West Virginia
Special Forces sergeant from Clay County dies in Afghanistan
CHARLESTON — A Clay County family is taking comfort in knowing that their son died in Afghanistan intent on protecting his country.
Sgt. First Class Jamie Nicholas, 34, was one of four soldiers who died Monday, the victims of a roadside bomb. He was serving his second tour of Afghanistan as a member of the U.S. Army Special Forces.
He is the son of Burke and Karen Nicholas of Clay. The family says they will bury their son in the family cemetery.
Karen Nicholas said today, "Jamie died doing what he wanted to do. He wasn't concerned about going over there this time, but I had asked him if he felt we should be there.
"He was adamant," she said. "He said if we are not there, they will be in America. That gives me comfort. We support America."
Nicholas was stationed at Ft. Bragg, N.C. He had a wife, Michelle, and two stepchildren. He spoke to his wife Sunday, the day before he died.
Nicholas said her son joined the Army not long after graduating from Clay County High School in 1994, following in the footsteps of his father, who served 12 years in the Army.
"I am very grateful there are people like him and the other soldiers with him who are willing to do these things so we can do what we want to do," she said.
"Clay County is a very rural area, and he was serving so we can be able to live as we desire here," she said. "I'm very proud of what they do. I pray for our soldiers and their families every day."
Nicholas was the second of six children in his family. And he was not the only one to serve in the military. Another son served for ten years, also stationed at Ft. Bragg. His sister-in-law was due to return to Iraq today.
This was Nicholas' second tour of Afghanistan. He spent seven months there in 2007, his mother said.
"The special forces work with the Afghani army, training and helping them," she said. "They were out among the people. Basically, they were looking for the bad guys."
He always knew how dangerous his job was, and so did his family.
She said there has been a large response from the community as news of her son's death has spread. Nicholas is the first Clay County native to die in the Iraq conflict.
- West Virginia
-
-
As session ends, ethics, tax items stalled
Measures offering ultrasound images to women seeking abortions and creating a single agency to manage the state’s vehicle fleet were among those sent to Gov. Joe Manchin on Saturday as West Virginia’s Legislature wound down its regular session.
With the economy still weak from the recession, lawmakers and Manchin both worked from hemmed-in agendas during the 60-day session.
-
Snow hampered helicopter rescue
Three hours after a Navy helicopter crashed last month in West Virginia’s snow-covered mountains, National Guard medic Casey Dunfee cracked his cable on the floor of a Blackhawk rescue helicopter to break the ice and lowered himself hundreds of feet to the wreckage below.
-
Varied topics left for W.Va. lawmakers
West Virginia’s Legislature headed toward the end of its regular session Friday with just a handful of measures from its recession-inhibited workload left on the agenda.
On the eve of the 60-day session’s midnight finish, the House and Senate began exchanging a final batch of bills that include several items from Gov. Joe Manchin’s agenda.
-
W.Va. gets $22M for ‘bad schools’
Nearly $22 million in federal stimulus money will help West Virginia’s worst schools take drastic measures, including replacing principals and overhauling curriculum, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced Thursday.
West Virginia is the first state to receive money through the federal School Improvement Grants program, which seeks to improve student performance by targeting chronically low-performing schools.
-
Dead bills pile up in W.Va. Legislature
Teenage tanners, seat belt scofflaws and adults who text while driving are among those who will evade further legislative restriction this year.
With three days to go before the regular legislative session ends, Thursday was the last day for most bills to reach the full House or Senate in time for a final vote.
-
W.Va. Senate bolsters proposed FY11 budget
Federal stimulus dollars and a recent pension funding change have allowed West Virginia’s Senate to tweak the upcoming state budget by $248 million.
But the amended budget bill unanimously passed Wednesday still cuts general revenue spending by $47 million from what the Legislature passed last year.
-
Proposed fees may doom election funding bill
The head of the Senate Finance Committee warned that the governor’s proposal to publicly finance state Supreme Court races could be derailed by concerns over the fees it would charge.
Senate Finance Chairman Walt Helmick, a Pocahontas County Democrat, questioned whether his committee would consider the legislation after it advanced late Monday from the Senate Judiciary Committee.
-
Mountain State cities may get more freedom
State lawmakers appear ready to increase the independence of West Virginia’s local governments, and they aren’t waiting on results from an ongoing experiment on the subject.
-
Lawmakers entering session’s crunch time
West Virginia’s Legislature has less than a week to decide the fate of proposals targeting abortion, corporate political spending and prescription drug abuse.
-
Foreman says mine boss ordered him to fake records
A mining foreman accused of forging safety inspection reports at a West Virginia coal mine says his boss put profit ahead of potential danger, telling him to stop production and evacuate the mine only if a federal inspector was watching.
- More West Virginia Headlines
-
As session ends, ethics, tax items stalled


