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Holy shit! Steven Green trial is now in deliberation! (Excellent article on rape/murder and trial)

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uppityperson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-06-09 02:05 PM
Original message
Holy shit! Steven Green trial is now in deliberation! (Excellent article on rape/murder and trial)
Edited on Wed May-06-09 02:22 PM by uppityperson
This has been very fast. I hope they are able to find the right conclusion for this atrocity/crime. The huffpost article is a VERY good one on the crime, etc.

RIP Abeer, Hadeel, Farkhiya, Qassim, Kristian Menchaca and Thomas Lowell Tucker.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gail-mcgowan-mellor/steven-green-trial-goes-t_b_197573.html
As former U.S. Army Private First Class Steven Dale Green waits at the defendant's table in a Paducah, Kentucky federal courthouse, on trial for his life, his face is notably expressionless. He is a slender young man with close-cropped hair, an aquiline face and a habit of lightly tapping his pen alternately against his right ear and his mouth. Green spent his 24th birthday, May 2, 2009, in this room facing 17 counts of gang-rape and multiple murder, and days have passed with polite, quiet jurors in middle class clothes sitting in two rows adjacent to him, listening intently to witnesses or staring attentively into individual computer screens when visuals appear. On May 5, Green, having never taken the stand, watched the last defense witnesses testify, leaning forward briefly to put his head on the table toward the end. Apart from a radio operator who explained communications acronyms, his visibly traumatized 101st Airborne Division buddies dominated the witness pool, speaking of months with only four hours of sleep a night, seeing friends and commanders blown apart and killed, and expecting to die themselves.

As General Ray Odierno noted in a 60 Minutes tape played by the defense, in 2007 Baghdad and the area to its southwest would be patrolled by 30,000 U.S. troops; but back in 2006, one thousand troops were trying to do the same job. The witnesses said that the family whom Green and the other four soldiers had slaughtered were Iraqi; that combatants and non-combatanbts were indistingishable; or as one said with what sounded like bewildered accusation, "they look just like me and you," they were "all out to get us."

The military command does not buy the "war made me do it" gambit. Four of Green's co-conspirators have been convicted by military tribunal and put away -- for 110 years in one case, and two of the convicted ones were here testifying against Green. Yet Green -- who bragged about his part in the premeditated gang rape and multiple murders to an Army officer, enlisted men, and a stateside friend -- has pled "not guilty." Unlike the others, Green is being tried in a civilian court, where jurors might be more sympathetic; but he could, if he loses, get the death penalty. The crimes in question were committed in a family home outside the desert hamlet Yusufiyah near the town al-Malmudiyah southwest of the sprawling city of Baghdad, Iraq. Yet Steve Green is being tried in Paducah, a subtropical town 7,000 miles away, near the Airborne's home base of Ft. Campbell, Kentucky, U.S.A.

(clip)
(Fourteen-year-old Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi)

While Specialist James Barker pinned a terrified Abeer down, Green shoved her parents and six-year-old sister Hadeel at gunpoint into a room with him and shut the door. As the mother Fakhriya Taha Muhasen and the father Qassim Hamza Raheem huddled in a corner trying to shield Hadeel, they could hear Abeer as Sargeant Paul Cortez raped her, and Aber could hear her family as Green shot and killed her parents and little sister with bursts from an AK47. He then re-entered the main room where she was, threw the AK47 down, raped Abeer, and standing up from doing it, put a pillow over her face and killed her with shotgun blasts. The soldiers used kerosene to set the lower part of her dead body on fire, and after they left, flames caught the house, bringing the family's relatives who saw the smoke then the bodies. They ran to the U.S. checkpoint for help, but two of the killers who were among the U.S. troops responding managed to blame the slaughter on "insurgents....(much more at link)


http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20090506/NEWS01/90506018/Prosecutor+asks+jury+to+find+ex-soldier+guilty+of+murder
After a seven day trial, a federal prosecutor today asked a jury to find former Fort Campbell soldier Steven Green guilty of premeditated murder and rape. In a closing argument, Assistant U.S. Attorney Marisa Ford said “rape and murder is wrong, wherever it is carried out,” and that the horrors of war endured by Green’s unit do not justify his acts. “American soldiers fight hard, but they fight fair, and they understand where the line is,” Ford told the jury.

