Posted on 10/04/2007 6:50:48 PM PDT by Dubya
An investigating officer has recommended that the Marine at the center of the biggest prosecution of U.S. troops in the Iraq war should not stand trial on murder charges, a defense attorney said Thursday.
Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich, 27, of Meriden, Conn., is charged with the unpremeditated murder of 17 Iraqis in Haditha in 2005. The former squad leader allegedly directed his Marines in an assault that left 24 men, women and children dead. The deaths came after a bomb blast that killed Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas, of El Paso, Texas.
Lt. Col. Paul Ware recommended that Wuterich should be tried for the lesser offense of negligent homicide in the deaths of five children and two women, said Neal Puckett, Wuterich's attorney.
Ware reviewed evidence against Wuterich in a preliminary hearing known as an Article 32. His recommendation is nonbinding, and the final decision about whether Wuterich should stand trial rests with Lt. Gen. James Mattis, the commanding general overseeing the case.
If Mattis accepts the recommendation for Wuterich and a similar one for one of his corporals, which appears likely based on past practice, no one will face murder charges in the biggest case involving civilian deaths in Iraq.
"We're both very pleased and also not surprised, given how the other cases have gone," Puckett said. "There has never been any inkling that any of these Marines lost control or went on a rampage."
Ware also recommended dropping charges of making a false official statement and telling a squadmate to do the same, Puckett said.
If tried and convicted of murder, Wuterich would face a maximum sentence of life in prison. Puckett said negligent homicide carries a maximum sentence of three years for each count.
A Marine Corps spokesman, Lt. Col. Sean Gibson, declined to comment.
Of four enlisted Marines initially accused in the case, charges have been dropped against Sgt. Sanick Dela Cruz and Lance Cpl. Justin Sharratt. Ware has also recommended charges be dismissed against the third alleged shooter, Lance Cpl. Stephen Tatum.
Charges also have been dropped against two of four officers accused of dereliction of duty for failing to investigate the incident. Lt. Col. Jeffrey Chessani, the highest-ranking of the officers, has been recommended for a court-martial, but Mattis has made no final decision. Another officer, 1st Lt. Andrew A. Grayson, is scheduled for a pretrial hearing.
The killings occurred Nov. 19, 2005, after a roadside bomb hit a Marine convoy, killing the driver of a Humvee and wounding two other Marines. Wuterich and Dela Cruz allegedly shot five men by a car at the scene, then Wuterich ordered his men into several houses, where they cleared rooms with grenades and gunfire killing unarmed civilians in the process.
At his preliminary hearing, Wuterich said he regretted the loss of civilian life in Haditha, but said he believed he was coming under fire from the homes and so was operating within military combat rules when he ordered his men to assault the buildings.
"Based on the information I had at the time, based on the situation, I made the best decisions I could have at that time," Wuterich said at the hearing. "Engaging was the only choice."
Wuterich also said he will "always mourn the unfortunate deaths of the innocent Iraqis who were killed during our response to that attack."
Dela Cruz, one of Wuterich's former squad mates, testified against him at the hearing, saying that Wuterich shot the men by the car even though their hands were in the air and they were not running. Dela Cruz's charges had been dropped and he had been given immunity to testify.
Wuterich argued the men were fleeing the scene of the bomb, an activity suspicious enough at the time to legitimize killing them.
Though prosecutors have yet to score any convictions, three high-ranking Marines have been censured for failing to investigate the killings. A letter of censure is the military's most severe administrative punishment.
Just talking to you and I can feel my anuerysm receding, how about yours? :-)
I’m reminded of the prophet Elijah complaining to God that he (Elijah) was the only one upholding the truth.
God corrected Elijah and said, “I have yet 7000 who have not bowed their knee to the (false idol) Ba’al.”
God has more of us out there we know.
Grace & Strength.
I find Post 26 most interesting, as to my nephew’s case.
BTW, been posting on this thread:
Al Qaeda in Haditha: The battle the media ignored. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1907778/posts
Have you been following this?
And from the Book of Daniel:
“Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting.”
Take that enemedia! And sadly enough, they haven’t a clue.
Who says?
There were no "innocent" civilians in those houses at Haditha. The occupants were either insurgents or collaborators. They were either "with us or against us". Clearly, they were against us:
A 12-year old survivor of the alleged massacre of innocent civilians by U.S. Marines patrolling Haditha has admitted she had prior knowledge of the plot to detonate an IED as their convoy was passing by her house on the morning of Nov. 19, 2005.
