Tag Archives: Fort Campbell

Army says its helicopters buzzed Washington city

Army special operations helicopters on a training exercise buzzed around the small city of Port Angeles, Wash., late Thursday in an episode that the mayor says “terrorized my city.”

An Army official apologized Friday for the unannounced training mission.

Dozens of alarmed residents called police to ask what was going on.

“No one had any warning about the helicopters, no one said anything afterward, and today city officials had to spend hours just trying to find out what had happened — who had invaded Port Angeles,” said Cherie Kidd, mayor of the Olympic Peninsula city about 60 miles west of Seattle.

The Army said the helicopters involved included both twin-engine Chinooks and Blackhawk attack helicopters.

The training exercise involved part of the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment, which is based at Fort Campbell, Ky., but has individual units in various locations, said Sgt. Jimmy Norris, an I Corps spokesman at Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Wash. Part of the 160th is based at Lewis-McChord, he said.

“Our watch commander last night reported that we received ‘dozens of calls’ complaining about low-flying helicopters over the city,” Deputy Police Chief Brian Smith said.

After multiple calls to Puget Sound-area military bases, Clallam County Sheriff Bill Benedict was finally able to determine about mid-day Friday that the helicopters belonged to the Army, The Peninsula Daily News reported (http://is.gd/QaMw82d).

Army Col. H. Charles “Chuck” Hodges Jr., garrison commander at Lewis-McChord, told the newspaper that he had launched an investigation and was meeting with unit commanders at the base.

“I apologize, this is totally unacceptable,” he said.

Hodges said the helicopters — he mentioned four Chinooks — were over Port Angeles from about 11:15 p.m. to shortly before midnight Thursday.

An Army spokesman for Hodges’ office did not immediately return an Associated Press phone call Friday evening.

Kidd said she plans to meet Monday with Hodges at the base about 90 miles south of Port Angeles.

The helicopters were “training to …read more

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Army soldier recovering from TBI gets Silver Star

A Fort Campbell soldier who suffered a traumatic brain injury has received the Silver Star for his actions to help evacuate wounded troops during a mission in Afghanistan in 2010.

After receiving the honor during a Friday ceremony at the Tennessee-Kentucky state line, Sgt. 1st Class Matthew Loheide (LOH’-hyd) of Patchogue, N.Y., immediately re-enlisted in the Army to serve other wounded warriors like him.

Several of Loheide’s former teammates returned to Fort Campbell to see him accept the military’s third-highest medal for valor, which he said was earned by everyone in his unit.

Loheide and others were injured when a bomb dropped on their position during the operation. Despite his injuries and under fire, Loheide marked a landing zone for helicopters to evacuate the wounded and led his soldiers to safety.

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Follow Kristin M. Hall on Twitter at http://twitter.com/kmhall

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US military deaths in Afghanistan at 2,063

As of Tuesday, April 2, 2013, at least 2,063 members of the U.S. military had died in Afghanistan as a result of the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, according to an Associated Press count.

The AP count is the same as the Defense Department‘s tally, last updated Tuesday at 10 a.m. EDT.

At least 1,713 military service members have died in Afghanistan as a result of hostile action, according to the military’s numbers.

Outside of Afghanistan, the department reports at least 119 more members of the U.S. military died in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. Of those, 11 were the result of hostile action.

The AP count of total OEF casualties outside of Afghanistan is four more than the department’s tally.

The Defense Department also counts three military civilian deaths.

Since the start of U.S. military operations in Afghanistan, 18,360 U.S. service members have been wounded in hostile action, according to the Defense Department.

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The latest identifications reported by the military:

— Chief Warrant Officer Curtis S. Reagan, 43, of Summerville, S.C., died March 29 in Kandahar, Afghanistan, from a noncombat-related illness; assigned to the 603rd Aviation Support Battalion, 3rd Combat Aviation Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division, Fort Stewart-Hunter Army Airfield, Ga.

— Sgt. Michael C. Cable, 26, of Philpot, Ky., died March 27, from injuries sustained when his unit was attacked by enemy forces in Shinwar District, Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan; assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 327th Infantry, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Ky.

