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Special report: U. S. soldiers accused of killing Iraqi
civilians
WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 (Xinhua) -- One of four American
soldiers accused of raping a Iraqi girl and later killing her and her family
pleaded guilty on Wednesday.
The soldier, James Barker, pleaded guilty to rape and
murder at the start of his court-martial in Fort Campbell, Kentucky, and agree
to testify against the others in the case, U.S. media reported.
Barker agreed to the plea deal to avoid the death
penalty, his civilian attorney David Sheldon was quoted as saying.
Barker gave an account of the event after entering
his plea, detailing how he and his fellow soldiers brought up the idea, then
raped the girl and killed her family at Mahmudiya, a village about32 kilometers
south of Baghdad, in March 2006.
The others charged with rape and murder in the case
were Jesse Spielman, Paul Cortez, and Bryan Howard, all members of the 101st
Airborne Division. A fifth person, former soldier Steven Green, had been charged
in a civilian court and he pleaded not guilty to charges including murder and
sexual assault.
Cortez was also arraigned Wednesday but deferred
entering a plea. Howard also deferred entering a plea at his arraignment in
October, and Spielman would be arraigned in December.
There have been several incidents in which U.S.
soldiers were accused of killing Iraqi civilians over the past year. On Nov.
19,2005, 24 Iraqi civilians were allegedly killed by U.S. troops in the western
Iraqi town of Haditha, and in March this year, 11 Iraqi civilians, including
five children, were killed during a U.S.-led raid against a suspected al-Qaida
site.
U.S. soldiers to face
court-martial
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (Xinhua) -- Eight U.S.
soldiers on rape and murder charges in Iraq have been referred to a
court-martial, the U.S. military said in a statement on Wednesday. Full
Story>>
Four U.S. soldiers could face death
penalty in rape, killing case
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4 (Xinhua) -- A U.S. military
investigator has recommended a court-martial on charges that could lead to the
death penalty for four soldiers accused of raping and killing of a Iraqi girl,
The New York Times website said Monday.
In his recommendation, Col. Dwight Warren agreed with
military prosecutors that "reasonable grounds exist to believe that each accused
committed the offense for which he is charged," including premeditated murder,
which under the Uniform Code of Military Justice could be punishable by death.
Full story>>
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