He lived as a symbol of American contradictions: a decorated Green Beret, a failed presidential candidate, and a mediator who walked unarmed into some of the most volatile standoffs on U.S. soil.
In Vietnam, he led shadowy missions deep into enemy territory, risking everything to bring men home. Years later, he traded jungles for cabins and compounds, trying to prevent more American bloodshed.
The events at Ruby Ridge haunted him. He never forgot the sight of a dead boy and a shattered family, or the sense that the Constitution he had sworn to defend was under threat at home.
He remained a controversial patriot—admired by some, criticized by others—yet steadfast in his belief that he was serving his country long after leaving the battlefield. His life ended not in gunfire but in Sandy Valley, where he had lived for more than forty-five years and said he wished to die.
His wife, Judy Gritz, wrote that he passed peacefully, “looking into the eyes of our Savior”—no final mission or firefight, just a soldier, a father of four, laid to rest in the desert town he called home.