Sandpoint airman dies in Afghanistan bombing
An Air Force officer from Sandpoint died Friday in Kabul, Afghanistan, after his vehicle was struck by an explosion triggered from another vehicle carrying a bomb that approached his convoy and detonated.
Capt. David I. Lyon, 28, of Sandpoint, was serving with the 21st Logistics Readiness Squadron, which is based at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colo.
“Our heartfelt condolences go out to the family and friends of Capt. Lyon. The loss of life pains our team deeply,” Col. John Shaw, 21st Space Wing commander, said in a news release. “We are poised to assist his family and friends in their time of need and have support services in place to facilitate those needs.”
Air Force officials said Lyon was about a month away from completing his yearlong deployment to Afghanistan. He was performing a combat advisory mission with Afghan National Army Commandos as part of the overall mission called Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force-Afghanistan.
Lyon was scheduled to return to Peterson Air Force Base in February.
A memorial service is being planned to honor Lyon, but details were not yet available, 1st Lt. Stacy Glaus said.
A five-year veteran of the Air Force, Lyon graduated from the Air Force Academy and had been stationed at Peterson since January 2010.
Lyon, who excelled in track and field, married former Air Force javelin standout Dana Pounds in April 2009, according to a USA Track & Field publication. Pounds is a two-time NCAA champion and was a 2008 Olympic Trials runner-up.
An Air Force Academy website notes that Lyon was formerly known as David Lissy. He was a track star at Sandpoint High School and later for the academy. He changed his name sometime after high school graduation.
Lissy’s track exploits in 2003 were highlighted in a 2009 story in the Bonner County Daily Bee. “Senior David Lissy set out with a goal of not just defending the shot put state title he won as a junior, but eclipsing Norm Gissel’s school record, which had stood since 1955,” Bee writer Eric Plummer wrote. “He achieved both goals and more, putting the shot 55-3 to win state, no doubt riding some adrenaline from a surprising win earlier in the discus (158-5).”
Gissel is a Coeur d’Alene lawyer who worked with Morris Dees of the Southern Poverty Law Center in 2000 during the landmark lawsuit that bankrupted the Aryan Nations and its late leader, Richard Butler.
The Academy website, which still lists Lyon as Lissy, notes that he finished sixth in the Mountain West Conference championships in shot put in 2007 and was selected as the co-captain of the team in 2008.