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Kelseyville family mourns son killed in roadside bombing in Pakistan PDF Print E-mail
Written by Elizabeth Larson   
Saturday, 06 February 2010

Image
Sgt. 1st Class David J. Hartman, 27, and two fellow soldiers died on Wednesday, February 5, 2010, in Timagura, Pakistan after their unit was hit by an improvised explosive device planted by insurgents. Photo courtesy of the US Army Special Operations Command.


 



KELSEYVILLE – A Kelseyville family is mourning the loss of a son, killed this week in Pakistan.


Sgt. 1st Class David J. Hartman, 27, was killed on Wednesday by a terrorist bomb while in Pakistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, the Department of Defense reported Friday.


Hartman's father, Greg Hartman, and stepmother, Kate, live in the Clear Lake Riviera, while his mother, Mikail Bacon, lives in Pardeeville, Wisc.


The family couldn't be reached for comment on Friday.


However, late Friday their pastor, Victor Rogers, who leads the North Shore Christian Fellowship in Upper Lake, said he just returned from picking the Hartmans up from the Sacramento airport.


He said they had just returned from Delaware, where David Hartman's body had arrived from Pakistan. The young man's body is due to return to California next week, but funeral arrangements are currently undecided.


Hartman and wife, Cherise, have a young son, Michael, and were expecting their second child together.


Officials said Hartman died along with Sgt. 1st Class Matthew S. Sluss-Tiller, 35, of Callettsburg, Ky. – who, like Hartman, was part of the 96th Civil Affairs Battalion (Airborne), 95th Civil Affairs Brigade (Airborne), out of Fort Bragg, N.C. – and Staff Sgt. Mark A. Stets, 39, of El Cajon, assigned to the 8th Psychological Operations Battalion (Airborne), 4th Psychological Operations Group (Airborne), out of Fort Bragg, N.C.


The men were killed in Timagura, Pakistan – located in the Lower Dir District of Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province – when their unit was hit by an improvised explosive device planted by insurgents, the Department of Defense reported.


The United Kingdom's Telegraph newspaper reported that the three deaths were believed to be the first US military deaths to occur in Pakistan.


The US Embassy in Islamabad reported that in addition to the deaths of Hartman, Sluss-Tiller and Stets, two other soldiers were injured in the bomb blast, which occurred at around 11:20 a.m. Wednesday.


Rear Adm. Hal Pittman, director of Communication at U.S. Central Command, said the three men and their fellow members of the military were in Pakistan at the request of that country's government.


The US military had been invited by the Pakistan Frontier Corps to conduct training in Lower Dir, according to the US Embassy. They were attending the opening of a new girls' school that had been renovated through US humanitarian assistance when the bomb went off.


Such schools have become a particular target for insurgents, according to recent press reports.


Pittman said the attack demonstrated “the terrorists' lack of respect for life and their willingness to use violence against women and children for advancing their malign vision.”

 

 

 

 

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Sgt. 1st Class Matthew S. Sluss-Tiller, 35, of Callettsburg, Ky. (right) and Staff Sgt. Mark A. Stets, 39, of El Cajon, Calif., also were killed in Timagura, Pakistan on Wednesday, February 5, 2010, as the result of a roadside bomb. Photos courtesy of the US Army Special Operations Command.
 

 

 

 


Along with the military casualties, the US Embassy reported that several Pakistani citizens – among them children – were killed and injured in the blast.


The US Embassy condemned the bombing. “The carnage at the school in Lower Dir clearly shows the terrorists' vision. The United States and Pakistan are partners in fighting terrorism – and our people are working together to build schools,” according to an agency statement.


Both Hartman and Stuss-Tiller were civil affairs senior noncommissioned officers and had previously deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan in support of the war on terror, according to a statement from the US Army Special Operations Command.


Hartman was assigned to Team 622 in Company B, 96th Civil Affairs Battalion (Airborne), 95th Civil Affairs Brigade (Abn.), Fort Bragg, N.C.


