Webb's brother, Coy Bullock, had just finished chatting on the Internet with Webb minutes before he was killed, Hoffmann said, crying into the phone.
Webb's mother, Teresa Bullock, of Lake Elsinore, said her son loved the Army. She remembered watching him don Army attire as a child and play soldier with his fiends.
"He comes from a background of military. He was 11 months old when I went into the Army. I was in for a couple of years," she said. "His stepfather was also in the Army, and his grandfather was in the Marines. His other grandfather on his stepfather's side was in the Marines, too."
In October 1996, Webb left West Valley High School as a senior to attend Alessandro High, a continuation school, but did not complete the program. After enlisting in the Army National Guard, he earned his GED and transferred into the regular Army.
Bullock said that being a former soldier herself, she always understood the danger her sons faced.
"But we've tried to keep things positive and say we'd get through whatever we need to get through with the love and help of our friends and family," she said. "With our belief in and support of a higher power, we are getting through this."
Funeral arrangements are pending. Bullock said her son will be buried in Alturas, a town about 180 miles north of Reno, where his wife and infant daughter live. A memorial service will be held later for family and friends in the Hemet area.
"You have no idea how many hearts this man reached," Bullock said. "I've talked to so many people I didn't know he knew and people I hadn't heard from in 15 or 16 years."
Bullock said the rest of the family is holding up under the circumstances. She and her daughter flew to Alturas to be with Webb's wife, Shalan, and 6-month-old child, Mary. Her other son and husband were driving up.
"I told Chris' wife this morning that I finally felt at peace," Bullock said. "I had the best night's sleep since this whole thing started, because I knew Chris would want us all to be together and still does."
Bullock said her younger son, Coy, 20, a specialist, joined the Army two years ago. Both sons deployed to Iraq together in October, each on a one-year tour.
"They put everything in process for Coy to come home as soon as possible on emergency leave, and he got home Friday night," she said. "We don't know yet if he has to go back."
Bullock said her older son loved and was devoted to his wife of 5½ years and their daughter. His baby was almost two months old when he went overseas.
Larry Stroud, commander of Hemet's Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 12023, said the post will change its name to honor fallen soldiers from the community, particularly those from Hemet High School. The post will be renamed the Hemet High Veterans Memorial Post.
A Hemet High School assembly will take place May 25 to commemorate the change, Stroud said.
"This community has paid a heavy price in this war," said Stroud, who served in Vietnam. "We want to make sure the community and the high school never forget it."
I would 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.
"Loyalty And Courage"(5th Cav Motto|)