In a CNN interview broadcast Wednesday, Safa Younis - who says eight members of her family were killed by U.S. troops - recalled that she was getting ready for school as the Marine Humvee approached.
"I was planning to go to school. I was about to go out of bed. I knew the bomb would explode so I covered my ears," the youngster said, according to a CNN translator. "The bomb [then] exploded," she explained. "The bomb struck an armored vehicle. I don't know if it was a Humvee or an armored vehicle. When the bomb exploded, they came straight to my house."
Based on all of the evidence we've seen so far, Haditha was a hotbed of insurgent activity and the entire town, from the Mayor on down, were in the pay and control of Al Qaida. For us to court martial these Marines for following the ROE based on anything from those collaborators is a travesty.
Exactly!
I had problems managing the conversion of the IO’s report from the pdf to a text file. It picked up weird formatting. Anyway, I’ll try to finish it tomorrow and post the report as a thread so we can kick it around.
I use Peep&See, then Hunt&Peck to do the conversion. Slow as hell, but accurate. ;^)
You're laying out some real fine thoughts.
This one really stopped me in my tracks...
Im reminded of the prophet Elijah complaining to God that he (Elijah) was the only one upholding the truth.
God corrected Elijah and said, I have yet 7000 who have not bowed their knee to the (false idol) Baal.
God has more of us out there (than) we know.
Grace & Strength.
Keep on truckin', yank, it's a pleasure to be on your ping list! :-)
Capt. Greenlaw:
This is a recap of the conversation I had with you two nights ago. As you and I and others are very aware of, there are many discrepancies with NCIS, the investigation in general and how the UCMJ has been applied throughout these hearings and previous hearings and court martials. The only breath of fresh air is the decisions mad by Lt Col. Ware. The history of infighting between the militarys interpretation of LAW and the constitutionally guaranteed rights under the law show great discrepancies between the two. In every case that the military has recently made public with the help of the media, the UCMJ has been documented in its failings. You have JAGs, whos only concern is working with each other, whether it is defense or prosecution, to obtain results that have already been pre-determined. These are merely ceremonies put into play for all concerned. This has been documented, reported, and reviewed without consequence or oversight by any authority and is apparently just a tool of the DOD and the politicians within those ranks and some within the ranks of the military.
We can supply many examples of how the system works, whom it preys upon and who is exempt from the reach of this system. Recent events along with years of research show what can only be described as a criminal element with a working above the LAW attitude, specifically those yielding the power of prosecution, judgment, and sentencing in a system that works outside and independently of the Constitution of the United States.
DOD and this system work as independent and separate Government entities within the borders every one has sworn to defend, to include the defense of the constitution of the United States. In the case of Sgt. Hutchins and his squad, the basic rights of the UCMJ and that of their guaranteed rights under the 4th, 5th, and 6th amendments have been crushed with no concern for the accused, to include the rights guaranteed them under the UCMJ. Command influence has to be part of the problem for these procedures happening the way it operates today, while under the laws provided by the UCMJ, it is in fact a crime to do some of the things mentioned here.
Example:
Confinement
Under the UCMJ it is up to the Convening authority to make this decision, but in doing so the UCMJ/MCM states specific reasons for Confinement;
RCM 304 (a)(4) Confinement. Pretrial confinement is physical restraint, imposed by order of competent authority, depriving a person of freedom pending disposition of offenses. See R.C.M. 305.
This refers to the physical confinement of Unit 3/1s return and treatment from Iraq (Haditha) compared to 3/5s treatment as being a flight risk, (Hamdania, The Pendleton 8). We know these assumed risks had no valid reason or circumstance to warrant confinement as these Marines experienced. These Marines, (Hamdania, The Pendleton 8), knew what was in store as they were sent home after INTERROGATION by NCIS and knew full well why they were returning, who then upon returning had 24 hours of unsupervised liberty which was uneventful.
