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  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    3:45pm, EST

    Army Sgt. Bales to face 'sanity board' in Afghan village massacre case

    Peter Millett / Reuters

    Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales (L) and Judge Col. Jeffery R. Nance is seen in a courtroom sketch as he is arraigned on 16 counts of premeditated murder, six counts of attempted murder and seven counts of of assault at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash. on Thursday

    By Kari Huus, Staff writer, NBC News

    U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Robert Bales, charged with killing 16 Afghan villagers in a pre-dawn rampage in March, will face a sanity board, the judge in the case said Thursday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In such a mental health review, neutral doctors are charged with evaluating the defendant's mental state at the time of the crime and whether he's competent to stand trial.

    Bales , a 39-year-old father of two from Lake Tapps, Wash., is accused of slipping away from his remote outpost in Afghanistan on March 11 after drinking with fellow soldiers, and killing 16 people, including nine children, in two nearby villages.


    Prosecutors say Bales acted alone and with "chilling premeditation" when he visited the villages in the dark, armed with a pistol, a rifle and a grenade launcher. He reportedly returned to his base between his visits to the two sites and told a fellow soldier: "I just shot up some people."

    Military judge Col. Jeffrey Nance, hearing the case at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., said he would order the official review of the soldier’s mental health after prosecutors argued that without it, the defense should not be allowed to raise mental health issues as mitigating factors.  

    Bales appeared in court wearing green military dress, entered his deferred plea through one of his defense attorneys, who also waived reading of charges against Bales, Reuters reported.

    The soldier faces 16 murder charges, as well as other charges, including attempted murder, assault and drug and alcohol charges.

    On Thursday, when asked if he understood that his conviction could result in the death penalty, Bales answered, "Sir, yes sir."

    In previous pre-trial hearings, defense attorneys for Bales have raised a number of mental health factors that may have affected Bales — including repeated deployments, a traumatic brain injury and the use drugs provided by the military.

    Prosecutors argued that in the absence of an outside review, the defense should be barred from presenting mental health arguments, The Associated Press reported.

    "An accused simply cannot be allowed to claim a lack of mental responsibility through the introduction of expert testimony from his own doctors, while at the same time leaving the government with no ability to overcome its burden of proof because its doctors have been precluded from conducting any examination of the very matters in dispute," Maj. Robert Stelle wrote in a Jan. 3 motion obtained by the AP.

    Up to now, defense attorneys have refused to let Bales take part in the sanity board, objecting to the terms set out.

    However, in a reply to the government's motion, defense attorney Emma Scanlan wrote Tuesday that Bales will participate — as long as only certain information about the results are forwarded to government prosecutors. They say findings about Bale’s state of mind at the time of the attacks should not be provided to prosecutors until Bales' defense team officially gives notice that it will pursue mental-health defense.

    "There is no authority for the bizarre proposition that the accused has to submit to a compelled mental health examination before he gives notice of a mental defense," Scanlan.

    The judge said conditions for the sanity board will be worked out later.

    Related reports from NBC News

    Bales case echoes loudly for ex-soldiers on hotline for vets
    Witness: Sgt. Bales, accused of Afghan massacre, was deemed a top soldier
    Witnesses to describe massacre at Sgt. Bales hearing

     

    18 comments

    I hope he is found not guilty by reason of insanity and gets the mental help he needs since he never got it before. Major Nidal Hasan still stone walling in Ft. Hood and that other puke Bradley Manning seem to be in limbo I guess the precedent it seems to promote is if someone fuks ups only NCOs wil …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: afghanistan, murder, crime, featured, ptsd, bales
  • 30
    Mar
    2012
    11:51am, EDT

    Bales' attorney claims 'information blackout' from government

    Anthony Bolante / Reuters

    Attorney John Henry Browne, right, discusses the case of Staff Sgt. Robert Bales in Seatttle on Friday. With Browne is associate counsels Emily Gause.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    An attorney for Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who has been charged with killing 17 Afghan civilians in two villages, said Friday that the defense team is “facing an almost complete information blackout from the government,” which is having a “devastating effect” on their investigation.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Bales, a 38-year-old father of two, is accused of creeping into the villages at night on March 11 and attacking the villagers. The Army has charged him with 17 counts of murder, six counts of attempted murder and six counts of assault. Nine children, four men and four women, were slain.