In November 2002 Hartman deployed to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom and in 2004 he supported Operation Iraqi Freedom, according to a Special Forces biography.


"Both Matthew and David are heroes in my mind – they volunteered to come to Army Special Operations and the 95th Civil Affairs Bde. (Airborne), they both believed in what they were doing, and they were committed to helping people in a place where violence against innocent populations was too often commonplace," said Col. Michael J. Warmack, commander, 95th Civil Affairs Bde. "In the pursuit of what they believed, they made the ultimate sacrifice.”


Col. Warmack said the work the men were doing “is terribly important and goes to the heart of strengthening the population’s ability to live free from the stranglehold of extremism.”


Stets, a senior psychological operations sergeant, was on his second deployment in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, and also had served in Operation Iraqi Freedom, officials reported.


The bombing is still under investigation, US Army Special Operations Command reported.


David Hartman was born in Merced in 1982. In 2000 he graduated from Kadena High School on Kadena Air Force Base in Okinawa, Japan, and immediately enlisted into the US Army, according to a Special Forces biography.


While in the Army he had completed a number of courses and served previous assignments including holding the position of platoon sergeant with Company C, Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Battalion, 1st Infantry Division, officials reported.


His biography said that he also served in multiple positions with the 50th Signal Battalion, XVIII Airborne Corps, including as an electronic maintenance shop foreman, forced entry switch section team chief and sergeant, senior electronic maintenance technician and senior switch technician.


Officials reported that Hartman's awards included the Joint Service Commendation Medal, Army Commendation Medal, Army Achievement Medal, Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Iraq Campaign Medal, Global War on Terror Expeditionary and Service medals, NCO Professional Development Ribbon and Overseas Service Medal.


As of Friday, the Department of Defense reported that 969 members of the military have died in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, with 894 of those deaths occurring in and around Afghanistan. Total deaths for Operation Iraqi Freedom stood at 4,378 on Friday.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . Follow Lake County News on Twitter at http://twitter.com/LakeCoNews and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lake-County-News/143156775604?ref=mf .


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Comments (26)Add Comment
A true hero.
written by James, February 06, 2010
This is a reminder that some just give,while others give their all. Semper Fi and God be at their side.
Heros like this
written by Old Coot, February 06, 2010
allow us to sleep soundly in our beds each night. God bless them all.
Thank You to ALL for your service to your country!
written by foghatrules, February 06, 2010
Proverbs 14:32
When calamity comes, the wicked are brought down, but even in death the righteous have a refuge
Welcome home.
written by Olmossback1, February 06, 2010
Does anybody know when Sgt. Hartman is to arrive home? The people of Lake County need to let the family know how much we care about this young hero. Every Vets group, Scout Troop, Social Club, and Civic Organization needs to get their people out. Show how much we support our young service men, and women. All give some, some give all. Thank you Sgt. Harman.
I am sorry for this family's loss...
written by smurf, February 06, 2010
but I don't recall us declaring war on pakistan (yet), and I also make distinction between being a hero and being unlucky-heroism is not a passive condition. I think we all failed this young man-everyone of us (myself included), who haven't done all we can to end America's reign of terror in the middle east, how many innocents have WE slaughtered just this year in Pakistan with drone attacks? Add that to the thousands killed in Afghanistan and the hundreds of thousands slaughtered in Iraq-and don't forget the thousands more civilians we help kill in gaza and lebanon. We let ALL out GIs down by not HONESTLY examining our foreign policy and demanding changes, as it stands we are on the path to do nothing more than guarentee that more families here and over there will share this family's misery.
Change we can believe in ? Where?
...
written by Marzocco, February 06, 2010
Smurf as usual you remind us of your lack of common sense. Everybody else had kind words for this young man and his family. You, instead, had to jump on the pedestal, and politicize this incident with the usual accusations involving our government politics.
You are entitled to your views, but this article was not the place.

