Defense of Freedom Medal Recipient Rick Ulbright
Fallen Civilian Agent Led by Example
By Kaukab Jhumra Smith
Maryland Newsline
Thursday, March 17, 2005
On April 15, Rick Ulbrights high school in Boise, Idaho, will dedicate
an 8-foot-tall, metal and granite memorial to alumni who died in
service to their country.
Fourteen
hundred students will file to the middle of the school quad for a
15-minute ceremony that begins with the national anthem and ends with
the playing of taps. The school is arranging for the state National
Guard to roar by in a four-plane salute.
Ulbright
wont be there for the ceremony, but his family will be.
A
graduate of the class of 1973, Ulbright was killed by rocket fire last
August at Kirkuk Air Force Base in northern Iraq. He was 49.
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Rick
Ulbright as a high school senior in 1973. His mother cut his
hair for this photograph.(Photo
courtesy Borah High School, Boise, Idaho)
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He
is the oldest alumnus of the six whose names are on the war memorial.
Ulbright
left behind a wife in Southern Maryland, two grown daughters, three
sisters, a grandchild hed yet to meet and his parents, who live
in Boise.
Rocket Attack
The
unexpectedness of his death left family and colleagues stunned. They
remember an upbeat, strong-minded man who cherished his family,
planned to visit his new granddaughter in Australia after returning
from Iraq, and who drove himself to be a role model to people around
him.
His
death was particularly shocking because he wasnt involved in
combat. A civilian agent who conducted lie detection tests for the
military, Ulbright had put off a new teaching job in South Carolina to
volunteer for a six-month tour abroad helping counterintelligence
efforts.
Nearly
four months into his Iraq tour, Ulbright finished conducting a
polygraph test at Kirkuk Air Force Base and walked outside toward an
office in a separate building to retrieve some paperwork, military
sources said.
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Rick
Ulbright died three days before his 20th wedding anniversary.(Photo
courtesy Air Force Office of Special Investigations)
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He
had reached the building door when a rocket soared over the bases
walls, wounding him. He died on a military operating table on Aug. 8,
2004, three days before his 20th wedding anniversary.
Ulbrights
wife, Karen, continues to live at the Waldorf, Md., house they bought
together two-and-a-half years ago. She has declined interviews since
her husbands death, directing reporters to talk to his colleagues
at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.
The
two met and married in the early 1980s in North Dakota, where Ulbright
worked in helicopter maintenance at Grand Forks Air Force Base and
took evening classes for a bachelors degree in criminal justice
administration.
More
than seven months after Ulbrights death, his wifes answering
machine continues to play an outgoing message in his deep voice.
Youve reached Rick and Karen, Ulbright says matter-of-factly.
His
mother, Wanda Ulbright, has also saved recordings of her sons voice
on her answering machine, she said. Listening to them comforts her,
she said.
Ulbright
paid his own way through Boise State University for three years before
enlisting in the Air Force partly because he needed the help with
tuition, his mother said.
He
moved every few years, shuttling between Air Force bases in the United
States and abroad, first as an active duty employee and then as a
civilian polygraph examiner. He continued working toward his
bachelors degree, finally completing it in August 1986 while
stationed in North Dakota.
When
Ulbright volunteered to go to Iraq, his parents at first couldnt
understand why. He had just lined up a faculty job with the Department
of Defense Polygraph Institute in Fort Jackson, S.C. -- the same
institute where hed trained to be a polygraph examiner and scored a
perfect 4.0 grade point average 13 years earlier.
He
was quite driven to be excellent in this profession, said Donald
Weinstein, who taught Ulbright in 1992 at the Department of Defense
Polygraph Institute, then located in Fort McClellan, Ala.
And
now here Ulbright was, talking about putting off this teaching
opportunity to go into a war zone.
His
mother describes how his father, Richard Ulbright, a Korean War
veteran, asked his son why he would want to take such a risk.
Dad,
you would, Ulbright said simply. Wouldnt you?
And
my husband said, Well, what could I say? Wanda Ulbright
recounted sadly. None of us wanted him to go over there, but he
felt it was his duty.
Deep
down, a close colleague says, Ulbright remained a son who wanted to
make his parents proud. Even though conditions were bad over there,
he would downplay that so that they wouldnt worry, said David
Fuller, his colleague in Iraq.
Travels
Through Danger Zones
Although
he was based in Baghdad, Ulbright traveled all over Iraq as a
polygrapher. He was helping a military unit in Kirkuk at the
time of his death, Fuller said.
While
most people only risked it once or twice, Ulbright regularly traveled
the dangerous stretch of road between the Green Zone and the Baghdad
airport nicknamed Route Irish by the U.S. military many times
to get to other military bases, Fuller said.
Much
of his work was shrouded in secrecy, said Wanda Ulbright.
Lots
of folks have trouble understanding what he was doing over there,
Fuller agreed. I think when he was able to talk to his father about
what he was doing over there, his father realized it really was an
important mission, and he was very proud of him.
He
was excited about the birth of his granddaughter. Fuller described how
his colleagues in Iraq cheered at the phone call announcing the
babys birth.
On
the phone, Ulbright immediately asked his exhausted daughter, Misty,
to put the newborn on the line, according to Wanda Ulbright. Misty was
calling from Australia, where she lives in Werrington with her
Australian husband.
When
Misty protested the baby was asleep, Ulbright demanded she rouse the
baby so that he could hear her, Wanda Ulbright said.
That
was really something, Wanda Ulbright said. I guess she did wake
up and cry for him.
Although
the Iraq war has claimed more than 1,500 American lives so far,
Ulbright is the only fatality from his close-knit agency, the Air
Force Office of Special Investigations. He is the fourth fatality in
OSI's 56-year history.
That
added to the shock of Ulbrights death, said Fuller, manager of the
OSI polygraph program, who accompanied Ulbrights body back to the
United States.
The
last person youd think to get hurt was a polygrapher, because even
though were in a combat zone were not out there on the front
lines, Fuller said.
Theyd
known each other for 12 years, and their living in the shadow of
Saddam Husseins presidential palace in Baghdad made Ulbright and he
as close as brothers, Fuller said.
He
and Ulbright would joke they were two old men involved in a young
mans war, Fuller said.
In
Baghdad, Ulbright shared a trailer with another person and a bathroom
with Fuller and two others. When others complained about the
conditions, Ulbright would remind them they were lucky to receive hot
meals and to sleep in trailers instead of tents, Fuller said.
Thats
the thing about Rick. I never heard the guy complain, Fuller said.
Bringing
Ulbrights body back home to Maryland and speaking at his memorial
service at the Andrews Air Force Base chapel were difficult, Fuller
said.
It
was very emotional because I knew I had to turn around and go back,
Fuller said. He completed his tour in November and is now back at
Andrews Air Force Base.
More
Honors
Ulbright
would have turned 50 on March 8 -- a birthday he shares with his
father.
The
family has drawn strength from the letters of support theyve
received from all over the world.
Its
been a help to know that he was thought of so highly, Wanda
Ulbright said.
Ulbright
has been posthumously awarded the Bronze Star, the Outstanding
Civilian Career Service Award and the Defense of Freedom medal.
His
name will be engraved on the National Law Enforcement Officers
Memorial in Washington, D.C., in May at an annual ceremony for fallen
civilian officers.
His
family will be there, too.
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