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Questions about the Affidavit against Pvt. Green (Iraqi Rape/Murder case)
Findlaw.com/Pissant ^ | 7/5/06 | Pissant

Posted on 07/05/2006 3:33:11 PM PDT by pissant

First off, the information in the Affidavit and the MSM regarding this incident in Muhmudiyah does not look good for Steven Green or his alleged conspirators. If he or they are guilty of this crime, then I pray that the Military comes down on them like a ton bricks. The description of what happened is beyond disgusting and evil.

Having said that, I will continue to give the benefit of the doubt to Steven Green and the others, until they confess in a military court or are found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

So in the interim, I will try to do my best, like on the Haditha case, to poke holes in allegations, and to publicize the work of others doing the same thing.

In regards to the affidavit (AD) used to charge Steven Green, I have a couple of questions/observations. You can click on the URL above to see the affidavit.

Questions:

In Item #5 in the AD, the CID investigation states that 3 men approached checkpoint 1 (TCP#1) on 3/12/2006 at 5:30 PM and reported that a family had been killed in their house and that it was believed to have been done by Anti Iraq forces or "others".

In Item #12, SOI5 (source of information) says that on 3/11/2006 an Iraqi approached him and told him the house had been burned. The Iraqi said four were dead and one had been raped. An HOUR later, Iraqi army personnel and four US soldiers, including SOI5, went to the scene and presumably took the photos.

So did the event happen on 3/11 or 3/12? If SOI5 is correct, then the bodies would have been in the morgue by 3/12 and a 3/11 report would have been discovered by the CID.

Item #6 says that during a combat stress debriefing on 6/20/06 it was determined that these members of the 4th Infantry division commited this crime. Yet all the previous reports say that two guys were debriefed, neither an eyewitness. One said that he overheard guys talking about it, and another said that he heard that the guys burned their clothes. And it was not until 6/24/06 that the invistigation from CIS started. Therefore Item 6 is factually wrong to say it was "determined" on 6/20/06 that our men did this.

In Item #8, SOI1 says SOI2 and KP1 (known participant) changed clothes before heading to the house. Then he says that SOI2, SOI3, SG and KP1 all burned their clothes when they got back. First, SOI3 supposedly stayed guard at the door fo the house, so why would he burn his clothes? And if he was in uniform, would he really burn his uniform at a checkpoint and stand there in his skivvies? 2nd, was SOI1 really dumb enough to man the checkpoint by himself while these guys went raping and pillaging, especially since one of the M4s they took belonged to SOI1?

In Item #10, SOI2 states "Green went into the bedroom to keep the rest of the family there" and that "KP1 threw a woman to the floor". After Green killed the family, SOI2 states that he witnessed "Green and KP1 rape the woamn that SOI3 had thrown to the floor". So who threw the rape victim to the floor?? SOI3 was supposedly standing guard outside the house.

In Item #11, SOI3 says that SOI2 ordered him to toss the AK-47 used by Green into the canal. SOI2 does not mention (items #9 and #10) that he asked SOI3 to get rid of AK-47.

Item #13 is the photo evidence. If this photo evidence was taken 3/11/06 by the Iraqi and US soldiers that went to investigate per item #12 (SOI5's version) then something is terribly amiss about the timing of this story.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption
KEYWORDS: iraqrapecase; mahmoudiya; propaganda; stevendgreen
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To: TexKat

Not explicitly.

"He said he and other family members found Abeer's body burned and her father, mother and sister shot to death."


81 posted on 07/05/2006 6:45:58 PM PDT by pissant
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To: pissant

Al-Mahmudiyah.

Mafkarat al-Islam: eyewitness testimony about US rape, murder of Iraqi family in al-Mahmudiyah in March.

In a dispatch posted at 11:55pm Makkah time Saturday night, Mafkarat al-Islam submitted its correspondents’ in-depth report on the rape and murder case in March that the American military have now been compelled to investigate.