RCM 305 (H)(2)(b) states: (B) Requirements for confinement. The commander shall direct the prisoners release from pretrial confinement unless the commander believes upon probable cause, that is , up on reasonable grounds, that: (i) An offense triable by a court-martial has been committed; (ii) The prisoner committed it; and (iii) Confinement is necessary because it is foreseeable that: (a) The prisoner will not appear at trial, pretrial hearing, or investigation, or (b) The prisoner will engage in serious criminal misconduct; and (iv) Less severe forms of restraint are inadequate. Serious criminal misconduct includes intimidation of witnesses or other obstruction of justice, serious injury of others, or other offenses which pose a serious threat to the safety of the community or to the effectiveness, morale, discipline, readiness, or safety of the command, or to the national security of the United States. As used in this rule, national security means the national defense and foreign relations of the United States and specifically includes: a military or defense advantage over any foreign nation or group of nations; a favorable foreign relations position; or a defense posture capable of successfully resisting hostile or destructive action from within or without, overt or covert.
Discussion A person should not be confined as a mere matter of convenience or expedience. Some of the factors which should be considered under this subsection are: (1) The nature and circumstances of the offenses charged or suspected, including extenuating circumstances; (2) The weight of the evidence against the accused; (3) The accuseds ties to the locale, including family, off-duty employment, financial resources, and length of residence;(4) The accuseds character and mental condition;(5) The accuseds service record, including any record of previous misconduct;(6) The accuseds record of appearance at or flight from other pretrial investigations, trials, and similar proceedings; and(7) The likelihood that the accused can and will commit further serious criminal misconduct if allowed to remain at liberty. Although the Military Rules of Evidence are not applicable, the commander should judge the reliability of the information available. Before relying on the reports of others, the commander must have a reasonable belief that the information is believable and has a factual basis. The information may be received orally or in writing. Information need not be received under oath, but an oath may add to its reliability. A commander may examine the prisoners personnel records, police records, and may consider the recommendations of others. Less serious forms of restraint must always be considered before pretrial confinement may be approved. Thus the commander should consider whether the prisoner could be safely returned to the prisoners unit, at liberty or under restriction, arrest, or conditions on liberty. See R.C.M. 304.
It must be noted that the conditions spoken of in the discussion section above, points 1-7, should have given the commanders of the Pendleton 8 accused no legitimate reason to keep these Marines confined in the manner in which they were held.
RCM 305(d) provides for further interpretation, mainly reasons for incarceration.
1) Flight risk, there was none.
2) Likely to engage in criminal activities or misconduct, like witness intimidation, threatening the safety of others, with no record of that either.
Knowing what we know now regarding evidences brought forth in pre-trial statements, sworn testimony by the defendants and the failure of the prosecution to prove that the deceased was identified correctly and that witness statements were authentic concerning events of the incident, I would like to hear the explanations for RCM 305 (h)(2)(b) where it is stated that, Confinement should not be ordered simply because the charged offense is a serious one. The reason these Marines were SHACKLED, HANDCUFED, and put in solitary was in re-action to the media, politicians and those in congress and DOD who demanded it for foreign policy, These young men paid a price for ABU GRAHIB, Guantanamo Bay and the events of HADITHA, that our press and those who would rather blame and use these young heroes and the military as scapegoats for not having their own backbone. I find this disheartening that our Marine leaders COs and commanders would allow this to ring true in the Corps.
Further examples of recent criminal acts rest solely on the shoulders of NCIS and the JAG corps, They, as far as NCIS is concerned, committed perjury, lied under oath and created evidence that simply does not exist, Why? There is and has been no oversight, none by the government, none by the congress or the senate and unfortunately none by the only branch of Gov. set in power to do so, the FBI.
NCIS and all the other acronyms of criminal investigative services for other branches of the military have no oversight and have no reason to worry about prosecution, as there is no one to prosecute. You have civilians working within the active military, thus the military cannot prosecute a civilian under the law, as far as the U.S. judiciary, It has no power to oversee or prosecute because they work within the comfort zone of the military. This leaves the barn door wide open for the criminal prosecution of the lower ranking personnel of the military who can and do not act on their own accord, The background and evidence of these Marines and there service speaks for itself. The UCMJ speaks of what is known to be a quitter (appendix) RCM 305(h). This describes these individuals as being a determent or having adverse affects on unit moral and has problems with discipline; this holds no water with any of the accused Marines either 3/1 or 3/5.
