Marine Corps News
Darkhorse
snipers kill insurgent sniper, recover stolen Marine sniper rifle
June
20, 2006; Submitted on: 06/22/2006 03:01:57 AM ; Story ID#:
20066223157
By Cpl. Mark Sixbey,
1st Marine Division

CAMP HABBANIYAH, Iraq - Lt. Col. Patrick Looney, battalion commander
for 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, holds the last round
chambered in a Marine M-40A1 sniper rifle, which spent two years in
enemy hands. A 21-year-old sniper from Sniper Section Four killed
the insurgent June 16. The Darkhorse battalion plans to mount the
round on a plaque to present to snipers of 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine
Regiment Magnificent Bastards, who lost four Marines and the rifle
in Ramadi in June 2004.
CAMP HABBANIYAH, Iraq (June 20, 2006) --
Scout snipers from 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment killed an
enemy sniper and recovered a Marine sniper rifle lost nearly two
years ago during a mission near Habbaniyah June 16.
The rifle was the one formerly used by four Marines of 2nd
Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment who were killed on a rooftop in
Ramadi June 21, 2004.
Sniper Section Four was in a hide when the spotter observed a
military-aged male inside a nearby parked car videotaping a passing
patrol of amphibious assault vehicles. The Marines saw a rifle stock
by the insurgent's side.
"We were in the right place at the right time," said Sgt. Kevin
Homestead an infantryman from K Company serving as a spotter for the
sniper team that day.
They first radioed the passing Marines and told them they were being
watched by an enemy sniper and to stay low. The insurgent then
sealed his own fate by preparing the weapon. The 21-year-old Marine
sniper, who declined to be interviewed - aimed in at the gunman's
head behind the rear-side window.
He recited a mantra in his head. Breathe, relax, aim, squeeze,
surprise.
The enemy sniper died with the gun in his lap.
They dialed K Company - or Samurai 6 - and reported the target was
dead.
"We then saw another military-aged male ... enter the passenger side
door," said Homestead, 26, from Ontario, Ore. "He was surprised to
see the other shooter was killed."
The second insurgent scurried around the car and jumped in the
driver's seat.
With the sniper now spotting for him, Homestead aimed in with his
M-4 carbine and put three bullets in the driver before he could
start the car.
A squad of K Company Marines came to the position and saw the sniper
dead and the driver shot three times. The driver died as soon as the
squad arrived on scene.
They pulled out the sniper rifle and immediately recognized that it
was an M-40A1, the same used by the snipers of 2nd Battalion, 4th
Marine Regiment in 2004.
The trunk of the car contained a pistol, a hand grenade, dozens of
7.62 mm rounds, multiple license plates and several camcorder tapes.
"When we saw the scope and stock, we knew what it was," Homestead
said.
The rifle was missing for nearly two years - almost to the day.
Marines believed the insurgent they killed, or those closely
associated with him, had it all along. It is unknown how many times
it was used against U.S. and Iraqi forces.
"He was a very good sniper," Homestead said. "But he got cocky and
slipped up and it was our time to catch that."
The weapon came full circle, having originally belonged to the
Darkhorse battalion in Operation Iraqi Freedom I, who turned it over
to the "Magnificent Bastards" of 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment.
Coincidentally, a Darkhorse sniper killed the insurgent sniper, and
a former Magnificent Bastard killed the spotter.
Darkhorse battalion had been dealing with sporadic sniper attacks
since arriving in Iraq in January. Now, Marines have one less sniper
to worry about.
"It's very rewarding to take them out the way we did," said Lt. Col.
Patrick G. Looney, the battalion commander. "Doubly rewarding that
it's a 2/4 sniper rifle, even though it won't bring back the four
Marines who were killed that day."
Triple rewarding that it won't be used on another Marine or soldier,
he added.
"The credit has to go to Sgt. Homestead and the Sniper Section
leader who made the kill," said 1st Lt. J. H. Cusack, Sniper Platoon
commander. "It was more than being in the right place at the right
time.
"It was the culmination of all of the training and planning the
section leader had done up until that moment," Cusak added. "Being
absolutely alert and focused to detect a small clue during a period
of apparent inactivity and a perfectly executed shot."
Darkhorse snipers have since removed the powder and primer from the
last 7.62 mm round chambered in the recaptured rifle. They will
mount it on a plaque and present it to the Magnificent Bastards'
snipers to honor their lost Marines.
Looney said the ability to give some retribution for their loss
makes the day a "grand-slam home run for sniper ops." He credited
the snipers' professionalism and attitude in accomplishing the
mission throughout their area of operations.
"I would say that the guys who shot are typical of the Darkhorse
snipers," said Looney, 43, from Oceanside, Calif. "They're very
proficient, very modest, very busy. They're out there almost daily
doing great things in this AO and our old AO. The fact that they're
taking a back seat and letting the battalion reap the benefits is
typical of the kind of Marines they are."

A
true shot through the window killed an insurgent sniper. A Marine
sniper from 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment shot him through the
window at a distance near Habbaniyah, Iraq June 16. Sgt. Kevin
Homestead, a 26-year-old squad leader for K Company, was spotting
for the sniper section leader when he noticed the insurgent was
videotaping a convoy with a scoped rifle by his side. Only after
killing the shooter and the driver who was spotting, did they
discover the M-40A1. The rifle was lost when it was taken from four
Marines assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment after they
were killed nearly two years before in Ramadi. Photo by: Sgt. Kevin
Homestead

Marines of K Company, 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment found an
assortment of improvised explosive device materials and munitions in
the car belonging to an insurgent sniper near Habbaniyah, Iraq June
16. A Marine sniper from Sniper Section Four killed the insurgent
gunman when his spotter, 26-year-old Sgt. Kevin Homestead noticed
the man was videotaping a nearby patrol of amphibious assault
vehicles from his car with a high-powered rifle at his side. The
Marine sniper team shot and killed the shooter and the driver who
was spotting for the insurgent sniper. Only later did they discover
they killed an insurgent who was using a Marine M-40A1 sniper rifle
taken from a team of Marines killed in Ramadi nearly two years
before. Photo by: Sgt. Kevin Homestead