Showing posts with label murder trial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label murder trial. Show all posts

Monday, September 2, 2013

Ft. Hood victims and survivors deserve answers

Ft. Hood victims and survivors deserve answers
Wounded Times
Kathie Costos
September 2, 2013

Lawmakers are pushing for Fort Hood families to have justice but no one seems to be asking what should be included in all of what they deserve. This is good for a start but far from fulfilling what they are owed.
Lawmakers to file bill to give benefits for Ft. Hood victims
KVUE News
by JESSICA VESS
September 2, 2013

KILLEEN, TX -- A group of lawmakers is filing new Legislation this week to get benefits for the victims of the Fort Hood shooting.

Senator John Cornyn and Congressmen John Carter and Roger Williams are presenting a bill called the "Honoring the Fort Hood Heroes Act." It would give both military and civilian victims the same status that was given to the victims of the September 11th attacks.

The fight for those rights has been building over the past year.

160 victims and their families released a 14-minute video last year asking for help.

To get more benefits, the Government must agree to change the status of the shooting. It's currently labeled as workplace violence, not an act of terror.
read more here



Widow of N. St. Paul native killed at Fort Hood speaks out
KARE 11 News
Boua Xiong
September 2, 2013

NORTH ST. PAUL, Minn. -- Kham Xiong had a way with people. In eighth grade he charmed himself right into Shoua Her's heart.

"He always knows what to do to make me happy and he was very caring and loving," Her said.

The two married right after high school in 2004 and dreamed of having kids, a big house, and a military career. Four years ago Xiong moved Her and their three kids from North St. Paul to Fort Hood, Texas to pursue his dream.

Xiong was getting ready for his first deployment when Her got word about a shooting on base. "I immediately texted Kham and he didn't reply back and I called and he didn't pick up so I started to get worried," she said.
read more here

Now let's look back at the beginning and how the press has reported this. First we begin with the reports from CNN on the Fort Hood massacre.

On November 5, 2009 at 6:14 pm CNN reported these highlights.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Source: Slain gunman identified as Maj. Malik Nadal Hasan (wrong)
NEW: One of the dead was a civilian police officer, official says
NEW: Senator says she was told soldiersere filling out paperwork to go overseas
More than one shooter may have been involved, Fort Hood spokesman says
(CNN) -- Eleven people plus a gunman were dead and 31 wounded after the gunman opened fire Thursday on a soldier-processing center at Fort Hood, Texas, officials said.

November 5, 2009 9:24 p.m. EST
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Suepect in shootings wounded but alive, Army official says
Source: Gunman identified as Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, a psychiatrist
Senator: Hasan was "upset" about scheduled deployment to Iraq (wrong)
Shooting happened in building that is one of last stops before soldiers deploy

(CNN) -- At least one soldier opened fire on a military processing center at Fort Hood in Texas on Thursday, killing 12 and wounding 31 others, officials at the Army base said.

PBS did a report that caught my attention since I had been on Fort Hood for a visit a few months before this happened. Several soldiers and family members were complaining about the lack of proper mental health treatment. It was bad before this day however considering Hasan was in fact part of the "treatment" they were getting, even with the attitude he had, no one was asking how many he treated got worse afterwards because of what he said to them or if gave proper medications.

Major Hasan was trained by the military to address combat trauma for our troops. Keep that in mind. If he kept getting bad reviews for how he treated soldiers, what was he telling them? Did he even know anything about PTSD considering he was trained around the same time they were still kicking out soldiers for "personality disorders" instead of PTSD? Did he end up involved with any of the soldiers who ended up committing suicide or trying to end their own lives?

If you think it isn't possible for him to play some kind of twisted mind game then you need to know what he was saying in 2007.
"It's getting harder and harder for Muslims in the service to morally justify being in a military that seems constantly engaged against fellow Muslims," he said during the PowerPoint presentation before his supervisors and other mental health staff members, according to the paper.
"US military doctors had worried that the suspected gunman in the Fort Hood shootings was "psychotic" and unstable but did not seek to sack him, National Public Radio reported on Wednesday, citing unnamed officials." But somehow none of this got tied into the fact that Ft. Hood had 10 soldier suicides in 2009 before this and "the second-highest of any Army post."
Sgt. Justin "Jon" Garza was one of them.
"While he was AWOL, Garza threatened to kill himself with a shotgun. Military personnel took him to Ft. Hood's Darnall Army Medical Center. Psychiatrists there diagnosed him with an adjustment disorder and depression and sent him home with his best friend, a fellow soldier. He was put on a Monday-through-Friday suicide watch. Eleven days later, on July 11 -- a Saturday -- Garza was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot to the head."

