Patrick R. McCaffrey Sr.
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Sergeant Patrick R. McCaffrey Sr. (May 26, 1970 - June 22, 2004)
Patrick R. McCaffrey was born at Stanford Hospital, Palo Alto, California. He was a U.S. Army soldier who joined the United States National Guard the day after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 and was assigned to the 579th Engineer Battalion, based in Petaluma, California.
On June 22, 2004, Patrick R. McCaffrey Sr. and 1st Lt. Andre D. Tyson were on a joint patrol with Iraqi Security Forces officers when the two U.S. soldiers were killed, initially thought by the Iraqi insurgents in an ambush near Balad, Iraq.
Witnesses at the scene reported that Iraqi Security Forces opened fire on Patrick R. McCaffrey Sr. and his unit. At the same time a third gunman simultaneously drove up to the American unit in a van, climbed onto the vehicle and fired at the U.S. Forces.
His mother Nadia McCaffrey was unsatified with the findings by the United States Army of her son's death and notified Senator Barbara Boxer for assistance to pressure the Pentagon for answers about the case. Nadia McCaffrey stated, "I really want this story to come out; I want people to know what happened to my son, there is no doubt to me that this (ambushes by attached Iraqi units) is still happening to soldiers today, but our chain of command is awfully reckless; they don’t seem to give a damn about what’s happening to soldiers." "He was killed by the Iraqis that he was training. People in this country need to know that."[1]
On June 20, 2005, the United States Army Criminal Investigation Division concluded that the Iraqi Security Forces officers patrolling with them had killed Patrick and Lt. Tyson. [2]
Patrick R. McCaffrey Sr. was promoted posthumously to Sergeant.