04 Apr

Man Owes His Life To A Fellow Marine



“Once a Marine Always a Marine”

Here is proof of that. In the Chicago Sun-time March 21, 2008. Brian Troy of Rockford IL, a Marine in the 1980’s. suffered several heart attacks before receiving a new heart in 2006. He didn’t know who the donor was but felt it was a Marine.
Eventually he found out the heart was from Ricky Martinez who was shot on April 26, 2006 while driving home from a Cubs game with friends. Martinez had signed up after 9/11 and served 2 tours in Iraq.
‘His heart seems to fill my chest’
From Sgt. Grit newsletter
Chicago Sun Times
Brian Troy is constantly reminded of the fellow Marine who saved his life.
Every time his heart beats.
Troy lost 40 pounds and was in a coma for a month before he received a heart transplant in 2006.
He was not certain who the donor was, but he suspected it was a young Marine whose murder was in the headlines.
Troy, 43, sent several letters to the donor’s family through the Gift of Hope organ donor network. The network would not disclose the name of the donor or his family members.
The donor’s father finally replied in December.
And Troy — a Marine in the early 1980s — learned his hunch was right: He was carrying the heart of murder victim Ricky Martinez Jr., 23, a Marine who patriotically signed up after 9/11 and served two tours in Iraq.

“His heart seems to fill my chest,” Troy said. “When I sit in my recliner, the whole recliner twitches with his heartbeat. … I think they are happy their son’s heart went to a good person.”

Last month, Martinez’s parents trekked to visit Troy at his home in Rockford, where they cried, laughed and shared childhood photos of their son. Troy hopes to see them again Saturday in Chicago to promote organ donation and support legislation to stiffen penalties for attacks on veterans.
The tragedy that saved Troy’s life happened in a flash of gunfire April 24, 2006.
Martinez was driving from a Cubs game when one of his passengers was mistaken for a rival gang member. Steven Bryant fired a .45-caliber pistol at Martinez’s car, Cook County prosecutors say.
A bullet hit Martinez in the shoulder and traveled up his neck to the base of his skull. Bryant, a 22-year-old already convicted of a killing and on the street again, was arrested and charged with murder.
Five days after the shooting, Martinez died.
The next day, Troy received an urgent call from Loyola University Medical Center that a heart was ready for him.
Troy is an electrician who suffered through many heart surgeries between 2002 and 2006. His mother also suffered from heart disease and died in 1996 at age 51.
After surgery in February 2006, Troy was in a coma at Loyola for about a month. He returned home in April 2006 to wait for a heart.

“This was it, live or die,” Troy said of the call from Loyola to rush to the hospital to receive a new heart.

He and his wife jumped into their Hyundai, and she drove 100 mph.

“I was half praying the cops would not stop us and half praying they would,” Troy joked. “I had a motion-picture fantasy that we would get a police escort.”

After an 11-hour operation, Troy woke up in a sunny room.

“I came to the realization that I have a heart. I am alive! And I am hungry!”

His wife, Denise, said she asked a nurse about the new heart.

“I said, ‘Is there anything you can tell me about the donor?’ She said, ‘No, only that it’s a healthy 23-year-old.’ Well, from the newspapers, we were 99 percent sure it was Ricky Martinez’s heart.”

‘My son had such a big heart’
Troy sent his first letter to Martinez’s family about four months after the transplant, but there was no answer. More than a year later, he sent another letter. Then, about three months ago, just after Christmas, Troy received a letter from Martinez’s father, Ricardo Martinez Sr., confirming Martinez was the donor.
The next day, Martinez’s father called.
Troy said he stared at the caller ID and refused to pick up the phone. He wasn’t ready to talk to Martinez’s family.
But the phone rang again, and this time, he summoned the courage to answer.

“There was a lot of crying and a lot of talking,” he said.

Troy slowly began to learn about his hero. Martinez had applied to the Chicago Police Department. His father told Troy that the Police Department sent Martinez an acceptance letter. It arrived a month after his death.

