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Loved Ones' Stories

SGT Christopher T. Monroe
December 3, 1985 -- October 25, 2005
When Chris turned 17, he got his mother to sign the papers so he
could join the Army Reserves. Part of the reason he joined
was the educational benefits that he could use when he graduated
from high school. The other reason was the terrorists in
Afghanistan and Iraq. He went to his basic training at
Fort Jackson the summer of 2003. He would wear his uniform to
high school twice a week during his senior year.
After he graduated from high school he was interested in
going to Indiana University and he met the love of his life.
Angela is a good hearted girl who was just a few months older
than Chris but that made no difference to him. He had asked her
to marry him about six months after they had met and her family
had adopted him like he was their son.
In 2004 his reserve unit in Indiana said that a unit in
Michigan needs a few people to go on a deployment to Iraq
starting in the summer of 2005. Without hesitation he
volunteered for this deployment and was transferred to the
Michigan reserve unit. He was looking into buying a house so
that when he married Angela they had a place of their own. He
wanted to get married before he went to Iraq but Angela said
that they should wait because they would have plenty of time
after he got back from Iraq for that.
On October 25, 2005, Chris was driving a 5 ton truck pulling
an armed HUMV that was going to have maintenance work done on
it. They were just outside of Basra, Iraq on a 6 lane
highway with a gravel median separating the 3 lanes. Chris
was driving the number two vehicle in the convoy when on the
other side of the road they saw a civilian BMW flip over. The
NCO with him yelled IED! but they discovered it was not
an Improvised Explosive Device. The convoy from Chris on
back stopped to help the civilian driver. The senior
officer on site ordered Chris to pull his 5 ton across the road
so the weapon on the HUMV could provide defense in front of the
convoy. Everyone was to get out and provide security while
the medics helped out the Iraqi civilian driver. Chris was
standing on the left front side of his 5 ton with his weapon at
the ready, providing a secure perimeter when it happened.
Unknown to the convoy the rear check point had let a 3
SUV British security detail enter the convoy's perimeter.
It was 850 meters from the rear check point to where Chris was
standing.
The next morning around 10:30am, an Army Chaplain and a
Sergeant First Class were at my door. This is where the real
story about Chris begins. I was told that Chris had been
killed in an accident the night before and was handed a business
card to the Fort Hood Casualty Affairs Office. They told
me to call them and they would give me more information. I
called them and they told me as much as what I had already been
told. My family was dealing with the Casualty Affairs
Office at Fort Knox my father gave me the phone number to that
office so I gave them a call as well. They said they did
not have a copy of the divorce decree and needed to see it so I
faxed it to them. It was at this point I was asked as the
primary next of kin what I wanted to have done with the body.
We had planned to have him sent back home to Indiana to go with
what had already been planned. It was about this time they
discovered I had served in the military and all information
about Chris was only volunteered if I asked, and then it was
limited.
Even though by Army regulation I was the primary next of kin,
that was removed from me. On the Friday after he was killed I
asked what the time frame was for him getting back home. I was
told that when he got to Dover they would have to do an autopsy
and then embalm him that this would take about 72 hours.
That Friday he had not left Iraq yet but they would let me know
anything when it happened. Over the weekend and Monday no
one called me about Chris so Tuesday I called Fort Knox.
When I asked the first thing out of the mouth of the Casualty
Affairs Officer was, "Uh Oh, they have already sent an escort."
I asked what that meant because I had never had this happen
before. They said Chris had arrived from Iraq Sunday night
and that Chris was going to be coming in to Indianapolis the
next night. I had to go to Fort Hood and get my airplane tickets
to leave the next day. I got to Indiana a few hours before Chris
did.
No one beyond the Chaplain and the SFC came to see me before
I left for Indiana. That night my ex-wife and I met with
the Casualty Affairs Officer from the reserve unit in Indiana.
We went to the Indianapolis airport with a hearse to pick up
Chris. The next time I saw Chris was the Flag draped
coffin on the loading dock at the freight section at the
airport. The Casualty Affairs officer did not bring enough
people to put Chris into the hearse. The Casualty Affairs
Officer, his driver, the escort, two police officers, Angela's
aunt, and I. put Chris in the hearse. At the funeral home
I asked the funeral director if an autopsy had been done on
Chris. He said he could not see that one had been done.
Even when I got to Indiana no one from the military came to see
me to offer their condolences. The Casualty Affairs
Officer spent all of his time with my ex-wife even though his
driver had been assigned to be her escort. Even though
Chris was at his battle station with his weapon loaded ready to
return fire if fired upon, he did not receive the Purple Heart.
so before we buried him I gave him mine that I had received when
I was in the Marines when I was in Beirut, Lebanon.
