Admin

 

Verse of the Day

The Newsroom

Powered By
widgetmate.com
Sponsored By
Digital Camera


Site Design By: SC Themes


Proud to be Americans





Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Blogroll

Newspaper Rack

Categories

This is an awful hard subject for me. I just don’t understand how you can charge someone with murder that is fighting a war.

A US general has dismissed all charges against two marines accused in the killing of 24 Iraqi civilians in Haditha, including women and children, the Marine Corp said yesterday.
Lance Corporal Justin Sharratt, 22, was charged with murdering three brothers. Captain Randy Stone, 35, a battalion lawyer, was charged with failing to adequately report and investigate the November 19 2005 incident.

The episode is seen as potentially one of the gravest abuses by US forces in the Iraq war. The dead included elderly people, women and children as young as three and one. Several of the victims were killed in their beds.

In dropping the charges, Lieutenant General James Mattis, the general with jurisdiction in the case, said he was sympathetic to the challenges marines face in Iraq.

“Where the enemy disregards any attempt to comply with ethical norms of warfare, we exercise discipline and restraint to protect the innocent caught on the battlefield,” Gen Mattis wrote in his letter to Corp Sharratt.

The decision to drop the charges against the two marines followed earlier recommendations by investigating officers who listened to the evidence against them, though it was recommended that Capt Stone face an administrative hearing.

Four enlisted marines were initially charged with murder, and four officers were charged with failing to investigate the episode. Prosecutors dropped charges against one of the enlisted men, Sergeant Sanick Dela Cruz, and gave him immunity to testify against his squad mates.

The central figure in the case remains squad leader Staff Sergeant Frank Wuterich, who faces 18 counts of murder and is scheduled to attend a preliminary hearing later this month.

The other enlisted marine, Lance Corporal Stephen Tatum, has attended a preliminary hearing but no recommendation has been made about whether he should stand trial for murder.

Story

Written by Guss

One Response to “Marine murder charges dropped”


  1. ~J~ Says:


    Visit ~J~

    The problem has been the rules of engagement where any soldier had to have a lawyer approve a plan before it could be implemented. That works here, but in a country where you can’t easily identify the enemy it was stupid. I think they’ve changed that now.

    As to murder during a war, if a soldier sneaks up on a dark house at night with the intent to kill all in that house even if they are not attacking him, I would call that murder.

    I don’t know what happened here and I’m glad they didn’t charge these men with murder.