| After nearly six years and a legislative wording change, shooting 
			victims from the Nov. 5, 2009, attack at Fort Hood were recognized 
			during a Purple Heart and Defense of Freedom award ceremony at Fort 
			Hood, Texas on April 10, 2015.
 III Corps and Fort Hood 
			Commanding General Lt. Gen. Sean MacFarland, joined by the Secretary 
			of the Army, John McHugh, presented Purple Hearts and Secretary of 
			Defense Medals for the Defense of Freedom to victims and family 
			members of the fallen from that tragic day at the ceremony.
 
 Thirteen people were killed in the shooting at Fort Hood's Soldier 
			Readiness Processing Center that day. Another 31 were wounded by 
			gunfire. The gunman was convicted and sentenced to death in 
			September 2013.
 
			 
		
			| 
			 Retired Gen. Bob Cone, former III Corps and Fort Hood commanding general, offers remarks during the Fort Hood Purple Heart and Defense of Freedom Medal Ceremony on April 10, 2015 at III Corps Headquarters, Fort Hood, Texas. (U.S. Army photo by Daniel Cernero, III Corps and Fort Hood Public Affairs)
 |  “We honor the memories of the 13 souls laid to eternal 
					rest pay tribute to their sacrifice,” MacFarland said. “We 
					also remember the acts of courage and selflessness by 
					Soldiers and civilians which prevented an even greater 
					calamity from occurring that day.”
 Purple Hearts were 
					presented to representatives of 10 of the Soldiers killed 
					Nov. 5, 2009, as well as to 26 of those wounded. The Defense 
					of Freedom Medal, the civilian equivalent of the Purple 
					Heart, was presented to the family of Michael Cahill, the 
					lone civilian contractor killed that day, as well as to 
					Kimberly Munley, the Department of the 
					Army civilian police officer who was shot when she responded 
					to the scene.
 
 Purple Hearts for four Soldiers 
					wounded and the families of two Soldiers killed Nov. 5, 
					2009, will be awarded at local ceremonies throughout the 
					nation, MacFarland said. They were not forgotten.
 
 “We 
					honor them, as well,” the general said.
 
 The 
					recipients hailed from 21 states and units from across Fort 
					Hood and throughout the U.S. and, of those killed, seven 
					were active-duty, five were Reservists and one was a 
					civilian contractor.
 
 “Hundreds of lives have been 
					woven together by this single day of valor and loss,” 
					MacFarland said. “Although no words can resurrect those we 
					lost or completely erase the scars, today's ceremony is an 
					opportunity to provide a sense of closure to those who were 
					injured or those who lost a loved one.”
 
 He applauded 
					the bravery of the first responders who rushed into the 
					active scene, those who worked to distract the shooter so 
					others could escape and those who provided emergency aid to 
					the wounded.
 
 “Their bravery has been matched only by 
					their resilience – the spirit of which is seen throughout 
					the Army,” MacFarland said, noting the 20th Engineer 
					Battalion at Fort Hood, which lost four Soldiers that day 
					and had 11 wounded; and the 467 Medical Detachment, an Army 
					Reserve unit based in Madison,Wisconsin, which had three 
					Soldiers killed and four wounded in the shooting. “Despite 
					these losses, both units deployed to Afghanistan within 
					months.”
 
 Retired Gen. Bob Cone, III Corps and Fort 
					Hood commanding general at the time of the incident, 
					recalled the resilience and bravery in face of that 
					adversity.
 
 Less than two months into command at Fort 
					Hood, Cone was on his way to speak at a college graduation 
					ceremony at Howze Auditorium, which shared a parking lot 
					with the SRP site, when he was alerted to avoid the area.
 
 He remembers the tragedy and pain of that day, but also 
					the way the installation and surrounding community rallied.
 
 “I think what struck me most was the tremendous sense of 
					purpose and resilience of the Soldiers, civilians and first 
					responders as the scene,” Cone said. “At the moment of 
					greatest need, these professionals were at their very best, 
					using their combat training to respond to the crisis, to 
					treat and evacuate the wounded, and care for each other.”
 
 Cone also was struck by the response from the Central 
					Texas community.
 
 “The outpouring of support for 
					everything from blood transfusions to local hospitality for 
					families, to financial contributions, was simply amazing,” 
					the former III Corps commander said. “In so many ways, the 
					community's response truly represents the remarkable bond 
					between this installation and this community.”
 
 Heroes 
					stepped up that day and continue to support those wounded 
					and the families of those killed, Cone said.
 
 Survivors have changed and adapted, and Cone has seen the 
					progress made.
 
 “I have monitored many of you as you 
					have struggled, adapted, triumphed or stumbled. While there 
					has been much pain, there has also been great progress,” he 
					said. “That is the essence of being a survivor that is the 
					essence of being a victor over a terrible incident like 
					this.”
 
 Capt. Dorothy Carskadon, a Reservist with the 
					467th Combat Stress Control Unit on Nov. 5, 2009, returned 
					to her civilian job as a social worker at a veterans' center 
					following the incident.
 
 Working with combat-theater 
					veterans and their families aided her recovery, Carskadon 
					said.
 
 “It really helped me move through the issues 
					that I needed to move through,” she said.
 
 Carskadon 
					said she has found an outpouring of support for herself and 
					her spouse from her community, church, family and friends.
 
 “It is overwhelming,” she said. “It has been 
					overwhelming since day one.”
 
 That support and 
					resilience exhibited by Soldiers like Carskadon illustrated 
					the victory that Cone said marked the ceremony.
 
 “For 
					the recipients of today's awards, both living and deceased, 
					today is about victory,” Cone said. “Today is about fully 
					documenting and acknowledging your sacrifice for this great 
					nation.”
 
 Many of those wounded that November day said 
					the ceremony served not only as recognition of their 
					sacrifice and injuries, but also of the magnitude of the 
					shooting. They thanked the legislators for their efforts to 
					make the awards presentations possible.
 
 Receiving the 
					Purple Heart validates her experience, Carskadon said.
 
 “It validates that it was a terrorist activity,” she 
					said. “It draws a line, a distinction between workplace 
					violence and terrorism.”
 
 Kerry Cahill, daughter of 
					the lone civilian fatality on Nov. 5, 2009, said there is 
					more to do as too many veterans struggle with suicide and 
					behavioral health concerns from incidents such as the one 
					that claimed her father. Those concerns were what her father 
					devoted his life helping Soldiers through.
 
 “We're 
					not done,” she said. “With these medals, with all of this, 
					comes a great weight, because I am not doing enough is how I 
					feel every day because I can't do what my dad did. I am not 
					in the room with a Soldier every day, asking how they're 
					sleeping, asking if they need help.”
 
 Retired Staff 
					Sgt. Alonzo Lunsford, who was shot seven times Nov. 5 while 
					working alongside his friend Michael Cahill at the SRP site, 
					shared those worries about veteran suicides and his fellow 
					Fort Hood survivors.
 
 “Within our family, the Fort 
					Hood family,” Lunsford said, “we stay in constant 
					communication with each other so that we do not let those 
					demons of the night come back and haunt us.”
 By U.S. Army Heather Graham-AshleyIII Corps and Fort Hood 
			Public Affairs
 Provided 
					through DVIDS
 Copyright 2015
 More photos of Fort Hood Honoring Victims of Terrorist's November 2009 Shootings 
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