This is how they were reporting about Hasan taking guesses instead of knowing any basic facts as it turned out.
An Army psychiatrist is suspected in the shootings at Fort Hood, Texas, and the rampage is raising questions about whether there's enough help for the helpers, even though it's unclear whether that stress or fear of his pending service in Afghanistan might be to blame. An uncle of Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan said Saturday that Hasan was deeply affected by his work treating soldiers returning from war zones. "I think I saw him with tears in his eyes when he was talking about some of patients, when they came overseas from the battlefield," Rafik Hamad told The Associated Press from his home near the West Bank town of Ramallah.

Fort Hood Shooting: A Closer Look at Soldiers and PTSD

Fort Hood, the site of Thursday's horrific attack on U.S. soldiers, was the focus of a NOW on PBS report about American troops suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.

Many of the thousands of U.S. troops discharged from the Army each year suffer from PTSD and say they lack the vital care they need. The Army claimed these soldiers were let go due to pre-existing mental illnesses or because they were guilty of misconduct. But advocates argue this was a way for the Army to get rid of "problem" soldiers quickly, without giving them the treatment and benefits to which they're entitled.

In our online coverage, NOW interviewed two Fort Hood soldiers about the personal trauma they experienced while fighting in Iraq.

That day I posted this.
Aftermath of Fort Hood shootings may be worse

As the news reports kept coming out today about the carnage at Fort Hood, my greatest fears were not for today, but for the next few months ahead. No one is talking about "secondary stressors" and this needs to be addressed quickly.

There are crisis teams heading there according to the press briefing by Lt. Gen. Robert Cone. This is one of the best things they can do. I spent months taking this kind of training and it is very thorough. The issue that we need to be concerned about is when there are thousands of soldiers, combat soldiers with multiple tours, many of them are dealing with mild PTSD. Mild PTSD is not that hard to cope with. They live pretty normal lives while covering up the pain they have inside. Many even cope well the rest of their lives but many do not. Like a ticking time bomb, PTSD rests waiting to strike if untreated. It waits for the next traumatic event and then mild PTSD turns into PTSD on steroids.

These are the soldiers that will need the greatest help as soon as possible.

These bases are very well secured. That makes the soldiers and their families feel safe. Think about going into combat and then making it home alive where you are supposed to be safe. Then having this happen.

"Francheska Velez, 21, from Chicago, was filling out paperwork when Major Nidal Malik Hasan opened fire on the Texas base. She had only just returned from a tour in Iraq three days before, coming back early because she was pregnant, her father Juan Velez told Fox News Chicago. She was expecting a baby boy in May, he said." She was heard screaming for her unborn baby.

"Staff Sgt. Amy Krueger decided she was willing to put her life at risk for her country the instant a second airplane crashed into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. "We looked at each other and knew, and the next day we were in the recruiter's office," recalled Kristin Thayer, who watched the attack with Krueger in a commons area at a college in Sheboygan. "Anything it took, anything our country needed of us, even if that meant giving our lives."

Among the dead were two VA employees. "Russell G. Seager, Ph.D., a 51-year old nurse practitioner at the Clement J. Zablocki VA Medical Center in Milwaukee was killed in the deadly attack. He was a captain in the reserves." Juanita L. Warman, 55, a nurse practitioner at VA's medical center in Perry Point, Md. She was a lieutenant colonel in the Maryland National Guard, with two daughters and six grandchildren. She wanted to help female soldiers

There was a lot of guessing going on back then. Two psychiatrist were questioning Hasan's involvement with soldiers.
"First, I'd get a list of all the patients he'd ever treated and get in contact with them," said Dr. Thomas P. Lowry, a psychiatrist who served two years as a doctor in the Air Force and then held the top psychiatry positions at four hospitals before retiring in 1999. It's important to know how the doctor's former patients perceived him and understand the care they received, he said.

Dr. Jonathan Shay, who spent 20 years as a Veterans Affairs Department psychiatrist specializing in the treatment of combat trauma before retiring last year, said some of Hasan's former patients might worry that the stories they shared in therapy sessions could have contributed to the doctor's state of mind, or even feel some responsibility for the killings.

This has to be the only time Jonathan Shay has been wrong but it was based on what the media was reporting at the time. What else could he think considering no one ever thought someone feared to be psychotic would ever be able to "treat" soldiers or even more absurd, hate them and still be in that position.

Or that this was possible.
In late December 2004, one of the officers overseeing Army Maj. Nidal Hasan’s medical training praised him in an official evaluation as a qualified and caring doctor who would be an asset in any post.

But less than a week later, a committee at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center that oversees student performance met behind closed doors to discuss serious concerns about Hasan’s questionable behavior, poor judgment and lack of drive.

