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thedrifter
12-28-06, 08:31 AM
Son's death evokes pride

Parents of Oak Ridge Marine killed in Iraq say 'he did his best'

By MATT LAKIN, lakinm@knews.com
December 28, 2006

OAK RIDGE - Marine Lance Cpl. Billy Koprince sent his last message home on Christmas Eve.

"Not much to pass here, but Santa did visit last night," he wrote in an e-mail to his parents, Bill and Bernice. "Three weeks or so, then we are outa here!!!"

He died three days later, when a roadside bomb exploded near him while on foot patrol Wednesday in Iraq.

"I don't know if you're ever prepared for something like this," his mother said at her home in Rarity Ridge. "I hadn't realized it, but we had a pretty good life with him. Now I'm burying my son."

Koprince, 24, had been stationed with the 3rd Battalion of the 2nd Marine Regiment near Al Habbaniyah in central Iraq since July on his second tour of duty there. He planned to come home in February.

"I had fears over Christmas," his mother said. "But I thought, six more weeks and he's getting out of there."

The fears came true Wednesday, when her cell phone rang as the family sat down to breakfast at a local Cracker Barrel. The parents knew what it meant the moment they answered.

"She handed it to me and said, 'It's the Marines; it has to do with Billy," Bill Koprince said.

A pair of Marines met them at the restaurant with the news.

"People were stopping at our table and telling us that they were going to pray for us," said Koprince's aunt, Norma Patterson. "We were just hoping and praying that it was just an injury."

William Craig Koprince Jr. was born in Southgate, Mich., grew up in Lenoir City, where he moved with his parents at age 10, and graduated from Lenoir City High School in 2001.

"He and I butted heads a lot, because we were a lot alike," the mother said. "He had to learn the hard way. He had to bang his head against the wall a few times to learn his lesson."

The hard way included enlisting in the Marines in September 2003.

"I tried to convince him to go across the hallway to the Air Force recruiter," his father said. "But he wanted to be the best. He wanted to be a Marine."

Koprince spent his first tour of duty in Iraq from March to October of 2005, helping guard the border with Syria along the Euphrates River.

"He was always trying to reassure us that he wasn't in danger," his mother said.

Koprince returned to the U.S. last fall, then headed back to Iraq this summer for what he hoped would be the last time.

"At first he wanted to make it a career," his mother said. "But he decided he wanted to get out and start his life."

Parents and son e-mailed back and forth and talked now and then on the phone. The parents kept each e-mail, all short and to the point.

"He was a guy of few words," his father said. "When he called, he knew there were guys with wives and kids who were waiting for the phone. He wanted them to be able to talk with their families."

They talked about his plans to start college and study landscaping upon his return to the U.S. He joked sometimes about the weather, the boredom and the things he missed - especially a good steak.

"One time, I sent him cinnamon gum," Bernice Koprince said. "He e-mailed back and said, 'Mom, it's too hot for cinnamon gum. It's Iraq. But I did give it to the kids here.' "

The daily foot patrols gave him a chance to talk face to face with individual Iraqis and see another side of the conflict.

"It's good to know that you're doing something right," he told the Marine Corps News Service in October. "Some people said that we're down there so much that they feel like we're citizens."

His parents know the days to come won't be easy, but they said they take pride in the life their son lived - and the way it ended.

"It was worth it," his father said. "He did his best. That's what he chose. That's what he wanted to do."

Arrangements for Lance Cpl. Koprince are incomplete. The family expects the body of their son to return to East Tennessee next week.

Matt Lakin may be reached at 865-342-6306.

Ellie