Google – AFP, 20 August 2013
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Staff Sgt.
Robert Bales (R) at the National Training Center in Fort Irwin,
California in
August 23, 2011 (DVIDS/AFP/File, Spc. Ryan Hallock)
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JOINT BASE
LEWIS-MCCHORD, Washington — The US Army sergeant who massacred 16 Afghan
villagers in 2012 was expected to face survivors of the assault and relatives
of its victims Tuesday as his sentencing hearing began.
Robert
Bales, 40, pleaded guilty in June to killing the villagers, nine of them
children, and to burning their bodies, in an admission brokered by his defense
team in exchange for avoiding the death penalty.
A military
panel of three officers and three senior soldiers was assembled Tuesday at
Joint Base Lewis-McChord, south of Seattle in Washington state, to weigh
Bales's sentence, with a decision expected this week.
The judge
in the case, Colonel Jeffrey Nance, previously ruled that Bales would face a
maximum of life in jail without eligibility for parole. The military panel is
charged with determining if the sergeant could be released early.
Some 20
prosecution and defense witnesses at the latest hearing will include nine
Afghans flown by the army to the United States from the village where Bales
committed the killings.
Bales's
trial heard that he had been drinking alcohol and watching a film with other US
soldiers in the Panjwayi district of southern Kandahar province when he
embarked on his shooting spree on March 11, 2012.
The
sergeant, a father of two, acknowledged the "horrible things" he did
but did not formally apologize during his previous testimony. He may address
the court once again during the sentencing hearing.
Prosecutors,
however, have presented an audio recording that captures Bales and his wife
laughing at the charges lodged against the soldier, which military counsel Rob
Stelle contends show the accused's "lack of remorse."
Bales's
lawyer John Browne has said he hoped his client could be out of jail after 10
years.
During his
trial, Bales initially appeared a little choked up when responding to the
judge's request for his version of events, but then outlined the full extent of
the massacre.
"I
formed the intent to kill and then did kill by shooting with a firearm and
burning her," he said, repeating the phrase for each of the 16 murder
counts against him.
Asked why
he had killed the villagers, he said: "Sir, as far as why, I've asked that
question a million times since then. There's not a good reason in this world
for why I did the horrible things I did."
Bales
recalled he had an M4 assault rifle and a 9mm pistol and that he had used both
weapons.
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