Boston Herald

‘Hero’ soldier struggled upon return home

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The former Army soldier who killed three hostages Friday at a Napa Valley, Calif., veterans care facility he once attended was described as a “hero” in the service who struggled once he returned home from Afghanista­n.

The Napa County Sheriff-Coroner’s Office identified the gunman as Albert Wong, 36, of Sacramento, who formerly was treated at the Pathway Home, a residentia­l unit within the Yountville Veterans Home. He was found dead next to the bodies of three employees Friday afternoon, including a former Massachuse­tts woman.

Wong was deployed to Afghanista­n in 2011 and was awarded the Expert Marksmansh­ip Badge. Yountville Mayor John Dunbar described Wong as “one of our heroes who clearly had demons.”

Cissy Sherr, who with her husband became Wong’s legal guardian after his father died when he was a child, said the soldier was deeply affected by the violence he saw.

“I think he realized that it started to catch up with him,” she said. “I had the impression he was kind of put in harm’s way, knowing that he didn’t have a family. He didn’t seem the least bit resentful.”

Officials have said Wong suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, and that’s what sent him to the Yountville facility. Sherr told The Associated Press that Wong told her, “I think I’m going to get a lot of help from this program.”

Authoritie­s identified the victims as the home’s executive director, Christine Loeber, 48, a Boston College graduate and native of Easton, Mass.; therapist Jen Golick, 42; and Jennifer Gonzales, 29, a psychologi­st with the San Francisco Department of Veterans Affairs Healthcare System.

Authoritie­s have said they don’t yet know whether Wong targeted the victims specifical­ly or chose them at random. Golick’s fatherin-law, Bob Golick, said she recently had expelled Wong from the program.

Dunbar said the Pathway Home program “has been unique from the very beginning,” partly because of the way it allowed veterans to interact with the community. The program included activities such as fishing or bowling trips. Pathway “serves post-9/11 Veterans affected by deployment-related stress,” its website says.

Some local businesses would offer the veterans anything they needed, he said, to “come and relax.”

“Sometimes that’s part of the programmin­g, to just be human,” Dunbar said.

He said of Loeber, “She would sleep in her office more often than not because she had to be there to fill a shift. That’s the kind of personal dedication she showed all of us.”

Sherr said she was still struggling to understand what happened. “He loved computers and he liked music. He was thoughtful and independen­t,” Sherr said. “He didn’t have a traditiona­l upbringing but still he became a fine young man.”

 ?? AP PhotoS ??
AP PhotoS
 ??  ?? DEDICATED: Massachuse­tts native Christine Loeber, above, was among four people who died Friday at a California veterans facility.
DEDICATED: Massachuse­tts native Christine Loeber, above, was among four people who died Friday at a California veterans facility.

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