More evidence of the violations of these young Marines rights are the facts that stand behind the plea deals that took place. This directly and indirectly reflects on both the defense and prosecution. You have young men who have been promised by their accusers and their interrogators that they will spend the rest of their life in prison if they did not cooperate. They pound on the weakest link and build a case of Marines testifying against themselves and fellow Marines through coerced evidence and guided confessions by both NCIS and prosecution. This started in Iraq. First came the allegations, followed by accusations, and followed by officers protecting their positions and political well being for their careers. It was found through the tainted testimony by NCIS, especially James Connolly, That there was in fact no PHYSICAL evidence, no CHAIN of CUSTODY of evidence acquired, no DNA of the deceased that would be comparable to alleged family members of the alleged Iraqi man, and other evidence the NCIS and its investigators said existed in the Gov. case against these young men.
To use this information and then have it summarily thrown out in the first courts-martial speaks for itself; for the Gov. to continue with these scripted trials is a travesty of justice, for JAG to continue to prosecute is a CRIME. To change the formal charges to read innocent Iraqi man during courts-martial mid stream is not only a crime, it conflicts with the parameters of the UCMJ. The Gov. may make minor changes to the charges and specifications unilaterally BEFORE the arraignment (see RCM 603), Major changes may not be made if the accused objects (see RCM 603(D)). Who was allowed to object and where were the defense JAGS in representing their clients?
Rule 603. Changes to charges and Specifications ( a ) Minor changes defined . Minor changes in charges and specifications are any except those which add a party, offenses, or substantial matter not fairly included in those previously preferred , or which are likely to mislead the accused as to the offenses charged.
Discussion
Minor changes include those necessary to correct in artfully drafted or redundant specifications; to correct a misnaming of the accused; to allege the proper article; or to correct other slight errors. Minor charges also include those which reduce the seriousness of an offense, as when the value of an allegedly stolen item in a larceny specification is reduced, or when a desertion specification is amended to allege only unauthorized absence. (b) Minor changes before arraignment. Any person forwarding, acting upon, or prosecuting charges on behalf of the United States except an investigating officer appointed under R.C.M. 405 may make min minor changes to charges or specifications before arraignment.
Discussion
Charges forwarded or referred for trial should be free from defects of form and substance. Minor errors may be corrected and the charge may be redrafted without being sworn anew by the accuser. Other changes should be signed and sworn to be an accuser. All changes in the charges should be initialed by the person who makes them. A trial counsel acting under this provision ordinarily should consult with the convening authority before making any changes which, even though minor, change the nature or seriousness of the offense. (c) Minor changes after arraignment. After arraignment the military judge may, upon motion, permit minor changes in the charges and specifications at any time before findings are announced if no substantial right of the accused is prejudiced. ( d ) Major changes . Changes or amendments to charges or specifications other than minor changes may not be made over the objection of the accused unless the charge or specification affected is preferred anew. Discussion If there has been a major change or amendment over the accuseds objection to a charge already referred, a new referral is necessary. Similarly, in the case of a general court-martial, a new investigation under R.C.M. 405 will be necessary if the charge as amended or changed was not covered in the prior investigation. If the substance of the charge or specification as amended or changed has not been referred or, in the case of a general court martial, investigated, a new referral and, if appropriate, investigation are necessary. When charges are re-referred, they must be served anew under R.C.M. 602.
How is it that the name AWAD was introduced by NCIS in their reports, and that name supplied while guiding statements from Marines who thought they had followed orders and achieved the objective directed by there OIC, 2nd Lt. Phan? This finding of the Court Martial, that the identity of the deceased alleged Iraqi was no longer known, means that all previous murder charges were void due to sworn statements presented by the prosecution when referenced to a named person. Once the court recognized that they did not know who this person was, all previous references to the alleged Iraqi mans family witness statements were now invalid for evidence. The changing of the charges in mid trial is a direct violation of the rules for courts martial as shown in the section cited above.
All this is achieved by way of NCIS but does not reduce the culpability of the prosecution by following and prosecuting false information, or for the week at heart, tainted at the very least.
Now lets add no physical body:
1. You have no body of any proven identification that is traceable to any known, real person,
2. No DNA collected or compared to alleged family members who came forth during the investigation to prove their family relation and thus, proof of identity of the deceased,
3. No physical evidence connecting the actions of the Marines to the deceased,
4. False testimony,
5. No unbroken chain of custody,
6. No forensic evidence,
7. No ballistic evidence,
8. No taped confession,
9. A sealed autopsy report and exculpatory evidence that will not be declassified in the defense of the accused,
10. A computer flash drive destroyed by the Co. Commander with the Co. Jag and no charges of impeding or blocking an on going investigation,
you can add the rest to that in charges, even the Marines were charged with blocking an investigation and making false official statements, WHO goes after the investigators and what price is paid there?????
