SGT Armand Luke Frickey

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SGT Armand Luke Frickey Veteran

Birth
Houma, Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana, USA
Death
6 Jan 2005 (aged 20)
Baghdad, Baghdad, Iraq
Burial
Cremated, Ashes given to family or friend Add to Map
Memorial ID
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The parents of Louisiana Army National Guardsman Armand Lance Frickey were about to send him a package when they learned he had been killed while on patrol near Baghdad.In the package were school supplies that Frickey, 20, had asked his parents to send for children in Iraq.“He wanted things to be normal (in Iraq) for the election,” said his mother, Denise Frickey, 48, of Denver. “He asked that, instead of sending him treats, we were to send him notebooks and pencils and things for the children to use.”She and Vance Frickey learned Friday that their son was among seven soldiers killed when their vehicle ran over a bomb and caught fire. The younger Frickey was part of the 256th Brigade Combat Team.Frickey joined the Army National Guard at 17, when he was still in high school in Noblesville, Ind. He moved to Louisiana a couple of years ago to be close to his 25-year-old brother, Eric, who lives in Orlando, Fla.“He always had a liking for the military,” Denise Frickey said of her younger son. “He always had a strong feeling about helping other people. He was a big, strong guy and he felt he could do some good.”Frickey married his wife, Nikki, last spring and was thinking of training to be a radiologist when his unit was called up in September for an 18-month deployment in Iraq.Frickey’s vehicle also had run over a bomb last month on patrol, but Frickey survived.His mother said the 6-foot-3 soldier was devoted to his family. She said she wasn’t surprised that he would get attached to the children in Baghdad.“He liked to play. He was a real soft touch,” she said. “He couldn’t see anyone hurt anybody.”Denise Frickey said she was proud of her son and what he was trying to do.“He lived what he believed and died for what he believed,” she said. “He felt he was able to help people who were not able to help themselves. He was working to try to prevent these people (insurgents) from spreading terrorism into our country. He did a very proud and courageous thing, and I want people to know that.”
The parents of Louisiana Army National Guardsman Armand Lance Frickey were about to send him a package when they learned he had been killed while on patrol near Baghdad.In the package were school supplies that Frickey, 20, had asked his parents to send for children in Iraq.“He wanted things to be normal (in Iraq) for the election,” said his mother, Denise Frickey, 48, of Denver. “He asked that, instead of sending him treats, we were to send him notebooks and pencils and things for the children to use.”She and Vance Frickey learned Friday that their son was among seven soldiers killed when their vehicle ran over a bomb and caught fire. The younger Frickey was part of the 256th Brigade Combat Team.Frickey joined the Army National Guard at 17, when he was still in high school in Noblesville, Ind. He moved to Louisiana a couple of years ago to be close to his 25-year-old brother, Eric, who lives in Orlando, Fla.“He always had a liking for the military,” Denise Frickey said of her younger son. “He always had a strong feeling about helping other people. He was a big, strong guy and he felt he could do some good.”Frickey married his wife, Nikki, last spring and was thinking of training to be a radiologist when his unit was called up in September for an 18-month deployment in Iraq.Frickey’s vehicle also had run over a bomb last month on patrol, but Frickey survived.His mother said the 6-foot-3 soldier was devoted to his family. She said she wasn’t surprised that he would get attached to the children in Baghdad.“He liked to play. He was a real soft touch,” she said. “He couldn’t see anyone hurt anybody.”Denise Frickey said she was proud of her son and what he was trying to do.“He lived what he believed and died for what he believed,” she said. “He felt he was able to help people who were not able to help themselves. He was working to try to prevent these people (insurgents) from spreading terrorism into our country. He did a very proud and courageous thing, and I want people to know that.”

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