Angela
had been named as the beneficiary of Chris' SGLI and had a power
of attorney to deal with Chris' affairs before he was killed.
At a meeting Angela had with the Casualty Affairs Officer. he
gave her copies of the interim casualty report. When I
asked for a copy of the documents I was told I would have to
file a freedom of information act request to get them.
When the media reported about Chris' funeral on TV all of his
family and Angela were mentioned but I was not. It was a
sad joke that we made that I was nobody, just his father.
When I got back to Fort Hood and told them what had happened
they could not believe it. The woman at Fort Hood that I
was dealing with I had known when I was in the Army gave me the
documents I could not get in Indiana.
It took about 4 months for the Army to send me the reports
about the events of Chris' death. One of the first documents I
received was the autopsy results. The cause of death was
blunt
force trauma, they claimed. A few days later I received a
copy of the final casualty report stating the cause of death was
blast force trauma. It was when I got the final report from the
Army investigator I had more questions than they answered.
The first lie was the conditions at the time of the accident.
In the report they said it was pitch black outside at 6:30pm but
I had been over there and knew this is not right. I have a
program for star watching that allows me to program in day,
time, and place. When I put in the day, time and as close
to the place of the events there was almost 2 hours of daylight
when it happened. The blame for the accident was placed on
several American soldiers. rather than the driver of the SUV
that had hit him. The investigator said because the
British security detail driver was allowed to enter the convoys
perimeter he was not at fault. I contacted the British
government about this accident but they informed me they knew
nothing about it. It was not a British SUV like the Army
investigator said. I found out that Chris was fully conscious
from the moment he was hit to the moment he died. One of
the things that got me was that the onsite medical personnel
took 15 minutes to determine that a traumatic surgical amputation of his
right leg was urgent and he needed to be Medevaced out.
It was during the flight to the hospital that Chris died.
The death certificate lists cause of death as traumatic
amputation of the right leg but the autopsy does not list
amputation at all. Many of the injuries listed in the
autopsy were not evident on Chris. On the autopsy report
the cause of death was blunt force trauma but the final casualty
report the cause of death was blast force trauma. That is
not a misspelling that is a mistake. All reports are
screened to be sure they are accurate.
The driver of the SUV, a British citizen, works for a
company called Erinys which is a South African company with its
home office in London. This company serves one propose and
that is to supply mercenaries to hot spots world wide. The
driver a British citizen was one of these mercenaries. The
director of operation in Iraq for this company is a good friend of
Dick Cheney and was supposed to become the Prime Minister of Iraq
but things did not work out the way they had planned.
Erinys has a web site that states they have an office in
Houston, Texas, but when you go to the address it is nothing but
a post office box. The company states it has a manager of
operation at this office but they have failed to register this
office with our government. Failing to register their
office is a violation of federal law. Neither the
mercenary company nor the driver
of the SUV is not being held accountable for the wrongful death
of SGT Christopher Monroe. I was told that because the
Army investigator blamed U.S. soldiers for letting the SUV pass
they were the cause of death. There is a belief that the
investigator was paid off by the mercenary company to put the blame on our
soldiers because of the flaws in statements and documents.
The driver makes the point in his statement that at the time
of the accident he was told it was not his fault. There is
no way anyone could make that statement without an
investigation. The SUV was destroyed that night burned in place
because they said it could not be recovered but when the
investigator went to the accident site later the burned our SUV
was gone. That was the way of destroying any evidence.
The Casualty Affairs Officer when he received the personal
effects of my son by regulation he was to hold them for 40 days so
that any legal action could be made in dividing them between the
mother, father, and fiancée. The Casualty Affairs Officer, who
was a Captain, was advised by an Inspector General Officer of
the rank of Colonel. He told the Captain to follow
regulations. The Captain told the Colonel what he could do
with the regulation and immediately gave all of the personal
effects to the mother who said she would return things to the
father and fiancée.
When I was in the military, regulation was the
heart of the operations of the military. You can add to the
regulation but you could never take away from the regulation. I
have a JAG lawyer and Inspector General Officer who agree that by
regulation I should have been the primary next of kin and the
one to receive the personal effects, but the Army refuses to
agree with their own regulations. I have even gone to my
congressional representative and senator in getting things
corrected but they have not done a thing. One of the things I
was promised was photographs taken by the unit photographer of
Chris in his casket at the funeral home. The Army refused to
answer all requests made of them.
Perry Monroe
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about this case, please
contact me through this website.
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