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Ret10Echo
01-03-2011, 20:45
This came out through the AP, but perhaps it has received more significant play here as it is relatively "local".

I have a sense that this will turn out to be some random act of violence, but this is someone I had not heard of previously and who has an interesting bio.


RIP




DOVER, Del. (AP) - The body of a military expert who served in three Republican administrations was found dumped in a landfill and investigators said Monday they were trying to retrace his steps in the days leading up to his death.

John Wheeler III, 66, who had not been reported missing, was scheduled to be on an Amtrak train from Washington to Wilmington on Dec. 28, but authorities say it's not clear if he ever made that trip. His body was found three days later, on New Year's Eve, as a garbage truck emptied its contents at the Cherry Island landfill. His death has been ruled a homicide.

Wheeler served as an Army staff officer in Vietnam and later worked in the Reagan and both Bush administrations. He also helped lead efforts to build the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall in Washington and was the second chairman and chief executive officer of Mothers Against Drunk Driving.

Before the garbage truck arrived at the landfill, it stopped to pick up commercial disposal bins in Newark, several miles from Wheeler's home in the historic district of New Castle. Investigators have been to the home he shared with his wife, Katherine Klyce. It was roped off with police tape, but was not considered a crime scene, said Newark police spokesman Lt. Mark Farrall.

"We don't have a crime scene at this point," said Farrall, adding that investigators still do not have any leads in the case.

Initial police reports that Wheeler was last seen getting off an Amtrak train on Dec. 28 were incorrect, Farrall said. Investigators don't know how long Wheeler might have been missing or where and when he was last seen, though a friend said he received an e-mail from Wheeler the day after Christmas.

The delay in the family notifying authorities was because they were not in town, Farrall said.

The family issued a statement through the police department.

"As you must appreciate, this is a tragic time for the family. We are grieving our loss. Please understand that the family has no further comment at this time. We trust that everyone will respect the family's privacy."

A doorman at the condominium building Wheeler and Klyce shared in New York City, said he hadn't seen Klyce in two weeks and a package for her had been sitting in front of her door for days. Two detectives had arrived at the modern-looking building in the Harlem section of the city. Telephone messages left for Klyce at the New Castle home were not immediately returned.

The son of a decorated Army officer, Wheeler followed in his father's footsteps to graduate from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. His military career included serving in the office of the Secretary of Defense and writing a manual on the effectiveness of biological and chemical weapons, which recommended that the United States not use biological weapons.

Wheeler went on to study at Harvard Business School and Yale Law School.

Richard Radez, a longtime friend who also graduated from West Point and Harvard Business School, said he exchanged e-mails with Wheeler on Christmas. On the day after, Wheeler sent Radez an e-mail expressing concern that the nation wasn't sufficiently prepared for cyber warfare.

"This was something that had preoccupied him over the last couple of years," Radez said.

James Fallows, a national correspondent for The Atlantic magazine, wrote in an article on the magazine's website that he had known Jack Wheeler since the early 1980s. A photo on the website shows a youthful, businesslike Wheeler in a dress shirt, tie and suspenders, in front of a map.

Wheeler, Fallows wrote, had spent much of his life trying to address "what he called the '40 year open wound' of Vietnam-era soldiers being spurned by the society that sent them to war."

Fallows told The Associated Press that Wheeler had been focused recently on getting ROTC programs restored at prestigious universities such as Harvard and Stanford.

He also exchanged e-mails with Wheeler over Christmas, and said Wheeler was concerned about school dropping ROTC military programs that resulted from the Vietnam War and continued through the debate over the "don't ask, don't tell" policy preventing gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military.

Author Rick Atkinson's 1989 book "The Long Gray Line" featured Wheeler as a prominent member of West Point's Class of 1966. It called him an extraordinarily intelligent and intense man who relentlessly pursued causes.

"Some of his pursuits were quixotic but others were magnificent," Atkinson said, citing the Vietnam Veterans Memorial as Wheeler's greatest achievement. He said the monument wouldn't exist had Wheeler not used his organizational skills to steer the project through a brutal political fight.

Wheeler retired from the military in 1971. He was a special assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force under President George W. Bush. He recently worked as a consultant for The Mitre Corporation, a nonprofit based in Bedford, Mass., and McLean, Va., that operates federally funded research and development centers.

"He was just not the sort of person who would wind up in a landfill," said Bayard Marin, an attorney who was representing Wheeler and Klyce in an ongoing legal dispute with a couple wanting to build a home near the Wheelers in the historic district.

"He was a very aggressive kind of guy, but nevertheless kind of ingratiating, and he had a good sense of humor," Marin said.

_____

Associated Press writers Sarah Brumfield in Washington, David Dishneau in Hagerstown, Md., and Cristian Salazar in New York City contributed to this story.

aegisnavy
01-03-2011, 20:52
RIP and prayers for the family.
What a sad ending to a life of service.

uplink5
01-03-2011, 21:07
Rest in Peace sir and God Bless you and your family......

Dragbag036
01-03-2011, 21:32
I forwarded the press release to a friend of mine a few hours ago. If you have read "the Long Gray Line" you will know that Jack is one of the main characters. My son is also a Cadet and heard of him as well. Jack is part of the famous class of '66. Some believe they have a curse on that class.


RIP Jack Wheeler...prayers out to the family

greenberetTFS
01-04-2011, 07:25
God Bless,Rest in Peace Warrior............:(

Big Teddy

Richard
01-04-2011, 08:14
This was all over the news yesterday and again today. Sad. :(

RIP, Soldier.

