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Sports
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Title: Pat Tillman Film a Haunting Blindside
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://freedomsyndicate.com/fair0000/latimes0017A.html
Published: Apr 29, 2010
Author: BILL DWYRE
Post Date: 2010-04-29 06:25:14 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 726
Comments: 16

Journalists gave the story of soldier Pat Tillman’s death six years ago the hero’s treatment. What it deserved was real journalism.

I have never quite gotten the Pat Tillman story out of my system. Only now am I understanding why.

It has been six years and two days since he died, his head blown off amid a pile of rocks on the side of a hill in Afghanistan, killed by guys on his own team, other U.S. soldiers. After lying about it, the military eventually called it friendly fire and treated it as a mistake. Horrible, yes, they said. But a mistake.

He was a football hero, a star safety for the Arizona Cardinals. Before that, he was a free spirit linebacker at Arizona State, whose hair flowed out of his helmet and whose tackles left physical and mental imprints.

When he walked away from a fat pro contract to become a soldier, fighting in the front lines of Iraq and Afghanistan, we all swooned. What a guy, what a hero, what a story.

We are so used to pro athletes being incapable of gazing beyond their own navels, unable to fathom anything of importance beyond their next contract and ensuing trip to the jewelry store, that we couldn't get enough of Tillman. Journalism celebrates the unusual, and this sure was.

Like other writers in the West, I had a head start. I had been face to face with Tillman, had met him, had a feel for him. Once, after an otherwise unmemorable UCLA-Arizona State game, my postgame question, as we walked along, brought him to a stop. I had danced around something controversial and he did what no other athlete, before or since, has done. He called me on it.

"That's not what you really want to know," he said. "Ask it again."

I did, this time straight to the point. He answered the same way. I was now a Pat Tillman fan. Veteran scribe learns from long-haired linebacker.

I laughed when he was taken near the end of the NFL draft and the babblers at ESPN assured all that he was too small to make it. They had likely never talked to him, certainly never been hit by him.

I loved the stories about him riding his bike to training camp and, when he drove, parking his junky old car next to the Beemers and Mercedes in the team lot.

When he died, when the tragedy dripped from the front pages and wept from the TV screens, I fell right in line. It was a story of heroics, the red, white and blue kind. It was more apple pie and Chevrolet than Don McLean, more American than John Wayne.

He wasn't just a hero. He was our hero.

In June 2006, I flew to San Jose to see Alex Garwood, Tillman's brother-in-law, who had been acting as a family spokesman in the absence of much speaking of any kind by the rest of the family. Garwood was cooperative, friendly and clearly a person who knew lots more than he was saying. By then, the story of Tillman being killed by the enemy had changed to friendly fire. Still, I didn't press Garwood much. I was looking for tears, when I should have been looking for facts.

My column ran on the Fourth of July. I blathered on about barbecues and water skiing with the family, about cherishing the freedoms we have because of heroes such as Tillman. All I missed were some rockets red glare. I was so pleased with myself. Heroes are a columnist's best friend.

Thursday night, on the sixth year anniversary of Tillman's death, I went to a screening of "The Tillman Story." It is a documentary about the quest of Tillman's mother, Mary (Dannie) Tillman, to get the real facts of what happened on that hillside. Halfway through, I was mortified. I realized why the Tillman story has stayed in my gut.

Dannie Tillman did what a nation full of high-paid, overblown journalists should have done. She went after the real story while the beautiful people on TV and the nerds with notepads broadcast and wrote morality plays. She got in the military's face, in the government's face. She didn't let up. She was doing journalism while journalists were doing what we mostly do now — chase Web hits and take short cuts to higher profits.

A housewife got the real story, or as much of it as anybody probably will. Professionals trained to do so gathered moss and wrote slop.

The youngest of the three Tillman boys, Richard, said of his mother, "She hit the ball out of the park, but the government kept moving the fences back."

The documentary won't be out until August. It won't be in many theaters, and it won't be around for long. You need to watch for it. It will make you angry and ashamed. Like I am.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.

#1. To: Ada (#0)

In case someone is uninformed ... Tillman had stated he was going to expose the fraud when he came home ... somebody overheard him !

noone222  posted on  2010-04-29   6:32:03 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: noone222 (#1)

Tillman had stated he was going to expose the fraud when he came home ... somebody overheard him !

There are some who think Pat was set up and killed for this very reason.

www.thenation.com/doc/2005102 4/zirin

Ada  posted on  2010-04-29   8:45:39 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Ada (#2)

deleted

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-04-29   8:57:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Eric Stratton (#3)

I dunno but his parents surely think so.

Pat Tillman's Dad Suspects Killing was Intentional Edited on Tue Mar-21-06 11:32 AM by NightOwwl Some snippets from today's NYTimes article:

Patrick K. Tillman staring intently at a yellow house across the street, just over 70 yards away. That, he recalled, is how far away his eldest son, Pat, was standing from his fellow Rangers when they shot him dead in Afghanistan almost two years ago. "I could hit that house with a rock," Mr. Tillman said. "You can see every last detail on that place, everything, and you're telling me they couldn't see Pat?"

He has studied — and challenged — Army PowerPoint presentations meant to explain how his son, who had called out his own name and waved his arms, wound up dead anyway, shot three times in the head by his own unit, which said it had mistaken him for the enemy.

has even left him suspicious of the military's central finding in their son's case so far: that the killing was a terrible but unintentional accident. "There is so much nonstandard conduct, both before and after Pat was killed, that you have to start to wonder," Mr. Tillman said. "How much effort would you put into hiding an accident? Why do you need to hide an accident?"

After the shooting, the Rangers destroyed evidence that would be considered critical in any criminal case, the records show. They burned Corporal Tillman's uniform and his body armor. "How could they do that?" Mr. Tillman said. "That makes no sense." The family still wants to know, he said, what became of Corporal Tillman's diary. It was never returned to the family, he said.

www.nytimes.com /2006/03/21/politics/21tillman.ht...

Ada  posted on  2010-04-29   9:53:49 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 4.

#5. To: Ada (#4)

deleted

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-04-29 10:11:57 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: Ada (#4)

just over 70 yards away. That, he recalled, is how far away his eldest son, Pat, was standing from his fellow Rangers when they shot him dead in Afghanistan almost two years ago.

If that number is accurate I find it difficult to believe that the shooting was friendly fire, even in the fog of war. That's within "easy" reach for someone who can barely shoot - identifying and hitting a human sized target with a rifle at that range is a piece of cake.

Patriot Henry  posted on  2010-04-30 12:12:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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