PINEHURST, N.C., July 8, 2008

Soldier In Famous Iraq Photo Dies

Army Medic Struggled To Cope With Paralyzing Anxiety After Returning From Iraq

  • This photo of former Pfc. Joseph Patrick Dwyer was taken on March 25, 2003, in the town of Mishkab south of Baghdad, as the soldier carried the young boy to safety.

    This photo of former Pfc. Joseph Patrick Dwyer was taken on March 25, 2003, in the town of Mishkab south of Baghdad, as the soldier carried the young boy to safety.  (Army Times/ Warren Zinn)

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(CBS/AP)  A former Army medic made famous by a photograph that showed him carrying an injured Iraqi boy during the first week of the war in March 2003 has died of an apparent overdose, police said.

The photograph of Joseph Patrick Dwyer running to a makeshift military hospital while cradling the boy appeared in newspapers, magazines and television broadcasts worldwide.

Dwyer died late last month at a hospital in Pinehurst, according to the Boles Funeral Home. He was 31.

After the photo was published, Dwyer laughed when a reporter told him of its widespread circulation and tried to deflect focus to his entire unit. His mother, Maureen, said then that the photo embarrassed her son because it singled him out while other soldiers were doing the same thing.

Warren Zinn, 30, the former Military Times photographer who captured the image, is now a law student at the University of Miami.

“The sad thing is that he clearly had a problem coming back from this war and nothing was done about it, or not enough was done,” Zinn told Army Times.

On June 28, Dwyer called a local taxi service to take him to the hospital after an apparent overdose, Capt. Floyd Thomas of the Pinehurst Police Department told the Fayetteville Observer. When the driver arrived, Dwyer said he couldn't get to the door, according to a police report.

Police kicked in the door at Dwyer's request, and he was taken by ambulance to a Pinehurst hospital. Thomas said bottles of prescription pills were found near Dwyer when police arrived. The former medic died later that night, according to authorities.

Dwyer's parents told a Newsday reporter that they had struggled to get help for their son. He had received treatment off and on in VA facilities, but he was never able to shake his anxieties.

"Every second that goes by, there is another soldier just like Joseph," Maureen Dwyer told Newsday. "Another family can't go through this. All the politicians talk so great about the soldiers, about patriotism, but mental illness is something they are not putting enough into."

Dwyer served with the 3rd Squadron of the 7th Cavalry Regiment of Fort Stewart, Ga. He earned the Combat Medical Badge and other military awards.

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 29 Comments
by lambor59 July 9, 2008 4:59 PM EDT
Mission accomplished Mr Bush, you just killed another young man, we''d rather see you die than seeing this soldier perished, he believed in your lies.
Reply to this comment
by lambor59 July 9, 2008 4:49 PM EDT
90% percent of returned service men had post war syndrome, many will die, many will end up on the streets, many will be in prisons....Just like it was after Vietnam war, this is the real cost of war. Bush and his criminal regime is held responsible for this aftermath.
Reply to this comment
by armydog2 July 9, 2008 2:35 PM EDT
Rest in Peace, You will not be forgotten,
Reply to this comment
by indyvet66 July 9, 2008 12:48 PM EDT
Tens of Thousands of our returning troops have had serious trouble adjusting during and after the war. Traumatic Stress is real and it''s part of the reason that many Vietnam vets are still all screwed up even 40 years later.

Normal humans are not meant to kill other people, even if the cause is right. War ruins lives.

The real shame is that the U. S. Government is so *** quick to pull the trigger on a war and guys like Bush and McCain talk all the time about supporting the troops...but when soldiers actually need help, the %u201Csupport%u201D from Bush and McCain vanishes.

For example, McCain recently opposed the new G.I. Bill that had overwhelming bi-partisan support. The new G.I. Bill dramatically expands educational benefits for our soldiers.

McCain refused to support this bill because he felt that the benefits were too good - that too many soldiers might leave active duty to get their degrees.

So there you have it. John McCain says he supports the men and women who are fighting for us - that is, until it is time to repay them for their service to America.

Go easy Brother Joseph.

Reply to this comment
by parrot123-2009 July 9, 2008 12:23 PM EDT
Every second that goes by, there is another soldier just like Joseph," Maureen Dwyer told Newsday. "Another family can''t go through this. All the politicians talk so great about the soldiers, about patriotism, but mental illness is something they are not putting enough into."


