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Charity expects $10,000
Playing Texas
Holdem was a family pastime for Michael DiRaimondo when he was
growing up in Simi Valley, so it was fitting that a year after the
Army flight medic's death in Iraq his family would have a charity
Texas hold'em poker tournament in his honor Sunday.
More than 100
players attended the tournament at Paul's Italian Villa, and
organizers expected to raise about $10,000 for a foundation created
in DiRaimondo's memory.
DiRaimondo, who
was 22 when he was killed in Fallujah, Iraq, on Jan. 8, 2004, wanted
to become a fire department paramedic.
"He went in to
the Army to be a flight medic," said father Tony DiRaimondo, 56, of
Simi Valley. "And his idea was get training, (and) when he gets out,
he would become a paramedic firefighter. And that dream did not
happen."
But with more
than $130,000 raised since the foundation was created last year, the
DiRaimondos will offer scholarships so that other aspiring
paramedics can get the training to achieve their dreams.
Dawn DiRaimondo,
29, said playing
Texas Holdem
was a family pastime when she was growing up, so the charity poker
tournament was a good event to have a year after her brother's
death.
"We wanted to do
something productive, sort of channel our energy into something
positive," she said, adding that her brother was a humble man and
would have been amazed to see the poker tournament.
With large
photos of Michael DiRaimondo on a table nearby, players competed to
get to a final round, where they could win hotel packages for trips
to such destinations as Las Vegas and Hawaii. Among the players were
many friends of Michael DiRaimondo, who was an avid surfer and
snowboarder.
Longtime friend
Tyler Field, 23, said he spoke to Michael DiRaimondo when he was in
Iraq.
"He said that he
was happy; he knew that this was what he was meant to do," Field
said.
Several members
of the Ventura County Fire Department also stopped by the
Texas Holdem
poker tournament.
Capt. Wayne Ferber said firefighters have been showing up at events
held in Michael DiRaimondo's honor because he wanted to become a
firefighter paramedic himself. |