Spaatz #1844

Started by Eclipse, February 14, 2013, 02:29:59 AM

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Eclipse

I was looking up someone else for a bio, and noticed award number 1844 says "Held for later use".

Any idea?

"That Others May Zoom"

Garibaldi

Shhhhhhhh....he's in that Area where more than 51 people "don't" work...
Still a major after all these years.
ES dude, leadership ossifer, publik affaires
Opinionated and wrong 99% of the time about all things

spaatzmom

July 10, 2012
The following cadets received awards in June:

Gen. Carl A. Spaatz Award

Gen. Carl A. Spaatz Award
Kaitlyn Fife, No. 1842, LA
David M. Trick, No. 1844, MD
Matthew H. Frame, No. 1845, MN
Garrett P. Frazell, No. 1846, NE
William A. Small, No. 1843, SD
Blake Orth, No. 1847, TX

I got this from the cadet awards list on the CAP website.

Eclipse

Hm...the plot thickens! (Or doesn't).

"That Others May Zoom"

NIN

I'm guessing David Trick is related to Larry Trick (#452).

Now, if Larry was #844, I'd get it.
Darin Ninness, Col, CAP
I have no responsibilities whatsoever
I like to have Difficult Adult Conversations™
The contents of this post are Copyright © 2007-2024 by NIN. All rights are reserved. Specific permission is given to quote this post here on CAP-Talk only.

Майор Хаткевич


Eclipse

They've got a few skipped - 913, 969, both would be cool as a number.

1844 was the only one indicated as held, that's what peaked my nosiness curiosity.

"That Others May Zoom"

a2capt

Quote from: Eclipse on February 14, 2013, 05:03:39 AMThey've got a few skipped - 913, 969, both would be cool as a number.
Any would be cool .. There's only so many of them. :)

ßτε

My best guess is that those that were skipped were due to clerical errors. Same goes for the few duplicate numbers indicated, as by a and b in the Spaatz Association list.

ColonelJack

As I was scrolling down the list, the one that jumped out and caught my eye was:

Quote
1281          [award rescinded]

Wonder what the story on that one is?

Jack
Jack Bagley, Ed. D.
Lt. Col., CAP (now inactive)
Gill Robb Wilson Award No. 1366, 29 Nov 1991
Admiral, Great Navy of the State of Nebraska
Honorary Admiral, Navy of the Republic of Molossia

Майор Хаткевич

Probably revoked for cause...

Stonewall

Quote from: ColonelJack on February 14, 2013, 02:51:36 PM
As I was scrolling down the list, the one that jumped out and caught my eye was:

Quote
1281          [award rescinded]

Wonder what the story on that one is?

Jack

There is at least one, if not two, Spaatz that were rescinded.  One was for the former Spaatzen that committed or helped in the committing of murder.   Linky.
Serving since 1987.

spaatzmom

DAVID GRAHAM—schoolboy athlete, scholar and gentleman—was regarded as close to being a paragon. "You know how growing up, your mom tells you about the perfect guy, the perfect gentleman, and there's nobody out there like that?" says Sarah Layton, a schoolmate at Mansfield High. "David was. He was one of the last cool guys on earth."

It was fitting then that his true love, Diane Zamora, from nearby Crowley, seemed his equal—ambitious, near the top of her class, eager to join the military and learn how to fly. Last spring, when David was accepted by the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, and Diane by the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., they were the subject of admiring stories in their local papers. And to seal their personal bond, they set their wedding date—Aug. 13, 2000—for soon after their planned graduations from the academies.

But early last month, the idyllic tableau they created was shattered. Police in Grand Prairie, Texas, announced that Graham and Zamora, both 18, had been charged with the cold-blooded slaying last December of 16-year-old Adrianne Jones, a Mansfield High sophomore whose body had been found on a rural county road. Both suspects confessed that Zamora, in a jealous fury, had ordered Graham to kill the girl because he had once had sex with her. In Mansfield and Crowley, just south of Fort Worth, the reaction was not so much shock as utter disbelief. "I remember being flabbergasted when I heard Diane had been arrested," says Lorena Jordan, a family friend. "I kept saying, 'This can't be the same Diane Zamora. There must be some mistake.' "

There was no mistaking the brutality of Jones's murder, which had baffled police from the start. On Dec. 4, less than 12 hours after she had slipped out of her home after dark, Jones's body was discovered by a motorist along a road leading to Joe Pool Lake, a popular recreation spot outside Grand Prairie. She had been clubbed over the head and shot twice in the head with a 9-mm handgun. An exuberant and well-liked young woman, Adrianne, nicknamed A.J., had herself been an outstanding student as well as a cross-country runner at Mansfield High. "She always uplifted everyone around her," says Tina Dollar, manager of the Golden Fried Chicken restaurant in Mansfield, where Adrianne had worked part-time. "She drew this smiley face on the visor she wore."