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Online:

http://www.defense.gov/news/

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Rand Paul Supports Some Military Bases On Foreign Soil, A Big Difference From His Dad

By The Huffington Post News Editors

A brief item on Rand Paul by Time’s Alex Altman describes the Republican Kentucky senator speaking recently to a group of Republican women in his home state and catching himself when he brings up the idea of shutting down U.S. military bases on foreign soil.

“I’m not saying don’t have any,” he said. “I’m just saying maybe not 900. I mean, I’d rather have one at Fort Campbell and Fort Knox than one in Timbuktu.”

And it turns out Paul is not opposed to keeping military bases in Iraq, or in that part of the world, for the foreseeable future. When he sat down a few weeks ago with a few reporters at an event hosted by National Review, I brought up a report that morning in The Wall Street Journal about the CIA taking responsibility for U.S. operations in Iraq from the Defense Department, and asked Paul if that was a good model for him, or whether he wanted “total removal” of U.S. forces from the country.

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Veteran's letter from boot camp in 1953 returned to sender

It was 1953 and a storm had caused a power outage at Fort Campbell, Ky., where then-Pvt. Bob Rodgers had just arrived for basic training.

Rodgers, then a 20-year-old anticipating deployment to Korea, sat down to write a letter to his wife in Indiana discussing the routines of life in boot camp.

Sixty years later, that letter finally turned up, when the U.S. Postal Service gave it back to Rodgers, who’s now living in southwestern Michigan, according to the South Bend Tribune.

In the June 13, 1953, letter, Rodgers told his wife, Jean, about his daily duties. “All you do is march, KP, shine boots, shine boots and shine more boots and brass and more brass,” he wrote.

On March 7, New Carslisle, Ind., Postmaster Connie Tomaszewski hand-delivered the letter to Rodgers, now 79. She did so the same day it arrived at her office, she told the Tribune.

Rodgers was bemused by the return of the letter.

“I asked if they had found the remains of the horse and rider and got the letter out of the saddle bag,” he said, smiling. “She just shook her head.”

Tomaszewski said it’s hard to even guess what might have happened to the letter over six decades.

“There are a million possibilities. … It could have sat at Fort Campbell,” she said. “The important part of it is it did get delivered.”

Mary Dando, spokeswoman for the Greater Indiana District of the U.S. Postal Service, said the letter may have actually been delivered, then ended up at a flea market or antique store where a collector latched onto it.

In such cases, people sometimes put them back in the mail for reasons unknown, Dando said.

Rodgers said even if his wife didn’t get the letter, it wasn’t a big deal.

“She didn’t miss it, and I didn’t miss it, because I wrote her about every day,” he said.

Jean Rodgers died of cancer eight years ago.

The letter bears a Fort Campbell postmark and the date June 15, 1953. It also features two 3-cent stamps.

Asked what her reaction would have been to the letter’s final arrival had she still been alive to receive it, he said, “She’d have got a kick out of that.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click here for more from the South Bend Tribune.

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Tennessee police chief uses polygraph test to weed out racist applicants

A police chief hired to rebuild a tiny Tennessee department dismantled by scandal is using a lie-detector test to keep racists off his force.

Coopertown Police Chief Shane Sullivan took over the department in November, becoming the 11th chief in as many years. He was hired on the heels of a series of police scandals that for a few months left Coopertown with no police at all. Years before that, a mayor was voted out of office after the local prosecutor accused him of racism and running a notorious speed trap.

Law enforcement experts say Sullivan’s polygraph approach is unusual, though some departments use the devices for other purposes during the application process. Others try to root out bias in other ways. One polygraph expert warned that lie detectors can’t accurately predict racism for reasons that include people’s inability to recognize their own racism.

Sullivan said he doubts racists will even apply for the force if they know about the tests.

“I think the polygraph will definitely keep these people from applying,” the 39-year-old chief said.

And he believes the policy is working, because he says it’s already discouraged some applicants.

“I’ve told a couple of ones about the polygraph who have not called me back.”

Before Sullivan’s hiring, the sheriff’s department had overseen law enforcement in the town 30 miles northwest of Nashville while the department was temporarily disbanded.

