Feb 05, 2014

Members of a small southern New Jersey town are sparring over a   state-approved flag meant to honor U.S. soldiers killed in the line of   duty.

Two years after Army SPC Benjamin Moore was killed in Afghanistan in   2011, his parents presented Bordentown, N.J., with two newly   state-adopted “Honor and Remember” flags, The Trentonian reported.

One flag was meant to be displayed in City Hall, while the other was   intended to be placed at the Veterans Memorial in Bordertown, according   to the newspaper.

The “Honor and Remember” flag was designed by George Lutz of   Chesapeake, Va., after his son, Cpl. “Tony” Lutz, was shot and killed by   a sniper in Iraq in 2005. Lutz’s mission is to “create, establish and   promote a nationally recognized flag that would fly continuously as a   visible reminder to all Americans of the lives lost in defense of our   national freedoms,” according to the flag’s website.

In 2013, Pat and Amy Moore, of Bordentown, bought and donated the   flags to the town that had buried their son with an outpouring of   respect and honor, the newspaper reported.

The Veterans Memorial Committee said in a letter to the Moores that   the flag would be displayed, according to the newspaper, but never   delivered on its promise.

Upon hearing rumors that the committee had quietly struck down plans   to hang it, the Moores attended a June meeting of the Veterans Committee   to learn more. After a heated exchange between Bordentown Mayor Joe   Malone and the Moores’ family friend, one member of the Veterans   Committee voiced his opinion directly to the family.

 

Air Force Master Sgt. Christopher Hofrichter, who is stationed at   Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, said to the couple, “‘You want to know   who has a problem with this flag? I have a problem with this flag!'”   according to Pat Moore.

“He stared at my wife and told her that the flag would single out   certain individuals on that wall (of the Veterans Memorial), and that he   lost friends and family to war, and that only the American flag   represents them, not the Honor and Remember flag,” Pat Moore told the   newspaper.

Shortly after, the Veterans Committee reportedly penned a letter to   the Moores, formally declined their request to fly the flag and claimed   it was “fundamentally flawed” and not made of durable flag material,   according to the newspaper.

“That was just adding insult to injury,” Amy Moore told the paper.   “Why did they have to mention that at all? This flag is not about our   Ben. This flag is about honoring and remembering ALL veterans who died   in war, not just our son. That was a low blow for them to write that.”

The mayor, meanwhile, is backing the committee, telling the newspaper   that, “You appoint committees to make these kinds of decisions … The   policies and procedures for our Veterans Memorial are set by the   Veterans Committee. A decision was made by that committee and I have to   respect that decision.”

http://www.military.com/daily-news/2014/02/05/nj-town-divided-over-flag-to-honor-fallen-gis.html?comp=700001075741&rank=3#disqus_thread

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