“We chitchatted about what a great son Ricky was. He was kind of a mama’s boy, and he was a respectful son. His father was proud he was going to become a cop.”

Troy and Martinez’s parents grew close over the phone and decided they needed to see each other.
So on Feb. 10, Martinez’s family made the trip from Chicago to Rockford. Troy hugged Martinez’s mother at the door.

“She brought family albums of Ricky when he was small,” Troy said. “I loved his big, cheesy smiles. I was only privy to his picture as a Marine, and he’s not smiling in that one.”

Troy learned that Martinez was more than 6 feet tall and a fitness buff. “Ricardo told me that his heart needs a lot of exercise,” Troy said. “He said, ‘You need to exercise for him.’ “

Now Troy thinks of himself as part of Martinez’s family.
And Martinez’s mother, Adalila Cruz, feels the same bond.

“I love him because part of him is my son,” she said of Troy.

“He is part of my family. He seems very grateful and thankful for what my son did. It shows you what kind of a person my son was. Even after his life was gone, he kept helping.”


Wild Thing’s comment…….

I don’t know who said it, “ONCE a MARINE ALWAYS a MARINE”, I know that I will be a Marine even after the life has left this body.” said by Robert D. Hawkins Sgt of Marines 64 -69 Third Battalion Platoon 342

I saw this story in Sgt. Grit’s newsletter that I get in my email, and wanted to share it with you. This story is very special that like the top quote says….. Once a Marine Always a Marine.

Lynn says:

That’s so right–Once a Marine, Always a Marine.
This is a great story, sad that a young man in the prime of life was gunned down, but happy that someone only my age who needed something to live, got that chance to have a future.
OOO-Rah.
Marines take care of their own.

darthcrUSAderworldtour07 says:

This US MARINE = KING OF HEARTS!

John says:

You are so right darth…..this Marine truly is the King of Hearts!!!
It saddens me so much to see a young man who has his whole future in front of him, taken this way. The article states that Martinez had already served 2 tours in Iraq and then comes home to a Cubs game and is killed by some punk druggie!!!! How unjust is that? My heart goes out to this family!!!!
If we are going to be serious about terrorism, then we need to crack down on all the drug related crimes and killings in this country!!! The news media can’t wait to report about the rising deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan but what about the number of innocent people killed in this country every day from drug crimes, gang crimes, and car accidents?!?!?! Talk about hypocrisy!!!!

BobF says:

What the article doesn’t say is why a convicted killer is back out on the streets again. A young man died because the justice system wouldn’t keep a low life punk behind bars.

TomR says:

I am glad that Troy and the Martinezs were able to meet and bond.
Yes, the damn court system in America is screwed up.

Jack says:

Great story WT and my sympathies go to the family of Ricky Martinez and the joy he brought to Brian Troy.
I have only one question, why isn’t the judge who let Steven Bryant out and back on the streets in jail on murder charges? That judge was directly responsible for what has occured.

Mark says:

Now isn’t it ironic this happened in Chicago, isn’t this where Obama was doing his community service and neighborhood outreach work ?
Sadly two tours in Iraq and he is killed in his own country and by mistaken identity.
And the killer is back out on the streets.
At least one good thing came out of this one life was saved.
God works in mysterious ways alright.

Wild Thing says:

Lynn, it is like a two sided story. Very sad and yet very much a happy one too. So special that it was another Marine for the Marine.

Wild Thing says:

Darth that is GREAT, yes.

Wild Thing says:

John, I agree me too. That is so sad what happened and after he had been in the war to come back and be killed like that. Horrible

Wild Thing says:

Bob yes I noticed that too. Judges today so many of them they just keep letting criminals right back out on the streets. It has been happenig a lot and ONCE is too many times.

Wild Thing says:

Tom, yes, they are letting child molesters, killers, rapists etc. all out so easily now. It is sickening.

Wild Thing says:

Jack I would LOVE for that to happen. I bet if we started to put Judges in jail for the crimes of the criminals they let out so easily maybe just maybe these vile Judges would stop doing this.

Wild Thing says:

Mark, God sure does.
I agree, interesting this was in Obamaland.