First, the only full-time patrolman was fired over a road rage incident. Then the reserve officer was dismissed after a dashboard camera captured him using a racial slur to describe a black motorist. The dash cam video was later aired in the media. Soon after that, the police chief quit.

Coopertown Mayor Sam Childs said the chief resigned because of the “predatory media.”

The rural community of about 4,000 people that is 95 percent white earned a reputation as a notorious speed trap, with about a third of its revenue coming from speeding tickets handed out by city police during the former mayor’s tenure. In 2006, the National Motorists Association said Coopertown had one of the most “blatant examples of speed traps in the country.” It stopped after a prosecutor filed a petition against the mayor in 2006. Its 25 squares miles encompass significant stretches of Interstate 24 and another highway that drivers use to cut through to Interstate 65.

In 2006, the county prosecutor asked a court to oust then-Mayor Danny Crosby on allegations he was running a speed trap and ordering police to target Hispanics, out-of-towners and soldiers from nearby Fort Campbell, Ky., for traffic tickets.

Although an appellate court agreed with a lower court’s finding that Crosby’s conduct and statements were strongly suggestive of “bigotry, sexism or utter foolishness,” it refused to remove him. Crosby was later voted out of office and the speed trap is gone.

One lifelong resident said he’s fed up with the city government and the police department making the town look bad.

“It’s put a black eye on the city,” Wayne Brown said of Coopertown’s controversies. Brown, a mechanic and football coach, said he thinks there …read more
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Dog reunited with Kentucky owner after being recovered in New Mexico

Mandi Smith’s 5-month-old puppy disappeared from the family’s Fort Campbell, Ky., yard 18 months ago. So when Smith got a call saying Pooka had turned up in northern New Mexico, she says she was more than a little surprised.

“At first I thought someone was playing a trick on me,” the 26-year-old Smith said Wednesday, adding that she played the voicemail from the Espanola Valley Humane Society more than once.

“I thought I’d never see her again.”

But it was no joke. The now 2-year-old Chihuahua-dachshund mix, also known as a “chiweenie,” was found wandering the streets in Espanola on Jan. 12. She was traced back to her military family by a microchip that Smith says had been installed just days before she went missing.

Smith and the dog were reunited Wednesday at Albuquerque’s airport.

Surrounded by cameras and reporters, it was unclear if Pooka recognized Smith. But she clearly looked content to be snuggled in her arms.

Pooka has been staying with a foster mom, Melanie Lopez, who brought the dog to the airport for the reunion. Also on hand was Claudia Inoue, a Santa Fe animal lover who donated Southwest Airlines frequent flier awards to Lopez. Southwest Airlines waived the $75 fee for Smith to carry the dog home on the plane.

Smith says she had Pooka for just four months when she disappeared after the family let her out to do her business.

“I don’t know if she got out through a hole in the fence or what,” Smith said.

Smith planned to head straight back to Kentucky, where she said the now full-grown dog would be welcomed into a much larger household.

With Pooka missing, Smith got two new dogs, a German Shepherd and a German Shepherd mix, because “I was depressed.”

And Smith recently gave birth to a fourth child.

Nina Stively, community outreach manager at the Espanola Valley Humane Society, said Pooka had recently given birth herself and was still nursing when she was found. Attempts to find her puppies were unsuccessful.

The rest of the dog’s story and how she traveled more than 1,220 miles to New Mexico, however, will likely forever remain a mystery.

“I have no idea,” she said. “And she’s not talking.”

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Woman who set fire to home, killed two children gets 25 years

A woman who set fire to her home and killed two of her children at Fort Campbell has been sentenced to 25 years in prison.

Prosecutors say Billi Jo Smallwood was trying to kill her soldier husband and collect his $400,000 life insurance policy.

A sobbing Smallwood maintained her innocence at her sentencing Thursday. Family, friends and jail guards portrayed her as caring and deeply religious.

The 39-year-old Smallwood could have been sentenced to life behind bars.

Smallwood was convicted of maliciously setting fire to the two-story housing unit in 2007 while her children slept inside.

The blaze killed 9-year-old Sam Fagan and 2-year-old Rebekah Smallwood.

Smallwood’s husband, Wayne Smallwood, and their young daughter survived.
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