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Soldier Gets 90 Years in Iraq Rape-Murder Case

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  • Soldier Gets 90 Years in Iraq Rape-Murder Case

    By RYAN LENZ, AP

    FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. (Nov. 17) - A soldier was sentenced Thursday to 90 years in prison with the possibility of parole for conspiring to rape a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and kill her and her family.

    Spc. James P. Barker, one of four Fort Campbell soldiers accused in the March 12 rape and killings, pleaded guilty Wednesday and agreed to testify against the others to avoid the death penalty.

    "This court sentences you to be confined for the length of your natural life, with the eligibility of parole," said Lt. Col. Richard Anderson, the military judge presiding over the court-martial.

    Under the plea agreement, Barker got a life sentence but will not serve more than 90 years in prison, Anderson said. He will be eligible for parole in 20 years.

    Barker, 23, showed no reaction when the sentence was read. Afterward, he smoked a cigarette outside as a military bailiff watched over him. He grinned but made no remarks as reporters passed by.

    Earlier Thursday, Barker wept during his closing statement, accepted responsibility for the rape and killings and said violence he encountered left him "angry and mean" when it came to Iraqis.

    "I want the people of Iraq to know that I did not go there to do the terrible things that I did," Barker said, his voice quivering as he began to weep. "I do not ask anyone to forgive me today."

    After Barker's sentencing, military prosecutors declined to comment because three other soldiers have yet to be tried in the case. Defense attorneys planned a news conference.

    Barker confessed Wednesday to the crimes as part of a plea agreement to avoid a possible death penalty that requires him to testify against the others.

    In his closing statement, Barker said Iraq made him angry and violent.

    "To live there, to survive there, I became angry and mean. The mean part of me made me strong on patrols. It made me brave in fire fights," Barker said. "I loved my friends, my fellow soldiers and my leaders, but I began to hate everyone else in Iraq."

    During testimony intended to show the judge that Barker could be rehabilitated, Barker's fellow soldiers described weeks with little support and sleep while manning distant checkpoints.

    Capt. William Fischbach, the lead prosecutor, told the court that such conditions were no excuse for Barker, who led the group to the family's house, and that no one deserved such unspeakable horrors.

    "This burned-out corpse that used to be a 14-year-old girl never fired bullets or lobbed mortars," Fischbach said as he held pictures of the crime scene. "Society should not have to bear the risk of the accused among them ever again."

    The killings in Mahmoudiya, a village about 20 miles south of Baghdad, were among the worst in a series of alleged attacks on civilians and other abuses by military personnel in Iraq.

    The defendants are accused of burning the girl's body to conceal the crime.

    Sgt. Paul E. Cortez, 24, and Pfc. Jesse V. Spielman, 22, members of the 101st Airborne Division along with Barker, have also been charged. Cortez has deferred entering a plea, and Spielman will be arraigned in December. Pfc. Bryan L. Howard, 19, also deferred entering a plea at his arraignment in October.

    Private Steven Green, 21, pleaded not guilty last week to civilian charges including murder and sexual assault. He was discharged from the Army for a "personality disorder" before the allegations became known, and prosecutors have yet to say whether they will pursue the death penalty against him.

    In earlier testimony, Barker described in detail how he raped Abeer Qassim al-Janabi with Cortez and Green before Green killed the girl, her younger sister and parents.

    "Cortez pushed her to the ground. I went towards the top of her and kind of held her hands down while Cortez proceeded to lift her dress up," he said. "Around that time I heard shots coming from a room next door."

    Howard, Cortez and Spielman could face the death penalty if convicted. Cortez and Spielman are both being held in confinement, and Howard is restricted to post.

    Barker did not name Spielman and Howard as participants in the rape and murders but said Spielman was at the house when the assault took place and had come knowing what the others intended to do. Prosecutors on Thursday said Howard had been left behind at a checkpoint.

  • #2
    That's horrible.

    Comment


    • #3
      what a complete asshole

      Comment


      • #4
        They should All be Set before a Firing Squad !

        I can think of a lot of OTHER fitting punishment but we'll save that for another time ! One incident and nine lives flushed down the toilet .... just unreal !

        Comment


        • #5
          We Punish Our Own For Horrible Acts Against Mankind But When We Assist In Eliminating A Leader Of Equal Horrible Action Against Fellow Countrymen, We Question The Validity Of Why We Are There???????

