Chattanooga Times Free Press

Solider dies after falling ill during Ranger School

-

FORT BENNING, Ga. — A 21-year-old Army officer died after falling ill during his first day at the military’s grueling Ranger School in Georgia.

The soldier, 2nd Lt. Michael R. Parros, died Wednesday at a hospital two days after he became sick during training at Fort Benning. The Army said in a news release that doctors treated Parros for hyponatrem­ia, an illness caused by unusually low sodium levels in the blood that can result from drinking too much water.

“Typically it’s over-hydration, but we don’t really know what happened in this case,” John Tongret, a Fort Benning spokesman, said Thursday.

The two-month Ranger School course tests soldiers’ abilities to overcome fatigue, hunger and stress during combat operations. The latest class kicked off on a sweltering Monday when temperatur­es at Fort Benning, located outside Columbus, reached 95 degrees and the heat index hit 103 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.

Parros, of Walnut Creek, Calif., had completed a training session on hand-to-hand combat and gone to dinner before he became ill Monday, Tongret said. He said the Army is investigat­ing, which is standard practice when a soldier dies.

The Army said Parros graduated in May from the U.S. Army Military Academy at West Point, where he played football, soccer and hockey.

“This is a tragic loss,” Lt. Col. Matthew Weber, who oversees the Infantry Basic Officer Leadership Course on Fort Benning, said in a statement. “While 2nd Lt. Parros was only with us for a short time, he showed so much potential and was the epitome of the kind of soldier you want to serve with.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States