Court Martial Attorney – Schofield sergeant
in Iraq charged in death of fellow soldier

By Gregg K. Kakesako

A 29-year-old Schofield Barracks soldier has been charged with accidentally shooting and killing a fellow 25th Infantry Division soldier in Iraq three months ago.

Sgt. Miguel A. Vegaquinones was charged yesterday with involuntary manslaughter and making a false official statement in connection with the death of Pfc. Sean McCune on Jan. 11.

McCune died after allegedly being shot by Vegaquinones following the completion of their guard duty shift in Samarra.

The Army said Vegaquinones negligently shot McCune, but did not provide details.

They were both assigned to 2nd Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team.

If Vegaquines’ case is sent to a general court martial he faces a maximum jail sentence of 10 years if convicted of involuntary manslaughter. The false official statement charges carries a maximum sentence of five years confinement.

McCune’s death is among seven non-combat deaths this year involving soldiers and Marines with Hawaii-based ties now serving in Iraq.

Until now, the Pentagon had given the reason for only one of the deaths. Hawaii Army National Guard Spc. Cwislyn K. Walter, 19, died Feb. 19 from injuries sustained in a single vehicle accident on Seventh Ring Road outside Kuwait City in Kuwait. She was assigned to the 29th Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 29th Infantry Brigade Combat Team.

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Lawyer – Elemendorf Court Martial

An Elmendorf Airman stands accused of drugging his wife, forcing her to abort her unborn baby.

Prosecutors say she did not know about the drug until it was too late.

The trial is playing out on base. On average, court martials are pretty rare events on Elmendorf.

Airman First Class Scott Boie of Milton, Wisconsin is being charged on 4 counts, including causing the death of the unborn child his wife was carrying.

The Air Force confirmed that Airman Boie is also charged with assaulting his wife. Prosecutors say he put the drug Meisoprostol in her food without her knowledge.

High doses of the drug can cause the uterus to rupture and it can result in severe fetal brain damage and death.

Airman Boie is also accused of stealing a 1990 Nissan truck and then willfully and maliciously burning the automobile.

Air Force officials say the incidents described in the court martial happened between April and June of 2008.

The charges are proceeding under the guidlines established under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, a legal code which applies to military members regardless of duty location.

The Deputy staff Judge Advocate, Major Shane Cohen says, “he pled not guilty to the intentional killing of the unborn child but pled guilty to the attempt. With respect to the arson he pled guilty, and to the assault consummated by battery he pled guilty.”

A court martial is similar to a trial in the civilian world, except that the accused can request to be tried by a military judge alone or by a jury of officers or, if the accused is an enlisted members, they can request that up to 1/3 of the panel also be enlisted members.

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Lawyer – Court refuses to reinstate charges against Marine

SAN DIEGO (AP) — A military appeals court has refused to reinstate war-crime charges against a Marine in connection with the deaths of 24 Iraqi civilians.

The nine-member appellate court rejected the Marine Corps’ appeal Tuesday night — as a three-member panel did in March.

Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani of Rangely, Colo., was charged with dereliction of duty for failing to investigate the 2005 killings of men, women and children by Marines in Haditha, Iraq.

A judge at Camp Pendleton in California dismissed the charges last year, saying the case was tainted by improper contact between a general overseeing the case and an investigator.

Charges also have been dismissed against five other Marines. Another was acquitted and one has a pending court martial.

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Attorney – Prescription drugs can end your career

Commentary by Col. Howard Hayes
354th Medical Group commander

4/28/2009 – EIELSON AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska — In May 2007 a technical sergeant in my squadron took a single pill from his son’s prescription bottle. That pill started him down the road towards a court martial and discharge from the Air Force.

The drug was a low level amphetamine used to correct Attention Deficit Disorder. Both the sergeant and his son suffered from the same condition and used the same medication. The non-commissioned officer had exhausted his supply and since he was too busy to make an appointment he took the pill from his son’s supply. Without a current prescription he was found guilty of illegal drug use.

When I heard about the case I thought “No big deal, it was the correct drug, he had just run out.” After all, his doctor would probably renew the prescription when he went in for his next appointment. As it turns out, this NCO lost his line number for master sergeant and was referred for court martial.