    “We are facing an almost complete information blackout from the government which is having a devastating effect on our ability to investigate the charges preferred against our client,” his civilian attorney, John Henry Browne, said in a statement. 


    Maj. Chris Ophardt, a spokesman for 1st Corps, Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington, said the investigation was ongoing.

    “The prosecution will provide the defense with evidence in accordance with the Rules for Courts-Martial and the Military Rules of Evidence. Within these guidelines the prosecution is and has been communicating with the defense,” he said in an e-mail. 

    Browne, who is in Seattle, was speaking about members of the defense team in Afghanistan. He said they had tried to interview injured civilians being treated at Kandahar Hospital but were denied access and told to coordinate with prosecutors. He said that the following day, the prosecution team interviewed the wounded, with defense counsel only later learning that they had been released from hospital and there was no contact information for them.

    “These witnesses are now who knows where … people just disappear into the countryside in Afghanistan,” he said later Friday at a press conference. “They (prosecutors) actually promised us that if we sent people to Afghanistan … that they would cooperate and make witnesses available for us, and they obviously violated that promise.”

    Browne also said in the statement that his team was denied access to medical records of the wounded, making it “even more impossible” to locate them, and that the prosecution was “withholding the entire investigative file from the defense team.”

    Afghan massacre: Sgt Bales case echoes loudly for ex-soldiers on hotline for vets

     The Army doesn’t have any requirement to provide evidence to the defense at this point, according to military rules governing courts-martial. The next stage of the legal process is the Article 32 hearing, akin to a civilian grand jury, and which is “supposed to be a discovery tool for the defense,” Michael Navarre, an adviser at the National Institute of Military Justice and a former Navy prosecutor and defense counsel, told msnbc.com.

    In general, most military prosecutors are cooperating with the defense and will provide some information -- though not everything -- prior to the Article 32 hearing to ensure it goes smoothly, he added, noting that some evidence may even be discovered after that proceeding.

    “As a defense counsel, one of your jobs is to … build a public record as to what the government’s doing during the course of their investigation and also to some degree build sympathy for your client,” he said. “Given the seriousness and the gravity of the charges against his client, I would say it’s not uncommon to point out that the government isn’t being cooperative with your client in the investigation given the current public perception of his client.”

    Browne said that though the defense team didn’t have the right to certain discovery materials until 30 days before the Article 32 hearing, he’d had better dealings in the past with prosecutors.

    “We usually have the cooperation of prosecutors and they will give us information ahead of time just so we can be prepared and that’s just not happening in this case,” he said at the press conference. “My gut, from a defense lawyer’s standpoint, is when the prosecutors are not cooperating there’s a reason, and that reason usually is because they don’t really have much of case.”


    Follow @msnbc_us

    “If they want cooperation from us, they better start cooperating more,” he later added.

    How Staff Sgt. Bales' lawyers are fighting for his life

    Bales, of Bellevue, Wash., is being held at a U.S. military prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kan. He was on his fourth tour in a war zone since signing up for the Army after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001. He had been in Iraq on his previous tours, during which he suffered a foot injury and a traumatic brain injury in a vehicle rollover, media reports say.

    Browne said Bales was “holding up,” communicating with his wife, being treated well. He said Bales had seen a chaplain.

    Some military law experts interviewed by msnbc.com said they expect the defense to mount a legal pincer attack, in which Bales’ attorneys may try to win acquittal by attacking the evidence but have a fallback position aimed at winning a lesser sentence than the death penalty -- which Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said could be sought in this case.

    That fallback position could be diminished mental capacity, which they may attribute to his reported combat injuries and mental trauma.

    For alleged Afghan shooter, death penalty unlikely

    U.S. military officials told NBC News on Friday that the Army was preparing to conduct a psychological exam of Bales. The exam, known as the “706 Board,” is considered routine in such cases and will include a team of psychiatrists.

    It's likely Bales would remain at Fort Leavenworth and the board doctors would travel to him, though a final decision has not been made.

    NBC’s Chief Pentagon Correspondent Jim Miklaszewski and news producers Karen Lucht and Courtney Kube contributed to this report.

