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Michael J. Medders Jr.

   
Individuals US

Akron Beacon Journal -- ELYRIA: A soldier whose father is the police chief of this Northeast Ohio community has been killed in Iraq, police said Thursday.

Capt. Michael Medders Jr., 26, was the son of Elyria Chief Michael Medders, who has been with the department 32 years.

Police Capt. Dan Jaykel said when and how the soldier died were not yet known.

''It's a tremendous loss,'' he said. ''We here at the Elyria Police Department felt that it was a part of our family that passed away and throughout the community. Michael Medders Jr., to me, was a hero for what he did in Iraq.''

Chief Medders said the family would not comment Thursday.

Medders was deployed in October 2007, said Army spokesman Sgt. Martin Maley. He joined the Army in 2003 while attending Bowling Green State University, and was a member of the U.S. Army's 2nd Squadron 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, based at Fort Hood, Texas.



He was a 2001 graduate of Avon Lake High School, where he played football, baseball and basketball and sang in the choir.

''He was a good, active kid, so we've got some people that are really hurting now,'' said Avon Lake City Schools Superintendent Bob Scott.

In football, Medders, a 6-foot-3, 220-pound defensive lineman was All-Ohio, first-team All-Southwestern Conference, all-district and all-county. He had attended Walsh College in Michigan on a football scholarship before transferring to Bowling Green, said Avon Lake football coach Dave Dlugosz.

''He was kind and caring to the younger players,'' Dlugosz said. ''They could go to him. And he had an outstanding sense of humor.''

Scott said Medders is the first graduate of the high school to die in the Iraq war.

''He was doing a great thing for all of us. It's so sad,'' Scott said.

==Another news story==

ELYRIA -- He was a police chief's son, who grew up around law and order.

He was a standout high school football player, earning accolades for his aggressiveness on the field and kindness toward his teammates.

On Thursday, the family of Michael Medders, 25, learned the Army captain, who was serving in the Iraq war, was killed.

Medders was a member of the U.S. Army's 2nd Squadron 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, based at Fort Hood, Texas. The U.S. Department of Defense has not released details surrounding his death.

The Elyria Police Department, where his father, Chief Michael Medders, has worked for 32 years, learned of the death Thursday morning.

"We are just devastated to hear the news," Elyria Capt. Daniel Jaykel said.

Reached at home, Chief Medders said the family would not make any statements Thursday.

==Another news story==

The Chronicle-Telegram — Capt. Michael Medders Jr., the son of Elyria Police Chief Michael Medders and a former Avon Lake High School football star, was killed while in Iraq.

The details surrounding the death of the 2001 Avon Lake graduate still haven’t been released by the U.S. Department of Defense, but Elyria police Capt. Daniel Jaykel said the Elyria Police Department learned of Medders’ death Thursday and is reeling from the loss.

“It’s like part of our family dying,” he said. “Our deepest sympathies go out to Chief Medders, his wife and their family for the loss of their son. It hits home so hard, we’re almost in a daze here because of it.”

Medders Jr. played varsity football for Avon Lake High School and was named to the All-Ohio first-team before moving on to play at Walsh University of North Canton.

His father, who declined to comment for this story, had said in May that his son was so determined to join the military following the Sept. 11 attacks that the family had to convince him to stay in school and get his degree.

Medders Jr. transferred to Bowling Green State University, where he majored in business and communications before graduating in 2005, and then entered the U.S. Army.

Medders Jr. served with the U.S. Army’s 2nd Squadron 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment based out of Fort Hood, Texas.

In May, as a 26-year-old Army lieutenant, he suffered a concussion when a roadside bomb exploded near  the vehicle in which he was riding.

Elyria Mayor Bill Grace said Thursday he knew Medders Jr. from his dealings with his father and will always remember how the chief spoke so fondly of his only son.

“The chief was very proud of his son, his academic and athletic accomplishments and his willingness to serve his country,” Grace said. “He was a bright young man with a promising future. I’m sad for the chief’s loss and that of the entire Medders family.”

Several staff members at Avon Lake High School were so saddened upon hearing of Medders’ death that they asked to go home, said Avon Lake Superintendent Robert Scott, who arrived at the district shortly after Medders graduated in 2001.

“Every one of our staff who knew him said he was just a great kid,” Scott said. “It’s hitting them pretty hard. It’s such a tragedy.”

Mari Beth Becker, a former neighbor of the Medders family now living in Illinois, used to drive Medders Jr. to and from school along with her daughter Ryan. She said Thursday that she was devastated when she heard he’d been killed.

“He was an awesome, awesome young man,” she said. “He was very respectful and had a great sense of humor. I never heard him say an unkind word — it’s very heartbreaking. I feel so bad for his family.”

Medders Jr. is the seventh soldier from Lorain County to have been killed during the war in Iraq, and the first from Avon Lake.

Avon Lake Mayor Karl Zuber said the city is in a state of mourning.

“Our young men and women are making the ultimate sacrifice so we can live here in freedom,” he said. “There’s no way we can ever repay that. We just have to keep their families and friends in our thoughts and prayers.”

 

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Michael J. Medders Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Thursday, October 02 2008 @ 03:00 AM EDT
Our entire community appreciates everything you did for us over there. We love you...
- Avon lake resident
Michael J. Medders Jr.
Authored by: anonymous on Sunday, October 05 2008 @ 08:50 PM EDT
Capt. Medders,
Sir, I would just like to say thank you for your service and sacrifice for our Country. And to your family and loved ones, I wish to extend my deepest sympathy.

"Brave Rifles"(3rd ACR Motto)
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