Nothing I could do as his commander could stop the process as he had turned up positive on a urinalysis test without a prescription. The case was referred to a major general who allowed the sergeant to remain in the Air Force after paying a fine and losing his line number.

Later that year a master sergeant complained to his friend that he was having trouble concentrating on the job. His Top-3 buddy told him that it sounded just like his Attention Deficit Disorder and he gave the sergeant one of his pills. He told his friend to wait until the weekend to take the drug since he didn’t know how it would affect another person.

Well, that weekend his friend took the pill and on Monday it was detected on a urinalysis test. The master sergeant was found guilty of distributing drugs and his friend was guilty of using an amphetamine without a prescription. Both were lucky enough to receive early retirements.

Each time the clinic gives you a new prescription your provider will give you instructions on the use of that drug. When you pick the drug up the pharmacist will review your medications in the computer, print out an instruction sheet for your use, ensure the bottle is properly labeled, and finally ask if you understand how to use the drug.

If you are taking an antibiotic we will tell you to take all the pills. Although you may begin to feel well soon after the first dose, it is important to consume all the pills in order to affect possible resistant strains of bacteria. If you are prescribed a pain killer, you must use the drug for the injury that it is currently prescribed for and not store the drug for future use.

You cannot self-prescribe medications for the same symptoms just because you have pills left over, unless your current provider has clearly given you permission to do so and your prescription is still valid. And, you cannot provide your drugs to another person, that’s a violation of both state laws and the Uniformed Code of Military Justice.

Drugs have a shelf-life, are dangerous around young children, and will only cause you problems when they are no longer needed. If you have old prescriptions the President’s Office of National Drug Control Policy recommends that you:

1. Take your prescription drugs out of their original containers.

2. Mix drugs with an undesirable substance, such as cat litter or used coffee grounds.

3. Put this mixture into a disposable container with a lid, such as an empty margarine tub, or sealable bag.

4. Conceal or remove any personal information, including prescription number, on the empty containers by covering it with black permanent marker or duct tape, or by scratching it off.

5. Place the sealed container with the mixture, and the empty drug containers, in the trash.

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Lawyer – Ex-Sgt.: Soldier acknowledged role in Iraq crime

By BRETT BARROUQUERE – Associated Press Writer

PADUCAH, Ky. — A former U.S. Army sergeant said an ex-soldier charged with killing a family in Iraq and raping a teenage girl had twice acknowledged committing the attack in the days after the bodies were discovered.

Anthony Yribe, who was in the same unit of the 101st Airborne Division with Steven Dale Green, told jurors Wednesday that Green admitted to the crimes in two separate interviews, one hours after the attack March 12, 2006, and again the next day.

Yribe said he met Green and another soldier at a traffic checkpoint after seeing the bodies.

“Green said something to the effect of, ‘I did that,’” Yribe said during testimony on the third day of Green’s trial in U.S. District Court.

During an interview the next day, Yribe again questioned Green about details of the crime. Yribe said Green accurately described how many bodies there were and where they were in the house. But Green refused to implicate any other soldiers.

“He said he did it alone,” said Yribe, of Belleview, Idaho.

Yribe testified he was charged with dereliction of duty and making a false official statement for not telling military investigators about his conversation with Green. He said that as part of a deal with prosecutors, the charges were dismissed and he accepted an other-than-honorable discharge from the Army in 2008.

Green, 23, of Midland, Texas, has pleaded not guilty to more than a dozen charges against him, including sexual assault and four counts of murder.

Prosecutors have said Green was the triggerman among a group of soldiers who attacked the family near Mahmoudiya, Iraq, about 20 miles outside Baghdad. They said he shot 14-year-old Abeer Qassim al-Janabi’s parents and 6-year-old sister, then was the third to rape the teen before shooting her in the face several times.

Green faces a possible death sentence if convicted in federal court, where he is being tried because he had been discharged from the Army before charges were brought.

Defense attorneys have asked jurors to consider the “context” of war surrounding Green, painting a picture of young soldiers in harsh wartime conditions, lacking leadership and receiving little help from the Army to deal with the loss of friends.

