Senior Airman Jason Plite Hometown



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"There were numerous opportunities for breaking the chain of events leading to the release of this weapon," General Edgington wrote. He declined to be interviewed. So did Gen. T. Michael Moseley of the Air Force, who was in charge of air operations in Iraq in 2003 and signed off on General Edgington's report. A spokeswoman for Fort Sill said no one from the artillery unit was available to comment.

On the night of the bombing, Battery D, First Battalion, 39th Field Artillery, made camp about 30 miles southwest of Baghdad. The unit had just rolled through the Karbala Gap and was firing rockets toward Baghdad Airport in support of the Third Infantry Division.

The unit had shut off the infrared strobe lights known as fireflies used to identify it to allied aircraft because of intelligence that Iraqi snipers could see the lights through night-vision goggles.

But First Lt. John Fernandez, an artillery platoon leader who lost both feet in the bombing, said in an interview that the unit's vehicles were also equipped with tape and heat panels that should have made them visible. Some vehicles also carried homing beacons that marked their positions for commanders at distant bases. And there were three dozen vehicles in the encampment - too many to be a plausible gathering of Iraqi forces, he thought.

"There were lots of indicators we were friendly," said Lieutenant Fernandez, a West Point graduate.

But Battery D's rocket launches had generated alarm among American pilots.

According to the investigation report, a lack of critical information had caused the confusion. Hours before, a Navy F/A-18 fighter had been shot down near Karbala. American commanders at air bases in Saudi Arabia and Qatar suspected that an American Patriot missile had struck it, in part because a Patriot had mistakenly shot down a British Tornado jet about a week before. The Patriot's role was later confirmed by the military.

But that night, "information went out from Crows Nest" - a commander's perch - that no one would discuss the possibility of a Patriot accident, an officer later told investigators. As helicopters and jets were assigned to the search and rescue mission, they were allowed to believe that an Iraqi surface-to-air missile was the culprit.

One of those jets was an Air Force F-15E fighter. Earlier that night, the pilot and his weapons officer, both instructors with seven years experience flying missions over Iraq to police the no-flight zone, had seen what looked like a surface-to-air missile hit the Navy fighter. As they searched for the pilot, they saw what appeared to be missiles fired from near the crash site - and were convinced it was an Iraqi battery firing on American aircraft.

It was, in fact, Battery D. But when the pilot and his officer looked for indicators that it was a friendly unit, they saw none and requested clearance to attack. Believing the warplane was in danger, and without checking for friendly ground forces, the crew of an Awacs reconnaissance plane gave the pilot a green light.

The explosion threw Lieutenant Fernandez out of his cot. Kicking off his sleeping bag, he realized his feet had been torn apart. He grabbed his Kevlar vest, helmet and gun, then tried to pull Sergeant Oaks, who had been sleeping beside him, away from the burning Humvee, which was loaded with ammunition and was leaking gasoline.

They escaped before the Humvee exploded, but it took more than an hour for an evacuation helicopter to arrive, according to the report. Though Sergeant Oaks, 20, was conscious as he was flown away, witnesses said he died within hours. Two other soldiers, Sgt. Todd J. Robbins, 33, from Pentwater, Mich., and Sgt. First Class Randall S. Rehn, 36, of Longmont, Colo., were also killed, probably instantly.

At daybreak, soldiers discovered pages from a Bible scattered around the remains of the Humvee. Sergeant Oaks's family believe they came from his Bible, which he was trying to read cover to cover.

"It was the most devastation I had seen in the war," said William E. Thompson, an Army reservist who photographed the scene.

Lieutenant Fernandez, who has retired from the military, says he no longer frets about how the accident might have been avoided. Now 27, he lives on Long Island with his wife and their infant daughter and is attending graduate school to become a math teacher.

Still, he occasionally wonders. "I know that the pilot didn't mean to do it," he said, adding he hopes that the pilot had taken "some preventative measures" to make sure he was going after the enemy. "If not, then he should be held responsible."