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    80 comments

    Let's see, hide the evidence, find a soldier that has served several tours so he could be probable for PTSD, and had a head injury so he might have gone crazy. I believe we have our scapegoat!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, afghanistan, massacre, 17, featured, ptsd, tbi, villagers, bales
  • 29
    Mar
    2012
    8:50am, EDT

    Alleged rampage was 'totally out of character,' Staff Sgt. Robert Bales' colleagues say

    Military prosecutors allege that Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, accused of a deadly rampage which left 17 Afghan civilians dead, came in two waves, with Bales returning to his base after the first attack and then slipping out again. NBC's John Yang reports.

    By Reuters

    FORWARD OPERATING BASE MASUM GHAR, Afghanistan -- In a natural amphitheatre high among the jagged grey peaks of Afghanistan's Panjwai district, the shock of a village shooting rampage is still settling over U.S. soldiers who served with accused gunman Robert Bales.

    The soldiers of Tacoma-based 3/2 Stryker Brigade Combat Team were moving into areas inherited from Alaska-based troops, tracking their armored vehicles to memorize the mazy roads of southern province Kandahar, when more than a dozen people were shot dead in Belandai and Zangabad villages.

    Bales' brothers in arms are perplexed and distraught by the March 11 slaughter, which has dragged U.S.-Afghan relations to new nadir, prompting President Hamid Karzai to demand a pullback of NATO forces from Afghan communities.


    "We are all talking about Sergeant Bales. I talk with some of the soldiers who served with him and they are all surprised. It saddens the friends of his, because my understanding is it was totally out of character," 3/2 Brigade Chaplain Major Edward Choi told Reuters at the unit's headquarters at Forward Operating Base Masum Ghar.

    Afghan massacre suspect's wife: 'He did not do this'

    The U.S. military last week lodged 17 charges of premeditated murder against Bales, a four-tour veteran, ahead of what is expected to be a long trial. In theory at least, the death penalty is on the table.

    Popular leader
    Bales had been a popular leader, Choi said, making the massacre even more bewildering. Comrades reject reports his marriage had been in trouble ahead of an Afghan deployment he was reluctant to undertake.

    "That is not the case," said Choi, shrugging in frustration. "People that knew him, that dealt with him personally, said he was a great NCO (non-commissioned officer), cared for soldiers, was tactically and operationally professional, loved his wife and kids."

    Karilyn Bales, the wife of Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, spoke exclusively with NBC's Matt Lauer, telling the TODAY anchor that the news about her husband is 'very unbelievable.'

    Choi, whose small plywood chapel overlooks a wide river plain and brigade command fenced by concrete blast walls, said some of Bales' comrades had been stressed by moving into a dangerous area that birthed the Taliban, and where its one-eyed leader Mullah Mohammad Omar still has a home.

    Three-hour firefight: Afghan militants attack NATO convoy

    Choi said he had no doubt multiple deployments were taking a toll on some of the fighting men. New rules governing elite units like the one Bales was assigned to guard, and wandered from in darkness on the night of the killings, were likely.

    "When I speak to some of my leaders, our concern is lack of oversight. There are conventional soldiers attached to special forces who are well trained, off on their own, very mature and growing beards and doing their own thing," he said.

    "When you take a 19 or 20-year-old conventional soldier and put him into special operations, they might not be able to handle it."

    Captain Janel Schlaudecker, a combat stress counsellor for U.S. soldiers in Panjwai, including Bales' unit, said while there was no explanation for what led to the massacres, she had not noticed an impact on the wider stress levels of Bales' brigade, even among the far-flung infantry units.

    "It's so hard to judge how they would respond to this. But they are used to going out there and eating next to nothing, if anything," Schlaudecker said.

    "They are used to being under a lot more pressure and not having a lot of sleep. They are wired completely differently. They are lot more resilient."

    PTSD: Having the courage to ask for help

    Tensions over the incident are still high in Panjwai, an insurgent hotbed west of Kandahar city, and the scene of some of the war's fiercest battles. Scores of Canadian soldiers were killed there before the Americans took over in mid-2011.

    U.S. authorities have given the victims' families cash compensation of around $50,000 for each person killed, but at a meeting with district elders this week, U.S. officers and advisers were confronted by angry Afghans demanding to know why more was not done to prevent such an atrocity.

    "Local people are very angry. I get hundreds of calls from people who want this soldier tried here, in Afghanistan," said Panjwai radio journalist Abdul Karim, who also runs a curio shop from a shipping container, used by U.S. troops.

