Winding paths led victims to Iraq stress clinic
Five were killed in war's deadliest case of soldier-on-soldier violence
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WILMINGTON, N.C. - Keith Springle, who grew up swimming and fishing off the North Carolina coast and seemed destined as a boy to join the Navy, was in Iraq because it was his duty as a military social worker. Dr. Matthew Houseal, a 54-year-old Army reservist and psychiatrist, was there because he felt he needed to be.
Regardless of how they came to be there, both made it their mission to help their fellow service members cope with the stress of life in the combat zone. Soldiers like the Maryland rebel who liked tinkering with guns and despised "pencil pushers"; or the Peru native who, whether he was walking the streets of New Jersey or the dirt roads of Iraq, was a magnet for candy-seeking kids; or the shy video gamer from Missouri whose refusal to back down probably cost him his life.
Stress brought the five together earlier this week at a Baghdad clinic, the emotionally wounded and the healers. And stress is what killed them.
Authorities say Sgt. John M. Russell, who was nearing the end of his third tour in Iraq, was deeply angry at the military when he walked into the combat stress clinic at Camp Liberty on Monday and opened fire.
Killed were Springle, 52, a Navy commander from Beaufort, N.C.; Houseal of Amarillo, Texas; Army Sgt. Christian E. Bueno-Galdos, 25, of Paterson, N.J.; Spc. Jacob D. Barton, 20, of Lenox, Mo.; and Pfc. Michael E. Yates Jr., 19, of Federalsburg, Md., who had met Russell shortly before the shootings.
Traced a grid across the globe
The paths that brought these six men together traced a grid across the globe, from South America to rural Missouri, from the islands of Alaska to deepest Antarctica, before intersecting so tragically in an Army clinic.
Family and teachers said Jacob Barton was a quiet student who loved graphic novels and science fiction. Growing up with his grandmother in the house, he sometimes had trouble relating to kids his own age.
"His grandmother was foremost on his mind at all times," said Rod Waldrip, Barton's high school English teacher at Rolla High School, where Barton graduated last year. "He sometimes wouldn't do after-school activities because he had to see if she was OK. She was his main concern."
When Barton's mother died of an aneurysm last year at age 42, he took it very hard.
"We would have discussions about religion and heaven and what it would be like, and hell, and things like that," Waldrip said.
Barton's older sister had been in the Army, and by graduation he'd already made up his mind to follow her. The grandmother he rushed home to see, Rose Coleman, said he was adjusting to life in the Army and that he "seemed to like it."
Although he was reserved, he wasn't afraid. Waldrip remembers seeing Barton come to the rescue of somebody who was getting bullied.
"He wouldn't say much unless there was some injustice being done, and then he would speak up."
Coleman said the Army told the family that Barton died trying to shield another man from the shooting.
"And he tried to talk the guy with the gun to put his gun down," she said.
'Preventive maintenance'
Springle, whose first assignment with the Navy was in the Aleutian Islands off Alaska, knew mental health problems were not addressed in the past and wanted to be make sure to treat the issues faced by soldiers and their families, said Staff Sgt. Robert Mullis from the Boone-based 1451st Transportation Company of the N.C. National Guard, who was part of a civilian outreach program with Springle.
"He saw it as preventive maintenance," Mullis said of Springle. "They've just been through some tough experiences. He was reaching out trying to try and stop a big beast before it got started."
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AP Pfc. Michael Edward Yates Jr. and his son Kamren in a family photograph. |
"It was a carefree life," said Dudley, a fishing boat captain who was nine years older than Springle. "I am sure that he joined the Navy so that he could be at sea or close to it."
All who knew him talked about Springle's sense of humor and upbeat attitude. But Springle — whose son and son-in-law have each done a tour in Iraq — took the issue of combat stress very seriously. Although deploying to Iraq was his duty, his work on the homefront with the Citizen-Soldier Support Program was a labor of love.
"This was volunteer work," said Bob Goodale, director of behavioral mental health for the Chapel Hill-based program. "He was doing this because it was the right thing to do — training civilian providers so they were better equipped to serve the families and the service members."
Houseal, a major in the Army Reserves, was under no obligation to go to Iraq, but he was already something of an adventurer.
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