California Soldier Returns From Afghanistan to Join Son in Cancer Fight

When FBI Director James Comey told a national gathering of law enforcement leaders that cops might be easing up for fear of being caught on camera, the conference attendees included a South Carolina sheriff whose deputy was about to star in the nation’s next viral police video. Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott returned home to an uproar over images of a school resource officer flipping a 16-year-old girl out of her desk and dragging her across the floor of her math class Monday at a high school in Columbia. In announcing the deputy’s firing two days later, Lott called on the public to shoot more video, not less. Comey’s and Lott’s comments — one questioning whether video is causing a chilling effect, the other saying it can only help — are the latest contribution to an intensifying debate over the role of cellphones in policing.

A California soldier has cut his second deployment to Afghanistan short in order to be with his 6-year-old son, who is battling a rare form of bone cancer called osteosarcoma.

As with any big fight, this one includes moments of hope and setbacks. One of those setbacks came Monday, when 6-year-old J.J. Orecchia was supposed to have his right leg amputated. The surgery was expected to prolong his life by four to five years, but an infection has now forced the doctors at UC San Francisco’s Children’s Hospital to call off the operation.

A year ago, the Hayward, Calif., boy was a healthy and active 5-year-old. Today, he’s fighting for his life.

“J.J. is feisty,” said Andrew Foster, a friend of the boy’s father, Will, who did not feel up to talking to reporters. “He’s a feisty young boy, a lot of love.”

Foster is among those at UCSF’s Children’s Hospital to support J.J. He is in the same Army unit as the boy’s father, who returned home from a second tour in Afghanistan early to be near his little boy.

“We’re gonna keep praying, and we’re gonna get through this,” Foster said.

But word that a potentially life-prolonging surgery is no longer possible comes as a blow.

“His parents are devastated, heartbroken and they can’t breathe,” said Susana Maumalanga, J.J.’s aunt. “They’re taking it one day at a time.”

For now, the family is trying to focus on the moments of joy and the time they have together.

“I wanted the Bay area to think about J.J. today, and to see his fight, and to see us wearing yellow, teaching about osteosarcoma,” Maumalanga said.

J.J. is now expected to undergo more chemo. His family has insurance, but insurance only covers so much.

Family members said they are trying to raise money to pay their share of J.J.’s medical bills, which have already reached $100,000.

In addition to an online crowdfunding effort, they are working to set up a foundation so people can donate.

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