U.S. Soldier Guilty in 4 Deaths

YesWECanDEl

Well-Known Member
February 20, 2009<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>
U.S. Soldier Guilty in 4 Deaths <o:p></o:p>
Filed at 6:52 p.m. ET
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VILSECK, Germany (AP) -- A U.S. Army medic was convicted of murder Friday for his involvement in the execution-style slayings of four bound and blindfolded Iraqi detainees shot in the back of the head in the spring of 2007. The court sentenced him to life in prison.
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Sgt. Michael Leahy Jr. was found guilty on charges of murder and conspiracy to commit murder by the nine-person jury who had heard testimony about the killings at the court-martial at the Army's Rose Barracks Courthouse since Wednesday.
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After a sentencing hearing, Leahy received a life sentence, with the possibility of parole. He also will have his rank reduced to private, his pay foreited and be dishonorably discharged.
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''Looking back at the canal, I see it was the wrong thing to do,'' Leahy read from a statement to the court before he was sentenced. ''Please see that I'm not a bad person, that I made a bad mistake. I want to move on.''
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Leahy, 28, was acquitted of murder in a separate incident involving the death of another Iraqi in January 2007. Wearing his dress uniform, he sat impassively as the verdicts were handed down by the foreman of the jury made up of officers and enlisted personnel.
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Leahy pleaded not guilty to charges of premeditated murder, conspiracy to commit premeditated murder and obstruction of justice in the deaths of a total of four Iraqi prisoners who were dumped in a Baghdad canal in 2007 after they were killed.
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Leahy, of Lockport, Ill., confessed to military investigators that he shot one of the prisoners point-blank in the back of the head with a 9-mm pistol.
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In closing arguments, Leahy's civilian lawyer, Frank Spinner, argued that Leahy went along with the killings because he was dazed from a lack of sleep and numb from being in a war zone for months.
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It was a sentiment bolstered Thursday in testimony from Col. Charles Hoge, a doctor and director of psychology and neuroscience at the Army's Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. He testified Leahy was unable to reason properly because of the constant danger of living and operating in a war zone and getting little sleep for months on end.
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''The tragedy resulted not so much by design but rather the working of fear, danger and madness attendant on many combat operations,'' Spinner said in his closing arguments.
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Prosecutors contended that Leahy knew what he was doing.
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''The defense can't just stand there and throw their arms up and say: 'We were protecting ourselves from future harm,''' Army Capt. Derrick Grace, the lead prosecutor, said, adding that the killings were the result of a breakdown of discipline and moral responsibility.
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According to testimony at the court-martial, at least four Iraqis were taken into custody in spring 2007 after a shootout with a patrol that included five other accused soldiers.
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The Iraqis were taken to the U.S. unit's operating base in Baghdad for questioning and processing, although there wasn't enough evidence to hold them for attacking the unit. Later that night patrol members took the Iraqis to a remote area and shot them in retribution for the attacks on the unit, according to testimony.
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Leahy, Master Sgt. John Hatley, 40, and Sgt. 1st Class Joseph Mayo, 27, are accused of pulling the trigger, the jury of seven men and two women was told.
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All of the accused were with the 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division. The unit is now part of the Germany-based 172nd Infantry Brigade.
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Three soldiers are scheduled for later courts-martial. Sgt. Charles Quigley, 28, of Providence, R.I., faces one charge of conspiracy to commit premeditated murder. Mayo and Hatley are charged with premeditated murder, conspiracy to commit premeditated murder, and obstruction of justice.
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http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/02/20/world/AP-EU-Germany-US-Iraq-Deaths.html?_r=1<o:p></o:p>

Gruss
Michael
 

YesWECanDEl

Well-Known Member
Oberpfalz<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>

US-Soldat wegen Mordes im Irak verurteilt<o:p></o:p>

Ein Militärgericht in der Opferpfalz hat einen Feldwebel der US-Streitkräfte wegen vierfachen Mordes zu lebenslanger Haft verurteilt. Es ahndete ein Verbrechen an irakischen Gefangenen im Frühjahr 2007.<o:p></o:p>
Die Möglichkeit einer vorzeitigen Begnadigung ließ das Gericht in Vilseck aber offen. Der 28-Jährige wurde zum einfachen Soldaten degradiert und unehrenhaft aus den Streitkräften entlassen.

Leahy fesselte dem Schuldspruch zufolge vier Gefangene, verband ihnen die Augen und tötete sie mit einem Schuss in den Kopf. Die Leichen warf er in einen Kanal in Bagdad. Das Urteil fällten neun Geschworene des Militärgerichts.

Insgesamt waren in das Verbrechen sieben Soldaten eines Bataillons verwickelt, das zu der in Deutschland stationierten 172. Infanteriebrigade gehört. In zwei Fällen sind noch Klagen für weitere Prozesse anhängig. In zwei weiteren Fällen wurden bereits Haftstrafen von sieben und acht Monaten wegen Verabredung zum Mord angeordnet, eine weitere Anklage wurde in der vergangenen Woche fallengelassen. Gegen Leahy läuft noch ein weiteres Verfahren wegen Mordes in einem anderen Fall aus dem Januar 2007.
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http://www.focus.de/politik/ausland/oberpfalz-us-soldat-wegen-mordes-im-irak-verurteilt_aid_373668.html<o:p></o:p>

Gruss
Michael
 
J

Julchen

Guest
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''Looking back at the canal, I see it was the wrong thing to do,'' Leahy read from a statement to the court before he was sentenced. ''Please see that I'm not a bad person, that I made a bad mistake. I want to move on.''
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Also wenn ich das lese, bekomm ich nen Hals. :scheisse
 

ApexLongimanus

Well-Known Member
das ist nicht zu entschuldigen. lebenslaenglich ist die gerechte strafe dafuer.
 
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