The night Adrianne was killed, her mother, Linda, overheard her talking on the phone. " 'It's David from crosscountry' she says," Linda recalls. " 'He's upset.' " Adrianne left the house shortly afterward and was never seen alive again. On Dec. 6, relatives and friends held a memorial service for her at the First United Methodist Church. Later her school friends gathered at the track for a separate tribute. Among the scores attending was a tearful David Graham. "While we were there struggling in class to keep our sanity, he was sitting next to us," snaps Jeff Lackey, 17, a schoolmate.

As a matter of routine, Grand Prairie police interviewed Graham, as well as other members of the track team. But he never fell under suspicion, despite the fact that a "David" was believed to have talked to Adrianne just before she disappeared. (Police did arrest another student—not named David—two weeks after the murder, but he was cleared when he passed a polygraph test after spending three weeks in jail.) The lack of interest in Graham wasn't totally surprising since he was believed to have known Jones only casually. The youngest of four children of Jerry Graham, a former elementary school principal, and his wife, Janice, a former teacher, he came from a respected family and had impeccable academic credentials.

David not only excelled in the classroom, he also ran on the track and cross-country teams and was a battalion commander in Junior ROTC. He liked to tell people he had fallen in love with flying while seeing an air show as a first grader and had long dreamed of attending the Air Force Academy. With close-cropped hair and a no-nonsense demeanor, he seemed to some to have been born to the military. "He was very dependable, very courteous, very businesslike," says Bob Sloate, manager of the Winn-Dixie store in Mansfield, where Graham worked after school. "Everything was 'Yes, sir' and 'No, sir.' "

Graham found a kindred spirit in Diane Zamora, the oldest of four children of Carlos Zamora, an electrician, and Gloria, a nurse. The two met four years ago while enrolled in search-and-rescue training in the Civil Air Patrol. Zamora, who wanted to be an astronaut, was a member of the junior varsity track team, the National Honor Society, the Key Club and the drill team. Yet at least one person felt her achievements stemmed more from career calculation than from genuine interest. "She was building her resume," says reporter Nancy Huckaby, who interviewed Zamora for a profile in the weekly Crowley Star Review. "She wasn't really that involved."

In contrast, friends and relatives were struck by her nearly total involvement with Graham. "I talked with Diane's mother about it a few times," says Sylvia Gonzalez, an aunt, "and she told me it was just a teenage thing." But to many it seemed an obsession. Some say Zamora turned an icy shoulder to Graham's friends and anyone else who came between them. "She controlled most of his life," says Sarah Layton. "She even got him to quit a couple of jobs because she said it took time away from her."

Others say it was Graham who ruled the relationship. He persuaded Zamora to compete in track, despite the fact she had never enjoyed running. Later, at her graduation, "he never took his arm from around her," says Martha Kibler, another of Zamora's aunts. "Several members of the family wanted to give her a hug, but David wouldn't let go of her." Still, Zamora apparently never felt smothered. "She was totally wrapped up in him," says Gonzalez. "She thought he hung the moon." At times the fixation seemed almost eerie. "Even when I tried to talk about her parents or the appointment [to the Naval Academy], she found a way to turn the focus back to David Graham," says Huckaby. "She gave the impression that she couldn't have done anything without David Graham."

Including, it appears, keep a secret. In July they said their goodbyes, with Graham heading off to Colorado Springs and Zamora to Annapolis. But within weeks of their separation, Zamora confided to two roommates at the Naval Academy, reportedly during a bull session about the "worst thing" they had ever done, that she and her fiance had committed a murder and would carry their guilt "to the grave." Alarmed ("People just don't make up that kind of story," one plebe told the Dallas Morning News), the women informed a Navy chaplain, who passed the information along to officials. Surmising that the crime, if there was one, had taken place near Zamora's hometown, authorities in Annapolis asked police in Texas if they had any unsolved murders.

Detectives in Grand Prairie and Mansfield thought immediately of the Jones killing and sent investigators to Annapolis to interview Zamora. At first she insisted she had invented the story. "She said at the time she was just lying for sympathy and to bring attention to herself," said Sgt. Chuck Sager of the Grand Prairie police. On Aug. 30, Annapolis officials placed Zamora on leave pending further investigation. (Only later did police learn that she then flew to Colorado Springs and met with Graham. "They had an opportunity to discuss who would take the blame," says Dan Cogdell, Graham's attorney.) When detectives interviewed Graham a few days later, he too insisted Zamora had invented her murder story. But on Sept. 6, after failing a polygraph test, he confessed. Ever the overachiever, he reportedly grew so impatient with the police typist that he tapped out the last part of his statement himself. The same day, police arrested Zamora. who quickly dictated her own confession.