Other soldiers involved in the attack were prosecuted in military court. Two of those pleaded guilty at court martial, and a third was convicted. A fourth who stayed behind at a checkpoint while the others went to the family’s home pleaded guilty to being an accessory.

Also Wednesday, jurors saw photos taken by Yribe hours after the attack. The photos showed a mother, father and small girl lying in pools of blood with shotgun wounds. Other photos showed badly charred and barely recognizable human remains.

As the photos were shown, Green sat at the defense table, rubbing his eyes, staring at Yribe and looking around the room.

Yribe recounted the two interviews with Green, saying he initially didn’t believe his fellow soldier committed the acts.

“I asked him if he was serious or if this was just him talking,” Yribe said. “He said he was serious, that he did it alone.”

Yribe said he didn’t tell his superior officers about Green’s comments. Defense attorney Scott Wendelsdorf asked: “Did you feel a sense of allegiance to Pfc. Green because of your service in the Army?”

“A little bit,” Yribe responded.

A superior officer, Lt. Col. Thomas Kunk, initiated a criminal investigation in June, after hearing rumors about American involvment in the slayings. Yribe said he lied to Army criminal investigators.

“At that point, why were you lying?” Wendelsdorf asked.

“The gravity of the situation and my involvement in it came into play,” Yribe said.

Wendelsdorf pressed Yribe: “You got yourself in too deep and you got scared?”

“Yes,” Yribe answered.

Earlier Wednesday, Kunk testified that he met with Green after his unit had suffered the deaths of several soldiers. Green had apparently told others that he wanted to kill Iraqi civilians, Kunk said.

“I specifically remember asking Steven Green, ‘Do you think all Iraqis are bad?’ He said, ‘No, not all Iraqis are bad, sir,’” Kunk said. “After engaging him and looking him in the eye, I felt comfortable about that.”

Kunk said he explained that only a “small percentage” of Iraqis were bad. After the two men exchanged a “firm handshake,” Kunk sent Green back to his unit.

In May 2006, Green was discharged from the Army after being diagnosed with a personality disorder.

The federal trial is being held in western Kentucky because the 101st Airborne Division is based at Fort Campbell, Ky.

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Lawyer – Consensus Forming on Prosecution of Guantanamo Detainees
Civilian Federal Court System Seen As Best Way to Go
By Daphne Eviatar 4/29/09 12:48 PM

A Guantanamo detainee is escorted to his cell.

On Wednesday evening during a trip to Berlin, Attorney General Eric Holder is expected to address the challenges of closing the prison at Guantanamo Bay and providing justice for the detainees still there. Whether President Barack Obama can safely return those prisoners to their home countries, resettle them elsewhere or try them in some sort of U.S. court is key to his ability to follow through on his promise to close the prison by the end of this year.

It’s also controversial. As Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said in a statement released Tuesday: “Many Americans are skeptical of the Administration’s decision to close Guantanamo before it has a plan to deal with the 240 terrorists who are currently housed there. And Americans were rightly alarmed by recent news reports that the Administration is considering releasing some Guantanamo detainees into the U.S. — not to detention facilities, but directly into our neighborhoods.”

Illustration by: Matt Mahurin
McConnell was referring to Holder’s recent statements that he may release some of the Chinese Muslim “Uighur” detainees who’ve been cleared for release but are still at Guantanamo Bay into the Washington, D.C. area because they can’t be returned to China for fear of persecution, and no other country will take them. Of the 240 prisoners left at Guantanamo, about 50 have told their lawyers they’re afraid they will be tortured in their home countries if returned there.

That only concerns prisoners against whom there’s little evidence of wrongdoing. Although it’s clear now that most Guantanamo prisoners are not “the worst of the worst” as former Vice President Dick Cheney often described them, at least some were involved in terrorist activities, and the challenge for the United States now is where to try them for those crimes.

In an interview with Katie Couric of CBS News earlier this month, Holder suggested that all options remain on the table. “We will bring, I think, a substantial number of those people who we decide to charge in Article III courts,” Holder said, referring to the civilian federal court system. “Others might be taken to military courts. Others perhaps, to these military tribunals with some – enhanced – enforcement,” he said.

