Wounded Warrior recovering service members on Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Ca. from July 17-23, 2022. Marines selected to represent Team Marine Corps at the 2022 DoD Warrior Games are attending the camp to hone their skills in multiple sports. The DoD Warrior Games is a multi-sport event for wounded, ill, and injured service members. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Phillips) - Recovering service members with Wounded Warrior Regiment throw discs during a training camp on Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Ca. from July 17-23, 2022. Marines selected to represent Team Marine Corps at the 2022 DoD Warrior Games are attending the camp to hone their skills in multiple sports. The DoD Warrior Games is a multi-sport event for wounded, ill, and injured service members. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Phillips)
Gary Sinise Foundation hosts Pendleton’s Fall Carnival - Gary Sinise, Hollywood actor and bassist for the Lt. Dan Band, performs during the Fall Carnival at the Wire Mountain softball fields on Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Sept. 13, 2019. The Fall Carnival was a free event hosted by the Gary Sinise Foundation to show support for service members, and featured a concert by Sinise and the Lt. Dan Band. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Alison Dostie)
A wounded warrior’s return to the fight - The commemorative statue of 1st Sgt. Bradley Kasal being carried by Lance Cpl. Chris Marquez and Lance Cpl. Dan Shaffer, after taking heavy fire, stands outside of the Wounded Warrior Battalion-West headquarters building on Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Calif., June 1, 2018. WWBn-W is committed to the successful recovery and transition of each Marine and family assigned to its care, and focuses on the mind, body and spirit of every individual when addressing recovery needs. (U.S. Marine Corps Cpl. Juan C. Bustos)
Seeing the world through new eyes: Marine sets sight on business opportunities - U.S. Marine Corps 1st Sgt. Michael Landry, company first sergeant, Headquarters Company, Wounded Warrior Battalion-West, Wounded Warrior Regiment, poses for a photo at the battalion headquarters, Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California, September 5, 2018. Landry went blind in November of 2015, but through a cornea transplant he is able to see again. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Noah Rudash)
Pains, gains, and bike chains: U.S. Marine Corps wounded warrior gives back to injured brothers and sisters-in-arms - Retired U.S. Marine Corps Master Sgt. Fernando Andrade, a volunteer and bicycle technician with Wounded Warrior Battalion-West, Wounded Warrior Regiment, installs a tire on a bicycle on Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Calif., April 17, 2018. Throughout the year, athletes with the unit compete in the Marine Corps Trials, the Department of Defense Warrior Games, and cycling tours in San Diego; therefore Andrade’s maintenance is vital to each competitors’ success. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Dalton Swanbeck)
Sgt. Anthony A. Arriaga, an athlete with Team West, wipes his weapon during the Marine Corps Trial’s shooting competition here March 4. - Sgt. Anthony A. Arriaga, an athlete with Team West, wipes his weapon during the Marine Corps Trial’s shooting competition here March 4.
A Jimmy Miller Memorial Foundation volunteer instructor gives a tutorial of proper surfing technique to service members with the Wounded Warrior Battalion in Del Mar, May 5. The JMMF ocean therapy program facilitates improved self-esteem for service members dealing with mental and physical illness. - A Jimmy Miller Memorial Foundation volunteer instructor gives a tutorial of proper surfing technique to service members with the Wounded Warrior Battalion in Del Mar, May 5. The JMMF ocean therapy program facilitates improved self-esteem for service members dealing with mental and physical illness.