Mafkarat al-Islam noted that the number of rapes of Iraqi women committed by US occupation troops is already legion and continues to climb. Many women have been victimized within Abu Ghurayb and the other prisons; while many others have fallen prey to the rapists in American uniform who prowl the large prison that is occupied Iraq.

But there is one case of rape that has come to the surface in recent days, which stands out for a savagery and brutality that goes beyond all bounds.

On an afternoon in March 2006, a force of 10 to 15 American troops raided the home of Qasim Hamzah Rashid al-Janabi, who was born in 1970 and who worked as a guard at a state-owned potato storehouse. Al-Janabi lived with his wife, Fakhriyah Taha Muhsin, and their four children – ‘Abir (born 1991), Hadil (born 1999), Muhammad (1998), and Ahmad (1996).

The Americans took Qasim, his wife, and their daughter Hadil and put them in one room of their house. The boys Ahmad and Muhammad were at school since the time the Americans invaded the home was about 2pm. The Americans shot Qasim, his wife, and their daughter in that room. They pumped four bullets into Qasim’s head and five bullets in to Fakhriyah’s abdomen and lower abdomen. Hadil was shot in the head and shoulder.

After that, the Americans took ‘Abir into the next room and surrounded her in one corner of the house. There they stripped her, and then the 10 Americans took turns raping her. They then struck her on the head with a sharp instrument – according to the forensic medical report – knocking her unconscious – and smothered her with a cushion until she was dead. Then they set fire to her body.



The neighbor of the martyred family told the correspondent for Mafkarat al-Islam:



“At 2pm a force of Americans raided the home of the martyr Qasim, God rest his soul. They surrounded him and I heard the sound of gunfire. Then the gunfire fell silent. An hour later I saw clouds of smoke rising from the room and then the occupation troops came quickly out of the house. They surrounded the area together with Shi‘i ‘Iraqi National Guard’ forces, and they told us that terrorists from al-Qa‘idah had entered the house and killed them all. They wouldn’t let any of us into the house. But I told one of the ‘National Guard’ soldiers that I was their neighbor and that I wanted to see them so that I could tell al-Hajj Abu al-Qasim the news about his son and his son’s family, so one of the soldiers agreed to let me enter.



“So I went into the house and found in the first room the late Qasim and his wife and Hadil. Their bodies were swimming in blood. Their blood had spewed out of their bodies with such force that it had flowed out from under the door of the room. I turned them over but there was no response; their lives were already gone.”



The neighbor continued his account: “Then I went into ‘Abir’s room. Fire was coming out of her. Her head and her chest were on fire. She had been put in a pitiful position; they had lifted her white gown to her neck and torn her bra. Blood was flowing from between her legs even though she had died a quarter of an hour earlier, and in spite of the intensity of the fire in the room. She had died, may God rest her soul. I knew her from the first instant. I knew she had been raped since she had been turned on her face and the lower part of her body was raised while her hands and feet had been tied. By God, I couldn’t control myself and broke into tears over her, but I quickly extinguished the fire burning from her head and chest. The fire had burned up her breasts, the hair on her head, and the flesh on her face. I covered her privates with a piece of cloth, God rest her soul. And at that moment, I thought to myself that if I go out talking and threatening, that they would arrest me, so I took control of myself and resolved to leave the house calmly so that I could be a witness to tell the story of this tragedy.



“After three hours the [American] occupation troops surrounded the house and told the people of the area that the family had been killed by terrorists because they were Shi‘ah. Nobody in town believed that story because Abu ‘Abir was known as one of the best people of the city, one of the noblest, and no Shi‘i, but a Sunni monotheist. Everyone doubted their story and so after the sunset prayers the occupation troops took the four bodies away to the American base. Then the next day they handed them over to the al-Mahmudiyah government hospital and told the hospital administration that terrorists had killed the family. That morning I went with relatives of the deceased to the hospital. We received the bodies and buried them, may God have mercy on them.”



