After graduating from
Penn State, Murphy applied and was accepted to several law schools, but decided to attend
SEAL mentoring sessions at the
United States Merchant Marine Academy. In September 2000, he accepted an appointment to the USN's
Officer Candidate School in
Pensacola, Florida. On December 13 of that year, he was commissioned as an
Ensign in the Navy and began
Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S) training in
Coronado, California, in January 2001, eventually graduating with Class 236 in November 2001. Shortly before deploying to Afghanistan, Murphy had asked for several patches from a close friend of his who had been assigned to the station.
Operation Red Wings Operation Red Wings was a
counter-insurgent mission in
Kunar province, Afghanistan, involving a four man
special reconnaissance team of United States Navy SEALs. Murphy and two other SEALs in the team,
Danny Dietz and
Matthew Axelson, were killed in the fighting, in addition to 16 other
U.S. special operations members, who were killed when their helicopter was shot down while attempting to extract the SEAL recon team. Prior to
a helicopter being shot down in 2011, Operation Red Wings was both the largest loss of life for U.S. forces in Afghanistan since the invasion began and the largest loss for the SEALs since the
Vietnam War. Murphy was the commander of the four-man
reconnaissance team made up of himself, Danny Dietz, Matthew Axelson, and
Marcus Luttrell. The team was tasked with conducting surveillance on a top
Taliban leader,
Ahmad Shah (code name Ben Sharmak), who commanded a group of insurgents known as the "Mountain Tigers," west of
Asadabad. They were dropped off by helicopter in a remote, mountainous area east of
Asadabad in Kunar Province, near the
Pakistan border. After an initially successful infiltration, local goat herders stumbled upon the SEALs' location. Unable to verify any hostile intent from the herders, the team cut them loose. Hostile locals, possibly the goat herders they released, alerted nearby
Taliban forces, who surrounded and attacked the small team. At the cost of his own life, Murphy was able to get a message out to friendly forces of their situation, which prompted reinforcements flown in on an
MH-47 Chinook helicopter. The helicopter was shot down by an
RPG, killing all 16 personnel aboard; eight were SEALs, the other eight were
160th SOAR. Murphy, Dietz, and Axelson were killed in the action. Luttrell was the only U.S. survivor and was eventually rescued, after having wandered in the mountains before being taken in by friendly local Afghan villagers. All three of Murphy's men were awarded the Navy's second-highest honor, the
Navy Cross, for their part in the battle; alongside Murphy's Medal of Honor, their team became the most decorated in
Navy SEAL history.{{Cite web |access-date=6 August 2009 |url=http://www.militarytimes.com/citations-medals-awards/recipient.php?recipientid=3646|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120509213050/http://www.militarytimes.com/citations-medals-awards/recipient.php?recipientid=3646|archive-date=9 May 2012 |series=Hall of Valor ==Death==