Indiana guardsman given posthumous Silver Star

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INDIANAPOLIS — Sgt. Joseph E. Proctor didn’t stay hunkered down under cover when mortar shells started falling on the isolated observation post where he was helping train Iraqi soldiers.

Without any orders, the 38-year-old Indiana National Guardsman grabbed his helmet and his rifle and bolted out of the concrete barracks into the open to provide first aid to wounded soldiers May 3 as small-arms fire ratcheted up.

When a dump truck loaded with explosives broke through the east gate and headed for the center of the compound, he faced down the truck and kept shooting until the driver was dead, the bomb detonated and Proctor was mortally wounded.

“Proctor saved countless lives that fateful day by stopping the driver before he could reach his objective,” Maj. Gen. R. Martin Umbarger, the Indiana Guard’s adjutant general, said during a Statehouse ceremony presenting Proctor’s family with the Silver Star.

“This was not an act of impulse,” said Gov. Mitch Daniels, who pinned the medal — the nation’s third-highest military honor — on the chest of Proctor’s wife, Beth. “Sgt. Proctor knew exactly the risk he was taking. He knew what he was doing, and he knew why.”

About 75 people attended the ceremony, including soldiers who served with Proctor in Iraq and relatives who enlisted in the National Guard after his death.

Staff Sgt. Nick Miccarelli, who served in the 638th Aviation Battalion with Proctor, said he wasn’t surprised at his comrade’s action.

“We all knew what he was all about,” Miccarelli said. “He was always out front on everything.”

Proctor, who lived in Indianapolis and grew up in the Johnson County town of Whiteland, was the first Indiana National Guardsman to be awarded the Silver Star since 1969, Guard officials said.

He had been a National Guard member during the 1980s and went into the Army on active duty, serving during the 1991 Persian Gulf War. After 10 years out of the military, he re-enlisted in the Guard in 2002, prompted by the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Following his death, his 44-year-old brother Eddie, his 18-year-old nephew Bradley and his own son, Joey, 21, enlisted in the Guard. None have yet been deployed to Iraq.

“This is a family of patriots,” Daniels said.

Joey Proctor said the day was not a time to be sad because his father had given his life for his country.

“I understand what he was doing, and I understand why he was doing it,” he said, standing at attention and speaking softly in the glare of television lights.

Eddie Proctor, who served in the military for four years two decades ago and re-enlisted this year, said he was proud of his brother.

“I hope I can be every bit of the man he was over there,” he said. “It’s going to take some big shoes to fill.”
http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-2437654.php

I knew this soldier. The story doesn't surprise me in the least. He could always be seen right where he needed to be without anyone ever asking or telling him to do it.

RIP warrior.
 
Ashes to ashes, dust to dust, brother to brother....

May the good lord watch over you and those you care for.

Rest in peace
 
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