• Please take a moment and update your account profile. If you have an updated account profile with basic information on why you are on Air Warriors it will help other people respond to your posts. How do you update your profile you ask?

    Go here:

    Edit Account Details and Profile

This is not good.

Status
Not open for further replies.

VetteMuscle427

is out to lunch.
None
http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/South/08/25/father.ablaze/index.html

CNN) -- After being informed that his 20- year-old son was killed while serving in Iraq, a Florida man doused a U.S. government van with gasoline and set it on fire while sitting inside.

Carlos Arredondo, 44, was severely burned and rushed to Hollywood Regional Hospital in Florida after learning that Pfc. Alexander Arredondo had died, police said.

"He suffered serious burns," said Detective Carlos Negron.

Negron said the young man was killed in Iraq Tuesday.

Melida Arredondo told CNN-affiliate WFOR, "My husband did not take the news well."

The events started around 2:15 p.m. when three Marine casualty officers arrived at the home to inform the Arredondo family of the death.

Arredondo went to his garage and came out carrying a propane tank, a gallon of gasoline and a welder's torch, police spokesman Tony Rode said.

The Marines tried to calm him, Rode said, but Arredondo smashed the window of their van, got inside and doused it with the gasoline.

Then he set it on fire.

"Unfortunately, the man was caught in the fire," a police statement said.

Video showed the van engulfed in flames.

The three Marines pulled the father from the burning van and had him "drop and roll," police said.

Arredondo was taken to a hospital and then to a burn center in Miami, Florida, with serious burns over much of his body.

"A bad situation turned ugly is what happened," Rode said.

"He's actually inside and, at one point, comes out of the vehicle pretty much on fire," Rode said. "He was burning on his arms, legs and hands."

The U.S. Marines had no immediate comment.

A call to the family's home was not immediately returned.
 

Attachments

  • storyvan.jpg
    storyvan.jpg
    10.1 KB · Views: 83

VetteMuscle427

is out to lunch.
None
yeah, that story kinda paints the picture of pain. I wonder why 3 Marines didn't stop a man with a can of gas and a blow torch going for the van.
 

plmtree

Registered User
You have no idea how hard it is to conduct a casualty call. I don't either but I worked closely with the Officers/SNCO's who did them and it takes a huge physical and psychological toll on them (and their support staff), just as it does the family. Here you're dealing with mourning parents/spouses, something completely different from anything you've been trained to do as a Marine. They were simply caught off guard.
 

phrogdriver

More humble than you would understand
pilot
Super Moderator
VetteMuscle427 said:
yeah, that story kinda paints the picture of pain. I wonder why 3 Marines didn't stop a man with a can of gas and a blow torch going for the van.

Well for starters, would you in a million years envision someone doing that? You're going to want a pretty good idea of what's going to happen before taking action, lest the headline be,"Marines beat grieving parent."

Second, I try not to mess with guys carrying gasoline and blowtorches, or even worse, a blowtorch AND a pliers, a la Pulp Fiction.
 

EngineGirl

Sleepy Head
I saw this on the news this morning and it caused me heartache. The marine who was killed, his family, and the marines who made the casuality call are all in my prayers.

-Erin Leigh
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top