Pray for Army Spc. John Austin Johnson and his family
What a horrific story! While Army Spc. John Austin Johnson was being treated from Iraq War injuries and waiting for his family to reunite with him at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, he was informed that two of his children had been killed in a car wreck as they were on the way to visit him:
More: Army Spc. John Austin Johnson survived five improvised explosions...
DALLAS - Two children of a Fort Bliss soldier flown back from Iraq with combat injuries are dead and a third is on life support following a car accident on the way to visit their father in the hospital, Army officials said.Stuff happens at the worst possible time. It's that "time and chance" deal that no one has control over. If you're a praying person, please pray for this family. They need the peace and comfort that only Almighty God and His comforting Holy Spirit can give at such a horrific time. May God bless and comfort Army Spc. John Austin Johnson, his wife and their entire family.
Army Spc. John Austin Johnson was waiting for his wife and three kids to visit him at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio Oct. 13 when another soldier told him his family's car had rolled over four times on Interstate 10 about 12 miles east of Ozona on the gusty West Texas plains.
"He said, 'Two of my children are dead?'" Army Sgt. 1st Class Eugene Schmidt told The Dallas Morning News. "And we started crying."
Schmidt said Johnson's wife, Lisa, overcorrected the steering in her sport utility vehicle after encountering a blast of wind on the drive from El Paso. The couple's youngest children, 2-year-old Logan and 5-year-old Ashley, died at the scene.
Tyler Johnson, 9, suffered massive head injuries and remains on life support at Children's Medical Center in Dallas. He was listed in critical but stable condition Sunday, a hospital spokeswoman said.
"He's a fighter. Even the doctors are amazed he's still alive," said Schmidt, who says the family is too grief-stricken to speak publicly. "We're praying."
More: Army Spc. John Austin Johnson survived five improvised explosions...
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