Just over nineteen months ago, we stood in honor at the Interment Service for US Marine Corps, Lance Corporal, Riley Alexander Schultz, age 19. He was on guard duty at Camp Pendleton at the time of his death, which was ruled a suicide. His family contested the cause of death findings (please see the following Times-Call article). The body was recently exhumed for further investigation. Lance Corporal Schultz will be reinterred on Monday, November 23, 2020.
The following has been requested of the Colorado PGR.
The family is scheduled to arrive at Viegut Funeral Home, 1616 North Lincoln Avenue, Loveland, 80538 by Noon. A Flag Line has been requested for the arrival of the family and when the family and friends depart.
11:15AM Stage at the Viegut Funeral Home
11:30AM Mission Briefing
11:45AM Form Flag Line at the entrance to Funeral Home
Lance Corporal Schultz will then be escorted around Lake Loveland on his way back to Loveland Burial Park, 1702 Cleveland Avenue, Loveland, 80538. The Cemetery is nearly across the street from the Funeral Home. The location within the Cemetery is block 52, lot 137 and grave 5.
After the PGR departs from the Funeral Home, immediately form a Flag Line near the Grave Site, awaiting the arrival of the procession.
Ken "Nick" Nicholas will serve as Ride Captain and will bring Flags.
Please be mindful of Coronavirus requirements. Facial coverings around the neck and at the ready in case distancing cannot be maintained.
By KELSEY HAMMON | khammon@prairiemountainmedia.com | Longmont Times-Call PUBLISHED: November 11, 2020
The family of a Longmont Marine, who died last year, hopes that exhuming his body this week will provide some answers about his death. Marine Lance Cpl. Riley Schultz, 19, was found with a gunshot wound to the head March 15, 2019, at Camp Pendleton, a Marine Corps base in San Diego County, Calif. Schultz had been serving with 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion. While the Marine Corps’ lead medical examiner ruled last year that Schultz’s death was a suicide, his family doesn’t believe that’s the cause.
Schultz’s mom, Misty Schultz-McCoy of Longmont, said in a text message that her son’s body was being exhumed Tuesday and taken from the Loveland Burial Park to the Larimer County Coroner’s Office for a “state of the art scan.” She said the family hopes to find answers with the process and learn more about his external injuries and general physical appearance. “At the moment, the plan is to re-bury him on Thursday,” she wrote. “The military has not been involved whatsoever with the exhumation. His case is still technically an ‘open investigation,’ with the NCIS (Naval Criminal Investigative Services).”
The NCIS didn’t respond to a request to confirm the case is ongoing before deadline Tuesday. On Wednesday, Ed Buice, the NCIS public affairs officer, said that the NCIS investigation into Schultz’s death was closed in June. He said that if an exhumation was being conducted, it was not at the request of the NCIS.
Larimer County Coroner James Wilkerson said the coroner’s office was “not involved in this exhumation or the investigation.” “We did do a Lodox scan at the request of and paid for by the family,” Wilkerson wrote in an email. He explained that a Lodox scan documents injuries and foreign bodies, using a low-dose of radiation for a rapid scan.
Jennifer A. Vallee, chief, public and congressional affairs with the Armed Medical Forces Medical Examiner System in Delaware, wrote in an email that the system was not aware of or involved in Schultz’s exhumation.
On the day of his death, Schultz was scheduled between 3:50 and 5 a.m. to stand fire watch over his platoon’s vehicles and equipment. A fellow Marine, who arrived to relieve Schultz, found Schultz with a gunshot would to the head, according to a statement released last year by Capt. Paul Gainey, the spokesman for the 1st Marine Division.
Schultz-McCoy listed several reasons Tuesday why she believes her son did not take his own life: Schultz was scheduled for a deployment to South Africa and planned to visit his family before then. A week before his death, he purchased a plane ticket to come home in mid-April, according to prior Times-Call reporting. Schultz-McCoy said he had several dates lined up for when he returned home on leave. The month before his death, Schultz had told his mother that, upon her death, he would care for his older brother, who has a schizoaffective disorder. Additionally, she said that Schultz was 3 years old when he was a passenger in a car crash that killed his father on June 24, 2003. She said the crash was caused by a teen driving in a wrong lane and attempting suicide. “He lived literally every single day from age 3 until his death with the consequences of suicide and would’ve never done that to us,” she wrote. Schultz’s mother previously said to the Times-Call that she had initially been told by Marine investigators hat her son’s death was not a suicide.
Schultz’s family also had been sent a certificate for a gold star from the Secretary of the Navy which stated, “In grateful memory of Lance Cpl. Riley Alexander Schultz who died while in the service of our country as a member of the U.S. Marine Corps. ”However, twelve days after Schultz’s death, the Marine Corps released another statement, this time saying the lead medical examiner had ruled that Schultz died of suicide.
Schultz-McCoy said the family doesn’t know how long the process will take to get answers from the new scan. After his body is exhumed, Schultz’s remains will be returned to the Loveland Burial Park, where he will again be laid to rest next to his biological father.
My sincere condolences to the family and friends of Corporal Schultz.
Regards
John!
It is with a heavy heart that I send my sincere condolences during this extremely difficult time. May God be with you.
Love, light and peace.
~Rebel ~
With my deepest condolance I will be honored to stand for U.S. Marine Lance Corporal Riley Alexander Schultz.
Sincere appreciation for the US Marine Corps Service of Lance Corporal, Riley Schultz. My thoughts and prayers continue to be with his family and friends following his tragic death in March, 2019.
The family and friends of USMC Lance Corporal, Mr. Riley Alexander Schultz have my most sincere sympathy and condolences. So sorry for your loss. Thank You for your service to our Country, RIP Marine.
Jim
My sincere condolences to the family and friends of Lance Corporal Schultz. I will be honored to stand for this fellow Marine. Semper Fi.
USMC 1964-1968
RVN Feb. 1965-July 1967
I wish to send my sincere condolences and prayers to the family and friends of Lance Corporal, Riley Alexander Schultz for the loss of this US Marine Corps serviceman. I am grateful for the service that was provided us, in the past, so we can enjoy the freedoms we have today. May confirmation be given to the family and bring comfort to all.
--
‘Can Do’ Bob Aholt
Southern Colorado Assistant State Captain
My sincere condolences to the family and friends of Lance corporal Schultz. I will be honored to stand for this Marine. Once a Marine always a Marine. Semper Fi.
Will,try to attend