    Fighting season
    Some soldiers worry the massacre will undo hard-won gains over the past year, when insurgent attacks fell 40 percent, and turn sentiment against incoming units of Bales' 3/2 Strykers ahead of the summer fighting months.

    The 2012 fighting season is the last which will be fought by NATO in surge-level numbers, as the end-2014 deadline for the exit of most foreign combat troops approaches.

    US orders more security for troops in Afghanistan

    Insurgents have already carried out small attacks as a bitter winter recedes, but U.S. commanders say this does not mean an emboldened Taliban have brought hostilities forward.

    "I think the coming summer will be bad and the new guys are worried," said Staff Sergeant Robert Nelson, 37, a garrulous ex-Marine from Texas who runs the 'Mission One' base shop at Masum Ghar for the outgoing 1/25 Arctic Wolves, now packing to leave.

    Colonel Todd Wood, the outgoing U.S. commander for the 25th Infantry Division, said patrols were brushing lightly over Belandai and Zangabad to avoid provoking more anger, but he did not think the massacre would make the fighting months worse.

    "Right now it's probably still too early to tell," said Wood, a weathered, hyperactive Iraq veteran from Iowa.

    "We've still got villagers that will point out IEDs (improvised explosive devices), we've still got villagers out there that will warn us of a possible attack ... that hasn't changed," he said.

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    55 comments

    Osama bin Laden is dead, the mission is over. This was never supposed to be about nation building. The mission was to kill those responsible for 9/11. Mission Accomplished.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: afghanistan, military, massacre, featured, stryker, bales, robert-bales
  • 26
    Mar
    2012
    11:37am, EDT

    Military: Fetus not among 17 Afghan massacre victims

    Kari Bales, the wife of Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, the soldier who stands accused of murdering 17 Afghan civilians, talks exclusively to TODAY's Matt Lauer about the "devastating" accusations against her husband, saying "this is not him."

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The Army said Monday that an unborn child was not among the 17 victims in the shooting massacre of civilians in two villages in Afghanistan allegedly perpetrated by Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, contradicting an Afghan official who spoke to The New York Times.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Kandahar Province Police Chief Brig. Gen. Abdul Raziq told The New York Times that one of the slain females was pregnant and Americans were counting her unborn fetus as a victim. But Army Lt. Col. Jimmie E. Cummings, Jr., told msnbc.com a fetus was not among the victims of the March 11 attacks in which Bales, 38, is charged with premeditated murder.


    “The information that we have collected up to now, this is not true,” Cummings, a spokesman for NATO's ISAF & U.S. Forces - Afghanistan, wrote in an email to msnbc.com. “The 17th is not from a pregnant female or any of the wounded passing away. At this time, the evidence available to the prosecution team indicates 17 victims of premeditated murder and 6 victims of assault and attempted premeditated murder.” 

    The death toll breaks down to four men and women each, and nine children, Cummings wrote. One man and one woman, plus four more children, were wounded.

    “I think one of the things you can assume is that it was difficult to collect evidence in this case and it was difficult for them to necessarily identify every victim right away,” said Michael Navarre, a director of the National Institute of Military Justice and a former Navy prosecutor and defense counsel.

    New details emerged over the weekend in the case. Military prosecutors told NBC News that the attacks came in two waves, with Bales allegedly returning to his base after the first attack and then slipping out again.

    Military prosecutors allege that Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, accused of a deadly rampage which left 17 Afghan civilians dead, came in two waves, with Bales returning to his base after the first attack and then slipping out again. NBC's John Yang reports.

    The father of two from Bellevue, Wash., was charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder, six counts of attempted murder and six counts of assault. He is being held at a U.S. military prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kan.

    His wife, Karilyn Bales, said she did not believe her husband had done this.

    “I don't think anything will really change my mind in believing that he did not do this,’’ she told TODAY’s Matt Lauer in an exclusive interview that aired Monday. “This is not what it appears to be.’’

    Military wives rally around Karilyn Bales

    “I just don't think he was involved,’’ she said. “I don't know enough information. This is not him. It's not him."

