Mom says her son 'snapped' after deployment

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2009
ARTICLE OPTIONS
A A A
print this article
e-mail this article

ALBANY (AP) - Relatives say a Fort Drum soldier accused of stabbing his two Army buddies to death told them he saw his best friend "blown to pieces" in Iraq and came back a changed man: violent, sleepless, edgy and plagued by flashbacks.

Spc. Joshua Hunter, a military policeman, was expected to be arraigned on second-degree murder charges Friday morning, three days after the bodies of Waide James, 20, and Diego Valbuena, 23, were found in their apartment just outside Fort Drum, about 140 miles northwest of Albany. Hunter and the two victims served in Iraq at the same time in the same battalion.

They all were based at the wind-swept Army post near the Canadian border, home of the much-deployed 10th Mountain Division, and shared an off-base apartment.

Hunter's wife, Emily Hunter, told The Associated Press in a phone interview that her husband was outgoing before he went to war, but when he returned stateside, he was preoccupied by images of his friend being blown up.

"He saw his best friend get blown up to pieces and he tried to put him back together," Emily Hunter said. "He was never right after that."

Joshua Hunter grew up in Ona, W.Va. and joined the Army in September 2007. Fort Drum officials said he served in Iraq for a year and returned in May.

In an interview with The Associated Press at the family's home, Judy Hunter said her son was not the same after coming home. He had trouble sleeping and would stay up for days on end. He sometimes suffered flashbacks. Though her son never talked to her about the war, he did confide in his father about "the trauma he went through," she said.

"In my heart of hearts, I think he snapped," his mother said.

FROM AN EARLIER REPORT:

Joshua S. Hunter, 20, is on his way back to Jefferson County to face two counts of second-degree murder.

Hunter, who was a military police officer with the 10th Mountain Division's Third Brigade, according to Fort Drum, waived extradition this morning in the municipal court of Portsmouth, Ohio. That cleared the way for authorities to return him to Jefferson County.

Portsmouth Municipal Court Judge Russell T. Kegley set bond at $1 million, and the Scioto County Sheriff's Department turned him over to four members of the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department, according to Undersheriff Timothy M. Dowe.

Warrants issued in Jefferson County charge him with the “intentional” murders of two fellow Fort Drum soldiers, Waide T. James, 20, and Diego Valbuena, 23, on Sunday or Monday in their residence at The Meadows Apartments, Evans Mills.

PHOTOS
This photo of Joshua Hunter holding a pistol was on his myspace page.
This photo of Joshua Hunter holding a pistol was on his myspace page.
RELATED STORIES
ADVERTISEMENTS
SHOWCASE OF HOMES
RECENT SPECIAL FEATURES
2012 Wedding Guide
2012 Wedding Guide
The Cychronicle (Vol. 5, Issue 1)
The Cychronicle (Vol. 5, Issue 1)
Healthy Lifestyle
Healthy Lifestyle