Collateral Damage
A soldier’s family aren’t buying the Army’s story that their daughter’s death in Iraq was a suicide

LaVena Johnson
Credit: Courtesy of Family
The death of soldier LaVena Johnson shown here in 2004, is still a mystery.

The moment John H. Johnson, a psychologist and motivational speaker, saw his 19-year-old daughter’s body in the funeral home, he knew something was very wrong. According to the Johnsons, an Army medical examiner told the family that on July 19, 2005, Private First Class LaVena Johnson, stationed near Balad, Iraq, had stuck an M-16 rifle in her mouth and pulled the trigger. Her father saw something different: “She had a bullet entrance wound in the left side of her head,” he recalls, “but LaVena was right-handed.” The young soldier also looked as if she had been badly beaten. But what was especially telling for John Johnson was the fact that no one could find the bullet that had killed his child.

The Army is conducting a routine investigation but will not release any details relating to the death.

LaVena, an aspiring movie producer and one of ten Black women to have died in Iraq since the war started, hadn’t seemed upset when she spoke with her mother, Linda Johnson, by phone just two days before she died. Excited about coming home to Florissant, Missouri, for Christmas, she talked of going shopping and decorating the family tree. “She was her usual bubbly self,” her mother remembers. “This wasn’t someone thinking of killing herself.”

Johnson remains convinced that there is more to his daughter’s death than the Army has so far let on. He says, “I think that perhaps LaVena walked up on something, or somebody tried to hurt her, and she fought them.” Now her family members vow to do right by their fallen soldier by clearing her name.





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-5 latest comments

hallo

We are Africans living in the middle east and we would like to extend our prayers to the family of the beautiful lady.

Do not worry, the pain i know is tremendous, but the great thing is, she joins other great black people of her kind fighting for what is good and right.

Somehow when i saw her picture she reminded me of strength, love and integrity.

God bless you,

g k m

-ngumsus

To johnson family,yes pray to God, but by no means

should this mean be passive, You need to fight

and seek nothing short of justice, Yes the military is a huge, and taking them on can seem

overwhelming, but God gave David tremendous power

and he took down Goliath,God gives us a voice

and the promise that if we come to him with faith

that the task at hand is possible, IT IS POSSIBLE!

Trust in God and the signs he gives you he will

FIGHT THIS BATTLE W.YOU RIGHT BY YOUR SIDE.


-kay

To the johnson family, Please do not let anyone or

anything allow you to back down, There are

too many of us tired of these type of injustices,

Please try to get as much help as possible, Your

daughters live is as important as Pat Tillman or

all the natelee halloways of the world, call

on the media to to draw attention to this atrocity, stop at nothing , too many of our lives and our childrens lives are extremely undervalued.

There will be many ignorant, racist or terrified

people who will not help, but the

-karen

My heart goes out to the Johnson Family. To suffer such a loss is unimaginable and heartbreaking. To suffer the loss of your beloved daughter and and not be presented with the facts of her death is unconscienable. I am ashamed of our government for the many deceitful lies they have told the American people about the war but this sickens me and weighs heavy on my heart. I believe your daughters loving spirit lives on and pray you can take some comfort there.

-Jan

if you think the "blue wall" is tough to penetrate, then my friends you haven't seen anything until you've encountered the "camoflauge wall" which is none other than the U S Government. Be prepared for obstacles, and dog and pony shows. dont be detered because you keep crashing into a wall. The answers lies within her comrades not the government. seek out the soldiers that are willing to discuss the issues, but by all means tread lightly on this. Good luck

-cathy