But one of Green’s lawyers, federal public defender Scott Wendelsdorf, said Green was suffering from extreme combat stress and should not be convicted of premeditated capital murder. “The war changed him, the war has broken him,” Wendelsdorf said. “And American owes its broken soldiers nothing less than justice.” He asked the jury to find Green guilty of a lesser crime, second-degree murder, which is not punishable by death.

If Green is found guilty of capital murder, the jury will return next week to hear evidence on whether he should be sentenced to death. Green, 24, of Midland, Texas, is being prosecuted in a federal court in Kentucky because he was deployed from Fort Campbell and because he was discharged from the Army before his alleged role in the crimes were discovered. Experts on military law say he is the first former soldier to face the death penalty in a civil trial.
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ck4829 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-06-09 02:06 PM
Response to Original message
1. Hopefully he'll spend the rest of his life behind bars
He should not get the easy way out, I hope he lives for a hundred years.
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uppityperson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-06-09 02:11 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. From what I have read on the trial, I hope they also go after those who
recruited him and kept him in, knowing he had the mental health issues he had, and those who kicked him out and simply sent him back home to the civilian world, knowing what he did. And those who helped cover this up.

The whole thing really pisses me off.
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uppityperson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-06-09 02:32 PM
Response to Original message
3. another article...
http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iv6N05o1l9VAypobX0GXE2JBxERQ
PADUCAH, Kentucky (AFP) — A US federal jury deliberated Wednesday on whether ex-soldier Steven Dale Green was guilty of raping an Iraqi teenager, and then executing her and her family. Prosecuting attorney Marisa Ford told jurors during closing arguments that the grueling conditions and tragic losses suffered by his unit, Bravo Company, in no way excused the rape of Abeer al-Janabi,14, and the murders of her and her family in their home south of Baghdad on March 12, 2006.

"The evidence in this case suggests the defendant was acting purposefully and intentionally with full knowledge of what he was doing," Ford said. She said Green and other soldiers changed their clothes and disguised their appearance to throw suspicion on insurgents. They then burned Abeer's body to hide trace evidence and burned their own clothes to destroy anything that might link them to the crime, she said. "This was a planned, premeditated crime which was carried out in cold blood," Ford told the jurors. But Green's defense attorney Scott Wendelsdorf told jurors that the stresses of war had left Green a broken man in a strange world. "Madness. Madness. That's the only possible word," he told them. In his closing argument, Wendelsdorf blamed the crime on the lack of leadership at Traffic Checkpoint 2, where Green served with the other soldiers involved in the crimes at the al-Janabi home. "They didn't come there as criminals," he said. "They were made criminals at TCP 2."

He noted that Green had been diagnosed as having Combat Operational Stress Disorder three months before the attack, and contended that former private first class James Barker and former specialist Paul Cortez took advantage of Green's mental condition to carry out the crimes. "In a real sense, Green was not the triggerman," Wendelsdorf said. "Green was the weapon." Wendelsdorf reminded the jury that Green, 23, could get the death penalty if convicted. Green was tried in a civilian court because he had been discharged from the army prior to charges being filed in the case.

Jurors last week heard the stories of Cortez and Barker, both of whom admitted to going to the al-Janabi family home with Green. They are serving 100 and 90 year prison sentences, respectively, for their roles in the brutal attack. The pair said they were in one room of the home trying to rape Abeer al-Janabi while Green was in the other room with her six-year-old sister and her mother and father. They said gunshots rang out and when they went to investigate, they discovered that Green had killed the three. Cortez testified that Green proceeded to rape Abeer al-Janabi. He said Green then put a pillow over the girl's face and shot her three times with an AK-47.
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uppityperson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-06-09 02:50 PM
Response to Original message
4. Green bragged to anyone who would listen about what he had done, including an officer.
and the response was to discharge him. Until Kristian Menchaca and Thomas Lowell Tucker were captured and killed, the military didn't care.
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uppityperson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-06-09 03:33 PM
Response to Original message
5. rec for Abeer?
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