FORT HOOD, Texas - Searchers found the body late Tuesday of a sergeant who
was missing for four days after he disappeared during a training exercise, an
Army spokeswoman said.
U.S. Army Sgt. Lawrence G. Sprader, 24, is shown in this
undated photo provided by the Fort Hood, Texas, public information office.
Teams of soldiers and civilians continued to search the rugged Fort Hood
terrain Tuesday, June 12, 2007, looking for the soldier, missing since he
set out on a solo navigation exercise four days earlier. [AP]
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Sgt. Lawrence G. Sprader, 25, went
missing Friday during a solo exercise testing basic map-reading and navigation
skills.
Col. Diane Battaglia, III Corps spokeswoman at Fort Hood, said the body was
found on the rugged Central Texas Army post. The body had been sent for an
autopsy and the cause of death had not been determined, she said.
Sprader was one of nearly 320 noncommissioned officers being trained as part
of a two-week leadership course.
He wasn't the only soldier who got lost during the three-hour exercise, but
nine others who were disoriented got back to the rally point safely by following
the sound of a siren that blasts when time is up, Battaglia said.
Reached on his cell phone two hours after the exercise was over, Sprader told
commanders he wanted to finish the drill.
Hundreds of soldiers scoured the rugged hills of the 15,000-acre training
range; 800 were walking in marked grid areas Tuesday. Post officials said no
other soldier had ever been lost on the heavily used range long enough to prompt
such a huge search.
Motorists reported seeing a soldier matching Sprader's description near a
road Friday evening. One sighting was on the eastern edge of the post and
another on the far northern edge, making it difficult to concentrate the search
in one area, Battaglia said.
The sightings, and his score card from the exercise, were the last signs of
him, although Battaglia wasn't certain where the card was found.
Sprader returned from an Iraq deployment in September and worked in the
criminal investigation division of Fort Hood. The Prince George, Va., soldier
had no orders for redeployment to the war zone.