The core of the
United States of America Army Soldier’s Creed:
I will never accept defeat.
I will never quit.
I will never leave a fallen comrade.
For those that
know me, you know that it is amazingly rare for me to ask for help. I pride
myself on being able to take care of myself and help those I care about. To
discuss the following is not an easy topic for me to share with you. However, I
refuse to leave a fallen comrade and I am asking for your help in doing so.
US Army Nurse
Corp First Lieutenant Jennifer Moreno, 25, from San Diego, CA, was assigned to
Madigan Army Medical Center, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA. On Sunday, October
6, 2013 she along with three other US Army soldiers lost their lives in the Zhari
District of the Kandahar province in Afghanistan. 1LT Moreno, Army Ranger Sergeant
Patrick Hawkins, Criminal Investigation Command Sergeant Joseph Peters, and Army
Ranger Private First Class Cody Patterson were all working with a Joint Special
Operations Task Force when they were hit during a mission near the city of Kandahar. Along with the loss of 1LT Moreno, SGT Hawkins, SGT Peters,
and PFC Patterson, approximately 30 fellow team members sustained injuries.
The loss of any
life is tragic. It should never be a part of “normal” conversation. However,
this is one that hits a little closer to home. Nowhere else in the US medical
community is it a known expectation that doing your job could cost you your
life. 1LT Moreno was a teammate. She served under the same flag with the same
purpose as I.
Here is where the statement
I will never leave a fallen comrade
comes into play.
When a US Service Member dies in
the line of duty, their family can expect to receive the “death
gratuity” of $100,000 to immediately reach them within 24 to 36 hours of the
notice of their loss. These funds are designed to provide for the immediate travel
and other expenses in getting the family to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware so
that they may be present when their loved one returns home for the final time.
With the Legislative and Executive Branch’s current failure to produce a budget
these funds are not available to the families of those of whom we have lost
this fiscal year. I find this disgraceful and amazingly shameful.
I am asking for your help. Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, TAPS,
is a not-for-profit organization providing
immediate and long-term emotional help, hope, and healing to all who are
grieving the death of a loved one in military service to America. TAPS meets
its mission by providing peer-based emotional support, grief and trauma
resources, casework assistance, and connections to community-based care (taps.org). They work with every family of our Fallen Heroes regardless of what our government is doing.
As I write this, TAPS is in contact with 1LT
Moreno’s family. They are working with the family to arrange for travel,
lodging, and to cover other needs/expenses as they travel to Dover AFB to welcome
home their beloved daughter. This is a costly mission.
Please help me in my mission to not
abandon my fellow Officer, Soldier, and Nurse. Please consider a financial contribution
to TAPS. Please help bring 1LT Jennifer Moreno’s family a piece of comfort in
knowing that they do not have to suddenly produce the finances to get to their
daughter.
This could have been me. This could
have been my parents, siblings, and extended family being denied financial assistance
to be present for my final arrival home or to be present for my memorial service
or funeral.
Even if our government has failed, I
will not allow the Moreno family to be abandoned by the Nation that their
daughter died for.
I humbly come before you as a broken
soul asking for your assistance in caring for the family of my fellow Officer,
Soldier and Nurse.
To donate to Tragedy Assistance
Program for Survivors
1)
taps.org