Acting on a search warrant, authorities recovered barbell weights and a Russian-made 9-mm Makarov handgun, which was found hidden in the attic of the Graham home in Mansfield. But the most powerful—and chilling—evidence was the confessions, which told a tale of teenage love run amok. According to Graham's statement, obtained by the Dallas Morning News, he had offered Jones a ride home on Nov. 4 after a cross-country meet. While driving, she directed him to the back lot of an elementary school, where they had a sexual encounter that he said was "short-lived and hardly appreciated." Afterward, Graham was overcome with guilt. "I was letting down the one person I had swore to be faithful to," he told police.

That same evening he divulged his infidelity to Zamora. "For at least an hour she screamed sobs that I wouldn't have thought possible," Graham said in his confession. Shortly, though, she regained her composure sufficiently to demand an act of atonement. "The only thing that could satisfy her womanly vengeance was the life of the one that had, for an instant, taken her place," Graham said, in the oddly stilted language that is apparently his confessional style. In her own statement, Zamora reportedly told Graham "that the 'purity' of their love could only be restored by killing Adrianne," says one law enforcement source. Graham insisted to police that he felt powerless to say no. "Diane's beautiful eyes have always played the strings of my heart effortlessly," he said. "I couldn't imagine life without her.... I didn't have any harsh feelings for Adrianne, but no one could stand between me and Diane."

A month passed. Then on Dec. 3, Graham contacted Jones on the pretext of arranging a date. The plan, according to his statement, was to "break her young neck" and use barbell weights to sink the body to the bottom of Joe Pool Lake. A little after midnight, they drove to the lake in Zamora's hatchback, with Graham and Adrianne in the front and Zamora hidden in the back. Zamora reportedly told investigators that once they parked, she sat up and confronted Adrianne for having seduced her boyfriend. Then a fight broke out in the car. Fearing that Adrianne might hurt Graham, Zamora said., she used a barbell to strike Adrianne in the head. "She [drianne] was fighting from instinct"—for survival, Graham said. Stunned and presumably bleeding, Adrianne managed to climb out of the car and began trying to get away—with David in pursuit. Apparently, Graham returned to the car to report that Adrianne was dead. But Zamora urged him to check again. This time, according to Graham, he stood over Adrianne and shot her in the face. In his confession, Graham said he wanted to drive away once Adrianne had fled from the car but decided he had no choice but to finish the job. "I knew I couldn't leave the key witness to our crime alive," he said. "I just pointed and shot.... I fired again and ran to the car."

Back in the car, he and Zamora turned to each other. "The first thing out of our mouths were 'I love you,' followed by Diane's 'We shouldn't have done that, David,' " Graham told police. "I thought, 'Nice time to tell me.' I just wanted it to be a dream." The two later drove to Zamora's house to clean up the interior of the car. "David wasn't able to help [Zamora] because he was quite sick and vomiting," says a law enforcement source.

Graham and Zamora, now being held in the Tarrant County jail, have been charged with capital murder and could face the death penalty. Mary Mendoza, who visited her niece on Sept. 22, says Zamora seems deeply depressed. "She is not doing so good," says Mendoza. "She's terribly lonesome. She cried the whole time I was there." Her lawyer John Linebarger says that despite her confession, Zamora will plead not guilty.

Dan Cogdell says his client will do the same. The attorney plans to challenge the admissibility of Graham's confession, arguing that police grilled him nonstop for 30 hours and denied his initial requests for a lawyer. In any case, Cogdell says, Graham invented his confession in a love-struck attempt to cover for Zamora. "He never intended to kill the girl," said Cogdell. "Nor did he intend to have anyone else kill her." Cogdell also told the Dallas Morning News that Graham's mother has said she wants justice for her son, but "not at the expense of the Zamora girl." He reported the youth's parents are concerned that Zamora continues to exert, as he put it, an "unholy influence" on their son.

Despite the legal maneuvering that may soon match their stories against one another, Graham and Zamora have apparently not forsaken each other. Linebarger says Zamora "wants to know when she can see [David] or talk to him." And as Graham was led in handcuffs to his cell last month, a reporter asked if he wanted to tell Diane anything. He replied with a wan smile, " 'I love you.'

NIN

Recinded, not revoked.