Disconnects such this were a familiar pattern throughout Hasan’s lengthy medical education in the Washington area, according to information gathered during an internal Pentagon review of the shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas, and obtained by The Associated Press.

The review has not been publicly released, but the emerging picture is one of supervisors who failed to heed their own warnings about an officer ill-suited to be an Army psychiatrist, according to the information.
After all this is the type of things they do when they do really care.
Capt. John Gaffaney, 56, a psychiatric nurse. But according to varying eyewitness accounts, Gaffaney either picked up a chair and threw it at Army psychiatrist Maj. Nidal Hasan, the accused killer, or physically rushed him from across the room.

Army Maj. Gen. Lie-Ping Chang, commander of the reserve force to which Gaffaney belonged, said that two eyewitnesses recounted how the reservist threw a folding chair and "tried to knock (Hasan) down or knock his gun down." Chang included this account in an essay submitted to USA Today.

Army Reserve Col. Kathy Platoni, a clinical psychologist who served with Gaffaney, said she was told that he rushed Hasan to within inches before being shot several times.

Platoni said she comforted Gaffaney as he lay dying in a building nearby where soldiers brought him after he was mortally wounded, ripping off pieces of their uniform to use as pressure bandages or tourniquets to stem his massive bleeding from multiple wounds.

“I just started talking to him and holding his hand and saying, ‘John, you're going to be OK. You're going to be OK. You've just got to fight,’” Platoni recalls.

He died shortly after that, she says. "I was still yelling, 'John, don't go. John, don't go.’”
But less than a year later Fort Hood was reporting "Four soldiers from Fort Hood, Texas died over the week. In all four cases, it appears the soldiers, all decorated veterans from the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan, took their own lives, according to Christopher Haug, a Fort Hood spokesman."

Then there was Staff Sgt. Josh Berry, wounded when the shooter opened fire inside a crowded medical building at the sprawling Army post in Texas.

While he was not one of the 13 soldiers who lost their lives or the 32 others who were struck by bullets, Josh Berry struggled through years of pain and suffering caused by the attack before he couldn't handle it anymore, family members said. The Mason native committed suicide on Feb. 13, 2013.

How many more committed suicide because of this? How many were discharged because of what Hasan did? How many lives were changed forever because of how much the military itself failed them? So many questions still needing answers and too few trying to find what real justice should be.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Fort Hood Shooter Nidal Hasan Gets Death Penalty

Fort Hood Shooter Nidal Hasan Gets Death Penalty
ABC News
By RUSSELL GOLDMAN
via WORLD NEWS
Aug. 28, 2013

Maj. Nidal Hasan, the Army psychiatrist accused of killing 13 people in a shooting rampage at Ft. Hood, was unanimously sentenced to death today by a jury of military officers.

A sentence of death was all but inevitable for Hasan, a Muslim American who represented himself during the court martial and whose own standby lawyers accused him of cooperating with the prosecution to hasten his "martyrdom."

"He is a criminal. He is a cold-blooded murderer," prosecutor Col. Mike Mulligan said today, according to the Associated Press. "This is not his gift to God. This is his debt to society. This is the cost of his murderous rampage."

Last week, Hasan was found guilty on all counts, including 13 charges of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted murder.
read more here

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Widow of Hasan murder victim talks of what he put her through

Hasan's Ft. Hood sentencing: Widow relives the hours of not knowing
Chicago Tribune
Molly Hennessy-Fiske
August 26, 2013

FT. HOOD, Texas – Like so many other Army wives, when Angela Rivera heard there had been a shooting at this central Texas post four years ago, the first thing she did was call her husband’s cell phone.

And like so many others, there was no answer.

On Monday, testifying at the sentencing of the man convicted of murder in the mass shooting, Rivera relived the uncertain hours of Nov. 5, 2009.

There were 13 dead and more than 30 wounded that afternoon. But no names had been released. Rivera had no way of knowing if they included her husband, Maj. L. Eduardo Caraveo.

She watched the news at her home in Woodbridge, Va., hoping for clues. It was no help.

“They just kept repeating the same thing: 13 dead,” Rivera said Monday as she sat on the stand, her long brown hair loose around the shoulders of her fitted black dress as she faced the man responsible.

As Rivera recounted the events that followed, how she slowly watched the life she had built unravel, her brown eyes filled with tears.
read more here

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Justice not served at Fort Hood with Hasan conviction

When Nidal Hasan was convicted in Fort Hood shootings some people think it is over and done with. It isn't even close but you won't hear about all the other things that were never allowed to bring justice for the families or for the wounded.

The first issue should have been why he was able to not only wear the uniform he claimed he didn't want to with his clean shaven face he suddenly had a religious obligation to cover with hair, but the fact he was still being paid. Does he have to pay that money back? If so, then where will the money go? How about the families get it?