    The timeline of the killings remains unclear. One Afghan guard working from midnight to 2 a.m. saw a U.S. soldier return at 1:30 a.m., and the guard’s replacement saw a U.S. soldier leaving the base at 2:30 a.m., but it was unclear whether it was the same soldier.

    There are reports that there is surveillance video, and that Bales allegedly walked back to the base and turned himself in.

    For alleged Afghan shooter, death penalty unlikely

    Karilyn Bales said her husband was fit for a fourth deployment and that she was not aware of any obvious signs of post-traumatic stress disorder or the traumatic brain injury that he allegedly suffered on one of his tours. 

    Bales was on his fourth tour in a war zone since signing up for the Army after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001. He had spent three years in Iraq on his previous tours, during which time he lost part of a foot and suffered a traumatic brain injury (TBI) due to a vehicle rollover, media reports say. Two days before he allegedly attacked the Afghan villagers, he saw the aftermath of a bombing in which a fellow soldier had his leg blown off, The Associated Press reported.

    Some military law experts interviewed by msnbc.com said they expect the defense to mount a legal pincer attack, in which Bales’ attorneys may try to win acquittal by attacking the evidence but have a fallback position aimed at winning a lesser sentence than the death penalty -- which Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said could be sought in this case.

    How Staff Sgt. Bales' lawyers are fighting for his life

    Gary Solis, former head of the Marine Corps’ Military Law Branch and current adjunct professor of law at Georgetown Law School, said the fact that the crime occurred in a combat zone in a distant country complicates the task for prosecutors given the possibility of numerous crime scene complications. But they agreed that pursuing an insanity defense based on PTSD would be a difficult case to make, too.

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    66 comments

    His poor wife is in such denial.... I would be too, how could you possibly believe your husband did this. I cannot speak for his guilt, but it does not look good for him.

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    Explore related topics: army, afghanistan, shooting, 11, base, massacre, march, robert, staff, ptsd, kandahar, tbi, sgt, villagers, bales
  • 25
    Mar
    2012
    6:29am, EDT

    US paid close to $50,000 per shooting spree death, American official tells NBC

    By NBC News and news services

    Updated at 11 a.m. ET: KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- The United States paid close to $50,000 in compensation for each Afghan killed in the shooting spree attributed to a U.S. soldier in southern Afghanistan, a U.S. official told NBC News on Sunday.

    The official, who asked not to be named, would not say exactly how much was paid to the families, but added the amount was close to the $50,000 reported by Afghan officials.

    "The amount reflects the extraordinarily devastating nature of the incident," he said.


    Average annual income in Afghanistan is $425, according to the BBC.

    U.S. officials paid $50,000 to the Afghan families of the dead. Meantime, Karilyn Bales tells Today's Matt Lauer that her husband "is like a big kid." NBC's John Yang reports.

    Staff Sgt. Robert Bales is accused of sneaking out of his base before dawn on March 11 then creeping into the houses of two nearby villages and opening fire on sleeping families within. The U.S. military has charged Bales with 17 murders.

    Bales charged with 17 counts of murder in Afghanistan massacre

    The 38-year-old soldier is accused of using his 9mm pistol and M-4 rifle, which was outfitted with a grenade launcher, to kill four men, four women, two boys and seven girls, then burning some of the bodies.

    The Associated Press earlier reported that the families of the dead received $50,000 for each person killed on Saturday at the governor's office, citing Kandahar provincial council member Agha Lalai.

    Agha Lalai told the AP that each wounded person has received $11,000 and that they were told the money was from U.S. President Barack Obama. Community elder Jan Agha has confirmed the same figures.

    The defense attorney for Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, the soldier charged Friday with 17 counts of murder, has said the military lacks much of the physical evidence necessary to establish a solid case against his client. But prosecutors say there is ample evidence: surveillance video, shell casings and more. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    US officials: Soldier split Afghan massacre in two

    The American official who handed over the money said it was not compensation, but the U.S. government offering to help the victims and their families, Kandahar provincial council member Haji Nyamat Khan said.

    But a spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force, Col. Gary Kolb, said the money was compensation.

