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Crowds line 29th Street in front of Loveland High School on Monday as the body of 26-year-old Army Sgt. Isaac Palomarez passes. The 2001 graduate of the school was killed in Afghanistan on May 9.
Crowds line 29th Street in front of Loveland High School on Monday as the body of 26-year-old Army Sgt. Isaac Palomarez passes. The 2001 graduate of the school was killed in Afghanistan on May 9.
Denver Post city desk reporter Kieran ...
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LOVELAND — An estimated 2,000 people lined the city’s streets Monday in a salute to a local man they called “hero,” Sgt. Isaac Palomarez, who was killed earlier this month in Afghanistan.

Men, women and children, most holding U.S. flags of varying sizes, lined a route between the Loveland church where services were held for Palomarez and Resthaven Memorial Gardens, where he was buried.

More than 100 cars joined the funeral procession, which was saluted all along its 5-mile route.

Rick Hoover, 61, a Navy veteran who served in the Vietnam War, came to the roadside to honor Palomarez. With him were his son and two grandchildren.

“He’s the first Lovelander to give his life in Afghanistan,” Hoover said. “I have to be here for support.”

Keith Hoover, Rick’s son, brought his children, Zach, 4, and Megan, 2, to pay tribute.

“It’s very important these two get to know why we live like we do,” free of tyranny and terror, Keith Hoover said.

Earlier in St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, Palomarez’s best friend offered a eulogy on a life cut short.

“He was supposed to be the best man at my wedding and me at his. There are a million unrealized dreams and accomplishments left unfinished,” Brett Sandford said, according to the Loveland Reporter-Herald.

Palomarez, 26, died May 9 when his 101st Airborne infantry team was hit by an improvised explosive device and small-arms fire.

He had graduated from Loveland High School in 2001, where he was an offensive lineman with the state champion football team.

His parents, Candido and Elma Palomarez, have described Isaac as a walking encyclopedia of history, an avid skier and an intense fan of the Colorado Avalanche. They were joined at the service Monday by Isaac’s three brothers.

Homeowners along the funeral route set out lawn chairs, workers spilled out of their businesses and students from Loveland High School, including the school’s ROTC color guard, stood in respect.

Linda Cottam, 50, got up at 4 a.m. and climbed on the back of her husband’s Harley-Davidson motorcycle to drive to Loveland from their home in Kimball, Neb.

Linda and Randy Cottam are members of the Patriot Guard Riders, a volunteer group of motorcyclists who support military members and their families.

“I think it’s good that they know people back here are supporting them and standing behind them,” Linda Cottam said of Palomarez’s family and friends.

The Rev. John Kunsemiller of St. John the Evangelist eulogized Palomarez as a man of “faith, duty, honor and country.”

“Those were his greatest commitments,” Kunsemiller said.

During the full military service, the Army presented Palomarez’s family with his Purple Heart and Bronze Star.

Matthew Miller, 24, went through basic training with Palomarez, was assigned to the same platoon and served with him in Iraq for two years.

Miller flew to Colorado from his home in Virginia to attend the service.

“He was extremely even-keeled,” Miller said. “He cared more than anything about his friends. He did everything he could to make sure they were taken care of.”

Kieran Nicholson: 303-954-1822 or knicholson@denverpost.com

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