NEWS RELEASES from the United States Department of Defense
No. 156-07 IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 9, 2007
DoD Identifies Navy Casualties
The Department of Defense announced today the death of two sailors who were supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Petty Officer First Class Gilbert Minjares Jr., 31, of El Paso, Texas, and Petty Officer Third Class Manuel A. Ruiz, 21, of Federalsburg, Maryland, died February 7, 2007, in a helicopter crash in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. The cause of the crash is under investigation.
Minjares was assigned to Marine Aircraft Group 14, 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, Cherry Point, North Carolina, and Ruiz was assigned to 2nd Medical Battalion, 2nd Marine Logistics Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
8 February 2007
It’s the phone call military parents don’t ever want to get, the call saying their son or daughter has been killed in the line of duty. Last night, a Federalsburg family got that call. Today, they are full of sorrow, but also full of pride as they remember Manuel Ruiz.
Lisa Ruiz, the mother of Manuel Ruiz, says “he was proud of what he was doing. He was happy, he loved his job.”
He was killed in a helicopter crash near Baghdad on Wednesday. He was a helicopter medic and was just beginning his second tour.
“He wasn’t on the list to go back, but he made them put him on that list.”
Manuel said goodbye to his Mom, Dad, and two brothers two weeks before.
Jacob Ruiz, one of the brothers, says “he misses us, loves us, and told us he’d see us one more time.”
Manuel’s family says he went back because he wanted to help people, and he knew he was making a difference.
Lisa adds “he said he’d rather work in the field than at the hospital, he was saving people.”
Which was what he had plans to continue doing after his service. His family says he wanted to work with the state police, again, as a helicopter medic.
“He knew he was serving his country, we’re proud of him.”
No plans have been made for the funeral service yet, but the family has said that Manuel wanted to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery, and he will be.
A sailor from the Eastern Shore was one of seven people killed when a U.S. Marine transport helicopter crashed in Iraq, his mother said Thursday.
Manuel Ruiz, 21, of Federalsburg, was a Navy paramedic assigned to Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
His mother, Lisa Ruiz, described him as a “very outgoing” man who loved running. He attended Colonel Richardson High School in Federalsburg, joined the Navy three years ago and was just two weeks into his second tour in Iraq, she said.
“I spoke with him last week,” she said. “He was saying how much he loved his job, what he was doing.”
The military reported the helicopter crashed Wednesday in Al Anbar province about 20 miles northwest of Baghdad. It was the sixth American aircraft reported lost in Iraq in just over two weeks.
A military statement did not give a cause for the crash, but a senior U.S. defense official in Washington said the CH-46 Sea Knight did not appear to have been hit by hostile fire.
An Iraqi air force officer, however, said the chopper was downed by an anti-aircraft missile. An al-Qaida-linked Sunni group claimed in a Web statement that it was responsible.
Names of the victims were not released, but military officials said they included five Marines and two from the Navy.
Two of the victims of Wednesday’s crash of a Marine Corps CH-46 helicopter in Iraq have been identified by the Pentagon as Navy corpsmen.
Petty Officer 1st Class Gilbert Minjares Jr., 31, of El Paso, Texas, and Petty Officer 3rd Class Manuel A. Ruiz, 21, of Federalsburg, Maryland, were killed in the crash, the cause of which is still under investigation.
Minjares was assigned to Marine Aircraft Group 14, 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, Cherry Point, N.C. Ruiz was assigned to 2nd Medical Battalion, 2nd Marine Logistics Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.
Ruiz, 21, was on the second week of his second Iraq tour when he was among seven servicemembers killed in the crash west of Baghdad. The crash was the fourth American military helicopter to go down since Jan. 20. While the other three were shot down, U.S. military officials have said enemy fire was not likely the cause of Wednesday’s crash.
The five other casualties of the crash were Marines, a military official said Friday.
Family members remembered Ruiz as “Little Manuel” — named after his father — and an energetic, fun young man.
Ruiz was committed to his job in Iraq, they said.
“He pretty much demanded to go back,” Adam Lusk, a family friend, was quoted as saying to reporters.
Ruiz was assigned to the 2nd Medical Battalion, which supports the II Marine Expeditionary Force out of Camp Lejeune, N.C. The Pentagon withholds names of the dead until their families are notified; official identifications are expected in the coming days.
Minjares had only been in Iraq for seven days before the crash, family members said.
“He gave me all his clothes and stuff, like he knew what was going to happen,” Jose Minjares, Gilbert’s brother, told an El Paso newspaper. “He told me, ‘If anything happens, I want you to let my kids know I did it for them.’”
Minjares is survived by his wife, a 2-year-old son and a 4-week-old newborn, family members said.
On Thursday, the commandant of the Marine Corps said the recent helicopter incidents represented an “intensity of effort” by insurgents. General James Conway also said that Marine officials did not believe the CH-46 was shot down this week. A Sunni insurgent group has claimed it shot down the helicopter, and news reports cited witnesses as saying they saw it shot down.
Conway, in comments made to a group of government executives at a Washington hotel, also said the Marines are worried about newer versions of anti-aircraft missiles showing up in Iraq.
“More troubling is the appearance of SA-16s and SA-18s,” Conway was quoted as saying. SA-16s and SA-18s are surface-to-air missiles.
An al-Qaida-linked insurgent group posted a Web video Friday showing what it said was the downing of a U.S. military helicopter earlier this week.
The two-minute video — which says it shows the “downing of U.S. aircraft on February 7” — shows a helicopter that appears to be a Sea Knight flying. An object trailing smoke is seen in the sky nearby, and then the craft bursts into orange and red flames, with a spray of debris emerging from it.
It is not clear whether the object is a rocket, and it cannot be clearly seen connecting with the craft.
The video was issued by the Islamic State in Iraq, an umbrella group of Iraqi insurgent groups that includes al-Qaida in Iraq. The group on Wednesday issued a written claim of responsibility for the craft’s downing and had promised a video would follow.
21 February 2007:
The town of Federalsburg said goodbye Wednesday afternoon to a local Navy paramedic who was killed in Iraq earlier this month.
A viewing for Manuel Ruiz was held the Framptom Funeral Home on Main Street. A reception followed at the Federalsburg VFW.
Ruiz will be buried Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery. The 21-year-old Navy Corpsman was one of seven who died February 7, 2007, when the Marine transport helicopter they were in crashed in Iraq.
- RUIZ, MANUEL ANTONIO
- HM3 US NAVY
- DATE OF BIRTH: 03/19/1985
- DATE OF DEATH: 02/07/2007
- BURIED AT: SECTION 60 SITE 8537
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY
Michael Robert Patterson was born in Arlington and is the son of a former officer of the US Army. So it was no wonder that sooner or later his interests drew him to American history and especially to American military history. Many of his articles can be found on renowned portals like the New York Times, Washingtonpost or Wikipedia.
Reviewed by: Michael Howard