Adam Ashton

The News Tribune

June 182012

Two sol­diers are await­ing courts-mar­tial at Joint Base Lewis-McChord on mul­ti­ple charges of mur­der that could send them to the Army’s death row. But recent his­to­ry sug­gests a mil­i­tary jury would be reluc­tant to use that pun­ish­ment on defen­dants whose alleged crimes were com­mit­ted in a combat zone.

Of the 2, the sol­dier accused of turn­ing a weapon on fel­low ser­vice­mem­bers in Iraq is more like­ly to face the death penal­ty than the Stryker infantry­man who alleged­ly slaugh­tered Afghan civil­ians unpro­voked – at least based on the military’s record in court.

Sgt. John Russell faces tri­al in the killing of five U.S. ser­vice­mem­bers at a men­tal health clin­ic in Iraq’s Camp Liberty 3 years ago. The death penal­ty is on the table, even though a judge rec­om­mend­ed the Army with­draw that pun­ish­ment because of Russell’s well-doc­u­ment­ed, dete­ri­o­rat­ing psy­cho­log­i­cal con­di­tion dur­ing his third deploy­ment to Iraq.

The oth­er sol­dier with a poten­tial cap­i­tal case at Lewis-McChord is Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, for­mer­ly of Lake Tapps, who alleged­ly mur­dered 16 Afghan civil­ians the night of March 11. He’d been sta­tioned at the base for a decade and was on his fourth combat tour.

The Army has not yet said whether Bales will face the death penal­ty when his case pro­ceeds to a court-mar­tial. His attor­ney, John Henry Browne of Seattle, is review­ing the Army’s evi­dence and prepar­ing to fight the charges.

In either case, his­to­ry sug­gests the Army is unlike­ly to car­ry out an exe­cu­tion even if it wins convictions.

50 YEARS

Its last exe­cu­tion took place in 1961. McClatchy Newspapers last year report­ed that 10 of the 16 ser­vice­mem­bers sen­tenced to death since 1984 had their punishments overturned.

We don’t fall all over our­selves in gen­er­al to exe­cute our own peo­ple,” said Eugene Fidell, who teach­es mil­i­tary jus­tice at Yale University. It’s been over 50 years now since we’ve exe­cut­ed a U.S. sol­dier and there have been plen­ty of death sen­tences, but juries and the appel­late courts and the review­ing author­i­ties includ­ing pres­i­dents do not have itchy fin­gers when it comes to the death penal­ty,” Fidell said.

Today, 6 men are on death row at Fort Leavenworth, Kan.

Their crimes resem­ble the charges against Russell more so than the Army’s case against Bales: All 6 are there for killing oth­er Americans, not for crimes com­mit­ted against foreign noncombatants.

However, only 1 of the 6 com­mit­ted his crimes while deployed overseas.

Soldiers who mur­der civil­ians in war zones are more like­ly to face a life sen­tence as their most serious punishment.

For instance, the Army did not pur­sue a death sen­tence against any of the four Lewis-McChord sol­diers who were con­vict­ed last year in con­nec­tion with the mur­ders of three Afghan civil­ians in 2010. The ring­leader of this so-called kill team,” for­mer Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs, received a life sen­tence with the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole.

Another con­vict­ed war crim­i­nal, for­mer Pfc. Steven Dale Green, received a life sen­tence with­out parole for rap­ing and killing a 14-year-old Iraqi girl, then lead­ing a group of sol­diers in killing her fam­i­ly in 2006.

History and expe­ri­ence would seem to indi­cate that (court-mar­tial) con­ven­ing author­i­ties will more read­i­ly send a case to tri­al as a death-penal­ty case if the vic­tims are Americans than they would if the vic­tims are civil­ian non­com­bat­ants,” said Gary D. Solis, who teach­es mil­i­tary law as an adjunct pro­fes­sor at Georgetown University.

The fac­tors weigh­ing on that deci­sion include the fog of war” argu­ment: The American pub­lic and com­bat com­man­ders under­stand that civil­ians die in every con­flict because of acci­dents and split-sec­ond judg­ment calls. Solis noticed a sim­i­lar trend dur­ing the Vietnam War, when rep­re­hen­si­ble crimes against Vietnamese civil­ians did not result in equal­ly seri­ous pun­ish­ment. The My Lai mas­sacre is the most famous exam­ple. Then-Lt. William Calley, who was con­vict­ed of killing 22 civil­ians, served a 3‑year sen­tence on house arrest.

Solis, a for­mer Marine offi­cer, wrote a book about the mas­sacre of 16 Vietnamese women and chil­dren at the vil­lage of Son Thang in 1970 by a 5‑man Marine patrol. The ring­leader, for­mer Lance Cpl. Randall Herrod, was acquitted.

Solis said the pat­tern could change if pros­e­cu­tors believe they can demon­strate that ser­vice­mem­bers in sit­u­a­tions like Bales’ delib­er­ate­ly planned homi­cides, Solis said.

He said he does not have a sense whether Bales will go to tri­al fac­ing the death penal­ty. The Army alleges Bales inten­tion­al­ly mur­dered the 16 Afghan civil­ians, includ­ing women and chil­dren, in 2 vil­lages after he sneaked out of a Special Forces out­post in the south­ern province of Kandahar.

Given the nature of the deploy­ments and some of the back­ground infor­ma­tion we are dis­cov­er­ing, he should not face the death penal­ty,” said Emma Scanlan, one of Bales’ defense attor­neys. That’s not an appro­pri­ate pos­si­ble pun­ish­ment for him.”