The neighbor went on: “Then we decided that we must not be silent so we asked the mujahideen to respond as quickly as possible. They responded with 30 attacks on the occupation in two days, bringing down more than 40 American soldiers. But our blood was still not cooled, so we decided to go to al-‘Arabiyah satellite TV to tell them the story since it is a station that broadcasts in Iraq. But al-‘Arabiyah paid no attention to us and said we were liars. They told us that their policy was to rely on official announcements issued by the American army, and that they were not able to get into a story over which they had no power. This was told to us by the al-‘Arabiyah correspondent Ahmad as-Salih. So we went to local newspapers and they slammed the doors in our faces because we are Sunnis and the rape victim was a Sunni girl. But the Resistance fighters told us that God does not allow the blood of any Muslim to be lost, and they told us to patiently persevere and we would see such a punishment for the blood of ‘Abir and her family, for the violation of the honor of our sister, a punishment that would make people’s hair stand on end.



“I personally wasn’t surprised that Umm ‘Abir [‘Abir’s mother] came to me on 9 March 2006 and asked that ‘Abir be allowed to spend the night with my daughters. She was afraid because of the way the occupation troops looked at her when she went out to feed the cows. I agreed to that because there was an occupation forces’ command post just 15 meters from Qasim’s house, God rest his soul. But frankly I thought it unlikely that anything would happen to the girl because she was only something like 16 and she was just a little girl. But I agreed and she spent one night at our place and then went back to her home in the morning. We had no idea that the occupation troops would carry out heir crime in broad daylight.”

The neighbor concluded: “The occupation troops came last Friday – that is, one day before the Mafkarat al-Islam correspondent visited the scene of the crime – and asked the people of the area to exhume the body of ‘Abir to conduct tests on it. And they also asked me to provide eyewitness testimony and I will go anywhere to make sure that justice is served.”

Mafkarat al-Islam was the first news agency to disclose the crime committed by US troops on that March day in al-Mahmudiyah.

http://www.freearabvoice.org/Iraq/Report/report567.htm


UNITED STATES OF AMERICA V STEVEN D. GREEN

http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/iraq/usgreen63006cmp.html


82 posted on 07/05/2006 6:48:22 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: OmahaFields

Yes, and he says that he was approached by an Iraqi about the burned house and dead bodies, which an hour later he was on site.

Where the shcoolkids the first to report it after school?


83 posted on 07/05/2006 6:50:41 PM PDT by pissant
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To: TexKat

So now its March 6th and was 10 to 15 guys. Nice.


84 posted on 07/05/2006 6:53:07 PM PDT by pissant
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To: pissant
Not explicitly. "He said he and other family members found Abeer's body burned and her father, mother and sister shot to death."

From reading other accounts regarding this, I gather that some of the deceased family's neighbors summoned Ahmad Taha.

I think its possible it gets confusing based on the original author and the translations of the language.

85 posted on 07/05/2006 6:56:32 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: pissant
So now its March 6th

Where did you get March 6th from?

You do realize that this particular article is from the Iraqi Resistance Report?

They have to embellish somewhat :)!

86 posted on 07/05/2006 7:04:51 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: pissant
Where the shcoolkids the first to report it after school?

I have read and posted at least one article that states that the 2 young boys were the ones to come home and find their family members dead.

87 posted on 07/05/2006 7:06:51 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: pissant
So now its March 6th and was 10 to 15 guys. Nice.

I didn't see March 6th. Here it says she was still alive on the 9th.

“I personally wasn’t surprised that Umm ‘Abir [‘Abir’s mother] came to me on 9 March 2006 and asked that ‘Abir be allowed to spend the night with my daughters.

88 posted on 07/05/2006 7:08:19 PM PDT by OmahaFields ("What have been its fruits? ... superstition, bigotry and persecution.")
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To: TexKat

I have no idea how I read March 6. I'm getting dizzy reading so many articles.

Yep, they embellish, not any more than Time did on its Haditha report though.


89 posted on 07/05/2006 7:09:06 PM PDT by pissant
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To: OmahaFields; TexKat

I din't either, I just thought I did.


