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Published November 18, 2007 04:56 pm - VEVAY (AP) — Residents in this small Ohio River town in southeastern Indiana are mourning the death of a hometown soldier who was killed in Iraq last week by a roadside bombing.


Soldier from Vevay dies in Iraq bombing



VEVAY, Ind. (AP) — Residents in this small Ohio River town in southeastern Indiana are mourning the death of a hometown soldier who was killed in Iraq last week by a roadside bombing.

A statement released Sunday by the Pentagon said Sgt. Kenneth R. Booker, 25, died Nov. 14 in Mukhisa, Iraq, from wounds he suffered when a bomb exploded near his vehicle. It gave no additional details.

But Booker’s father, Charles Booker, said the family was told that his son’s vehicle, a Stryker eight-wheel-drive truck that he was commanding, was struck by a new form of improvised explosive device while on patrol.

The military began using Stryker vehicles in Iraq in March, believing that their speed and design would make them less vulnerable to roadside bombs than other vehicles.

Booker’s mother, Becky Graham of Milton, Ky., learned of her son’s death Thursday, the same day she had mailed a Christmas package to him. That package includes a note stating that since he couldn’t be home for Christmas, Christmas was coming to him.

Graham had enclosed a little Christmas tree, a movie, Christmas music, a Christmas mug and cocoa for her son.

“I didn’t know he was already gone when I sent it,” she said Friday.

Graham said her son joined the Army in 2000 after graduating from Switzerland County High School in Vevay, about 90 miles southeast of Indianapolis.

She said he had a clever sense of humor, liked to have fun and to go hunting.

“He was a funny person,” she said. “He had a really great sense of humor. He liked to joke around, he liked to hunt, was goodhearted, kind. He was quiet. He was just a wonderful person.”

Booker turned 21 in Afghanistan and 22 in Iraq during previous deployments, both when he was with the 82nd Airborne based at Fort Bragg, N.C., said his father, Charles Booker.

“I always had faith he was going to be all right, but you never know,” he said. “Even the best soldiers, it happens to.”

Booker was the 94th member of the military from Indiana to have died since February 2003 after being sent to the Mideast for the war in Iraq.

He was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 23rd Infantry Regiment, 4th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, Fort Lewis, Wash.

The Army transferred him to Fort Lewis, Wash., and into military intelligence, but he didn’t like it because he spent most of his time at a desk, Graham said.



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