          Comment


          • #6
            You rape a 14 year old, you deserve instant death. IMO
            Questions, comments, complaints:
            [email protected]

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            • #7
              Originally posted by jcindaville
              You rape a 14 year old, you deserve instant death. IMO

              Damn Straight ..... have your ******* whacked off with a Dull Knife .... have half poked in your **** and half stuffed down your ******

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Ldawg
                Damn Straight ..... have your ******* whacked off with a Dull Knife .... have half poked in your **** and half stuffed down your ******

                Damn, Dawg, you had 3 words *********** out
                Questions, comments, complaints:
                [email protected]

                Comment


                • #9
                  "Society should not have to bear the risk of the accused among them ever again."

                  yet innocent ppl all over the world still die each day.
                  How many more titles will the Yankees try to buy it never ends.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Plea deals pile up for accused Marines

                    By LINDA DEUTSCH and THOMAS WATKINS, Associated Press Writers
                    1 hour, 14 minutes ago



                    CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - In the beginning, there were eight. A squad of seven Marines and a Navy corpsman charged with kidnapping and murdering an Iraqi man, a crime described by a prosecutor as especially brutal.

                    They faced military trials; the death penalty was possible.

                    And now there are four. In the six months the men have been held at the Camp Pendleton brig, the profile of the Hamdania cases has changed dramatically. The death penalty is off the table and four of the defendants have struck plea bargains.

                    Some observers of the military justice system find the developments mystifying.

                    Gary Solis, a former Marine Corps prosecutor and judge who teaches law of war at Georgetown University Law Center, said he was surprised by the number of plea agreements in this case.

                    "It's a wonderment to me that it's happening in the military system," he said.

                    The group was accused of kidnapping 52-year-old Hashim Ibrahim Awad in the town of Hamdania, taking him to a roadside hole, shooting him and then trying to cover up the incident. According to court testimony, the troops planned to kidnap and kill a known insurgent, and when they couldn't get to him, some members of the squad went into Awad's home.

                    "They killed a 52-year-old crippled man in cold blood," Lt. Col. John Baker, a prosecutor, said during a recent hearing. "They killed a retired police officer with 11 children and four grandchildren. Hashim Awad was a very forgiving and gentle man. He was precisely the kind of man (the Marines were) sent to help."

                    Despite the prosecution's argument that the Marine squad was a lawless gang intent on killing, Baker and the military justice system agreed to plea deals resulting in minimal sentences. Judges have listened to testimony and recommended sentences, only to have them trumped by plea bargains. Defense lawyers have said their clients did no wrong, and would be found not guilty at trial.

                    Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Melson J. Bacos, sentenced to 10 years confinement, will serve only one year because of a pretrial agreement. Pfc. John J. Jodka III, recommended for five years confinement and a dishonorable discharge will serve only 18 months and may get a non-punitive discharge under the plea agreement.

                    Lance Cpl. Tyler Jackson, was sentenced to nine years in prison but his pretrial agreement limits the time he will serve to 21 months. His discharge also will be non-punitive. All three men's sentences include credit for the six months they've already served. Proceedings for another Marine who has made a deal are scheduled in the coming week.

                    David Glazier, a professor at Loyola University Law School who teaches the law of war, said that with such a large number of defendants, prosecutors may be weighing who may be most at fault.

                    "They may feel that two or three were the ringleaders and others went along because of peer pressure," he said.

                    Solis suggested that another pending case could be playing a role. The Marine Corps has been investigating whether a squad deliberately killed as many as 24 Iraqi civilians in Haditha last November, and whether efforts were made to cover up the incident. Charges have not been filed — if they are, defendants would likely be prosecuted at Camp Pendleton.

                    That could strain the military justice system, Solis said.

                    "I think they're clearing the decks for the Haditha cases," he said.

                    But former Army prosecutor Tom Umberg said he doubted that a lack of resources would be a reason to accept pleas.

                    "Something as high profile as this, they can free up resources," said Umberg. "They can activate reservists ... In a case like this, the Marine Corps would find adequate resources to ensure adequate prosecution."

                    Even as trials are scheduled for the four defendants who have not yet made deals, further plea bargains are still a possibility.

                    But Solis said he is confident there will be trials in the case.

                    "A trial serves many purposes and one is to achieve justice and exact punishment for criminal misconduct," said Solis. "The accused are well represented. But who speaks for the dead man? Who represents society? That's the purpose of the trial."

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