90 posted on 07/05/2006 7:10:00 PM PDT by pissant
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To: pissant
There is ALOT more to the story, and of particular significance is the testimony of I5 and the fact that he and others including Iraqi army checked out the deaths on 3/11. Which would be before the 3/12 murders.

WHY? First that may just be a typo. Obviously you can't check out murders that haven't happened yet.

91 posted on 07/05/2006 7:10:00 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad
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To: Pikachu_Dad

Could be a typo, or it could be conflicting info. Either SOI5 and his group checked it out or they didn't. One thing seems certain, either they checked it out after the 1 guy came to them on the 11th OR they checked it out after the 3 guys came to them on the 12th.

In either case, they made the guesstimate that it was insurgents at the time, as did the uncle who was at the scene.


92 posted on 07/05/2006 7:14:52 PM PDT by pissant
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This image made from AP Television News shows a room in the house on Wednesday July 5, 2006 in Mahmoudiyah, Iraq where an Iraqi girl was allegedly raped and murdered in March by a U.S. soldier. (AP Photo/ AP Television News)

This image made from television shows the exterior of the house on Wednesday July 5, 2006 in Mahmoudiyah, Iraq where an Iraqi girl was allegedly raped and murdered in March by a U.S. solider. (AP Photo/ APTN)


93 posted on 07/05/2006 7:18:35 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: pissant

Notice his account doesn't have her being shot. The soldier says she was shot.


94 posted on 07/05/2006 7:19:46 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad
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To: Pikachu_Dad

Yes, I noticed that. Smothered. Not sure how many of the 10 soldiers helped with that though. ;o)


95 posted on 07/05/2006 7:21:27 PM PDT by pissant
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To: All

Goodnight all. I hate to leave you all but I have to get up early in the morning.


96 posted on 07/05/2006 7:23:43 PM PDT by TexKat
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To: TexKat

'night.

Thanks for your posts.


97 posted on 07/05/2006 7:27:22 PM PDT by pissant
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To: pissant
Could be a typo, or it could be conflicting info. Either SOI5 and his group checked it out or they didn't. One thing seems certain, either they checked it out after the 1 guy came to them on the 11th OR they checked it out after the 3 guys came to them on the 12th. In either case, they made the guesstimate that it was insurgents at the time, as did the uncle who was at the scene.

A reasonable assumption given the reputation of the terrorists. Given that is the odd bit of information out, I suspect that it is a typo. There were some other problems with the document - the misspelling of 'soldier'. The age of the young lady (Don't trust them on much, but I am assuming the arab media got that bit right since they have birthdates and family names.) The Arab account has it happening at 2pm. That is extremely brazen to do it in broad daylight. The 'uncle' knew how to contact the terrorists pretty quick - now didn't he. Didn't one account say they made lots of quick counter attacks and killed 40 Americans - and then another account said he had now idea it was the Americans til they started the investigation. Now which is it?

98 posted on 07/05/2006 7:30:37 PM PDT by Pikachu_Dad
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To: sinkspur
Why is that detail important? A time line Insert any type of evidence you want here is not necessary for a charge when two people have confessed to being in on the murders and rape. The time line will be developed by the prosecutors.
99 posted on 07/05/2006 7:33:59 PM PDT by MrEdd (Bad spellers of the world - UNTIE!,)
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To: Pikachu_Dad

Not sure what to make of it yet. Here's a Reuters admission in their article about it:
From http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-07-03T110642Z_01_IBO326760_RTRUKOC_0_US-IRAQ-RAPE-REPORT.xml&pageNumber=1&imageid=&cap=&sz=13&WTModLoc=NewsArt-C1-ArticlePage1

"Local residents and officials in the area, one of the most dangerous and violent in Iraq, have offered Reuters reporters conflicting accounts of incidents involving U.S. troops."

Though the fail inexplicably to follow that up, thus shielding the locals from all the myriad lies and contradictions they are spouting, I'm sure.


100 posted on 07/05/2006 7:39:27 PM PDT by pissant
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