Next is the position he held in the military. He was a psychiatrist treating soldiers while he admitted he hated them and what they were doing. Was anyone held accountable for that? What happened to the soldiers he treated? Were they given proper treatment? Were they given deadly medications? Were they discharged under personality disorder instead of being treated for PTSD?

What about all the higher ranking officers that kept him on the job? Did any of them have to face the consequences for what he did? Did any of them actually have to face the families and explain how he was allowed to wear the same uniform and treat soldiers he hated enough to want to kill?

I've read just about everything on this man and what he did but not once have I ever felt that justice was served.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales gets life in prison of two kinds

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales gets life in prison of two kinds. The first one was what was going on inside of himself before he decided to commit murder. That prison has left too many questions in what was behind this act. Was it TBI? PTSD? Medications? Alcohol or a combination of all of them that turned this hero into a mass murderer? Will we ever really know? The second prison is built with bars but like the other trial producing a guilty verdict with the Fort Hood mass murderer Hasan also found guilty yesterday there are many more unanswered questions.
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales sentenced to life in prison without chance of parole for Afghanistan massacre that left 16 dead
Despite apologizing and pleading for a chance to someday be released, Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales gets life.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — Staff Sgt. Robert Bales was sentenced to life without a chance of parole Friday for slaughtering 16 Afghan villagers -- a punishment he and his attorneys tried hard to avoid.

Six military juors decided his fate after prosecutors asked them to send a message that the civilians’ lives mattered.

Describing Bales as a “man of no moral compass,” Lt. Col. Jay Morse asked the jury in his closing argument to ensure he is never released from prison. “In just a few short hours, Sgt.

Bales wiped out generations,” Morse said. “Sgt. Bales dares to ask you for mercy when he has shown none.”
read more here

Friday, August 23, 2013

Nidal Hasan convicted in Fort Hood shootings

Nidal Hasan convicted in Fort Hood shootings; jurors can decide death
By Chelsea J. Carter, CNN
updated 7:28 PM EDT, Fri August 23, 2013

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Husband of a victim says death penalty "would be too lenient" for Hasan
Penalty phase begins Monday, death penalty can be considered
Jurors "will decide whether you live or die," judge tells Hasan
Maj. Nidal Hasan is convicted of 13 counts of murder

Fort Hood, Texas (CNN) -- A military jury on Friday convicted Army Maj. Nidal Hasan of 13 counts of murder and 32 counts of attempted murder in a shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas, making it possible for the death penalty to be considered as a punishment.

The jurors deliberated less than seven hours over two days before finding Hasan guilty on all charges in connection with the November 5, 2009, shootings at a deployment process center.

The Army psychiatrist admitted to targeting soldiers he was set to deploy with to Afghanistan, saying previously he wanted to protect the Taliban and its leaders from the U.S. military.

Under the rules of a military court-martial, the jury must return a unanimous verdict of premeditated murder for the death penalty to be considered as a punishment option. The jury is not required to tell the court whether they reached a unanimous verdict on the attempted murder charges.

The court-martial moves on Monday to the penalty phase, where Hasan -- acting as his own attorney -- will have the opportunity to address the jurors considering whether he should be executed for his actions.
read more here

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Premeditation at heart of closing remarks in Hasan case

Premeditation at heart of closing remarks in Hasan case
Stars and Stripes
By Jennifer Hlad
Published: August 22, 2013

FORT HOOD, Texas — In the prosecution’s closing statement, Col. Steve Henricks on Thursday asked the panel of military officers in charge of deciding Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan’s fate to return a unanimous verdict — leaving unspoken that the government will seek the death penalty if they do.

Hasan elected to not to give any closing statement.

There is no doubt, Henricks said, that Hasan killed 13 people, injured 31 others and shot at police officer Sgt. Mark Todd on Nov. 5, 2009. But what the case boils down to, he said, is premeditation. Hasan on Wednesday chose to call no witnesses and declined to testify on his own behalf.

Thursday morning, the judge, Col. Tara Osborn, told the jury they should consider the 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder against Hasan, but if they feel there is reasonable doubt on any of those charges, they may consider charges of unpremeditated murder, attempted unpremeditated murder, aggravated assault in which grievous bodily harm is inflicted with a firearm, and, in one case, aggravated assault with a dangerous weapon.
read more here

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales apologizes for killings, disgracing Army

Bales apologizes for killings, disgracing Army
The (Tacoma, Wash.) News Tribune
By Adam Ashton
Published: August 22, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — In his first remarks in court, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales could not apologize enough for the lives he ruined on the night he slipped out of his combat outpost in Kandahar province and slaughtered 16 civilians in their homes.

He said he let his family down. He disgraced the Army, he said. And he robbed innocent people of their families.

