Jesse Samek

A1C Jesse Samek United States Air Force
Born 1983
O'Fallon, Missouri
Died 2004 (aged 20–21)
Afghanistan
Allegiance  United States of America
Service/branch  United States Air Force
Years of service 2003–2004
Rank Airman First Class
Unit 66th Rescue Squadron
Battles/wars Operation Enduring Freedom
Awards Purple Heart

Airman First Class Jesse Monroe Samek (1983 – October 21, 2004) was a United States Air Force flight engineer deployed to Afghanistan from the 66th Rescue Squadron based out of Nellis Air Force Base, in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. He died when the HH-60 rescue helicopter he was riding in crashed northwest of Kandahar, Afghanistan. He is most notable as having had a U.S. Air Force camp named after him at the Kandahar Airfield in Kandahar, Afghanistan.[1]

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Education

Samek graduated from Rogers High School, in Rogers, Arkansas in 2001 and attended the University of Arkansas for a year before joining the Air Force in February 2003.

Death

Jesse Samek died in October 2004 when the HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter he was the flight engineer during a crash involving poor visibility and drift into terrain. The helicopter was performing a medical evacuation of an Afghan election official who was accidentally shot by a guard 105 miles east of Shindand, and northwest of Kandahar.[2]

He is buried at Bella Vista Memorial Cemetery.

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