Richard

Dusty
01-04-2011, 08:17
Prayers out to the family.

Sohei
01-04-2011, 08:53
Rest In Peace Sir. Thank you for your faithful service. Condolences to your family and friends.

dennisw
01-04-2011, 09:22
http://www.examiner.com/criminal-profiles-in-national/former-army-officer-john-p-wheeler-iii-who-killed-him

Interesting article about the murder of this former soldier. Below is a comment from a reader of the above article. Strange. Apparently, one of the causes Wheeler was passionate about was the use of biological agents in warfare. Regardless, RIP soldier.


The rumor is that he had gone to washington to confront people with knowledge out about the accident with chemical weapons that left thousands of animals dead in arkansas. Something about a supply of chemical weapons from iraq.

Red Flag 1
01-04-2011, 11:16
Rest In God's Peace. Prayers out.

Ret10Echo
01-04-2011, 11:41
http://www.examiner.com/criminal-profiles-in-national/former-army-officer-john-p-wheeler-iii-who-killed-him

Interesting article about the murder of this former soldier. Below is a comment from a reader of the above article. Strange. Apparently, one of the causes Wheeler was passionate about was the use of biological agents in warfare. Regardless, RIP soldier.

My take was he was against the use of Bio-Agents...

His military career included serving in the office of the Secretary of Defense and writing a manual on the effectiveness of biological and chemical weapons, which recommended that the United States not use biological weapons.

or if that was your point...

Pete
01-04-2011, 13:22
http://www.examiner.com/criminal-profiles-in-national/former-army-officer-john-p-wheeler-iii-who-killed-him

Interesting article about the murder of this former soldier. Below is a comment from a reader of the above article. Strange. Apparently, one of the causes Wheeler was passionate about was the use of biological agents in warfare. Regardless, RIP soldier.



".............The rumor is that he had gone to washington to confront people with knowledge out about the accident with chemical weapons that left thousands of animals dead in arkansas. Something about a supply of chemical weapons from iraq................."

That poster is a good tin foil hat candidate. Chemical weapons are not so selective that they can kill a few thousand birds of the same type and kill 10,000 fish - of the same type - while everything else is fine.

dennisw
01-04-2011, 17:25
or if that was your point...

Yes, that was my point. Obviously some kind of unsavory business here, and it did not take long for the wild ass rumors to surface.

A tragic story.

Gypsy
01-04-2011, 18:29
Rest in Peace, Mr. Wheeler...

I hope they catch whomever is responsible.

Todd 1
01-06-2011, 11:59
Surveillance Footage Adds More Mystery to Former White House Aide’s Death

http://www.theblaze.com/stories/surveillance-footage-adds-more-mystery-to-former-white-house-aid%e2%80%99s-death/


Rest in peace Mr. Wheeler.

incarcerated
01-29-2011, 03:57
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/front_page/20110129_Del__report__Wheeler_died_from_blunt-force_trauma.html

Del. report: Wheeler died from blunt-force trauma

By Kathleen Brady Shea and John P. Martin
The former Pentagon adviser whose body turned up last month in a Wilmington landfill was fatally assaulted, authorities said Friday.
John P. Wheeler 3d died from "blunt-force trauma after being assaulted," Delaware's chief medical examiner said. The ruling answered one question about Wheeler's Dec. 31 death, but left many others unanswered.

The one-paragraph statement offered no new details about Wheeler's unexplained behavior in his last days - when he was seen wandering around Wilmington disoriented - or clues to who killed him and dumped his body in a Newark, Del., trash bin.

Carl Kanefsky, a spokesman for the medical examiner, said the office released the ruling after getting toxicology results, the last piece of evidence it needed for a determination.

Kanefsky refused to elaborate on or release those results, but acknowledged they were a factor in determining the cause of death - effectively ruling out any suggestions Wheeler might have been poisoned or overmedicated, or might have passed out on his own.

Lt. Mark Farrall, a Newark police spokesman, said the investigation was continuing.

"The only thing I can say is to reiterate what I've said before: We're looking for information on how Mr. Wheeler got to Newark," Farrall said.

A 66-year-old New Castle, Del., resident, Wheeler had been scheduled to take a train Dec. 28 to Wilmington from his consulting job at Mitre Corp., a defense contractor outside Washington.

The next night, an employee at a Wilmington parking garage reported seeing him coatless, confused, and holding one shoe. The next day, he was captured by a surveillance camera in a downtown building, again looking disoriented.

That was the last time he was seen alive.

His body tumbled out of a truck as it delivered trash to the Cherry Island landfill in Wilmington just before 10 a.m. Dec. 31. Farrall said investigators have determined that the truck made 10 pickups that morning in Newark before going to the landfill.

Wheeler's tragic end contrasted with a lifetime of achievement: a West Point graduate and veteran who worked as secretary at the Securities and Exchange Commission, aide to Pentagon leaders, and executive director of Mothers Against Drunk Driving.

One unresolved mystery concerns the four-year dispute Wheeler had with a neighbor who was building a house across from his. Wheeler felt the project was out of scale for the historic neighborhood.

A law enforcement source has said police linked Wheeler to an arson attempt at that house days before he disappeared. But there has been no evidence disclosed that it played a role in his death.

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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704680604576110480771016902.html?m od=googlenews_wsj

....A spokesman for the medical examiner said Friday that toxicology tests had been completed as part of the autopsy but declined to discuss which substances might have been found in Mr. Wheeler's blood....