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NEWS:
Working dog handler
receives Purple Heart |
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01/31/2007 |
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Maxwell AFB, AL |
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"Today, you have an example of what a truly great NCO can be,"
said the 42nd Air Base Wing commander to those attending the
January and February enlisted promotion ceremony at the Enlisted
Club Jan. 31. |
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Col.
Pete Costello referred to Staff Sgt. Robert Brown, a 42nd
Security Forces Squadron military working dog handler. Sergeant
Brown received a Purple Heart at the ceremony for wounds he
received while he and his military working dog Nero were
deployed to Iraq. |
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Photo: Awarded Purple Heart - - SSgt Robert Brown, 42nd Security
Forces Squadron working dog handler at Maxwell Air Force Base,
AL received a Purple Heart Jan 31, 2007 for wounds he sustained
he and his military working dog “Nero” deployed to Iraq. While
checking a field near Tahrir City, Iraq, Nero warned the
sergeant to an improvised explosive hidden in the field. The
IED was then detonated by an insurgent, and SSgt Brown suffered
a concussion and a contusion to his right leg. |
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The
colonel said the Purple Heart is the oldest medal in the
American military, devised by Gen. George Washington to reward
his troops for wounds sustained in battle, and that it was a
"very special day" at Maxwell-Gunter. He said it was nice to be
able to present the medal at a formal observance. |
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"Unlike today, many military members coming back don't receive
their Purple Heart at a ceremony, but in a hospital bed,"
Colonel Costello said. |
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Sergeant Brown said it was also a special day for him, and he
felt, "overwhelmed." |
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"I'm glad I'm back here in one
piece, as it could have been a lot worse for us," he said. "I
never would have thought my deployment to Iraq would result in a
ceremony like this," Sergeant Brown noted. |
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Sergeant Brown said he was grateful
for the assistance Nero gave him during the deployment, but
especially on that day. He said he might have been killed if
Nero had not warned him of the danger. |
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Sergeant Brown, who has been in the
Air Force about eight years, sustained a concussion and a
contusion to his right leg when an improvised explosive device
exploded. He and Nero were checking a field in Tahrir City,
Iraq, for hidden weapons when Nero alerted to a suspicious
object. The object was detonated by a nearby insurgent, and
shrapnel struck the sergeant in the head and leg. |
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Ginger Brown, Sergeant Brown's
wife, said she is "very proud" of him and glad he returned
safely back home. |
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"When something like this happens,
it makes you reassess your priorities and value and appreciate
each other a little more," she said. "I knew about deployments
when I married him, and I know he will probably be going back
again. And, I will be waiting for him when he returns."
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Mrs. Brown said she too loves Nero
and is grateful to him for his actions on that day in Iraq. She
said being a working dog handler was what her husband always
wanted to do in the Air Force, and he has worked with Nero since
his arrival at Maxwell. |
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