I could sink to your level and tell you that if you don't like this country, feel free to find another one where you will be happier, but I won't do it. As I said you have the right to post your opinion, IN THE RIGHT FORUM. And guess who have given you this right and continue to defend that right even with their life?

Marzocco
What Marzocco said
written by Old Coot, February 06, 2010
Smurf, your flatulence belongs in another forum.
A true hero.
written by James, February 06, 2010
We that served do not take the word hero lightly. We that live use that honor for those that gave their all. What other word would you use for those that took their oath and died for this country? What higher duty can one give? To the family I send my salutations and pray your God be with you. Semper Fi.
what's really wrong here...
written by smurf, February 06, 2010
is the jive-ass jingoism and phoney patriotism of the same type that got us into this mess which resulted in this young man's death. Your kind of thinking guarentees more of our GIs and more innocents will die, it's time for YOU to rethink your positions, which would require first learning what we are up against-meaning some knowledge of regional political dynamics which you clearly do not possess.
The loss of this young man's life is a tragedy that doesn't need to be repeated but it will, thanks to YOUR acceptance of it, shame on YOU all for being accomplices to the actions that are bringing this nation down, draining our treasury, image and of course, the flower of our youth.
Ignorance is NOT a form of patriotism, it is ignorance that got us into Iraq and Afghanistan, now it has put us into Pakistan as well, where we will leave with nothing to show for our efforts besides corpses.
GreyBeard
written by GreyBeard, February 06, 2010
Our thoughts are with the family of this fallen hero and his fellow soldiers. I am sure God has already welcomed them home.
To you that would bloveate your views.
written by James, February 06, 2010
There is a time and a place and would state this would not be the time of place. So you would hurt the feelings of us that care, so you can spout you crap at the wrong time and place. I knew the young man so save it for another day.Thank you.
Smurf is a sinner.
written by foghatrules, February 06, 2010
This post is to mourn a loss of a young man, not to discuss your lack of knowledge on foreign affairs. Please troll elsewhere.
...
written by Marzocco, February 06, 2010
Murf, I agree with you on most of your geopolitical beliefs. However, your comments are appropriate in another forum, not in this one.
Having said that, I also believe your comments are a slap in the face of Sgt. Hartman, all the other people that have given their lives for our country, and their families.

Marzocco
A salute to a fallen brother
written by bearer, February 06, 2010
Thank you for your service to this great country and to the protection of our liberties.
God Bless David Hartman
written by allen, February 06, 2010
Sorry he died on foreign soil. Yankee come home!
Please don't Forget....
written by Sphynx Queen, February 06, 2010
He is also survived by his older sister Ladonna Hartman, who lives here in Lake County. From one Army Mom to the Army Family of this fallen Soldier, you have my most heartfelt condolences & sympathy. LaDonna, if you need us, you know where to find us.
Hugs & Tears
Renee
Smurf
written by chezking, February 06, 2010
Let's review:
The article states they were asked into Pakistan by the government of Pakistan. They were working with school children, and at the time of the incident, were killed in activities directly related to the school, along with innocents including children. They were funded by US Aid. There's a best-selling book by a man doing all these things.

Apparently all this is negated by political & military mistakes our government has made, not only in neighboring Afghanistan, but in Iraq as well. Negated in spite of this being the most effective strategy to stabilize and pacify these regions, and one exponentially more dangerous for our military that "bring it on". All because they wore the uniform of our military.

Please be sure to maintain consistency by kicking grieving military family members as their beloved work in Haiti, patrol in Serbia and Korea, and die changing the world in ways of which we should be proud.

