Lake Fong/Post-GazetteRose Mary Sabo Brown, of Hickory, is reflected in the glass of a medal showcase. Her husband, Leslie Sabo, died in 1970 in Vietnam.
Vietnam War hero may finally get his due
Soldier who died to save his comrades recommended for Medal of Honor
Sunday, May 09, 2010
By Torsten Ove, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Forty years ago Monday, Leslie Sabo of Ellwood City died in Cambodia while trying to save his buddies from a North Vietnamese ambush that killed seven of his 101st Airborne Division comrades.
The 22-year-old was recommended posthumously for the nation's highest award, the Medal of Honor.
He never got it.
Somehow the citation ended up lost in military bureaucracy and then forgotten until 1999, when a writer for the 101st Division association magazine came across Mr. Sabo's records at the National Archives.
Now, through his efforts and those of two members of Congress, the Army has again recommended that Mr. Sabo receive the medal.
"This brave soldier clearly distinguished himself through his courageous actions," wrote Secretary of the Army John McHugh in a March letter to Rep. Jason Altmire, D-McCandless, who pushed for the medal. "The Army and our nation are forever grateful for his heroic service."
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