Jeff Coyne wants to go to college to become a sports journalist. But he struggles with back pain and says he has found the Veterans Administration bureaucracy difficult to navigate. He says he still grieves deeply for the dead.

"It always seems in war they take the best ones from you," he said.

And Samuel Oaks's bitterness runs deep. He and his wife, Mary, helped raise Donald, the quiet, hardworking only son of their only son, after his parents divorced when he was 5. They tried to discourage him from joining the Army and worried frantically when he was deployed to Iraq. But he loved the military and rose rapidly in its ranks, winning promotion to sergeant posthumously .

Just before the second anniversary of the accident, his father visited Sergeant Oaks's grave, a simple black stone etched with his likeness a few miles outside Erie.

"You'd think it gets easier with time," Donald Oaks Sr. said. "But it doesn't."

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2005/04/15/national/15friendly.1843.jpgEustacio Humphrey for The New York Times

Donald Oaks Sr., left, and his parents, Samuel and Mary Oaks, leave the grave of Sgt. Donald S. Oaks Jr.



Staff Sgt. Scott D. Sather

photo of staff sgt. scott d. sather

Hometown: Clio, Michigan, U.S.

Age: 29 years old

Died: April 8, 2003 in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Unit: Air Force, 24th Special Tactics Squadron, Pope Air Force Base, N.C.

Incident: Killed in action in Iraq.

Air Force Staff Sgt. Scott D. Sather was a quiet professional, a special forces combat controller who liked to be the "do" man. "He'd basically go out, take care of matters," said Staff Sgt. Michael Bain. "Even if he wasn't asked to do it, he would just go out and do it anyway, just to make sure things got done." Sather, 29, of Clio, Mich., was killed in combat April 8. "He was well-loved in the community," said his uncle, state Rep. John Gleason. "He was just a great person." Sather was married and often talked about his plans to build a home, Bain said. Another love was riding and working on his motorcycle.



Scott D. Sather

photo

SATHER, Scott D. Staff Sgt. - United States Air Force, of Clio, age 29, died Tuesday, April 8, 2003 in Iraq as a result of a battlefield injury he sustained while bravely serving his country. Funeral services will be held at 1PM Tuesday, April 22, 2003 at Messiah Lutheran Church in Clio, Pastor Erwin Kostizen officiating. Scott will lie in state at the O'Guinn Family Funeral Home in Clio on Monday, where friends may call from 10AM-3PM and 5- 9PM. He will lie in state at the church on Tuesday from 11AM until time of service. Scott will be laid to rest in Arlington National Cemetery at 3PM Friday, April 25, 2003. Memorial contributions may be made to the Scott D. Sather Memorial Fund. Envelopes available at the funeral home. Proceeds will be directed in Scott's honor to various children's agencies who treat the terminally ill and those who suffer from catastrophic injuries.



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Scott D. Sather
Staff Sergeant, United States Air Force

michigan state flag

Arlington National Cemetery was the site for Friday's emotional tribute to a Pope airman killed in combat in Iraq.

Staff Sergeant Scott Sather was killed two weeks ago in Iraq - the first airman killed in the war. The 29-year-old Michigan native earned seven medals, including the bronze star, during his Air Force career.

"Scott's a great American," said Major Robert Armfield. "He was a hard-charging guy. He wanted to be the best at what he did, and that's why he became an Air Force combat controller."

Combat controllers are an elite group of fighters who lead allied aircraft to enemy targets. There are only about 300 controllers, a group that had not suffered a war casualty until last year.

Chaplain Mark Thomas, a Sampson County native grew up near the base, works with the controllers. He also conducted Friday's service.

"What I try to do is focus on the fact of their faith," Thomas said. "I try to help them out with hope."

Thomas said burial services like Friday's are never easy for anyone.

Chaplain Mark Thomas said services like Friday's are always emotional and that his job is to offer hope for the future.

"Seeing children and young brides," he said, "knowing they paid such a sacrifice for our freedoms."