Sometimes we are the good guys. Do try to discern when there is a difference.
...
written by Smow, February 06, 2010
my condolences.
review this:
written by smurf, February 06, 2010
I wouldn't have pointed out what a waste of life his was if others hadn't already wrapped the flag around the stupidity that got this young man killed. If I have offended the family of this guy I'm sorry for that, the rest of you who DIDN'T vote for a candidate that would have brought him home so he'd be alive today can lump it-I tried to save his life and you all sent him to his death.
That's your bad, not mine, don't try to put your guilt and shame on me-it's all yours!
Liam Ó Loinsigh
written by a guest, February 06, 2010
My sister is a Col. in the USA Medical Corps. Her husband a full bird in and out of Iraq for years.
I wish the family and friends love and good thoughts as I do not know what I would do in such a sad and shocking situation.
Peace and I am truly sorry for your troubles.
My God?
written by James, February 06, 2010
No one was praising the war or the governments polices. We were expressing the loss of the man. You are the one that put politics into our grieving.I say again there is a time and place,your views allowed you to treat on others emotions and then you give reasons for your justification. I served with allot that are not here to give you that right. I only take exception to your choice but not that you can't say what ever you like.
...
written by offgrid, February 06, 2010
my thoughts and prayers are also with the family in this difficult time. Like smurf, I find it hard to separate local grief and politics. One of my first thoughts when you get this kind of news is why in the hell do our commanders put our soldiers at the mercy of ied's. I think we should utilizing unmanned monitoring and long range strikes from air/ship from only secure posts in the region. How many poor american kids from inner cities and farms need to be blown up in rediculously vulnerable convoys? Pakistan is way too hot to be school building. Our military is geared to take land and kick butt with devestating force, not mess around in small poorly defended positions. When U.S. armed forces put their lives on the line, it is unacceptable for them to be put in defenseless positions.
My big brother
written by ladonahartman, February 09, 2010
Let me introduce myself. My name is Ladona Hartman. I am SFC David J Hartman's younger sister. Him and I are only 11 months apart so you can imagine how close we were throughout his entire 27 year life. I can guarantee, to anybody who questions the heroism of my brother, that we were NOT the bad guys in this situation. My brother was there doing humanitarian work. He wasn't even dressing in BDU's. He was wearing the local attire. He was assessing the needs of the local people and helping them. I spoke with him a few days before this HORRIBLE TRAGEDY. I really appreciate all of the kind words. Those people who do not have kind words need to consider the family who would be reading these articles! Shame on you! GO POST YOUR CRAP IN YOUR OWN DAMN FORUM! My family is in terrible grief right now. I have to live with the fact that the only other person in the entire world that I shared my childhood with is gone. His wife is pregnant with their second child that he will never even see or touch. My big brother was ALWAYS quick to defend me. I will not let his name be dragged in the mud by somebody who has no clue!
La Donna-
written by herb, February 09, 2010
Thanks for sharing something about David with us. My heart goes out to your family and I hope you are all getting the support you need from the community.
I have a show on the local radio station and I would like to dedicate an hour of radio to David some time when you may feel up for it. I have done this before for Lake County service members killed in the line of duty. Friends and family could phone in or join me in the studio and we can celebrate his life. Please feel free to contact me.
Herb Gura (707)350-1150
Herb
written by ladonahartman, February 09, 2010
Thanks Herb. I will talk to my family about it and maybe get a list of his favorite songs.

I have a photo album of pix of my brother on my facebook. Here is a link. If for some reason it doesn't come across you can search for me on facebook. I'm Ladona Yvonne Hartman. My grandmother is on there too and she has the same name so make sure you click on the one with the middle name Yvonne. http://www.facebook.com/home.p...&aid=49173

There are a couple of videos too.

He will be buried at the Arlington National Cemetery with full honors.
...
written by Ladona, February 13, 2010
I am David's grandmother and live in Kelseyville. I would like to respond to Olmossback in regards to when Sgt 1st Class David James Hartman will arrive home. He is suppose to arrive in Los Banos on Monday Feb. 15 for funeral services there on Wednesday Feb. 17, then to Arlington National Cemetary at a later date.
Thank you everyone for your concern, we are totally overwhelmed with love and efforts of this community words can never express our gratitude.

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