Cpl. Carlos ArellanoCarlos Arellano Pandura, 22
Marines, Corporal
Based: Camp Pendleton
3rd Battalion, tst Marines, ist Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force
Supporting: Operation Iraqi Freedom
Died: January 20, 2006
Haqlaniya, Iraq
Single
Gender: Male
Hometown: Rosemead
High School: Mark Keppel High (Alhambra)
Foreign Country of Birth: Mexico
Burial: Oakdale Memorial Park, Glendora
"Mom, you know how things are here and even though nothing is easy, I keep fighting
and I am doing everything possible to return home."— Carlos Arellano, in a letter to
his mother
MILITARY DEATHS
Cpl. Carlos Arellano, 22, Rosemead
January 29, 2oo6jAnna Gorman I Times Staff Writer
Emilia Arellano begged her son not to return to Iraq. He had already served two tours of duty and was
wounded the second time. She urged him to tell the Marine Corps that his mother was ill and needed
him at home.
But Cpl. Carlos Arellano, 22, refused to Be, his mother said. He didn't want to be seen as a coward. And
he didn't want a tarnished record. So in September, he again left for Iraq.
Four months later, Arellano was killed when a suicide bomber exploded a car in Haqlaniya, northwest
of Baghdad. Also killed in the Jan. 20 explosion was Marine Lance Cpl. Brandon Dewey, 20, of Tracy,
Calif. Both were assigned to the 3rd Battalion, ist Regiment, tst Marine Division, tst Marine
Expeditionary Force at Camp Pendleton. As part of Operation Iraqi Freedom, their unit was attached
to the 2nd Marine Division, 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward).
Arellano, who was horn in Mexico and grew up in Rosemead, was scheduled to return to California in
March and be discharged in June, his family said.
"He wanted to come home," said his brother Marco, 25. "But when that moment came, when he had to
give his life, he did."
As a teenager, Arellano was a daredevil, frequently riding his bike off the roof, his family said. He loved
sports, especially football, soccer and basketball. "Whatever he could get his hands on to kick, throw or
play with, he did," Marco Arellano said. "That was him." That obsession with sports sometimes got
him into trouble when he accidentally broke neighbors' windows while playing ball in the street, his
brother said.
Arellano graduated from Mark Keppel High School in Alhambra in 2oor, and joined the Marine Corps
in 2003.
He thought military service would help him reach his ultimate goal: becoming a SWAT officer with the
Los Angeles Police Department, his family said. He also hoped to attend college and study criminal
justice. "He figured the Marines would be something that would open a lot of doors," Mum Arellano
said.
His brother Robert, 27, who has been in the Marines for nine years, said he discouraged Carlos from
following him into the military. He told him the job was demanding and required a lot of time away
from home. "That was something he wanted to do," Robert Arellano said. "Once he set his mind to
something, there was nothing in the world that could change his mind."
On his second tour of duty, Carlos Arellano, an infantryman, was awarded a Purple Heart after being
injured by a rocketpropelled grenade during a firefight near the Syrian border, Robert Arehano said.
He was promoted following that firelight, his brother said.
On his last tour, Arellano taught classes to Iraqi soldiers, Robert Arellano said.
Emilia AmUano said Carlos, whom the family affectionately called "Carlitos," was the most timid of her
four sons. She believes he was scared but didn't share his fears with her. "He knew I would be sad, and
he didn't want me to worry," she said.
He frequently sent photographs home, often of him surrounded by Iraqi children. He told his family
that his greatest reward was when children would come out and wave at him.
In a letter a few months before his death, Amllano wrote to his mother in Spanish, "Mom, you know
how things are here and even though nothing is easy, I keep fighting and I am doing everything
possible to return home. Thanks for all your support and prayers, which is the only thing that helps
me."
A funeral Mass was said Saturday at St. Stephen Catholic Church in Monterey Park. Burial was at
Oakdale Memorial Park in Glendora.
In addition to his mother and brothers Robert and Marco, Arellano is survived by his father, Robert;
and another brother, Gustavo, 18.