A fellow controller said two deaths in the unit in just more than a year is tough to take.

"All you can think about is what you are in the military for and what you are doing," said Tech Sgt. Westley Brooks, "and that's defending the freedoms we all have."

Thomas' job is to offer hope for the future, even when it seems impossible to reach.

"It's rewarding, in a sense," he said, "knowing we've been able to establish some hope with them that tomorrow will come, and they'll be able to walk through this." 26 April 2003:
Courtesy of The Washington Post

The first specks of scarlet at the graveside of Staff Sergeant Scott D. Sather were isolated, nearly lost in the mass of civilians in dark mourning clothes. Then, after everyone else had settled in, the slim men in blue uniforms and dark red berets approached by the dozens, forming a ring of color around the outside of the crowd.

Sather, an Air Force Combat Air Controller, was killed in Iraq on April 8, 2003. Yesterday he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery surrounded by service members wearing berets, the symbols of their elite status. In addition to the scarlet worn by his fellow airmen, there were tan berets on Army Rangers and at least one Army Green Beret in the crowd.

Sather, 29, a native of Clio, Michigan, joined the Air Force in 1992. He soon began training to be a Combat Air Controller, one of a unit of about 300 who work on the ground near or ahead of front-line combat troops and guide attack planes to nearby targets.

These airmen, whose slogan is "First There," are trained in parachuting, scuba diving and combat survival as well as air traffic control. Retired Staff Sergeant Mike Naylor, who served with Sather in Bosnia, said Sather was drawn to the extreme aspects of the job.

"He wanted to skydive. He wanted to scuba dive. He wanted to be a cowboy," Naylor said after the funeral. "I mean, he wanted to be right up front."

Naylor said Sather, an outstanding athlete in high school, was a fierce competitor. While assigned to Bosnia, Naylor said, their unit was kept on alert and could not stray more than a few minutes from its planes. To pass the time, Naylor said, they would engage in highly competitive games of Ultimate Frisbee.

Sather "was fanatical about it. He didn't want to lose," Naylor said. "Everything that he did was that intense."

There were also lighthearted moments during those long periods of alert: Naylor said that Sather played practical jokes on another airman named Eggers, hiding eggs in his boots, then slipping away.

"Eggers never found out who was doing it," Naylor said.

Sather's service yesterday was the last of a week in which seven casualties of the Iraq war were buried at Arlington. Fifteen have been laid to rest there since April 10. Sather's coffin was positioned in a row of fresh graves at the edge of a field that does not yet have headstones. 

Sather was stationed at Pope Air Force Base in North Carolina and married last year, according to published reports. His widow, Melanie, sat with his parents, Karin Craft and Rod Sather, at the grave site.

The service began with a flyover by A-10 attack jets. After remarks by a chaplain, flags were presented to his wife and parents.

At the conclusion, other combat controllers -- in distinctive headgear and uniforms, their dress pants stuffed into combat boots -- walked forward, set a coin commemorating their unit on the coffin and saluted.

Major John Koren, a retired Air Force officer who once was Sather's commander, said afterward that the handsome, capable airman stood out even among his elite colleagues.

"When they asked me to put people on tough missions, he was first on my list," Koren said, adding that he could think of no higher praise for a soldier.

"He represented America," Koren said. "He represented you and I. You can't ask for anything better than that." The harsh reality of war hit home last week when the husband of a former Sylva woman died during Operation Iraqi Freedom. Staff Sergeant Scott Sather, 29, of the U.S. Air Force, was shot to death on April 8 in southern Baghdad.

His wife was the former Melanie Mull, a 1986 graduate of Sylva-Webster High School. She is the daughter of Linda Mull of Sylva and the late Jim Mull.

A memorial service was held Tuesday at Pope Air Base, where Sather was stationed as a combat controller with the 24th Special Tactics Squadron of the 720th Special Tactics Group, which is home-based at Hurlburt Field, Florida.

