(Tribune News Service) — Thomas Dunne, who fought two tours in Vietnam as a Marine and went on to serve in the Minnesota National Guard and the Wisconsin Army Reserves, died Friday at Regions Hospital, nearly a month after St. Paul police say a 17-year-old severely injured him with a punch to the face at Harriet Island Regional Park.
Dunne, 76, and his wife, Helen Broderick, had finished a walk before 5 p.m. Jan. 28. He’d put his walker in his car, and saw a male urinating. He pulled out his phone to try to catch the act.
That didn’t go over well with three teens. One of them threw and landed a punch, knocking Dunne to the ground, according to a Jan. 30 juvenile petition charging the Rosemount teen with first-degree assault causing great bodily harm.
At Regions Hospital, Dunne had emergency surgery for “traumatic damage” to his right eye. He had several fractures to both his eye socket and nose.
He left Regions the next day and had follow-up visits with an eye doctor and at the VA Hospital in Minneapolis, his wife said this week. He came down with a high fever on Feb. 4 and was taken by ambulance back to Regions, where he was “bouncing from progressive to ICU,” she said. “He went unresponsive at one point, and they had to intubate him.”
He died just after midnight Friday.
St. Paul police spokesman Sgt. Mike Ernster said Tuesday the Ramsey County medical examiner’s office is working to determine Dunne’s cause and manner of death.
A spokesman for the Ramsey County attorney’s office said any new evidence presented by police will be reviewed and considered for additional charges.
Dunne was a “hero,” his wife said.
“For a hero like him to come home to his local park after being at risk in foreign wars,” she said, “and to be assaulted like that …”
Park visitor saw the punch
Officers were called to the 100 block of Water Street after Broderick reported her husband was punched in the face. Officers found him standing next to his car with blood streaming from his right eye socket. St. Paul fire medics were called to the scene.
He told officers that after he saw a male urinating and took out his phone to take a picture, two other males got out of a blue Ford Fusion. They approached him and tried to take his phone. One of them punched him in the face.
A witness told police she was getting out of her car and saw a male urinating in the “pond.” She said three males then confronted Dunne and that one of them slapped the phone out of his hand and punched him approximately two times in the face. She said she yelled at them before they walked away, headed east.
Officers saw three males walking east along the river and asked if they were involved in a fight. One of them spoke up and said, “Yeah, that was me,” the petition says. He declined to give a formal statement.
One teen told police they confronted Dunne because they believed he was recording them and that he should have “minded his business.”
The other teen said he couldn’t find a public bathroom and began urinating in the “pond.” The other teens walked over and one “indicated that (Dunne) was recording or taking a picture of him,” the petition says. “(He) then approached (Dunne) and said, ‘Let’s get to it,’ before punching (him).”
Hospital staff told the police investigator that Dunne’s eye injury was “very severe” and that he “may permanently lose most of his vision in that eye, and it would be months before they could tell if there was any improvement.”
Born in Ireland
Born in Clonaslee, Ireland, Dunne emigrated to the U.S. at age 2 with his parents and his younger sister. They ended up on Chicago’s far southeast side, where growing up he delivered Chicago Tribune newspapers and graduated from George Washington High School. He then enlisted in the Marines Corps and served two tours in Vietnam as an infantryman. He was a staff sergeant when he got discharged in 1972.
Dunne moved to St. Paul in 1975. He met Broderick the next year in Ireland and they married five years later.
He re-entered the military in 1984 as a Minnesota National Guardsman, drilling once a month and going away for two weeks every summer, according to a biography he wrote and submitted to Twin Cities PBS’ online project, mnvietnam.org, which records local vets’ stories.
Dunne was recalled to active duty when Desert Storm began in 1991. He later transferred to the U.S. Army Reserve and had assignments in Somalia, Haiti and northern Iraq, where he helped coordinate and implement the evacuation of Kurds.
In 2002, Dunne became the command sergeant major of a Wisconsin Army Reserve battalion that sent most of its troops to war after 9/11, he wrote. “It was difficult for me as a Vietnam vet to do this as I was very much aware what they were heading into; it would have been much easier to go than stay,” he wrote.
Friend and fellow Vietnam vet Tom Storey said this week that Dunne was an “excellent writer who always had a real sympathy for the victims of war, the civilians. Some of his writing brings tears to your eyes.”
Friend Vernon Hall first met Dunne in the early 1990s through the Vietnam Veterans of America, St. Paul Chapter 320. “I can’t think of another person in the world who was more patriotic to this country than him,” Hall said.
Residents of the downtown St. Paul condominium building where Dunne lived with Broderick hosted a small memorial gathering Monday night.
“He loved St. Paul,” his wife said.
Funeral services for Dunne, who also worked for Ramsey County Public Works for over two decades and retired in 2010, will be held at noon Tuesday, March 5. A visitation will be at the O’Halloran and Murphy Funeral Home location in St. Paul, followed by a burial at Fort Snelling.
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