Where is class 234 now




















The next six months brought over 50 chemo and radiation treatments and a move to Seattle where he received a bone marrow transplant. Once recovered, Justin moved on to a new assignment in Virginia Beach. Two years later, he developed Graft Versus Host Disease, in which the immune system that developed from the donor bone marrow attacked parts of his body. Then, complications of a lung biopsy brought on complete respiratory failure and put Justin in a coma for two weeks, a downward spiral that led to a double lung transplant.

Justin became the first, and still only, double lung-transplantee in the world to climb Mt. McKinley and to run three half marathons.

Today Justin takes on all that life presents and lives each day to the fullest, one breath at a time. All Rights Reserved. The water is unforgiving and fear and panic can sink a mission before it gets started. You can try to game it as much as you want Winter class vs.

Lively Great attitude and a magnetic personality Carr, Mr. Geary, Mr. Holly, and Fox are just as memorable as they were on that video. Haha Lively, yeah that dude was something else. All I gotta say is good on you for trying man! Cmdr Geary was OIC of 1st phase when i went through He came in day 1 of Indoc and gave a speech.

Hey Steve, Sorry for the late reply. Very interesting site and information. Thank you. Rob, fantastic work. Have always thought about , especially since their world would change 3 months after graduating. The what happened to has burned me for 20 years…until now!! Thank you for fantastic work. No problem at all Bryan!

You can hear here Goggins slipping his name accidentally, while he was speaking fast. Great mentor to many great men! Our unit worked with Koth and his team in Iraq we were the 5th engineer bn.

He was a stand up guy, we lost some guys May 4th, and he and his team paid their respects at their memorial. He was a really good guy and had one heckuva mustache. I attended his memorial in Iraq, and still have a copy of the memorial brochure if any of you want a copy? Not sure, just noting. Thanks for that BOOya. Disregard the previous comment, I see who he is now.

Will get this updated shortly, thanks for sending over! For the layman, what does that mean? Is that correct? This is assuming that they reached Thursday of Hell Week. That could be the next class, or even be a few classes later depending on the severity of the injury.

Ashlock must have had some pretty serious injuries, because he ended up classing up with Class he graduated by the way. If a student got injured on Monday or Tuesday of Hell Week, and be forced to medically roll out, they would have to start Day 1 Phase 1 all over again.

Thank you so much for following up on all these great dudes! I watch it often when I feel like not getting after it Thanks Jocko. Good to see these guys still doing great things. I went through jump school with him at Benning in I caught up with him about years after we graduated jump school together via email a few times and he was an instructor at The Center at that time also.

He deployed in his early Team days but within short order had to get both shoulders reconstructed. I completely lost track of him since then. I would love to catch up with him if you every are able to track him down. He was a good dude with nipple piercings that I gave him shit about. Ha ha. Awesome job Rob! Any idea what he meant? Not an accurate portrayal of the BUDS? This is very easy to say sitting in front of your computer, warm and dry, with a full nights sleep and belly, no injuries, no instructor s harrasing you at every turn, etc.

Hope that makes sense! I have some rough info on Haas. He was one of the terror instructors that everyone feared. I think he went on to work at SQT, not sure as to whether he was active or contracting while there. I think it was around September because our contract ended and we all left in early October. This was awesome to read.

Most kids at that age have the physicality to but not the mental tenacity to make it through so I thought it was really cool that he did. Hopefully he made it to the teams and had a good career. Hey Terry, I plan on doing a more in-depth follow up with these guys in the future, which will involve reaching out to them directly wherever I can find them.

Rosebrough is at the top of my list to track down, so def bookmark this page and revisit every once in awhile. I promise I will do all I can to track down the details of what happened to him. Stay tuned! Your email address will not be published. Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email.

It got me thinking, what ever happened to these guys? What did they end up doing with their lives? Where are they now? Again, I tried to keep out the most private of information. Table of Contents. Check them out below:. Author Recent Posts. Rob V. While he never actually served in the US Military, he has a passion for writing about military related topics.

His hobbies include beach volleyball, target shooting, and lifting. Latest posts by Rob V. If you've ever wondered where they are now, OMK has the inside scoop. Share on Facebook. Yeah we learned about his passing back in February. Thanks for that, Buford. More like this. Storyline Edit. Did you know Edit. Trivia Justin Legg was later diagnosed with Leukemia he beat it and that led to a double lung transplant. Justin became the first, and still only, double lung-transplantee in the world to climb Mt.

McKinley and to run three half marathons. Connections Featured in Lone Survivor User reviews 2 Review. Top review. The most annoying thing about this series, however, is the female narrator. Suffice it to say that her mock-officious, ultra-snide and sterile voice belies her actual comprehension of what is going on. This rings especially true when she makes comments like, "So-and-so is being dropped for his failure to pay attention to detail," or "so-and-so's poor attitude and lack of physical fitness have contributed to his own downfall.

Bottom line is that the narrator comments are really annoying and by the third hour, will begin to grate on your nerves.



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