Another memorial service is planned in his hometown of Clio, Michigan, with burial to be in Arlington National Cemetery.

"He was a very dedicated and loyal combat controller," said Cassandra Collins Mayer of Greensboro, formerly of Jackson County and Melanie Sather's longtime friend. "He was just incredible. As a husband, he was a great person. I don't have enough good things to say about him. He loved Melanie with all his heart."

The couple was married during a July ceremony in Jamaica. Mayer said they had recently bought a house in Fayetteville and were talking about starting a family. 
Scott Sather spent some time in Sylva during December following the death of his father-in-law, Mayer said.

Sather had been deployed for five weeks at the time of his death, and his wife had not heard from him since he left the United States, according to Mayer.

Sather served in Afganhistan as part of Operation Enduring Freedom and received the Bronze Star Medal. He also had earned four Air Force combat medals, an Air Medal and a Joint Service Medal, according to officials at Hurlburt Field.

sd sather photo
Scott & Melanie Sather Staff Sergeant Scott D. Sather
June 21, 1973 to April 8, 2003

sd sather photo

Staff Sergeant Scott. D. Sather, assigned to the 24th Special Tactics Squadron was killed in action April 8, 2003, in Iraq.

Sather was a Combat Controller and was 29 years old.

I offer my condolences to Sergeant Sather’s family, friends and teammates,” said Lieutenant General Paul V. Hester, the Commander of Air Force Special Operations Command. “His ultimate sacrifice for our great nation is a constant reminder of the service and dedication of the men and women in uniform to a cherished principle — freedom.”



Sather was from Clio, Michigan, He joined the Air Force in 1992 and had been stationed at Pope Air Force Base, North Carolina, since 1999. His previous assignments include special tactics squadrons at McChord AFB, Wash.; Royal Air Force Mildenhall, England; and RAF Alconbury, England.

(Courtesy of Air Force Special Operations Command News Service)

sd sather funeral services photo

sd sather funeral services photo
The casket of Staff Sergeant Scott D. Sather arrives at the gravesite at Arlington 
National Cemetery in Washington, April 25, 2003.  Sergeant Sather was killed April 
8, 2003, in combat in Iraq

sd sather funeral services photo
Danielle Harris, 3, a cousin of Air Force Staff Sgt. Scott D. Sather, watches a flag being folded 
above his coffin at Arlington National Cemetery

sd sather funeral services photo
Danielle Harris, 3, cousin of Air Force Staff Sergeant Scott D. Sather, from Clio, 
Michigan, covers her ears during the firing party's three round volley at 
Sather's funeral at Arlington National Cemetery outside of Washington Friday, 
April 25, 2003. Sather, a combat controller with the 24th Special Tactics Squadron 
at Pope Air Force Base in North Carolina, was the Air Force's first combat 
casualty when he was killed in action in Iraq

sd sather funeral services photo
Three-year-old Danielle Harris, in blue dress at right, cousin of Air Force 
Staff Sergeant. Scott D. Sather, continues to cover her ears after the firing party 
fired three volleys of seven during Sather's funeral at Arlington National Cemetery 
outside of Washington Friday, April 25, 2003.

sd sather funeral services photo
Air Force Lieutenant General Paul V. Hester, left, presents the flag to Melanie Sather, 
right, wife of Air Force Staff Sergeant Scott D. Sather, from Clio, Michigan, during 
his funeral at Arlington National Cemetery outside of Washington Friday, April 
25, 2003. The woman at far right is Karin Craft, Sergeant Sather's mother. NEWS RELEASE from the United States Department of Defense
No. 228-03
(703)697-5131(media)
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 9, 2003
(703)428-0711(public/industry)

DOD IDENTIFIES AIR FORCE CASUALTY

        The Department of Defense announced today that Staff Sergeant Scott D. Sather, 29, of Clio, Michigan, was killed in action Tuesday, 8 April 2003, in Iraq.