Although Holder signaled that the administration is still considering the creation of some sort of new court system to try suspected terrorists, a consensus is developing among legal experts that for the vast majority of them, the civilian federal court system — where terror suspects have traditionally been tried — is still the best way to go. A broad range of experts increasingly seem to agree that any new military commissions or “national security courts”, as they’re sometimes called, even if they could be set up quickly and provided detainees more rights than did the Bush military commissions, will always be viewed as suspect and subjected to protracted challenges in federal court. And while the military justice system used to prosecute U.S. soldiers could also be used to prosecute alleged war criminals, experts say it offers few advantages over the federal court system and many practical drawbacks.

“I think it would be much better to go into a federal court system,” said Gary Solis, a retired Marine and war crimes expert who teaches international and military law at Georgetown University, and spoke at a recent legal conference on the subject. “It could be done in the military, but I don’t think it should be.”

After the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, the Bush administration’s declaration of a “war on terror” changed the paradigm for dealing with terrorism. Instead of treating it as a law enforcement problem, which it always had been, it became a military one. That immediately changed — or discarded — the usual rules for how to treat suspects. As Judge Kenneth Karas, a federal judge in New York said earlier this month at a conference sponsored by the Center on Law and Security at New York University School of Law, “After 9-11, you didn’t have people sitting down with Miranda cards saying you have the right to remain silent. Because that’s the last thing the U.S. government wanted them to do,” he said. “So how will those cases be prosecuted?”

The problem for the Obama administration is that the suspects at Guantanamo Bay were arrested, interrogated and detained by the U.S. military and the CIA, not by the FBI, local police or federal prosecutors, who are trained to collect evidence in a way that will be admissible at trial. Evidence coerced under torture or other abuse — as described in recent Office of Legal Counsel and the Senate Armed Services Committee reports — is considered inherently unreliable and therefore inadmissible in federal court. Documents seized by the military or CIA agents, meanwhile, may not have been handled in a way that allows them to be reliably used against a defendant. And statements that soldiers or the CIA may have relied upon to capture a suspect may not be admissible in court, either, if they were based on hearsay or coerced from detainees during abusive interrogations.

That doesn’t necessarily mean we should create a new court system to get around that, argue many lawyers. “The best way to hide torture and other illegal conduct is to have a proceeding that hides some of the evidence,” said Joshua Dratel, a criminal defense lawyer who has represented detainees at Guantanamo Bay and is co-editor with Karen Greenberg of the 2005 book, “The Torture Papers: The Road to Abu Ghraib.” “The solution to a situation where there are difficulties is not to create a system that dilutes fundamental protections to the point where the court loses credibility altogether. That’s what happened at Guantanamo.”

Indeed, President Bush created the military commissions largely to get around the evidence problem. The Supreme Court struck down the first set of commissions in 2006 because they weren’t authorized by Congress and violated the Geneva Conventions. Congress passed the Military Commissions Act to solve that problem. The Supreme Court has never had an opportunity to decide if those commissions — put on hold in the early days of the Obama administration — are actually lawful. Lawyers who represented detainees tried before the commissions insisted that they were not.

Still, some prominent law professors, such as Georgetown University’s Neal Katyal, now deputy solicitor general in the Obama administration, have advocated for creation of special “national security courts”. Run by federal judges who specialize in terrorism cases, they would oversee “preventive detention” of suspects and would admit evidence that’s normally inadmissible in federal courts. Some suspects, for example, “can be tried only on a conspiracy theory that comes close to criminalizing group membership,” Katyal wrote in 2007 with Harvard Law Professor Jack Goldsmith, and “the standards of proof for evidence collected in Afghanistan might not meet every jot and tittle of American criminal law.”

But many experts say it would be a mistake for the Obama administration to create new courts now. “The Guantanamo military commissions for seven years have proven a failed and fruitless process,” Solis said. “I don’t think the international community is prepared to accept another military commission along the lines of what we had at Guantanamo Bay,” he said. “And any totally new system would be challenged just like the Military Commissions Act was.”