"I don’t have the words to tell them how much I wish I could take it back,” he said this morning in an unsworn statement on third day of his sentencing trial at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

Bales, 40, will receive a life sentence for his slaughter in Kandahar’s Panjwai district on March 11, 2012. He spoke to convince a six-member military jury that he deserves a chance for parole one day.
read more here

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Staff Sergeant Robert Bales to withdraw guilty plea

U.S. soldier in Afghan murder trial declines to withdraw guilty plea
By Jonathan Kaminsky
TACOMA, Washington
Tue Aug 20, 2013
Bales' attorneys said they would argue that post-traumatic stress disorder and a brain injury were factors in the killings.

(Reuters) - A U.S. army soldier who in June admitted the slaughter of 16 Afghan civilians declined to withdraw his guilty plea in a military court on Monday.

U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales made his decision in advance of legal arguments set to begin Tuesday that will determine whether his life sentence will come with the possibility of parole.

"I'm just trying to do the right thing," he said in a hearing Monday to establish ground rules for the roughly week-long sentencing proceedings.

The judge, Army Colonel Jeffery Nance, asked Bales whether he wanted to withdraw the guilty plea in light of possible misinformation about the length of time before he could be eligible for parole.

Under a plea agreement that accompanied the plea, Bales will be spared the death penalty and could be eligible for parole after 20 years, less time already served and credit for good behavior.

Bales pleaded guilty in June to walking off his base in Afghanistan's Kandahar province before dawn on March 11, 2012, and killing 16 unarmed civilians, most of them women and children, in attacks on their family compounds.
read more here

Also from April
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales Defense Must Decide Strategy His lawyers have said for the past year that he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and combat-related head injuries, suggesting those ailments overcame him on what was his fourth combat deployment from Lewis-McChord since 2003.


The News Tribune has this report from yesterday

Army: Bales, wife laughed about killing charges
Published: August 19, 2013

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, WASH. — Army prosecutors said Monday they have a recording of a phone call in which Staff Sgt. Robert Bales and his wife laugh as they review the charges filed against him in the killing of 16 Afghan villagers.

Bales, an Ohio native and father of two from Lake Tapps, Wash., pleaded guilty in June in a deal to avoid the death penalty for killing the civilians, mostly women and children, on March 11, 2012.

His sentencing begins on Tuesday with the selection of a military jury. Prosecutors told the judge, Col. Jeffery Nance, on Monday they hope to play the recording, among others, to show a lack of remorse on Bales' part. He faces life in prison either with or without the possibility of release
Bales, on his fourth combat deployment, had been drinking and watching a movie with other soldiers at his remote post at Camp Belambay in Kandahar Province when he slipped away before dawn on March 11, 2012. Bales said he had also been taking steroids and snorting Valium.

Armed with a 9 mm pistol and an M-4 rifle, he attacked a village of mud-walled compounds called Alkozai then returned and woke up a fellow soldier to tell him about it. The soldier didn't believe Bales and went back to sleep. Bales left again to attack a second village known as Najiban.
read more here

Friday, August 16, 2013

Pregnant soldier pleaded for baby during Fort Hood massacre

CONTINUING COVERAGE: HASAN TRIAL
Pregnant soldier pleaded for baby during rampage
Thursday, Aug. 15, 2013
Associated Press

FORT HOOD — One of the soldiers killed during the 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood cried out for her unborn child as she was fatally shot.

Pvt. Francheska Velez was among 13 people killed when a gunman opened fire inside a crowded medical building at the sprawling Central Texas Army post Nov. 5, 2009. Maj. Nidal Hasan is being court-martialed in the massacre.

He’s also accused of wounding more than 30 others.

Pathologist Col. AbuBakr Marzouk says Velez suffered a fatal wound to her heart and right lung. Witnesses to the shooting testified earlier to hearing the 21-year-old Chicago woman cry out, “My baby! My baby!”

If convicted, the Army psychologist who stands trial for the worst mass shooting ever on a U.S. military base could face the death penalty.

The 13 victims were shot 48 times, according to pathologists. Spc. Frederick Greene was shot 12 times and a pathologist testified Thursday that his injuries were consistent with him attempting to confront the shooter.
read more here

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Hasan shot soldiers multiple times at Fort Hood

Pathologists testify Hasan shot soldiers multiple times, from several angles
Stars and Stripes
By Jennifer Hlad
Published: August 15, 2013

FORT HOOD, Texas — Michael Cahill was shot six times. Spc. Jason Hunt was shot three times.Spc. Frederick Greene was shot 12 times.

As the shooter moved through a clinic at Fort Hood on Nov. 5, 2009, he shot soldiers again and again, from various angles, according to the military officers who performed the autopsies who testified Thursday as the trial of Maj. Nidal Hasan continued.