We know she''s no fan of McSame. *** Repugs.
Reply to this comment
by whiskyrocker July 9, 2008 12:15 PM EDT
Hwy71So :
Have you ever been treated at a VA hospital?
Reply to this comment
by hwy71so July 9, 2008 11:02 AM EDT
"The Veterans Administration -

HALLS OF SHAME

To all of the VA workers I must ask - how can any of you sleep at night, how can any of you live with yourselves, knowing that through your inaction and denial, FINE YOUNG AMERICANS ARE DYING AND IT''''S ALL YOUR FAULT.

Posted by mswolfestock at 04:36 PM : Jul 08, 2008"

Do you really think its the VA WORKERS at fault?

Wow, we''ve got a winner!!!

...or is that weener?
Reply to this comment
by bladan58z July 9, 2008 10:08 AM EDT
The Saudis want bloodshed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Bin Laden is simply an instrument of death. How many Americans died there or in this country afterward? The Saudis demand $200 a barrel for oil. The United States pays its money and human lives to this war.
Reply to this comment
by whiskyrocker July 9, 2008 9:44 AM EDT
Another fallen soldier.Go easy brother.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti July 8, 2008 10:43 PM EDT
FeelFree4U, keep up the good work on this blog and elsewhere. Give no quarter to the righties for what they have done to our country. They are the ones who are not patriotic. They are the ones that should leave if they don''t like the new liberal progressive America. They want the same old same old and being brave with other people''s kids. Shame on them, shame on McSame. Shame on the Greasy Old Pervert party, the party of death and big government!
Reply to this comment
by o2bewealthy July 8, 2008 10:33 PM EDT
This is a bipartisan tragedy - it doesn''t matter, your political stance. The fact is, it''s to our country''s utter shame that we aren''t taking care of the mental health of not only our veterans, but of the population, in general. The country seems to have inherited a kind of "pull yourself up by the bootstraps" mentality that is doubly forced on our military population. Mental health care in the country is shabby at best, and criminal, at worst. Until someone picks up the battle cry for the mentally ill, we will continue to see more of these kinds of tragedies. My sympathies to the Dwyer family and all other families affected by this war.
Reply to this comment
by babooph July 8, 2008 10:28 PM EDT
After ww2 Truman & Ike did much for vets-this new lowgrade bunch use them up ,dump them out & sucker in a fresh batch-the propaganda system helps with the scam.
Reply to this comment
by omded July 8, 2008 9:01 PM EDT
Fee1Free4U,
Why do you hate true Americans so much? Are you from another country than the U.S.A.?
Reply to this comment
by spadeisspade July 8, 2008 8:59 PM EDT
Are they tacking on the deaths back home that were directly related to the Iraq war to the total number of soldier deaths? Soldier suicide is quadruple what it was prior to it.
Reply to this comment
by fee1free4u July 8, 2008 8:58 PM EDT
I hope to read the same story about McVet or SgtRDS some day. That would rock.
Reply to this comment
by omded July 8, 2008 8:54 PM EDT
Sadly, the same thing happened after the Vietnam War. Many Vietnam Veterans are roaming the streets homeless because of mental disabilities that resulted from the war, but have not been adequately treated by the Veterans Administration. Sadly, this administration, like some before it, only see our soldiers as meat to be thrown into the grinder. Perhaps the thing that most angers me about this administration is the way they''ve consistantly accused anyone who dissagrees with their war policy of being "anti-soldier", or "not supporting our troops". How can anyone with a heart, and a true concern for our soldiers ever criticize someone for wanting to bring these young men and women home? How can anyone with a heart, and a true concern for our soldiers ever criticize someone for not wanting to send any more soldiers off to this war? The people who do truly characterize the word "evil".
Reply to this comment
by six-6-seis July 8, 2008 8:53 PM EDT
Someone should stick this photo in the oval office.
Reply to this comment
by andrew_693 July 8, 2008 8:49 PM EDT
another tragedy o this stupid war. Meanwhile Bush''s daughters get to enjoy their honeymoon of booze and ***. Now I understand "Mr ten deferments" Cheney and why he didn''t want to go to war.
Reply to this comment
by hangelle July 8, 2008 8:34 PM EDT
An injured soldier should not need patience to receive adequate care. *** this war and those who tricked these young people into thinking their government had their backs. I could not despise them more.
Reply to this comment
by credibility2 July 8, 2008 7:55 PM EDT
God bless him and his tormented soul. God keep his loved ones strong during this time. How really tragic that he felt compelled to do this and that he hadn''t anyone to turn to or any where to go to for help. This is shameful. This is an American tragedy. This is something both candidates should be aggressively addressing while doing their stumps and pressing the flesh.
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