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PHOTO GALLERIES

Homecoming

The first plane load of main body paratroopers from the 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, were welcomed home to Fort Richardson on Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010, after a year-long deployment to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.   About 800 paratroopers of the 3,500 member brigade have returned to Alaska and most of the rest will be returning this month.

The first plane load of "main body" paratroopers from the 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, were welcomed home to Fort Richardson on Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010, after a year-long deployment to Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

Pilot for a Day

Brendan Thompson enjoys the view from a personalized F-15C fighter jet cockpit Friday morning January 29, 2010 at Elmendorf Air Force Base. Thompson, 13, his brother Joshua Poole, 9, and mom Cristin Poole spent the day on base courtesy of the Air Force and the Make-A-Wish Foundation. The three toured fighters in Hangar 3, visited the control tower, watched F-15s and an F-22 take off on a training exercise, checked out a C-17A Globemaster transport plane, and experienced a flight simulator. Diagnosed with aplastic anemia a year ago, Thompson and his family will head to Seattle soon to discuss treatment options. After that, Flying would be awesome!, he concluded.

Brendan Thompson is guest of honor in the Pilot-for-a-Day program Friday January 29, 2010 at Elmendorf Air Force Base.

SOLDIER PROFILES

Alaska's Fallen Soldiers

Running list of profiles of Alaskan, or Alaska-based, soldiers who have died since 2003.

Suicide suspected in Fort Richardson soldier's death

LIKELY CAUSE: He was found in garage with vehicle running.

A Fort Richardson soldier who was found dead in his East Anchorage home this week died of an apparent suicide, according to his family.

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Staff Sgt. Anthony S. Schmachtenberger.

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The body of Staff Sgt. Anthony S. Schmachtenberger, 30, was found Wednesday afternoon by two soldiers sent to find him when he did not show up for work, the Army said Thursday.

He was discovered in his garage with a vehicle running, apparently killed by asphyxiation, said his mother, Robin Scalero, reached in Alliance, Ohio. Personal problems, combined with the stress of combat, may have overcome Schmachtenberger, she said.

"I think it had to do with Iraq and what he had to deal with when he come home," she said. "He was a great kid. He was, I know. And he loved his daughters. I thought he loved life. I really did."

Suicide among the ranks has been an increasing issue for the military. Earlier this month, the Department of Defense said there had been 88 reported Army suicides in the first six months of the year. During the same period last year, there were 67 confirmed suicides, according to the department.

According to the Army, Schmachtenberger, an artilleryman from Minerva, Ohio, joined the Army in March 1999 and came to Fort Richardson in April 2006. He was attached to the 2nd Battalion, 377th Parachute Field Artillery Regiment, 4th Airborne Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division.

He was with the rear detachment and had not deployed to Afghanistan with the unit earlier this year, Army spokesman Chuck Canterbury said. Why he didn't deploy was not clear. His mother, however, said Schmachtenberger did go to Iraq the last time the unit deployed and saw combat while there.

Schmachtenberger had three young daughters, Scalero said. Two of them from a previous relationship live with their mother in New York, but his youngest, born in January, was with his wife in Alaska.

He and his wife, however, were having troubles and were separated of late, she said. Schmachtenberger's wife, Sue Chapman, filed a restraining order against him last month. Chapman, who is now living in Fairbanks, could not be reached for comment Thursday.

The U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command is investigating the death.


Find James Halpin online at adn.com/contact/jhalpin or call him at 257-4589.

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