Marine dies 3 hours after coming home from Iraq
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Marine dies 3 hours after coming home from Iraq Expand / Collapse
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Posted 8/13/2003 7:04 AM


President for Life

President for Life

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The Associated Press

WEARE, N.H. -- After eight months in Kuwait and Iraq, Marine Master Gunnery Sgt. Dale Racicot just wanted to see his wife and daughters.

Giddy with excitement, they headed for the airport on Friday in Racicot's cherished "Marine Corps green" pickup truck to start what his daughter, Keri Magnarelli, called "a reunion of a lifetime."

Back home three hours later, Racicot collapsed onto his dining room floor, dead of a heart attack at 54.

His wife, Janet, said she heard the thud from the kitchen, where she was getting a glass of water.

"I came running over to him and I knew something serious was going on," she said in an interview Tuesday. "He looked at me and said, 'I love you all,' and that was the last thing he said."


In Kuwait, Racicot headed a six-member intelligence team that analyzed statements from Iraqi prisoners of war. It was not immediately known if the stress of the job contributed to the heart attack.

Staff Sgt. Luis DeJesus, who at 33 was the youngest member of the team, said Racicot was a careful listener who was a mentor to fellow Marines.

DeJesus said Racicot often talked about how proud he was of his family.

"He was very focused about going home and being with his family," DeJesus said. "He used it as a light at the end of the tunnel at times when that light was very dim for us."

His family was equally devoted to him.

"Every morning there was a cup of tea, nearly every day, a love note," said Janet Racicot. "Every girl dreams of the man she's going to marry. I got to marry that man."

Photographs and mementos were spread over the dining room table Tuesday at the Racicots' home. Outside were American and Marine Corps flags and yellow ribbons on trees.

"When you love someone and they go to war you have to mentally prepare yourself for the fact they might not come home, so we were just thrilled," Magnarelli, 24, said Tuesday. "We had three hours. They were the most precious hours we could have asked for."

In his civilian life, Racicot was a mechanical engineer at a company that makes power supplies and other electrical equipment. His family said he was a devout Christian who was a drummer in the "music ministry" at Goffstown Christian Fellowship church, where his funeral will be held Thursday.

Racicot joined the Marines in 1969, when he was 20, and was on active duty until 1975. He left the service to help raise his daughters and rejoined the reserves in 1985.

He returned from the Mideast to Camp Pendleton in California, where he spent three weeks before flying home Friday. He was to begin the process to end his active duty this week, and told his family he wanted a quiet homecoming.

"He didn't want a big entourage. He didn't want a party. He just wanted it to be the three of us and my husband," Magnarelli said.

During his few hours at home, Racicot handed out trinkets, Kuwaiti money, bandannas and other gifts he had picked up overseas.

At 2:30 a.m. Saturday, he suggested that everyone go to bed because they would have the whole weekend to spend together


Rest in peace brother



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Post #11160
Posted 8/13/2003 7:31 AM


Detachment Sergeant

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Oh my Lord; what a sad ending. I'm glad he at least made it home. Rest In Peace.

   ALWAYS OUT FRONT
Post #70574
Posted 8/13/2003 8:58 AM


Hard Charger

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That is sad. RIP

"Greater love than this hath no man, but that he should lay down his life for his friends."
Post #70575
Posted 8/13/2003 9:00 AM
Hard Charger

Hard Charger

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At least he got to say "I love you" one last time. More than a lot of folks get. Rest in peace.


"EBO isn't a strategy.  It's a sales pitch." - Ralph Peters
Post #70576
Posted 8/13/2003 1:04 PM


Got Silk?

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That's a damn shame!

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Post #70577
Posted 8/13/2003 8:21 PM


Beekeeper

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Such a good man. He'll surely be watching over us all. Rest in peace.

 
IMO
SFC Richard J. Lacey
LLDS,RCG 1st Sig Bde.
31JAN1968
104535N 1063940E(XS816898)
"The young dead soldiers do not speak.
 Nevertheless, the are heard in the still houses...
We were young, they say. We have died. Remember us."
 
Archibald MacLeish
 
Post #70578
Posted 8/13/2003 9:21 PM


Hard Charger

Hard Charger

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RIP Marine.

"I have the Americans with me, and they have their death ray. Surrender or die!"   Gen. Abdul Rashid Dotsum. Afghan Warlord.
Post #70579
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