Bill Text: TX HCR69 | 2013-2014 | 83rd Legislature | Introduced
Bill Title: Directing the governor of the State of Texas to posthumously award the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor to Chief Petty Officer Christopher Scott Kyle.
Sponsorship: Partisan Bill (Republican 2)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-03-21 - Withdrawn from schedule [HCR69 Detail]
Download: Texas-2013-HCR69-Introduced.html
| 83R8752 JGH-D | ||
| By: Pitts | H.C.R. No. 69 | |
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| WHEREAS, The Texas Legislative Medal of Honor was established | ||
| to recognize gallant and intrepid service by a member of the state | ||
| or federal military forces, and U.S. Navy Chief Petty Officer Chris | ||
| Kyle, the most successful sniper in U.S. military history, proved | ||
| himself a deserving recipient of this prestigious award; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Born in Odessa on April 8, 1974, Christopher Scott | ||
| Kyle learned patience and marksmanship at an early age; his father | ||
| bought him a rifle when he was eight, and he hunted on the family | ||
| ranch for pheasant and deer; after high school, he worked as a ranch | ||
| hand and a professional rodeo rider until he was injured; despite | ||
| the pins in his arm from his rodeo injuries, he actively sought to | ||
| serve his nation, and thanks to his grit and determination, he was | ||
| accepted into the elite Navy SEALs unit in 1999; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Chief Petty Officer Kyle served four tours of duty | ||
| in Iraq as a member of SEAL Team 3, and he fought in every major | ||
| battle of Operation Iraqi Freedom, including engagements in Ramadi, | ||
| Fallujah, and Baghdad; working in hot, dirty, and dangerous | ||
| conditions, Chief Kyle put himself in harm's way on a daily basis, | ||
| setting up his sniper's post in abandoned buildings, sometimes for | ||
| as long as five weeks at a time, watching tirelessly through his | ||
| scope for enemy combatants and, through his efforts, saving | ||
| countless American lives; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Known by his peers as "the Legend" for his uncanny | ||
| skill, Chief Kyle often successfully took long-range shots, and in | ||
| Sadr City in 2008, after he spotted an insurgent approaching an army | ||
| convoy with a rocket launcher, he shot the man from a distance of | ||
| 2,100 yards, or 1.2 miles; as feared by the enemy as he was | ||
| celebrated by his fellow Americans, Chief Kyle was nicknamed | ||
| Al-Shaitan Ramadi, or "The Devil of Ramadi," by the insurgents, who | ||
| put an $80,000 price on his head; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Chief Kyle performed his duty in extremely difficult | ||
| conditions and at great risk to himself; he was shot twice and | ||
| survived six IED explosions; by the time he left the navy to return | ||
| to his family in Texas in 2009, he was credited with the highest | ||
| number of confirmed kills in U.S. military history, and he had been | ||
| recognized with two Silver Stars and five Bronze Stars with Valor, | ||
| among many other decorations; and | ||
| WHEREAS, Chief Kyle continued to distinguish himself in | ||
| civilian life, running a security training company, publishing a | ||
| best-selling combat memoir, and working with the FITCO Cares | ||
| Foundation to provide support to disabled veterans; tragically, he | ||
| died while trying to help another veteran, and such was the respect | ||
| and admiration he had earned from his fellow Texans that his funeral | ||
| procession from Midlothian to Austin stretched for more than 200 | ||
| miles, one of the longest memorial processions in American history; | ||
| and | ||
| WHEREAS, Chris Kyle repeatedly risked his life to save the | ||
| lives of his fellow soldiers and to advance their mission, and for | ||
| his remarkable heroism he is most assuredly deserving of this | ||
| state's supreme military award; now, therefore, be it | ||
| RESOLVED, That the 83rd Legislature of the State of Texas | ||
| hereby direct the governor of the State of Texas to posthumously | ||
| award the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor to Christopher Scott | ||
| Kyle in recognition of his valiant service during Operation Iraqi | ||
| Freedom. | ||