IIRC, at the time the determination was made that the Graham, when taking the Spaatz exam approximately two weeks after brutally murdering Adrianne Jones, was not qualified to remain as a CAP cadet because he failed to meet the requirement under CAPR 39-2, para 2-2f (it is 2-2f now, not sure what it was then) of "good moral character" and therefore should never have been administered the Spaatz in the first place.

I think the basic idea was "he was improperly awarded this award, since he wasn't qualified."
Darin Ninness, Col, CAP
I have no responsibilities whatsoever
I like to have Difficult Adult Conversations™
The contents of this post are Copyright © 2007-2024 by NIN. All rights are reserved. Specific permission is given to quote this post here on CAP-Talk only.

ColonelJack

#14
I'm glad Spaatzmom & Darin gave that info ... nowhere in the linked material did I find which one of the two murderous lovebirds was the Spaatz cadet whose award was rescinded.

Interesting point, too, that it was rescinded and not revoked. 

Thanks!

Jack
Jack Bagley, Ed. D.
Lt. Col., CAP (now inactive)
Gill Robb Wilson Award No. 1366, 29 Nov 1991
Admiral, Great Navy of the State of Nebraska
Honorary Admiral, Navy of the Republic of Molossia

Ned

I spoke out against the provision that permitted rescinding CP awards based on subsequent behavior, primarily as it was a knee-jerk reaction to bad news and because there is no similar provision to rescind senior member awards.  It struck me as patronizing and hypocritical on the part of the former National Board.

When a person does despicable acts, I imagine his/her high school would like to rescind their diploma and the church would like to rescind their confirmation certificate as well.  It just smacks of "piling on" and makes little or no difference to someone sitting in prison for the rest of their lives.

It's not like someone is going to say "Well, I was going to commit this mass murder, but now that I consider that the Air Force Auxiliary might rescind my Earhart I'm not gonna do it.  Thanks, CAP for keeping me on the straight and narrow.  I'm gonna to devote my life to selfless works from now on."

At some point it becomes an intellectual line-drawing exercise.  Will any felony do?  How about violent misdemeanors?  What do we do with someone who apparently commits a violent crime but gets off on a technicality?  Or dies before the legal process has a chance?

Sigh.  If only the National Board had spent their time debating worthwhile matters like vision, missions, and ways to ease the administrative burder on members and squadrons.

Oh well.


FW

Quote from: Ned on February 14, 2013, 04:48:41 PM
Sigh.  If only the National Board had spent their time debating worthwhile matters like vision, missions, and ways to ease the administrative burder on members and squadrons.

Oh well.

Sooooo True!  :clap:

Now, back to our regularly scheduled topic >:D

ColonelJack

The murder took place in 1995; Graham stood for his Spaatz in late 1995 or early 1996; the trial was in 1998.

When was his Spaatz award rescinded?

And Ned ... I am with you on the policy of rescinding earned awards.  While it gives the impression that "they're doing something," it also is (as you say) a knee-jerk reaction.  I would say that, if there's going to be a policy of rescinding Cadet awards based on subsequent events, such should be done for Senior awards as well; or don't do it to either group.

Jack
Jack Bagley, Ed. D.
Lt. Col., CAP (now inactive)
Gill Robb Wilson Award No. 1366, 29 Nov 1991
Admiral, Great Navy of the State of Nebraska
Honorary Admiral, Navy of the Republic of Molossia

NIN

Speaking of piling on: a wing commander once petitioned his region commander to revoke the milestones of a guy, former cadet with a Spaatz, who had been convicted of swindling his clients out of money (he was an attorney).   It was a bad scene, the guy was an idiot for sure over the whole deal, but he was no longer in CAP and it was not like CAP's name was brought up or anything.

The problem was, the former member had committed suicide some months beforehand in the wake of his conviction.

So the impression was that the wing commander felt that him being dead wasn't enough of a message (that may not have been what the wing commander was thinking, but that was the impression of the members who knew about the petition to revoke under 52-16).  I mean, really: the guy is dead, lets leave it be.

The region commander approved it.

The national commander said "Yeah, no."

ETA: So my point is, I agree with Ned. 


Darin Ninness, Col, CAP
I have no responsibilities whatsoever
I like to have Difficult Adult Conversations™
The contents of this post are Copyright © 2007-2024 by NIN. All rights are reserved. Specific permission is given to quote this post here on CAP-Talk only.

Brad

There was also a movie about the murder case:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0119579/

"Love's Deadly Triangle: The Texas Cadet Murder".

(Anyone else find the irony in that and the triangle thingy?)
Brad Lee
Maj, CAP
Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff, Communications
Mid-Atlantic Region
K4RMN