    NBC's Atia Abawi, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    1604 comments

    The entire thing is sad. The real sad thing however is that while our President fights to fix a failing health care system (the one that contributed to this soldier falling between it's cracks) all the conservatives can do is fight as hard as they can to make sure US soldiers -along with everyone el …

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, massacre, featured, kandahar, bales, panjwai
  • 22
    Mar
    2012
    9:21am, EDT

    How Staff Sgt. Bales' lawyers are fighting for his life

    Allauddin Khan / AP file

    In this March 11, 2012, file photo, Afghan men stand next to blood stains and charred remains inside a home where witnesses say Afghans were killed by a U.S. soldier in Kandahar province.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Lawyers for Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, suspected of killing 16 Afghan civilians, will likely mount a two-pronged defense, military law experts say, attacking the evidence against him while also arguing that his reported combat injuries and mental trauma created diminished mental capacity.

    Bales’ civilian attorney, John Henry Browne, has suggested such an approach in his public comments on the case, in which the Army has identified the soldier as the lone suspect in the March 11 attack but not yet charged him.


    Follow @mimileitsinger

    “There’s no forensic evidence, there’s no medical examiner’s evidence, there’s no evidence about how many alleged victims or where those remains are,” he told NBC Nightly News on Tuesday, adding that he intends to travel to Afghanistan to oversee his own investigation.

    But he also stated that his client had “no memory” of the attack and suggested that could be from a concussive head injury. In comments to CBS News on Monday, he indicated he would make a "diminished capacity" argument rather than pursue an insanity defense.

    Defense official: Staff Sgt. Robert Bales to face 16 counts in Afghanistan massacre

    John Henry Browne, the attorney for U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, speaks about the long and emotional first face-to-face meeting with his client. NBC's John Yang reports.

    Some military law experts interviewed by msnbc.com said they expect a legal pincer attack, in which the defense may try to win acquittal by attacking the evidence but have a fallback position aimed at winning a lesser sentence than the death penalty -- which Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said could be sought in this case.

    Military officials have said that after drinking at an Army outpost in southern Afghanistan on March 11, Bales, 38, crept away in the night to two nearby villages, where he shot his victims and set many of them on fire. At least nine of the 16 victims were children, they said.

    Gary Solis, former head of the Marine Corps’ Military Law Branch and current adjunct professor of law at Georgetown Law School, said the fact that the crime occurred in a combat zone in a distant country complicates the task for prosecutors, who are expected to charge Bales with premeditated murder and other crimes.

    Army Sgt. Robert Bales' lawyer questions evidence in Afghanistan killings

    To convict Bales of that charge, prosecutors would have to prove that people died, the means by which they died, that the accused is the person who used those means and had premeditated the offense, Solis said.

    That would be no easy feat, given the possibility of numerous crime scene complications, he said.

    “The prosecution is under additional burden in that they’re trying a crime that happened … 9,000 miles away,” he said. “They have no bodies, they have no autopsies, they have no forensics, they have no photographs, they have no witnesses. There is no Afghan who is going to come here to testify against this guy, so how do they prove premeditation? It’s going to be a problem for them.”

    Daniel Conway, a lawyer and former Marine staff sergeant who has been involved in battlefield investigations in Iraq and Afghanistan of alleged crimes by U.S. soldiers, said prosecuting Bales will be “exceptionally difficult.” Even establishing him as the gunman could be problematic, he said.

    “It still remains to be seen whether any of these Afghan local nationals can actually identify Bales as the shooter,” he said. “Now there’s going to be some real linguistic divides here in terms of people’s … ability to communicate what they saw but you may very well have the potential down the road for a defense that he didn’t do it.”

    The physical evidence from combat zone crimes is similarly suspect, Conway said.

    Spc. Ryan Hallock / DVIDS via AP file

    In this Aug. 23, 2011 Defense Video & Imagery Distribution System photo, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales participates in an exercise at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif.

    “In these combat zone cases, you have crime scenes that are contaminated almost instantly … bodies are moved, forensic evidence is either contaminated or cleaned, there (are) typically no photographs that are taken of forensic value so you can’t necessarily go back and do a very thorough wound analysis,” he said, noting that it would be difficult to exhume the bodies if they have already been buried due to Islamic tradition.

    “It’s not easy to separate the fact from the fiction in this kind of case,” he added.

    If Bales’ case goes to trial, the defense will have an opportunity to react to the government’s case, because the Army presents first. That will enable his lawyers to decide whether to focus on attacking the evidence or arguing that Bales’ reported combat injuries and mental trauma from the battlefield created diminished mental capacity. Or, they may do both, Solis said.