Kenneth Wainstein, a former federal prosecutor and homeland security adviser under President George W. Bush, acknowledged at the recent NYU conference that “as a former U.S. attorney, my bias is toward criminal prosecution, if it can be done.” He did, however, note the tension between the desire to protect classified information at trial and “the reality that in the world of counterterrorism you operate largely in a classified world.”

Many former federal prosecutors believe that world is adequately protected by current laws and procedural rules that allow judges to look at evidence behind closed doors, and allow the government to redact names of informants or to summarize critical evidence where its release in full could endanger national security. Indeed, a study of terrorism cases since 9-11 conducted for Human Rights First by former federal prosecutors concluded that the federal court system is well equipped to handle such cases. The ACLU and a bipartisan coalition created by the Constitution Project, along with many lawyers who have represented detainees at Guantanamo Bay, have also argued consistently that specially created national-security courts are unnecessary and likely unconstitutional.

What’s more, as Judge Karas noted, “The perception of our allies in the fairness of how we prosecute these cases is essential for their cooperation.” U.S. prosecutors will depend on that cooperation to obtain critical evidence, so creating a new court system “has very real practical implications.”

To the extent that the current court rules don’t accommodate some of the needs of prosecuting international terrorism, those rules could be amended without creating a whole new court system, legal experts say. Some have argued that Rule 15 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, for example, could be amended to make it easier to introduce deposition testimony in federal court when witnesses aren’t available.

“The questions about national security courts are complex, but the answer is simple,” Dratel said. “My answer is a categorical ‘no’. No one has yet articulated the failure of Article III Courts” to handle terrorism cases.

Although Dratel acknowledged that there could be “some tweaking in the rules,” the goal shouldn’t be to make getting convictions easy. “It’s not supposed to be easy to convict someone, to deprive them of liberty for a long time and in some cases to execute them.” The federal rules already protect classified evidence, he said, and in some cases don’t allow the defendant or even his lawyer to see that evidence. What’s more, “Confidential informants have been addressed for 40 years. It happens far more in drug cases then in terror cases. We’re not dealing with an uncharted future here,” he said, adding: “I’m skeptical of a system designed to protect evidence that will make it even more unfair.”

Of course, there’s still the military court martial system, whose rules are at least as stringent as those in civilian courts in terms of protecting defendants. President Obama has at times suggested that some suspects could be tried that way, since military courts have jurisdiction over war crimes. But the five-years statute of limitations on most crimes (except murder) will present a problem. “Most of these crimes, due to the length of time these folks have been held, the statute of limitations would have expired,” said Michelle McCluer, a former Judge Advocate General and executive director of the National Institute of Military Justice.

Even if the military courts could get around that problem, experts say most military lawyers, who ordinarily handle court-martials of soldiers, don’t have the sort of trial experience needed to try complex terrorism cases involving serious charges and classified evidence.

“There’s nobody in the military system who’s qualified to try these cases,” Solis said. “Not that they’re bad, just that they’re only a few years out of law school. ” Guantanamo detainees, meanwhile, “will have some of the best defense lawyers in the country,” he said, noting that some of the nation’s top lawyers rallied to defend them in habeas corpus cases and in the Bush military commissions.

If you pit skilled defense attorneys against military prosecutors with little trial experience, said Solis, who for years taught law at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, it won’t go well for the United States. “We’ll get killed.”

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Attorney - Court refuses to reinstate charges against Camp Pendleton officer

A military appeals court has rejected an attempt by the U.S. Marine Corps to reinstate war-crime charges against a Camp Pendleton officer in connection with the 2005 killings of 21 civilians in Haditha, Iraq.

The rejection increases the chances the case against Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani will never go to court martial. He was charged with dereliction of duty for not launching a thorough investigation after Marines in his battalion killed the civilians, including women and children, in a futile hunt for insurgents.

Of eight Marines charged in the killings, one was acquitted and six, including Chessani, had charges dismissed.

A trial judge at Camp Pendleton tossed out the case against Chessani after finding that a Marine lawyer who investigated the incident had sat in on meetings with the general who ultimately levied the charges. A three-judge panel of the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Appeal agreed with the judge that the lawyer’s conduct tainted the case because it gave the appearance of undue command influence.

