Navy medic
recounts killing of Iraqi
WASHINGTON, Saturday (AP) - A slight,
soft-spoken Navy corpsman testified that Marines in
his patrol seized an Iraqi civilian from his home, threw
him into a hole and put at least 10 bullets in his head
and chest after growing frustrated in their search for
an insurgent.
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Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Melson
J. Bacos. AP. |
Petty Officer 3rd Class Melson J.
Bacos said on Friday that he saw a Marine put fingerprints
from the victim onto a rifle and on a shovel to implicate
him as an insurgent.
''I was shocked and I felt sick to
my stomach,'' Bacos said.
Bacos, a medic who had been on patrol
with the squad, was charged along with seven Marines
in the slaying of Hashim Ibrahim Awad last spring in
the town of Hamdania.
But Bacos, 21, struck a deal with
prosecutors under which he pleaded guilty to kidnapping
and conspiracy and agreed to testify Friday at his court-martial
and during upcoming proceedings about what he saw.
Military judge Col. Steven Folsom
sentenced Bacos to 10 years in prison but reduced the
term to one year because of the plea agreement. That
will be further reduced by time served.
A reduction in rank and a dishonorable
discharge also were suspended because of the deal approved
by the military authority that convened the court-martial.
In return for Bacos' testimony, other counts of murder,
kidnapping and conspiracy were dropped.
''Why didn't I just walk away?'' Bacos
asked before being sentenced. ''The answer to that question
was I wanted to be part of the team. I wanted to be
a respected corpman, but that is no excuse for immorality.''
Prosecutor Capt. Nicholas Gannon said,
''We are in Iraq to protect Iraqis and that fact makes
this case more tragic and more criminal.''
Bacos said he asked the Marines to
let Awad go, but Cpl. Marshall L. Magincalda told him
in crude terms that he was being weak and should stop
protesting.
''I knew what we were doing was wrong,''
Bacos testified, speaking nearly in a whisper. ''I tried
to say something and then I decided to look away.''
Bacos was the first of the servicemen
to be court-martialed. The seven others could get up
to life in prison.
Prosecutors have said the servicemen
killed Awad out of frustration and then planted the
assault rifle and shovel by the body to make it look
as if he had been caught digging a hole for a roadside
bomb.
Bacos testified that the squad entered
Hamdania on April 26 while searching for a known insurgent
who had been captured three times, then released. Squad
leader Sgt. Lawrence Hutchins was ''just mad that we
kept letting him go and he was a known terrorist,''
Bacos said.
The group approached a house where
the insurgent was believed to be hiding, but when someone
inside woke up, the Marines instead went to another
home and grabbed Awad, a former policeman, according
to the testimony.
Bacos said the squad had intended
to get someone else if they did not capture the insurgent,
then stage a firefight to make it appear they had found
an Iraqi planting a roadside bomb. Awad, 52, was taken
from the home with his feet and hands bound, then placed
in a hole, Bacos said.
''I felt I couldn't stop it any more
that day,'' Bacos testified. ''They were going to do
it. They were going to carry out the plan, so I continued
on.''
Bacos said Hutchins fired three rounds
into the man's head after checking to see if he was
dead, then Cpl. Trent Thomas fired seven to 10 more
rounds into his chest.
After the killing, Bacos said Hutchins
called in to a command center and reported the squad
had seen a man digging a hole and wanted permission
to fire at him.
Bacos said he saw Lance Cpl. Robert
B. Pennington put the victim's fingerprints onto an
AK-47 and on a shovel to implicate him as an insurgent
who had fired first. Bacos was told to fire an AK-47
into the air to simulate the sound of a firefight.
After the killing, Bacos said, he
was standing in the road when another Navy corpsman
drove by.
''He asked me what happened, and I
was very vague,'' Bacos testified. ''I said, 'I want
you to remember something. We're different. We're not
like these men.''
Bacos' wife and father sat in the
front row of the courtroom during the court-martial.
During a break, Bacos turned to her and mouthed the
words, ''I love you.'' Bacos was recently transferred
from Camp Pendleton, where the Marines have been held,
to Marine Corps Air Station Miramar for his own safety.
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