Trooper killed in Iraq praised for valor
This is my tribute to a fallen South Orange neighbor - May have met him as we walk and talk in our town, but none the less , it is sad to see a life lost like this. Here’s to you and we will say prayers for you and your family.
Greg Burrus
Thursday, June 26, 2008 -BY MICHAEL J. FEENEY AND JASON TSAI -STAFF WRITERS
A veteran state trooper from
Detective Sgt. Dwayne M. Kelley, 48, a 20-year state police veteran serving with the Army Reserves, was among nine people — and one of three Americans — killed in a bomb attack in an office building in Sadr City on Tuesday.
Capt. Gregory T. Dalessio, 30, of Cherry Hill died Monday in
Few details were available about Dalessio on Wednesday night.
Kelly, of
He was a member of the counterterrorism bureau and was working to restore local government in
“This was his third deployment to
News of Kelley’s and Dalessio’s deaths came the same day that members of a New Jersey National Guard Unit left the Teaneck Armory for Fort Bliss, Texas, where they will begin two months of desert training before leaving for Iraq in September.
Kelley is survived by a wife and two daughters. Relatives gathered at Kelley’s
Kelley, who became a trooper in 1988, served on the state police terrorism task force, Della Fave said. Kelley began his work overseas in November, the captain said.
Della Fave said Kelley was a “tremendous tool” in
A rabid basketball fan, Kelley often joked that he could have played for the New York Knicks, said neighbor Shan Atkinson, 62, who had known him the past four years.
Kelley’s grandparents were full-blooded Cherokee, Atkinson said, and she often made him traditional American Indian food. He also liked Arabic food, she said, noting that she’d made grape leaves for Kelley the last time she saw him.
Atkinson said that whenever she ran into Kelley in the laundry room of the complex, he would playfully ask, “What did you cook for me today?”
“He was very nice, very friendly, always smiling,” she said.
Kelley received a valor award for his work in
At least 25 service members have died this month, with eight deaths coming since Friday. May’s death tally of 19 was the lowest monthly toll of the
Internal Shiite rivalries may have been behind Tuesday’s blast inside the district council building in
The Iraqi Defense Ministry spokesman suggested that Iraqi council members — and not the Americans — were the targets of the bombing.
“The presence of the American forces and embassy employees was by chance,” Defense spokesman Maj. Gen. Mohammed al-Askari said. “Chance played a role in the casualties among the Americans.”
American soldiers using trained dogs sifted through the wreckage of the office on Wednesday. A dozen people were detained for questioning, including 10 security guards.
Staff Writer William Lamb contributed to this article, which includes material from The Associated Press. E-mail: feeney@northjersey.com and tsai@northjersey.com

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