Reliving Memorial Day 2006
CBS' Dozier Tells How A Car Bombing In Baghdad Changed Lives Forever
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Play CBS Video Video Dozier: 25 Surgeries Later CBS News' Kimberly Dozier was severely injured last year by a car bomb in Baghdad. Most of the damage was to the right side of her body, Dozier tells Katie Couric about her injuries and surgeries.
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Video We Remember Family, friends and colleagues pay tribute to CBS News cameraman Paul Douglas and soundman James Brolan, who were killed in a Memorial Day 2006 Baghdad car bombing.
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Video Dozier's Life-Changing Day Kimberly Dozier tells Katie Couric that Memorial Day 2006 changed her life forever. A car bombing killed CBS cameraman Paul Douglas and soundman James Brolan and severely injured Dozier.
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Kimberly Dozier, with James Brolan, left, and Paul Douglas in the field. (CBS)
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The aftermath of the attack. It is believed the car bomb weighed between 300 and 500 pounds. (AP)
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CBS News Producer Kate Rydell. (CBS)
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Video Library Meet The 4th I.D. Hear from soldiers who survived a deadly 2006 car bombing in Baghdad that struck a CBS News crew.
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Interactive American Heroes Profiles of U.S. soldiers who've died in Iraq, a look at the war's toll and pictures of mourning.
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Interactive Iraq: 4 Years Later The conflict wears on as the nation struggles to rebuild.
"What was the mission that day?" Couric asks.
"Be a security detachment for Captain Funkhouser, and a CBS News crew, to take 'em to Iraqi check points that we were in the process of turning back over to the Iraqi army," Reed explains.
Their first checkpoint was the Karradah, a previously safe residential neighborhood where an improvised explosive device, or IED, had gone off the day before.
IEDs are responsible for well over half of the American combat casualties in Iraq.
"What did you do first?" Couric asks Reed.
"When we first rolled in, me and my driver basically looked at each other and, I mean, we just had a, just the way the cars were parked, we were like, 'Man, this looks kinda shady. I don't like this, the way it's looking.' Because, it just didn't look right to us for some reason," he recalls.
Funkhouser got out of his Humvee and started walking towards a group of Iraqi civilians.
"He was maybe 15 or 20 feet ahead of me when I saw Paul and James sort of out of the corner of my eye moving to intercept. Because it's the perfect shot. The American soldier in what we call full battle rattle: helmet, flack jacket, weapons," Dozier remembers. "And Paul wasn't gonna miss a shot like that."
Normally, Justin Farrar would have been at Funkhouser's side, providing protection. "But that day he told me to hold back and stay with Kimberly," Farrar remembers. "We were walking, you know, trying to catch up to Captain Funkhouser, and all and next thing I know I heard a loud boom, and everything just went black."
"So I remember I turned to my left, and I seen that one Humvee on fire. And then I turned back to my right and I seen Captain Funkhouser fall," Farrar recalls.
It was chaos. Medic Izzy Flores scrambled to treat several wounded soldiers at once.
"First patient I came up to was Sgt. Reed. And he was laying on his side. And right away you can just tell he took a large shrapnel wound to his calf," Flores remembers. "I ran to Sgt. Farrar. He had shrapnel through his foot. Shrapnel to his sides, shrapnel to his face and the back of his neck. He was just all bloody. And then, a little ways from the wall, Kimberly Dozier was laying down and she had deformed legs, shrapnel."
"I couldn't feel anything, I couldn't see anything, I couldn't hear anything," Dozier remembers. "I do remember somewhere in all of that I said, 'Where are my guys? How are my guys?'"
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Sad in every way -- for the families who lost their loved ones, the soldiers and this show's audience. This programs is hard to watch, not for the subject matter, but by a lack of respect for its viewers. This truly was a lost opportunity to watch and absorb powerful imagery, undermined by an insistent belief that attention spans and interest levels are only maintained by over-editing.
Thankfully there were a few 'naked' moments without flashes and quick moves that not only let us see things, but provided poignancy. I only wish there were more.
