U.S. Army prosecutors urged a presiding Army judge to recommend courts-martial for five soldiers accused in a three-month killing spree in Afghanistan.
The prosecutors said the five men serving at Forward Operating Base Ramrod in southern Afghanistan sought out civilians at random and then killed them with grenades and rifle fire, ABC News reported Tuesday.
One of the defendants, Cpl. Jeremy More.. Morlock, appeared in court Monday at Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Wash. He had been videotaped while being questioned in Afghanistan, The Seattle Times reported.
On the videotaped confession, Morlock described how Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs had men in his unit randomly choose civilians and then kill them.
"Gibbs called it like, 'Hey you guys wanna, you guys wanna wax this guy or what?' And you know, he set it up, like, he grabbed the dude," Morlock said on the tape.
The five soldiers face murder charges and if convicted could face the death penalty, the Los Angeles Times said. All have denied the charges.
The military says the investigation also led to the discovery of widespread drug use at the base.
Defense attorneys said Morlock didn't confess to the slayings and his statements indicate other soldiers did the actual killings, the Times said. The attorneys also questioned investigators' assertions that Morlock was properly told of his rights and that his prescription drug use -- he had taken a muscle relaxer before questioning -- should invalidate the statements as evidence.
The parents of Spc. Adam Winfield, another soldier accused in the killings, said they tried to warn the Army about the sergeant, but to no avail, ABC News said. The Winfields say they called six different Army offices and Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., to get help. - via LiveLeak
2 Comments
acidSpinesays......But the rest of the miltary are still heroes right? I need to be able to look up to professional killers as role models.
Drachen_Jagersays...The worst thing about this whole affair is that it WAS reported by US soldiers and swept under the rug. Only after a complaint from a Canadian special forces soldier was there a full Canadian investigation which led the investigators to open channels to the US forces. Once they realized they couldn't keep a lid on it any more the US forces investigated, but they waited until pressured into it.
Which leaves me with two questions.
How many times have these things happened when a soldier from another country wasn't there to report it?
How long before Quantum Mushroom steps in to defend these psychos?
Discuss...
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