Correction to This Article
A July 1 Metro article about the death of Army Pfc. Justin Davis in Afghanistan incorrectly reported his mother's first name. It is Paula, not Patricia. The article also reported an incorrect date for when Davis will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery. The burial will be July 10, not July 16.
WAR DEATH

Md. Soldier Lived, and Served, With Gusto

19-Year-Old Who Loved Kung Fu and Dreamed of Acting Is Killed in Afghanistan

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By Nelson Hernandez
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, July 1, 2006

As she sat on her living room couch yesterday, surrounded by dozens of photos of her son, who was just killed in Afghanistan, Patricia Davis shed no tears. In fact, the strangest thing about the trim townhouse in Gaithersburg with the yellow ribbon on the tree in the front yard was that there were no sounds of mourning at all -- only laughter.

She believed that is the way her only child, Pfc. Justin Davis, would have wanted it. The 19-year-old graduate of Col. Zadok Magruder High School was a brash, outgoing young man so enthusiastic about kung fu movies and crunk rap music that he made his own videos and recorded his own songs. In his Web site on MySpace.com, he wrote that his heroes were God, Martin Luther King Jr. and Bruce Lee.

He also was just plain large. Before he went to Army basic training after graduating in 2005, the hefty, 5-foot-10 running back sprinted around the neighborhood and wrapped himself in plastic to sweat off the last few pounds he needed to qualify.

It was a decision he had reached during a one-year stint at the Hargrave Military Academy in Chatham, Va., relatives said yesterday. In the Army, he found a happy home, they said. He enjoyed the physical exertion, the excitement, the respect that wearing a uniform brought. When he came home, he'd visit Magruder High wearing fatigues and a tight T-shirt to show off both his muscles and what he'd become.

"I don't mind you going in, but I wish it wasn't wartime," Patricia Davis recalled telling him.

"Mom, you should've had more kids," he answered.

Despite his ample self-regard, Justin Davis was recalled by relatives and friends as an unusually thoughtful young man who remembered not only to call his mother on Mother's Day but also his aunt. One of his last telephone conversations home was June 24, to give birthday greetings to a friend.

"I don't have long to talk. I'm going out on a mission," his mother remembered him telling the friend.

Davis was killed later that day. The military has not released much information about the circumstances, saying only that two soldiers were killed in action June 24 in the Panjwayi district of Kandahar province in southeastern Afghanistan, an area that is a hotbed of Taliban activity. His mother and cousin said that the deaths are still being investigated because of the possibility that they were caused by friendly fire.

Defense Department officials also announced yesterday that Army Pfc. Michael Joseph Potocki, 21, of Baltimore died Monday after he came under fire while on duty protecting a military command center in Iraq.

"He was on the rooftop providing security at the task force operation point when he took on enemy small arms fire," Army spokesman Maj. Nathan Banks said. "He was in the Anbar province of Iraq. He was initially treated on the scene and then transported by medevac to a surgical unit in Al Asad, where he later died."

Banks said that Potocki was an infantry soldier in Bravo Company of the 1st Battalion, 6th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team of the 1st Armored Division, headquartered in Baumholder, Germany.


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