Greene was shot so many times that the medical examiner who did his autopsy found it difficult to determine the path the bullets took, using a metal rod to ensure he was correct. He concluded that the shooter and Greene were likely moving during the incident, and Greene may have been attempting to subdue Hasan.
read more here

Monday, August 12, 2013

Fort Hood trial: Vivid testimony, quiet defendant

Hasan admitted to being the shooter and supporting the enemy. Do the Fort Hood victims of his attack get justice now and become eligible for benefits?
Fort Hood trial: Vivid testimony, quiet defendant
USA TODAY
Rick Jervis
August 11, 2013

FORT HOOD, Texas – The first week of the trial of Maj. Nidal Hasan, the radicalized Army psychiatrist accused of killing and wounding unarmed soldiers in a shooting spree here four years ago, had much of the emotional detail and legal jarring observers expected from the military trial.

But one thing was glaringly missing: Hasan's cross-examination of witnesses.

Witnesses and local residents were angered when they heard, months ago, that Hasan would be allowed to represent himself and potentially question many of the same victims he targeted inside the Soldiers Readiness Processing complex on Nov. 5, 2009.

But Hasan has only cross-examined two of the 44 witnesses called to the stand by prosecutors so far – and none of the eyewitnesses to the massacre. Prosecutors say Hasan, 42, killed 13 people, including a pregnant private, and wounded 31 others in the shooting.

His interactions have been limited instead to awkward exchanges with the judge, Col. Tara Osborn, and have centered on his standby defense team's attempts to minimize its role in the proceedings. Hasan faces multiple counts of murder and premeditated murder. If convicted, he could be the first person the U.S. military puts to death in five decades.

In a brief opening statement Tuesday, Hasan admitted to being the shooter in the massacre and swore his allegiance to the mujahideen, or holy warriors.
read more here

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Fort Hood massacre survivors talk about having to play dead

'It smelled like gunpowder, feces, blood': Soldiers recall Fort Hood rampage in court
NBC News
By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer
August 8, 2013

Nearly four years after the deadliest attack at a U.S. military installation, Army soldiers testified about the day that changed their lives forever in Fort Hood, Texas.

"There were a lot of bodies on the ground. The chairs were overturned, a lot of blood on the floor. It smelled like gunpowder, feces, blood. Pretty bad," said Staff Sgt. Michael Davis, who thought the gunfire was a drill until "I saw somebody get hit, I saw a blood spray," Reuters reported.

Soldiers recalled the searing pain of bullets ripping through their skin on Nov. 5, 2009. They described playing dead to avoid being injured further and making futile efforts to save their friends.
read more here

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions

Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions
Associated Press
By NOMAAN MERCHANT
August 3, 2013
The last man executed in the military system was Pvt. John Bennett, hanged in 1961 for raping an 11-year-old girl. Five men are on the military death row at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., but none are close to being executed.

An inmate was taken off death row just last year. Kenneth Parker was condemned for killing two fellow Marines in North Carolina, including Lance Cpl. Rodney Page. But Parker was given life without parole last September by an appeals court. The court found his trial judge should have not allowed him to be tried for both murders at the same time, nor should the judge have allowed testimony that the appeals court said was irrelevant to the crimes.

DALLAS (AP) - Hundreds of unarmed soldiers, some about to deploy to Afghanistan, were waiting inside a building for vaccines and routine checkups when a fellow soldier walked in with two handguns and enough ammunition to commit one of the worst mass shootings in American history.

Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan doesn't deny that he carried out the November 2009 attack at Fort Hood, Texas, which left 13 people dead and more than 30 others wounded. There are dozens of witnesses who saw it happen. Military law prohibits him from entering a guilty plea because authorities are seeking the death penalty. But if he is convicted and sentenced to death in a trial that starts Tuesday, there are likely years, if not decades, of appeals ahead.

He may never make it to the death chamber at all.

While the Hasan case is unusually complex, experts also say the military justice system is unaccustomed to dealing with death penalty cases and has struggled to avoid overturned sentences.

Eleven of the 16 death sentences handed down by military juries in the last 30 years have been overturned, according to an academic study and court records. No active-duty soldier has been executed since 1961.

A reversed verdict or sentence on appeal in the Hasan case would be a fiasco for prosecutors and the Army. That's one reason why prosecutors and the military judge have been deliberate leading up to trial, said Geoffrey Corn, a professor at the South Texas College of Law and former military lawyer.
read more here

Thursday, August 1, 2013

"Warren began stabbing himself until his father wrestled the knife away"

Father says son accused of murder suffered from nightmares from Iraq duty
Daily Breeze.com
By Larry Altman, Staff Writer
Posted: 07/31/2013

The father of a U.S. Army veteran accused of murdering his girlfriend in Lawndale testified Wednesday that his son was "different" when he returned home from two tours of duty in Iraq, suffering nightmares, attempting suicide and requiring medication.

