SSG STEPHEN G. MARTIN
330th Military Police Company
Army
Staff Sgt. Stephen G. Martin, Age 39, of Rhinelander, Wisconsin
Assigned to the 330th Military Police Detachment, Army Reserve,
Sheboygan, Wisconsin
Died July 1, 2004 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington,
D.C. from injuries sustained June 24, 2004 when a car bomb exploded
near his guard post in Mosul, Iraq.
(www.militarycity.com)
Wisconsin policeman dies of wounds in Iraq
(Associated Press)
RHINELANDER,
Wis. — A Rhinelander police sergeant and Army reservist has died from
wounds suffered in Iraq in an attack that killed another Wisconsin
reservist, police said.
Staff Sgt.
Stephen G. Martin, 39, died Friday at Walter Reed Army Medical Center
after life support was discontinued, according to a press release from
the Rhinelander Police Department. He had been flown to Washington,
D.C., on Wednesday from a medical facility in Germany.
Martin, a
member of the Sheboygan-based Army Reserve’s 330th Military Police
Detachment, suffered severe head and abdominal injuries when a truck
bomb exploded June 24 near his checkpoint outside a U.S. military
compound at Mosul.
Sgt.
Charles Kiser, 37, of Cleveland, Wis., who also was with the 330th, was
killed in the attack. His funeral was held Thursday.
Martin, a
New Jersey native, joined the Rhinelander police force in February 1996.
He spent
most summers on the city’s bicycle patrol and also worked in city
schools. He and another officer conducted bicycle rodeos, instructing
children how to ride bikes safely.
He
previously had served in the military and decided in January 2003 to
join the 330th, Police Chief Glenn Parmeter said.
Martin’s
unit was activated in December and arrived in Iraq a few months later.
Funeral
arrangements were pending Friday evening, police said.
Mourners
pay tribute to Indiana native killed in Iraq
(The Associated Press)
RHINELANDER,
Wis. — A police officer and Army reservist who died as a result of
injuries he received in a bomb attack in Iraq knew the dangers he faced
and was prepared to die, his father said Thursday as he eulogized his
son.
More than
700 people paid a final tribute to Staff Sgt. Stephen Martin during his
funeral at Rhinelander High School.
Martin, a
member of the Sheboygan-based Army Reserve 330th Military Police
Detachment, received head and internal injuries June 24 when a truck
bomb exploded near his checkpoint outside a U.S. military compound in
Mosul. He died July 2 after life support was discontinued.
“His prayer
before he left for Iraq was ‘I prefer to die rather than come home
maimed for the rest of my life,”’ said his father, the Rev. Jim Martin.
“Me and my family believe God answered that prayer, and he is at a
better place.”
Among the
mourners Thursday were about 200 uniformed police officers, Gov. Jim
Doyle and Attorney General Peg Lautenschlager. Martin’s 21-year-old
son, Seth, played guitar and sang the Eric Clapton song “Tears in
Heaven” during the service.
Martin was
remembered as an outdoorsman, patriot, practical joker, musician,
vegetarian and dedicated Rhinelander police officer.
His father
said he sometimes considered his son strange as a child.
“Hour after
hour, he read the encyclopedia,” Martin said to quiet laughter.
“Was he
perfect? No. Was he honest? Yes. Was he straightforward? You better
believe it. That was the person he was.”
Martin said
he lost another son to leukemia before Stephen was born, and Stephen
always said he wished he had known his brother.
“What is
exciting for me today is when he gets to heaven, I can see Stephen’s
older brother looking at him, saying ‘Hey, bro, where have you been?”’
said Martin, of Columbia City, Ind.
Before
Thursday’s service, mourners filed past Martin’s open, flag-draped
casket. It stood in front of a stage in the high school’s auditorium
near a table covered with medals, photographs, flowers and the book
“For Whom the Bell Tolls” by Ernest Hemingway.
Two easels
displayed photographs of Martin wearing his uniform, laughing with
family members, riding a bicycle and doing other activities.
Rhinelander
Police Sgt. John Hirsch said Martin devoted his life to serving others
and was good at training new recruits. Hirsch said he also liked
practical jokes, once putting a dead squirrel in Hirsch’s squad car.
“I’m sure
Steve drove every street in the city to find the right squirrel,”
Hirsch said.
Army Brig.
Gen. Michael Beasley called Martin a brave and inspiring man with
superb leadership and communication skills.
“A perfect
man in Iraq for a very, very hard job,” said Beasley, commanding
general of the 88th Regional Readiness Command, which includes Martin’s
detachment.
Martin’s
partner in the Rhinelander Police Department, Greg DeRosier, said he
will remember Martin’s enthusiasm for life and patriotism.
“When 9/11
happened, he was so angry and volatile that this had happened to our
country. He wanted to go over there as a patriot to defend our
freedom,” he said.
The 330th
Military Police Detachment arrived in Iraq in March. Martin was a
supervisor at the Mosul Public Safety Academy, where he was responsible
for training Iraqi police recruits.
Martin, an
Indiana native, served in the Army as a military police officer in
South Korea and Fort Dix, N.J., from 1984 to 1990. He later was a
member of the Trenton, N.J., Police Department and then moved to
Rhinelander, where he joined the police department in 1996.
In addition
to his son, Martin’s survivors include his wife, three stepdaughters in
Rhinelander and two daughters who live elsewhere.
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