I support Captain Funkhouser's widows' statements completely She wants everyone to see not just her soldier but the thousands of soldiers that go through this everyday. She is the ultimate military wife - not in it to forward her career, but to honor the lives and cause of all our troops.
The odd thing is, I didn't feel this way about the Bob Woodruff, and various other reports because they honored their profession as a reporters, and didn't try to pretend to live the life of a soldier.
I am an Iraq veteran. Although I am 100% against this illegal and immoral war, I appreciate the sacrifices that all soldiers and civilians have made over there.
Thank you to you and all the US and "Coalition" military and civilians over there, all victims of a corrupt and misguided US president and his advisors.
3800 is a lot of deaths but I also think of the Tens of thousands of innocent Iraq's that have also died and the families that have to live without them.
Thanx most of all to the voices of all the soldiers and the Sergants window and those gorgeous little girls, that made me cry, and especially to Kimberly for sharing such an intimate and revealing ordeal with me and the many others who hopefully watched ,I will never forget it. I pray every day for our brave heroes who will soon be coming back home. Also for all the tireless doctors and nurses who are putting our men and women back together again.
Thank you Patric
character of a combat zone how it is a web of love, hurt that transends the world. The gift of
haveing video, pictures, real time and the personel envolved. This was not political is was humanity. I feel as a vet from Nam that this gave not only what the troops and their familes go through but that the innocents locial and other wise the recorded impact of a war. Kimberly God bless you for your sharing and I pray that what
happen to you does not depress you but lifts you up, you have been there done that, life should be enjoyed with a clear sense of purpose God bless. Oh by the way is CBS going to make copies of your show available to the public, it should be required study in every high school in the nation as well as soical groups.
My deepest prayers go out to Sgt Farrar and his family. To carry that kind of burden - I can't even imagine.
Capt Funkhouser's wife is incredibly strong! My prayers go out to her and her family.
To the 4th ID team - you showed strength and teamwork and I am proud to serve with you!
I agree with the earlier posting that Kimberley should have told her story without Couric and I hope she will soon write a book of her personal struggles during her time in Iraq and her recovery.
Finally, thank you Kimberley for sharing such a difficult time with us. My prayers are with you. Thank you for giving us a glimpse into the real pain and fear that is experienced on a daily basis in a war zone. You truly brought the story home.
I want to thank you for your courage to share your story in it's fullness, from beginning to present. Watching you tell each story/report from the war zone brought you close. When you spoke, I always stopped to listen, knowing you put yourself in harms way each time you made a report. I admired you and do even more so tonight. You have told the story of our wounded soldiers from this war, to past wars like no one else but a reporter could tell. And you tell it first hand. To see you wounded, brought the war to my home as I had become so familiar with your name, your face and your voice telling me, all of us, all about what our young men and young women faced every day. You became a frind I trusted and listened to. I can not even begin to express my sorrow, thinking of you all and your familes. I appreciate your exposed pain at the loss of Paul and James, it tore my heart for you and all who loved them. There are no words to fully describe the heroric sacrifices many have given selflessly. My deepest admiration goes to you all. I couldn't stop crying during your touching story as well as the team wounded and lost with you.
Thank you Kimberly. . . You are amazing. I continue to pray for you and your continued success, and all affected by war. I just happen to feel I know you as my friend.
P. Fabbri
Houston, TX
- by Mal0410 May 30, 2007 2:30 AM EDT
- I was totally engrossed watching "Flashpoint" tonight. It was so well done and I admire the courage of Kimberly Dozier. Politics aside, we must continue to support our troops and their families. My prayers and best wishes to all the soldiers of the Fourth Infantry Division of Fort Hood and to the troops of the Iowa National Guard. The doctors, nurses, pilots and all the others who are involved in the care of our wounded must never be forgotten either. They are truly life savers. I'd just like to let the troops know that, politics aside, we support you and pray for your safety and want you home soon. I personally feel that CBS News and, in particular, Kimberly Dozier should be nominated for an Emmy for bringing the sometimes ugly truth about PTSD and recovery to us tonight. Well done!
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