Lead defense attor­ney Browne has crit­i­cized the Army’s case as defi­cient in phys­i­cal evi­dence. In past inter­views, he has sug­gest­ed that Bales was expe­ri­enc­ing post-trau­mat­ic stress and pos­si­bly the effects of mood-altering steroids.

For now, the 38-year-old hus­band and father of 2 young chil­dren is at Fort Leavenworth await­ing a trans­fer to Lewis-McChord.

MILITARY VICTIMS

Russell’s case diverges from Bales’ because the vic­tims wore U.S. mil­i­tary uni­forms. But advo­cates for the sol­dier from Sherman, Texas, insist his cir­cum­stances are dif­fer­ent than those of the 6 ser­vice­mem­bers on death row.

Russell’s attor­ney argues that behav­ioral health spe­cial­ists in Iraq mis­treat­ed Russell when he turned to them for help, once dress­ing him down and anoth­er time mak­ing light of his distress.

At the time, Russell was serv­ing with a Germany-based com­bat engi­neer unit that was attached to a Lewis-McChord brigade. He was not sta­tioned at Lewis-McChord at any time, and is only being pros­e­cut­ed here because his chain of com­mand is based here.

Russell’s unit sent him to a clin­ic on May 8, 2009, fol­low­ing 6 days of mood swings and para­noia. At the clin­ic, a major chose to make an exam­ple of Russell in front of a cap­tain whom she regard­ed as too soft with patients, accord­ing to legal documents.

The cap­tain remem­bered Russell’s 1st vis­it to the clin­ic as aggres­sive and hos­tile” because of the major’s tough ques­tion­ing, accord­ing to court tes­ti­mo­ny quot­ed in case documents.

I know Sgt. Russell felt very uncom­fort­able, and he kept look­ing to me for reas­sur­ance, but what do you do when a senior offi­cer is there? You don’t do any­thing; you sit, and you lis­ten,” Capt. Brian Ropson said at a pretrial hearing.

Russell’s fol­low-up vis­its to the clin­ic became even more argu­men­ta­tive. His con­di­tion wors­ened notice­ably to the sol­diers in his unit on May 10. He felt that every­one had lost hope in him and no one want­ed him around,” remem­bered Lt. David Vasquez in a sworn statement.

On May 11, Russell stormed out of a meet­ing with anoth­er coun­selor, Lt. Col. Michael Jones. Russell did not believe Jones was will­ing to help him.

Russell told Jones he was ready to kill him­self, but Jones appeared skep­ti­cal to wit­ness­es who over­heard their inter­ac­tions. By then, a lieu­tenant had already tak­en the bolt from Russell’s rifle, a step that showed his unit believed Russell would hurt him­self with the gun.

Later that day, Russell returned to the clin­ic and killed a Navy com­man­der and four sol­diers. An Army board ini­tial­ly found him incom­pe­tent to stand tri­al. With treat­ment, Russell is now regard­ed as able to par­tic­i­pate in his defense and capa­ble of standing trial.

Army Judge Col. James Pohl wrote that Russell’s tri­al should not be a cap­i­tal case. Rather, Pohl in September wrote that Russell’s undis­put­ed men­tal dis­ease or defect makes the death penal­ty inap­pro­pri­ate in this case.”

Pohl is the same offi­cer who rec­om­mend­ed that Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan face the death penal­ty for killing 13 peo­ple at Fort Hood, Texas, in 2009. Still, the Army is pros­e­cut­ing Russell as a capital case.

Defense attor­ney James Culp con­tends a mil­i­tary pan­el will not sen­tence Russell to death if the case pro­ceeds to trial.

Do we kill some­one who is suf­fer­ing from 2 severe men­tal defects when he snaps and does some­thing in a com­bat zone? I think the answer is no,” Culp said.

Who’s on mil­i­tary death row

Former Marine Lance Cpl. Kenneth Parker

Year sen­tenced: 1995

Crime: Murdered 2 fel­low lance cor­po­rals in Jacksonville, N.C.

Former Army Spc. Ronald Gray

Year sen­tenced: 1988

Crime: Convicted of abduct­ing, rap­ing and mur­der­ing an 18-year-old pri­vate; rap­ing and mur­der­ing a 23-year-old civil­ian; rap­ing, rob­bing and attempt­ing to mur­der anoth­er vic­tim, all in the Fayetteville, N.C., area.

Former Army Pfc. Dwight Loving

Year sen­tenced: 1989

Crime: Murdered 2 taxi­cab dri­vers in Killeen, Texas, while based at Fort Hood.

Former Army Sgt. Hasan Akbar

Year sen­tenced: 2005

Crime: Killed an Air Force major and Army cap­tain while wound­ing 14 oth­ers by toss­ing a grenade at them at a U.S. base in Kuwait dur­ing the inva­sion of Iraq.

Former Air Force Senior Airman Andrew Witt

Year sen­tenced: 2005

Crime: Murdered a senior air­man and his wife at Robins Air Force Base in Georgia; also seri­ous­ly wound­ed a staff sergeant.

Former Army Master Sgt. Timothy Hennis

Year sen­tenced: 2010

Crime: Murdered 3 peo­ple in North Carolina in 1985. He was con­vict­ed in 2010 after 3 trials.

Upcoming cap­i­tal cases

Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan

Charges: Murdering 13 peo­ple at Fort Hood, Texas, in 2009.

Army Sgt. John Russell

Charges: Murdering 5 ser­vice mem­bers at a men­tal health clin­ic in Iraq in 2009.