The Columbus Dispatch

Marine, 24, to get Medal of Honor

- By Lindsay Wise MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS

WASHINGTON — A retired Marine will receive the Medal of Honor for using his body to block a grenade blast in Afghanista­n, the White House announced yesterday.

Cpl. William “Kyle” Carpenter, a 24-yearold Mississipp­i native who now lives in South Carolina, was serving with 2nd Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment on Nov. 21, 2010, when he covered a grenade to save the life of his friend, Lance Cpl. Nick Eufrazio, during a firefight with Taliban insurgents, according to the Marine Corps.

Both men were severely wounded, but Carpenter took the brunt of the blast. A lung collapsed, and he lost an eye, his eardrums were blown out, and his jaw and teeth were shattered.

President Barack Obama is to present Carpenter with the Medal of Honor at a ceremony at the White House on June 19. Carpenter will be the eighth living recipient and the second Marine to be awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism during the wars in Iraq or Afghanista­n.

Born in Flowood, Miss., Carpenter graduated from W. Wyman King Academy in Batesburg, S.C., in 2008 and enlisted in the Marine Corps in 2009. After 21⁄ years recovering

2 from his injuries, he was medically retired from the military last year and is studying at the University of South Carolina in Columbia.

“Going from toting a machine gun in Afghanista­n to using a bedpan, and I can’t even put my own socks on — that was hard to kind of suck it up,” Carpenter said in an account of his actions on the Marine Corps website.

He said he feels very fortunate. “Early on in my recovery, the entire United States seemed to be supportive,” he said.

 ??  ?? Cpl. Kyle Carpenter
Cpl. Kyle Carpenter

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