The rights I referred to in the previous paragraphs speak for themselves, If they were followed under the constitution of the United States and used in context and applied to these young Marines and Soldiers, none of these courts-martial (ceremonys) would or could have taken place. The rights referred to in the warning are the Fifth Amendment right against self incrimination and the Supreme Court has ruled on the fact of this and stated, you have the right to counsel during custodial interrogation. This is contained in the Bill of Rights and this is part of the constitution. In the grand hierarchy of laws, the constitution ranks as number one and cannot be over ruled by the UCMJ. Couple this with the Fourth Amendment on search and seizures and the add the Sixth Amendment right to counsel. These are here to be the backbone to every service members rights to due process. Now, there are going to be people who say this does not apply; these are service men and women. This is garbage, this is DOD working as a state within a state, Show us folks where there has been a Legal Ruling of Sorts, or any Constitutional Convention that would contradict these basic rights that have been withheld from the very people who protect it. It cannot be done.
Don, I could write for days, I will save it for the documentary that is now under way. With the amount of Gov. documents of past courts-martial and in house memos it will be easy to explain how out of control this system is. They have fought within the system for more than 100 years on the lack of constitutionality of the UCMJ, Articles of war; You have for study; the Ansel Crowder debates, COMA revolt, COX commission as it stood for a 50th report card on the system, We could go on and on, but now being directly involved with these proceedings and with the families and the connections of the internet, it is easier to explain research and get this information out for those to read and look at for themselves.
You will not find it written by Mark Walker, too worried about access to write the truth, same with Watkins of AP, and besides, the agendas conflict with the truth. As far as our great leaders in the house, you know how many I have dealt with; they are all-spineless and lead these families on as if they would do something. They could, expose it, bring it to the floor, they cant, or they would be exposed. I have had several arguments with one staff attorney for a Congressman, He has admitted to the truth of these words to include the word attainder. Lt. Col. Riggs will understand that word, congress does not have that right, but yet, 3/5 is just but one more example, holding a class of young NCOs to watch the proceedings of the GCM is nothing more than the USMC using these fine young men as a training tool.
You can take all the hearings and courts-martial I have been involved in and all are more of the same, then we can talk about the civilian attorneys, most who have come from the military. They have either left or retired, I do not paint them all with the same brush nor am I a conspiracy theorist, but two and two will always equal four, just no way around it.
The only branch that has grown over the past five years by over 5% is the JAG CORPS, with almost over the last years with a 100% conviction rate, Must be some outstanding folks, corporate America needs to seize this opportunity of the finest military minds. Sorry, just disenfranchised with the flagrant beating of the Jr. Enlisted and Jr. Officers and the cottage industry that has blossomed through out the JAG. NCIS and the rest are no more than a tool for DOD and the house of mirrors called the Sate Department. Either side of the isle you stand they say they are for the troops. They couldnt care less for these men and women.
Now more than ever, the leadership in the military needs to forget their political agendas and lead, more folks like Gen. Mattis and a good house cleaning would be going on, maybe he is a key. Sempers always Sir. I do not posses the accolades of you or those who serve today, but I earned the right of a Marine and I will not stand behind these men and women if I cant stand and fight beside them. These courts-martial are void on fact alone and constitutionality.
Tim Harrington: former active and reserve Marine
Ping
Ping
I’d like to see every Marine, Soldier, Airman, and Sailor copy this, and submit it to their CO’s for reference. Just a request to Read and Comment. I believe it will take something similar to that to wake up the REMFs in the Puzzle Palace.
Thanks, Race; and thanks for the ping, Ma.
Thank you very much for this post. It is certainly refreshing to know that someone, as I do, truly cares for our men and women in the field.
Still, I often find myself wondering if things are coming to a head. Your Dad may be on to something.
Thanks for the ping. Outstanding thread. Thanks to all posters. BTTT!
I hope that point is raised.
We have all seen numerous video of AC-130’s taking out 20 or 30 people at a time, were ALL of them terrorists? I am sure that some of them were the children of some of those men, yet we dont prosecute the pilots or gunners of the AC-130
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