Army Spc. Dennis M. Williams  
Death: Aug 25, 2009
 of Federal Way Wash.; assigned to the 1st Battalion 17th Infantry Regiment 5th Stryker Brigade 2nd Infantry Division Fort Lewis Wash.;  Died Aug. 25 in Sha Wali Kot Afghanistan of wounds sustained when enemy forces attacked his vehicle with an improvised explosive device. Also killed were Capt. John L. Hallett III Capt. Cory J. Jenkins and Sgt. 1st Class Ronald W. Sawyer.  Wash. soldier among 4 killed in Afghanistan  The Associated Press  FORT LEWIS Wash. — The Army says a 24-year-old soldier from Federal Way Wash. was among four members of a Fort Lewis-based Stryker brigade who were killed in southern Afghanistan.  Killed Tuesday was Pfc. Dennis M. Williams. Fort Lewis says Williams enlisted in Seattle in October 2007. This was his first deployment.  Also killed were: 30-year-old Capt. John L. Hallett III of California; 30-year-old Capt. Cory J. Jenkins of Arizona; and 38-year-old Sgt. 1st Class Ronald W. Sawyer38 of Trenton Mo.  All  Died of wounds suffered when their vehicle hit an improvised explosive device.  They were assigned to the 1st Battalion 17th Infantry Regiment 5th Stryker Brigade 2nd Infantry Division.    Followed father’s footsteps into Army  The Associated Press  Dennis Williams pictured in his military uniform with a serious stoic look was really “mischief” and a clown around his family said his grandmother Kathy Anderson.  He was helpful too she said.  “Denny always put up my Christmas lights” she said choking back tears after her grandson’s death. “I’m so confused I don’t hardly know my own name.”  Williams24 of Federal Way Wash. and three others were killed Aug. 25 when a roadside bomb exploded near their vehicle in Afghanistan. He was based at Fort Lewis Wash.  When he left for deployment a month ago he told his grandmother he might never see her again.  Anderson remembers responding “Denny don’t be silly.”  Williams graduated from Federal Way High School in 2003. Before enlisting in October 2007 he was a security guard at a building in Seattle.  “He was very proud of that job” his older brother David Williams said. “He looked sharp in his uniform. That’s when it started to grind on him.”  It was then that Dennis Williams decided to serve in the military his brother said. Williams’ father had been in the Army and his grandfather was a Marine.  “We had him about talked out of it 10 times” David Williams said. “But he went. He wanted to provide for his wife and kids.”Operation Enduring Freedom