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				New Group Of Wounded Vets Returns To Iraq(February 4, 2010)
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 |  |  | CAMP VICTORY, Iraq (Feb. 1, 2010) -- Rick Kell, executive 
					director of the Troops First Foundation, has done it again: 
					Six wounded warriors arrived in Baghdad in C-130 Hercules, 
					Jan. 31, and took their first steps in Iraq after being 
					severely wounded the last time they were here. 
 This is the fourth time Kell, with support from the USO, has 
					returned wounded servicemembers to Iraq as part of 
					"Operation Proper Exit," a program aimed at helping the 
					warriors find emotional closure after being injured.
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								| Command Sgt. Maj. Lawrence Wilson, United States Forces-Iraq command sergeant major, introduces the wounded warriors of Operation Proper Exit IV, Jan. 31, 2010 at the Al Faw Palace in Baghdad, Iraq. (Left to right) Cpl. Charles Dominguez, Sgt. Jay Fain, Sgt. Omar Avila, Sgt. 1st Class Michael Schlitz, Master Sgt. Tom Carpenter, Capt. Ferris Butler and Capt. Lonnie Moore. |  |  | Although this is the fourth trip, this set of Soldiers differs from previous 
	groups, as all six are retired. 
 Capt. Ferris Butler was serving with 2nd Battalion, 14th Infantry Regiment, 
	2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, in Yusufiyah, Iraq, when he 
	was struck by an improvised explosive device Dec. 21, 2006. Butler, a Port 
	Tobacco, Md. native, suffered a bi-lateral amputation below the knee. 
	Currently, Butler works as the executive assistant for Ekistics Development 
	Firm based out of Baltimore, Md., is on the board of advisors for Kell's 
	Troops First Foundation and is an Amputee Coalition of America peer mentor. 
	He is a ninth-generation servicemember and has a brother serving in 
	Afghanistan.
 
 While serving in Ramadi, Iraqi, with the 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry 
	Regiment, 1st Heavy Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Capt. Lonnie 
	Moore was struck by a rocket propelled grenade. Moore underwent an 
	above-the-knee amputation after the April 6, 2004, attack. A program analyst 
	for the Army Warrior Transition Command, the Chula Vista, Calif., native is 
	also a board member on the National Council on Disability and a chairman for 
	Operation Homefront - Southern California.
 
 The 1st Battalion (Airborne), 503rd Infantry, was deployed to Ramadi in 2005 
	when Master Sgt. Tom Carpenter was injured in an explosion. The "First Rock" 
	Soldier suffered an above-the-knee amputation, in addition to a left foot 
	amputation. Carpenter was originally scheduled to join Soldiers on Operation 
	Proper Exit III, but severe weather in his hometown of Hastings, Mich., 
	prevented him from leaving. Carpenter is enrolled in school and hoping to 
	finish college in the future, while enjoying the company of his children and 
	grandchildren.
 
 Sgt. Omar Avila, a Brownsville, Texas, native, was serving in Adhamiyah, 
	Iraq, when he was injured May 14, 2007, by a 200-pound, deeply-buried IED. 
	The 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st 
	Infantry Division, Soldier sustained burns to 75 percent of his body and a 
	foot amputation. Since retiring, Avila has started college again, coaches a 
	basketball team for young children and speaks at local schools in the area.
 
 About one month later, on June 26, 2007, fellow 1-26 Inf. Soldier Sgt. Jay 
	Fain was struck by an explosively formed penetrator on the side of the road. 
	In addition to sustaining internal injuries and burns and scars to his body, 
	Fain, of Columbia, S.C., suffered a right leg amputation. He is currently an 
	active member of the Combat Veterans Motorcycle Association.
 
 Cpl. Charles Dominguez was serving with the 501st Military Police Company, 
	Special Troops Battalion, with the 1st Armored Division, when he was 
	attacked by a suicide bomber Aug. 22, 2006, in Ramadi. Dominguez sustained 
	second and third degree burns to his face, back and hands. The Ontario, 
	Calif., native is currently the building manager of the Warrior and Family 
	Support Center at Brooke Army Medical Center, which houses the Army's Burn 
	Unit.
 
 Also returning in the role of military mentors are Sgt. 1st Class Joshua 
	Olson and Sgt. 1st Class Michael Schlitz. This is the third Operation Proper 
	Exit trip for Olson, who had his entire right leg amputated in 2006 after 
	being struck by a RPG. Schlitz, on his second Operation Proper Exit tour, 
	sustained burns to 85 percent of his body and lost both hands when his 
	vehicle hit an IED in 2007.
 
 The Soldiers will travel throughout Iraq for the next week with Command Sgt. 
	Maj. Lawrence Wilson, United States Forces-Iraq command sergeant major. 
	Wilson has worked with Kell for nearly a year to continue to bring troops 
	back to the places that had changed their lives forever.
 
 "We welcome these warriors. This is going to be a great trip for these guys, 
	and we thank everyone for their support in getting them to his point," he 
	told a crowd of servicemembers gathered to welcome the warriors.
 |  | Article and photo by Army Sgt. Lindsey BradfordUnited States Forces-Iraq Public Affairs Office
 Copyright 2010
 
					
					Reprinted from 
Army News Service / Army website 
					
					
					
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