going to be on my conscience.”

 

Brandon wrote a letter to his father, Tom Titus, to be opened only upon his death. That letter read in part: “Before I could take all freedoms and liberty this country has granted, I had to earn them,” he wrote. “I don’t see any greater honor than giving my life for my country, my family and my friends.”

9. Captain Alan Blake Rowe, Fairfield, September 3, 2004

Captain Alan Blake Rowe, USMC, was killed in combat action in Iraq on September 3, 2004. Born in Woodland, California, on October 3, 1968, he came with his family to Idaho when he was a year old.

 

He loved the mountains, beauty, and peace found in Idaho.

 

He loved the Marine Corps and his country and had dreamed of serving his country since he was a small boy. When he became a Marine, he thrived and excelled in the opportunities the Corps offered. We receive some comfort knowing that Alan lived and died doing and being what he wanted to be: A Marine.

 

Captain Rowe’s decorations include a Purple Heart, Navy and Marine Commendation, Navy and Marine Achievement with star, Combat Action with star, Navy Unit Commendation with star, and Meritorious Unit Commendation.

 

Alan will be greatly missed, but always deeply loved and remembered as the honorable Marine as well as our husband, father, son, brother, nephew, cousin. His death is a tragic loss to his family, his friends, the Marine Corps and his country. He died a hero to us all, reminding us that freedom is not free.

10. Captain Luke Wullenwaber, Lewiston, November 16, 2004

CPT Luke Wullenwaber, executive officer of Company A, 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry, was killed in action November 16, 2004, in Iraq, four weeks shy of turning 25. Luke had volunteered that day for a security mission to serve alongside “his” men.  An explosion from a vehicle borne improvised explosive device killed Luke.

 

Described by some men as the toughest guy they ever knew, Luke was intelligent, kind, of the highest integrity, capable of great intensity and exceedingly funny. He was devoted to his family and friends. He exuded strength. His high school coach said he epitomized what a man should be.

 

Luke was president of his high school’s National Honor Society Chapter. In 12th grade Luke was the varsity’s Defensive Lineman of the Year and All North Idaho; and his home town’s local TV stations’ Prep Athlete of the Week.

 

Luke attended Virginia Military Institute. While there, Luke was the first undergraduate in VMI’s history to complete the Special Forces Underwater Combat Diver course at Key West, Florida; he represented VMI at the Thai Royal Military Academy; and the Army featured Luke’s photograph in a national ad.

 

Luke graduated with academic honors and was a Distinguished Military Graduate. In Iraq, Luke was awarded the Purple Heart, the Bronze Star and the Meritorious Service Medal.

 

Luke’s family is permanently rent by his absence, but because of the promise of the resurrection of God’s people through the Lord Jesus Christ, they are not lost in despair.

11. Sergeant Darren VanKomen, Lewiston, December 21, 2004

Darren VanKomen grew up in Lewiston, Idaho, and enlisted in the military in 1991, a few years after graduating from Culdesac High School in Idaho. He was stationed in West Virginia and Colorado before coming to Fort Lewis for a second time.

 

Twice, he left the army to explore life as a civilian. Twice he returned, after missing the structure and purpose of the military.

 

"He liked everything about it. He literally felt like he could make a difference," said sister-in-law Stephanie VanKomen, of Orofino. "He was right where he wanted to be," said another sister-in-law, Andrea VanKomen, of Puyallup. "He was really dedicated to serving his country."

 

VanKomen was a 33-year-old sergeant and unit supply specialist who doted on his large family of six brothers and two sisters. He was the uncle who played basketball and blind man's bluff with the kids. He was tall and funny, liked to draw pictures of cartoon characters and Conan the Barbarian, and he loved the military. He was a loving and devoted man who doted on his wife, Stephaine, and 12-year-old stepdaughter, Chelsea.

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