The Marine Corps appealed the panel’s ruling to the full nine-member court. But the court Tuesday night rejected the appeal without command.

The Marine Corps can continue its appeals or attempt to reinstate charges against Chessani by launching a new investigation under the direction of a new convening authority, a lengthy and complex process.

If the case against Chessani is dropped, it might also lead to the dropping of charges against Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich, the squad leader. Wuterich’s lawyers also have claimed undue command influence.

Richard Thompson, president of the Thomas More Law Center, which has represented Chessani, said, “This case has turned into a government vendetta against a patriotic Marine combat officer who loyally served this country for over 20 years.”

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Attorney – Civilian Trial Begins for Ex-Iraq Soldier
By Jim Frederick / Paducah, Ky.

With its dark wood benches, plush blue carpeting and rich ornamental details, the second floor courtroom of the U.S. District Court in Paducah, Kentucky, is half a world away from Iraq’s hardscrabble Triangle of Death. But in a trial that opened here on Monday, Steven Green, a former Private First Class from the 101st Airborne Division, stands accused of crimes committed there, one the worst atrocities believed to be carried out by U.S. forces during the war.

Three previous trials have established this much: on March 12, 2006, a small group of junior soldiers slipped away unnoticed from a lightly defended traffic checkpoint just outside the insurgent-infested town of Yusufiyah 20 miles south of Baghdad. Nursing a hatred of Iraqis stemming from heavy losses their unit had suffered, and fueled by several bottles of Iraqi whisky, they embarked upon a premeditated crime of gruesome barbarity. Donning black long underwear outfits as disguises, even though it was the middle of the day, they traveled a few hundred meters to an isolated farmhouse where they gang raped Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi, a 14-year old Iraqi girl and murdered her, her parents, and her six-year old sister. The men returned to their checkpoint unnoticed and for months afterwards, the massacre was considered by the Army and locals alike to be just another outburst of the frequent Iraqi-on-Iraqi violence that plagued the area.

Three soldiers from that murderous expedition have already been tried by court martial for their roles in the crime. All were found guilty and all were sentenced to jail terms of 90 years or longer. But because Green, whom the three other soldiers have described as both the plot’s mastermind and trigger man, was discharged before the full extent of the crime was discovered, he is being tried in a civilian court, where federal prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. He faces 17 counts of conspiracy, rape, murder, unlawful use of a weapon and obstruction of justice. (See TIME’s story on the killings in Haditha.)

In opening statements, federal prosecutor Brian Skaret emphasized the barbarity of the slaughter, focusing almost exclusively on the events of March 12, and Green’s alleged role in it. In the opposing opening statement, however, defense lawyer Patrick Bouldin called attention to what he called “the context of the tragedy.” Although Green is pleading not guilty to all charges, Bouldin did not explicitly affirm his client’s innocence during his remarks, emphasizing instead to the jury that the events of March 12th cannot be fully understood without appreciating the horrific conditions that Green’s platoon labored under, the breakdown in leadership that it suffered, and the clear, repeated warning signs of Green’s instability that his superiors routinely ignored. (Check out a story on whether Iraq should prosecute U.S. soldiers.)

But getting a civilian jury to believe that the frequently dehumanizing extremes of life in a war zone can be mitigating factors for even the most heinous of crimes will be one of the defense team’s greatest challenges. Green is the first former soldier to face trial — and the possible death penalty — in a civilian court for conduct during war. And, during the first day of trial, Green’s lawyers clearly felt forced to assume a pedagogical role that would not be necessary with a military jury. They described not just the psychological toll that constant battle can take, but even the most rudimentary military basics like how many soldiers an infantry staff sergeant leads and how many platoons are in a company.

Over the past year, Green’s lawyers have filed several motions challenging the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act (MEJA) of 2000 and 2004, a law designed to close the loophole that enabled military contractors or the spouses of servicemen and servicewomen to escape punishment for crimes committed abroad. Green’s lawyers (as well as several military law experts) have maintained that MEJA was never intended to cover cases like his, but, in August, U.S. District Judge Thomas Russell upheld its constitutionality. Green has offered to re-enlist in the Army and face a court-martial, but that request has also been denied.