    “The government has to go first and it has to prove its case,” he said. “He’s going to be ready to take advantage of any chink in the government’s arguments that he perceives in addition to whatever argument he may have.”

    Bales was on his fourth tour in a war zone since signing up for the Army after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001. He had spent three years in Iraq on his previous tours, during which time he lost part of a foot and suffered a traumatic brain injury (TBI) due to a vehicle rollover, media reports say. Two days before he allegedly attacked the Afghan villagers, he saw the aftermath of a bombing in which a fellow soldier had his leg blown off, The Associated Press reported.


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    While an insanity defense remains possible, experts who spoke to msnbc.com note that winning such a case is extremely difficult in a military trial.

    Unlike an insanity defense, where Bales would have to be shown not to have known right from wrong to be acquitted, diminished capacity is simply an argument that the crime was not premeditated and that mitigating factors should lessen his punishment.

    “That’s very hard, so … he might have to go with this diminished capacity,” Greg Rinckey, a former attorney with the U.S. Army’s Judge Advocate General Corps who is now managing partner of military law firm Tully Rinckey PLLC, said of an insanity defense. “Most of the cases that I’ve tried, that’s what we’ve went with is because we couldn’t get to … the complete no mental responsibility or the capability to stand trial.”

    Eugene R. Fidell, who teaches military justice at Yale Law School, said testimony indicating that Bales’ was afflicted by post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, could be introduced at this juncture, but would be unlikely to result in acquittal.

    “Maybe some psychiatrist will say he suffers from PTSD,” he said. “That’s not a defense – probably. There’s no case in which PTSD has given rise to a successful insanity defense in the military.”

    Solis said Bales’ lawyers would likely put the brain injury, the wounding of his comrade, the multiple deployments and his foot injury into the “diminished capacity argument box,” with the traumatic brain injury (TBI) possibly being a strong element in support of that claim.

    Afghan massacre by US soldier puts focus back on brain testing

    “You can get a doctor who will come in there with a chart and … show here’s a normal brain and here’s his brain getting TBI,” he said. “So the jury’s got something concrete … that they can wrap their not guilty finding around,” if that’s how they’re leaning.

    Conway said doctors compare traumatic brain injury to a “hardware” problem, whereas PTSD is more like a “software” issue.

    Solis, the former head of the Marines law branch, said the horrific nature of the crime could ironically benefit Bales’ defense.

    “They’re going to say, ‘Would somebody in control of their facilities, somebody who didn’t have diminished capacity have done something this wacky?’” he said. “The act itself is inherently supportive of a diminished capacity” argument.

    As a result, he said, Bales’ case might not even make it to a military courtroom. Perhaps a deal will be struck, or maybe mental health exams -– which could takes months -- will show that Bales is not competent to stand trial.

    But Conway, the former Marine who has been involved in high-profile military crime cases, including the 2005 killing by U.S. Marines of 24 unarmed Iraqi men, women and children in Haditha, Iraq, said the defense also runs a risk by telegraphing that it intends to argue diminished capacity.

    “It’s a two-edged sword. On the one hand, if they can prevent this from turning into a capital (death penalty) case, that’s a huge victory,” he said. “On the other hand, they’re giving away the playbook and they don’t have any access to the witnesses. So the government is going to be out talking to everybody trying to rebut the diminished capacity defense.”

    At the same time, a defense built on PTSD and brain injury is generally a tough sell in a military courtroom, Conway said.

    “We have used it many times” to get charges reduced, he said. “I can tell you that it’s hard to get a military jury to be sympathetic to these kinds of defenses because the way they look at it is, ‘I’ve had multiple deployments, I’ve had multiple concussive events … I’ve got family problems, and I didn’t go out and do this.’”

    “So you’re going to have to be able to explain to the jury why this case is different from their own experiences in combat and that’s going to be tough to do.”  

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    533 comments

    So, this man faces a death sentence for this? And what of the Fort Hood Muslim, Major Nidal Malik Hasan that cried Allah Akba as he killed 12 and wounded 31 people here in the states? He gets off with an insanity plea? Where's the stress in being a psychiatrist stateside compared to being a soldier  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: afghanistan, defense, john, massacre, robert, civilians, henry, 17, ptsd, tbi, browne, bales

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