One of our Adoptees, Lejeune Marine dies in Afghanistan

January 7, 2009 - 5:41 PM  
DAILY NEWS STAFF  

A Camp Lejeune Marine died Tuesday during combat in Afghanistan, the Department of Defense announced.

Lance Cpl. Jessie A. Cassada, 19, of Hendersonville was supporting combat operations in Helmand province, according to the press release. Cassada was an infantryman assigned to 3rd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment.

This was Cassada's first deployment, according to a Marine Corps press release. He joined the Marine Corps on Aug. 20, 2007 and his awards include the Afghanistan Campaign Medal, the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal and the National Defense Service Medal

 


Family members mourn the loss of Lance Cpl. Alberto Francesconi.

francesconiA Bronx  Marine is the first U.S. casualty in Afghanistan  this year - killed by a land mine during an ambush New Year's Day in a tragedy his family learned of as they gathered to ring in 2009.

Lance Cpl. Alberto Francesconi , 21, died during combat in the volatile southern Helmand Province .

"I still don't believe it. I think it's a mistake, a dream," said his 23-year-old wife, Cynthia. Francesconi's older brother, 39-year-old Navy reservist Robert Rivera , said his family was gathered at their home in Bedford Park  to ring in the new year. Around 11 p.m. - which was 9:30 a.m. New Year's Day in Afghanistan - one of Francesconi's fellow Marines  called from the battlefield to tell them he had died. "The first to find out was my mother and father," Rivera said. "I tried to settle her down. She kept saying the only way to confirm it is if they come to the door." "The first to find out was my mother and father," Rivera said. "I tried to settle her down. She kept saying the only way to confirm it is if they come to the door." Just minutes before midnight, there was a knock on the door. Two Marines appeared in the doorway to confirm their worst fears. At least he was fighting for something," said his mother, Minerva Negron , 58. "He died like a hero." "I am just praying for the other soldiers," she said. "All of them are like my son. When I read the newspapers, when I see the news, I cry for them, too."

Since the war began in 2001, 631 soldiers have died in Afghanistan.  This was Francesconi's second deployment to a combat zone. He left for Iraq  in July 2007 - and returned home New Year's Day last year. Rivera said his brother was nervous about going to Afghanistan, which has gotten increasingly violent over the past year.  He told his wife  ahead of time, 'Just in case I don't come home, I want to be buried with my grandmother,' " he said.  His mother said she took comfort in knowing that her son would be laid to rest next to his grandmother. "She's going to take care of him," she said.  Rivera said he last spoke with his brother two days after Christmas. "He told me they were out in the field and one of his partners stepped on a land mine. Luckily it was buried deep into the ground so he just shattered his ankles," he said.  "But after that news, he was getting scared a little more. It's worse there than people are talking about." Francesconi, who was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force  at Camp Lejeune , N.C. , will be flown to New York  on Tuesday. His funeral is scheduled for Friday.


January 27th, 2009 6:17 am
Afghanistan bomb blast kills Brooklyn Marine and aspiring actor, 25

By Kerry Burke and Leo Standora / New York Daily News

Just about everyone who knew aspiring actor Julian (Jules) Brennan thought he'd be a star someday. The handsome 25-year-old Brooklyn man with a killer smile could sing, dance, crack you up with a joke or just endear himself to you with his sometimes goofy personality, say friends. He wanted a career on the stage or in movies, but not before he followed a family tradition of serving his country, so he joined the Marines. A roadside bomb blast killed Lance Cpl. Brennan Saturday during a combat mission in Afghanistan's Farah Province, a growing hotbed of Taliban activity, officials said. He became the second New Yorker to fall in Afghanistan this year while serving with the 3rd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Lejeune, N.C. Marine Lance Cpl. Alberto Francesconi, 21, lost his life to a land mine in Afghanistan on New Year's Day. Brennan's brother, James, and father, Billy, a singer who tours the nation entertaining kids with environment-themed tunes, were too distraught to talk. But family friend Charles Marahan, 75, described Julian as a "real swell kid, a very good-looking boy who was the darling of the girls. Jules was made for the stage and the movies. You either have it or you don't, and he had it."  Brennan graduated from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Manhattan in 2005 with an associate's degree in drama, then took a job as a carpenter with the Martha Stewart show. "He was in a couple of Off-Broadway shows and it looked like that was what he was going to do," said Marahan, "but then he got the bug to join the Marines."

"His grandfather fought in the Pacific theater in WWII, and Jules wanted to emulate him," he explained. "The family had a military tradition, and he wanted to live up to it. "We're all shook up about this because we expected to see him come back," Marahan said dolefully. "The Marines, they offered him a commission because he was a college graduate, but he turned it down. All he wanted to do was one tour then return to acting." Brennan also was a pretty fair athlete who finished the 2007 New York City Triathlon in 2:44:21. On his MySpace page, he described himself "as a guy who will go out of his way to make someone laugh, write a great song, find a reason to dance, and watch the sun rise every chance he gets."


 

Please take a moment to read these names and reflect on the "person" represented by each name. Each one volunteered to serve America, to protect their fellow Americans, and to advance American values throughout the world. Each one gave their life in that service. To each one, we owe a tremendous debt of gratitude. Not one of them will ever be forgotten! We need to remember that we've lost the best men and women our Country has to offer, and their families have suffered so much for our freedom.

 

( Please click here to view other fallen heroes. )

"The Pentagon Memorial Project" at the Pentagon can not be forgotten. The memorial commemorates 184 victims of the terrorist attack at the Pentagon on September 11, 2001. This memorial is put up in remembrance of those who gave their lives to all of us when the Pentagon was struck. The memorial is constructed at the point of impact of the airplane that took their lives. They were just doing a days work for all of us, unsuspecting that this was their last. The memorial is funded not by tax dollars but by your and my donations. Please take the time to consider donating to this well deserved memorial.


> http://memorial.pentagon.mil <

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