Tymarc Warren Sr., whose 28-year-old son, Tymarc Warren Jr., is charged with stabbing his girlfriend to death on Jan. 8, 2011, testified during his son's trial in Torrance Superior Court that the former sergeant encountered a mortar attack on his first day in Iraq in 2002 and later witnessed the death of a friend.

"He kind of scared me a couple times," the father said of his son's return home. "He woke up one day in a cold sweat and talked about his buddy being blown up."

Warren confessed to choking and stabbing 22-year-old Eileen Garnreiter to death inside their Rosecrans Avenue apartment after his arrest, prosecutors said. The crime occurred about a month after Garnreiter gave birth to their daughter.
During testimony Wednesday, Warren's father described rushing to the apartment the couple shared and breaking open the door when his daughter told him she feared something had happened there. Garnreiter was lying face down on the kitchen floor. His son had his arm over her.

"Tymarc asked me to grab the baby," the father said. "She was fine. Tymarc grabbed the knife and said, 'I don't want to live.' "

The younger Warren began stabbing himself until his father wrestled the knife away. Deputies arrived to take him into custody.

Deputy Casey Cheshier said he found Warren on the floor next to Garnreiter's body, and that he immediately confessed.

" 'I killed her because I have hate in my heart,' " Cheshier recalled him saying.

Warren told Cheshier that he stabbed Garnreiter and shoved the knife into her throat when she grabbed it, confessing again, " 'I have the devil and hate in my heart. I stabbed her and then I cut my wrists,' " Cheshier recalled.
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Thursday, July 25, 2013

Ex-Marine Indicted in Slaying of Former Navy SEAL Sniper Chris Kyle

Ex-Marine Indicted in Slaying of Former Navy SEAL Sniper Chris Kyle
NBC
Thursday, Jul 25, 2013

A grand jury in North Texas has indicted the man accused of killing former Navy SEAL and "American Sniper" author Chris Kyle and another man on two charges of capital murder.

Eddie Routh, a former Marine, was arrested in the slayings of Kyle and Chad Littlefield in February.

A judge has issued a gag order in the case.

The Feb. 2 shootings at a gun range in rural North Texas were national news.

The memorial service for war hero Kyle was so big that it was held at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington. His funeral procession to Austin drew thousands.

The case against Routh, who reportedly had been seeking treatment for post-combat stress, seems strong. Police said he confessed to his sister and he was arrested driving Kyle's pickup after a chase in Lancaster, a Dallas suburb.
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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Fort Hood Prosecutors oust 3 jurors over death penalty

Ft. Hood prosecutors seek ouster of 3 potential jurors
Angela K. Brown
Associated Press
POSTED: Tuesday, July 16, 2013

FORT HOOD, Texas - Prosecutors asked Monday that three Army officers be dismissed as potential jurors in the murder trial of the Fort Hood shooting suspect because of their views on the death penalty. Six potential jurors - four colonels and two lieutenant colonels - were brought in from Army posts nationwide and overseas as questioning continued in the court-martial of Maj. Nidal Hasan.

The Army psychiatrist faces execution or life in prison without parole if convicted in the 2009 rampage that left 13 dead and nearly three dozen wounded on the Texas Army post. Two of those officers indicated they opposed the death penalty, while a third said he strongly favored it. Prosecutors want all three tossed from the jury pool.
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Monday, July 15, 2013

Iraq veteran charged with infant's death was self-medicating

Friend: Accused man took path of self-destruction
The Daily Item
By Cyrus Moulton
July 15, 2013

Anthony Gideika at his arraignment
Wednesday in Lynn.
(Item Photo / Owen O'Rourke)
LYNN — A longtime friend said he could not believe Anthony Gideika, the city man charged Wednesday with beating an infant to death, would purposely have killed the child.

But the friend also said Gideika should not have been caring for the deceased and the child’s twin brother, describing how Gideika abused drugs to deal with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after returning from serving in Iraq.

“I don’t think he purposely, in my heart, I don’t think he shook [the baby] or slammed it; but I could definitely see him dropping it,” Chris Webb, Gideika’s friend since high school said. “He was already a self-destructive kind of person the last couple of years from the Army, and now he has to live with having the baby die, which is honestly why I believe he didn’t do anything on purpose to his baby.”
Prosecutors said Gideika had recently learned he was not the twins’ father and was “self-medicating” with Klonopin to handle post-traumatic stress disorder from his service in Iraq.