Where Green is tried could be a matter of his life and death. While the Army punishes murderers severely, it has rarely executed soldiers in the post-World War II era; the last was put to death in 1961. Green’s lawyers have thus maintained that it is fundamentally unfair that their client faces a much harsher potential penalty than his already convicted co-conspirators, against whom the Army did not seek death, and who will be eligible for parole in 10 years. The day before the trial began, federal prosecutors asked the judge that this line of argument be barred from the court, saying it risked biasing the jury because, they wrote in their motion, of “our sense of indebtedness to the service and sacrifice of our fighting men and women.” Green’s trial is expected to last three to six weeks and, if a death penalty is handed down, an already notorious war crime may well become even more so.

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Lawyer - Soldier faces year in prison for desertion

FORT STEWART, Ga., April 29 (UPI) — U.S. Army enlisted man Cliff Cornell was sentenced to one year in prison Tuesday evening in Georgia after a court martial found him guilty of desertion.

Cornell, who had fled to Canada where he expressed his objection to the war in Iraq, also was given a bad conduct discharge during the military proceedings at Fort Stewart.

The War Resisters Support Campaign, a Canadian anti-war group, said prosecutors had argued Cornell’s appearance on television in Canada had helped undermine troop morale in the Middle East.

“Cliff is being punished for what he believes, for his comments to the press,” said James Branum, the lawyer who represented Cornell during the court-martial. “Because he spoke out against the Iraq war, Cliff’s sentence is harsher than the punishment given to 94 percent of deserters who are not penalized but administratively discharged.”

Cornell, a specialist in the 39th Artillery Regiment at Fort Stewart, deserted to Toronto in 2005. Canadian authorities ordered the Mountain Home, Ark., native out of the country in February after Immigration Minister Jason Kenney turned down his request to stay in Canada on humanitarian and compassionate grounds.

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 

Court Martial Attorney – Midshipman Gets 15 Months for Stealing Spree

By Nelson Hernandez – Washington Post Staff Writer

A U.S. Naval Academy midshipman was sentenced to 15 months of confinement yesterday after pleading guilty to more than two dozen instances of theft and conduct unbecoming an officer.

Julia Kaelberer, a fourth-year midshipman from Rialto, Calif., admitted stealing a class ring sample from a display in October 2007. Her thefts culminated in what her attorneys described as a stealing spree Dec. 6, 2008, when most of her classmates were in Philadelphia for the Army-Navy football game.

The stolen items included a BlackBerry, video game consoles, a class ring worth over $3,000, a “Go Navy, Beat Army” quilt, and gasoline, food and Starbucks travel mugs purchased with stolen credit cards.

Kaelberer, 23, also admitted lying to Navy investigators and to classmates who were trying to find out what happened to the stolen items.

“We were taught that midshipmen are persons of integrity,” Kaelberer said in a tearful final statement. “They do not lie, cheat or steal. I broke that code.”

Her lead attorney, Lt. Jentso Hwang, said Kaelberer broke under the stress of attending the academy. “This was a girl whose life was slowly spinning out of control,” he said.

Lt. Cmdr. Pete Clemow, lead prosecutor, asserted that she had abused her classmates’ trust and was “not fit to wear the uniform.”

The military judge, Capt. Bruce MacKenzie, sentenced Kaelberer to 18 months of confinement and dismissed her from the Navy. The sentence was reduced to 15 months under a plea deal negotiated before the trial.

MacKenzie did not comment on the case but advised the Naval Academy superintendent to consider clemency toward Kaelberer.

Kaelberer and her family watched the final moments of the court martial quietly. She hugged her relatives and was led back to the brig.

Michael Waddington is a court martial lawyer – court martial attorney that defends military personnel worldwide as well as deployed civilian contractors subject to the UCMJ. He defends Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine, Coast Guard, and civilian contractor court martial cases. He has successfully defended military personnel as a court martial lawyer Army Navy Marine & Air Force court martials in Germany, England, Italy, Iraq, Kuwait, Korea, Okinawa, Japan, Yokota, and throughout the United States. military-defense-lawyer-recentcases.htm.

 
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