Sergeant Sather was assigned to the 24th Special Tactics Squadron, Pope Air Force Base, North Carolina. I went to a funeral today. I said good bye to a friend today. I watched his casket be carried - covered in red, white, and blue. I looked up at the sky and wanted to blame you. Why on earth would God let this happen? Why would he take someone so gracious and loving?

But as I listened to the sermon today, and listened to the Reverend so calmly say, Scott was loved by us and by God. It doesn't only hurt our hearts to see him gone. God doesn't want to see us hurt - God wants peace and justice on earth. Scott was a fighter, a man with a heart of gold. With will and strength he took on this cause so bold. We may not have been able to say goodbye to him in the ways we would have chose, but God has a purpose all of his own.

Scott will be missed, many tears will fall. Many days lie ahead of wonderance, disbelief and awe. But whether we want to believe or not - God was there upon the death of dear Scott. For it was God's voice Scott heard that fatal morning calling. A soldier, full of bravery, death stricken and falling.

My emotions are mixed with anger and sadness. My heart is torn and hurts for gladness. I looked at his mother, father, and siblings. His wife, now a young widow - mere thoughts of children she will never be bearing. How I'd love to tell them all, everthing will be okay....in my heart, I know, grief can only heal....day..by day.

IN MEMORY OF STAFF SGT SCOTT D SATHER.

May you hold him close in mind like we do close in heart.
We love you Scotty!
God Speed & God Bless you all
Liz SATHER, SCOTT D
SSGT US AIR FORCE
IRAQ
DATE OF BIRTH: 06/21/1973
DATE OF DEATH: 04/08/2003
BURIED AT: SECTION 60  SITE 7875
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY

sd sather gravesite photo
Photo Courtesy of Holly, September 2007




http://www.fallenheroesmemorial.com/oif/profiles/images/satherscottd.jpg combat control association

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_kk_gv2ps9lw/s75n3hxrw1i/aaaaaaaaaje/blusge9-d6w/s400/sather+memorial+push+ups+(6).jpg
Lt Col Spanovich and the men and women of the Special Tactics Training Squadron lower the flag to half-staff and knock out their memorial push-ups for SSgt Scott Sather, CCT killed in action April 8, 2003 in Iraq. Sather was assigned to the 24th Special Tactics Squadron, Pope Air Force Base, North Carolina.

Scott D. Sather


son of Karin Brown Sather, daughter of Elmer Strickert, son of Valentine Strickert, son of John William Strickert, son of Christian Strickert, son of Johan and Christina Strickert.
The Sylva Herald, NC
Scott Sather Staff Sgt. Scott D. Sather, 29, U.S. Air Force, of Clio, Mich., died Tuesday, April 8, 2003, in Iraq as a result of a battlefield injury he sustained while serving his country. Funeral services were held at 1 p.m. Tuesday, April 22, at Messiah Lutheran Church in Clio. Pastor Erwin Kositzen officiated. Burial will be at 3 p.m. Friday, April 25, at Arlington National Cemetery.

He was born June 21, 1973, in Flint, Mich., to Rodney and Karin Brown Sather. He graduated from Clio High School in 1991. He joined the USAF in 1992 and served as a combat controller. He was stationed at Pope Air Force Base with the 24th Special Tactics Squadron. His previous assignments included McChord AFB, Washington; Royal Air Force-Mildenhall, England; RAF Alconbury, England and Lackland AFB, Texas. He was the recipient of numerous meritorious awards and commendations, including the Bronze Star and Purple Heart.

He married Melanie Mull of Sylva on July 16, 2002. She was living in Fayetteville at the time of her husband's death. He was preceded in death by his grandparents, Myron Sather, Elmer Strickert and Herb Henderson. Surviving, in addition to his wife and parents, are three brothers, Derek, Jason and Jason "J.C."; two sisters, Lisa and Becky; and grandparents, Alice Sather, Bill and Shirley Brown, Florence Stickert, Edward and Ernedene Craft and Gloria Henderson.
O'Guinn Family Funeral Homes was in charge of arrangements.



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