Gideika pleaded not guilty and maintained that he had dropped the baby several times and any injuries were involuntary.
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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Anti-malarial drug linked to Afghan massacre a long time ago

What the hell is going on when reports do not research what they report on? Here is one more case of that.
MARCH 26, 2012 CNN reported Military Scrambles To Limit Malaria Drug Just After Afghanistan Massacre
That isn't the problem, even though reports on this drug go way back.

VA issued warning on Lariam in 2004

Spc. Adam Kuligowski's problems began because he couldn't sleep, April 2010

Army curbs prescriptions of anti-malaria drug Mefloquine NOVEMBER 20, 2011 and this one the same month. After four decades of use, the U.S. Army is banning the use of mefloquine (an anti-malaria drug) because of side effects.

Is Mefloquine the new Agent Orange? from August 2012

This report claims that it is "new information" but it isn't.
Anti-malarial drug linked to Afghan massacre
Soldier was taking mefloquine when he killed 16 civilians, report indicates
By Patricia Kime
Staff writer
Jul. 13, 2013

In less than a month, Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales will be sentenced for the massacre of 16 Afghan civilians in March 2012.

His attorney, John Henry Browne, has not publicly disclosed whether he will use a mental health defense to fight for a parole-eligible sentence.

But an argument could be made that Bales, 40, was out of his mind:

■ He was treated for a traumatic brain injury resulting from a rollover accident in 2010 and possibly had post-traumatic stress disorder.

■ He admitted to using steroids, which can cause aggression and violence.

■ And new evidence suggests he was prescribed an anti-malaria drug known to cause hallucinations, aggression and psychotic behavior in some patients.
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Media guilty but Zimmerman not guilty

Media guilty but Zimmerman not guilty
Wounded Times Blog
Kathie Costos
July 14, 2013

News Media guilty of killing news coverage but Zimmerman not guilty of murder turns out to be the outcome of this trail here in Florida. Every channel covered Zimmerman every chance they had since the shooting of Trayvon Martin. We can't call it murder now since a jury said it wasn't. The problem is not so much that another Florida jury found someone not guilty stunning the majority of Floridians, but the problem is the sensationalization to the point where no other news is covered.

The fact that once the trial date was announced, reporters from all over the country showed up. During the trial every station dropped their programming for the trial. CNN, FOX, MSNBC and HLN made sure they were not left out of the frenzy. Did anything else happen? Were there any other murder trials going on in the country or was this the only one?

The broadcast news media wanted us to believe everyone was watching but most of us were asking "Isn't there anything else on?" Standing in line at Publix was a true lesson in current events because everyone was sick of it.
Trayvon Martin's family reacts to verdict via social media
Orlando Sentinel
By Jerriann Sullivan
July 13, 2013

Trayvon Martin's family was not in the courtroom when the not guilty verdict in the George Zimmerman murder trial was announced. But moments later, family members shared their sentiments on the social media site Twitter.

"God blessed Me and Sybrina with Tray and even in his death I know my baby proud of the FIGHT we along with all of you put up for him GOD BLESS," Tracy Martin, Trayvon's dad, tweeted seconds after the verdict was announced.
read more here


The Sentinel decided to report off of tweets from Martin's family. How desperate were they to keep the story going? Did we care what happened? Sure but not to the point where nothing else mattered.

The loser in all of this are the stories that should have merited national attention.

In Lancaster Pennsylvania a Vietnam Veteran died trying to save other people from a house fire. Jimmie Moore should have mattered more to the national news stations.

The Army started to investigate two deaths. Army Spc. Hilda I. Clayton died in Jalalabad, Afghanistan and 44-year-old First Sgt. Tracy L. Stapley died July 3 at Camp As Sayliyah in Qatar.

A homeless veteran was stabbed 70 times by a 21 year old "celebrating his birthday" but then news came that George Mohr, 71, died in Temple University Hospital Saturday.

Pvt. Errol D.A. Milliard, 18, of Birmingham, Ala., died July 4 in Farah province, Afghanistan, of injuries sustained when enemy forces attacked his unit with a rocket propelled grenade while on dismounted patrol.

CNN needs to stop letting social media lead the way on what they report. Soldier's suicide note goes viral, then CNN notices?
"I Am Sorry That It Has Come to This": A Soldier's Last Words came in June 10, 2012 and Gawker published the story on June 22. Wounded Times posted it on June 23. Daniel Somers had carried all that pain within himself but it seems the only time the media takes an interest is when it is too late to do any good for them.


There were so many stories coming out that in a normal world would have had national attention but then the reporters would have to actually go out and investigate, interview and spend time on the subject. It was a lot easier to follow the rest of the crowd in Sanford just as it was during the Anthony trial. Two not guilty verdicts had indicted the news but they just didn't notice.