Prosecutor: Soldier had victims' blood on him after killing spree
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JOINT BASE LEWIS-McCHORD, Wash. (AP) - The soldier accused of killing 16 villagers in a nighttime rampage in Afghanistan returned to his base wearing a cape and with the blood of his victims on his rifle, belt, shirt and pants, a military prosecutor said Monday.
Staff Sgt. Robert Bales was incredulous when fellow U.S. soldiers drew their weapons on him when he returned to Camp Belambay in southern Afghanistan last March, prosecutor Lt. Col. Jay Morse said as a preliminary hearing opened at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash.
Bales then turned to one sergeant at the scene and said: "Mac, if you rat me out ..." Morse said.
Bales, 39, has been charged with 16 counts of premeditated murder and six counts of attempted murder in one of the worst atrocities of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Nine of the victims were children. The hearing will help determine whether the case goes to a court martial.
Bales has not entered a plea. His attorneys have not discussed the evidence in the case, but say Bales has PTSD and suffered a concussive head injury during a prior deployment to Iraq.
The father of two from Lake Tapps, Wash., sat beside one of his civilian lawyers, Emma Scanlan, in green fatigues as an investigating officer read the charges against Bales and informed him of his rights. Bales said, "Sir, yes, sir," when asked if he understood them.
Morse said Bales seemed utterly normal in the hours before the March 11 killings. With his colleagues, Bales watched the movie "Man on Fire," a fictional account of a former CIA operative on a revenge rampage.
Just before he left the base, Morse said, Bales told a Special Forces soldier that he was unhappy with his family life, and that the troops should have been quicker to retaliate for a roadside bomb attack that claimed one soldier's leg.
"At all times he had a clear understanding of what he was doing and what he had done," said Morse, who described Bales as lucid, coherent and responsive.
Bales is accused of slipping away from the remote outpost with an M-4 rifle outfitted with a grenade launcher to attack the villages of Balandi and Alkozai, in a dangerous district.
American officials have said they believe Bales broke the slaughter into two episodes - walking first to one village, returning to the base and slipping away again to carry out the second attack.
The prosecutor said Bales returned to the base at one point, telling a colleague about shooting people at a village. The soldier apparently took it as a bad joke and responded: "Quit messing around."
Prosecutors played for the first time a video captured by a surveillance blimp that showed a caped figure running toward the base, then stopping and dropping his weapons as he's confronted. There is no audio. Morse said Bales was the caped figure.
After being taken into custody, Morse said, Bales said: "I thought I was doing the right thing."
The hearing is scheduled to run as long as two weeks, and part of it will be held overnight to allow video testimony from witnesses, including an estimated 10 to 15 Afghans, in Afghanistan.
Bales' attorney, John Henry Browne, said the hearing will give the defense a chance to see what the government can prove. They are expecting a court martial.
Bales is an Ohio native who joined the Army in late 2001 - after the 9/11 attacks - as his career as a stockbroker imploded. An arbitrator entered a $1.5 million fraud judgment against him and his former company that went unpaid, and his attempt to start an investment firm in Florida also failed.
He was serving his fourth combat tour after three stints in Iraq, and his arrest prompted a national discussion about the stresses posed by multiple deployments.
Scanlan, his attorney, declined to say to what extent the lawyers hope to elicit testimony that could be used to support a mental-health defense. Bales himself will not make any statements because his lawyers said he would have nothing to gain.
Bales' wife, Karilyn, who plans to attend the hearing, had complained about financial problems on her blog in the year before the killings, and noted Bales was disappointed at being passed over for a promotion.
Browne described those stresses as garden-variety - nothing that would prompt such a massacre - and has also said, without elaborating, that Bales suffered a traumatic incident during his second Iraq tour that triggered "tremendous depression."
Bales remembers little or nothing from the time of the attacks, the defense said.
Scanlan, who deferred an opportunity to give an opening statement, said the Army had only recently turned over a preliminary DNA trace evidence report from the crime scenes, but defense experts have not had time to review it.
Bales, who spent months in confinement at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., before being transferred to Lewis-McChord last month, is doing well, Scanlan said.
"He's getting prepared," she said, "but it's nerve-wracking for anybody."
What a shame! This man should never have been protecting our country with a brain injury.He also had PTSD! While I believe our troops should not be over there,he killed innocent people,and was not authorized to do so! Our mental health programs are being shut down,and our military closes their eyes to this problem. It has got to stop! Even a very strong person can  have severe mental issues when they are subject to horrible things everyday. Mental health is a very huge situation,and is getting worse everyday. They need to be taken care of,and there is no excuse ,that our military men and women are not taken care of when they are in the service,or when they get out!
just horrible for everyone involved. horrible what he did, horrible his fellow soldiers discovered him that way, horrible for his family, horrible for how it made us look, horrible that someone didnt catch him before he ruined his life and took so many others. no good outcomes here, for anyone.
I find it sad that our troops family's have to worry at all about living from pay check to pay check being on foodstamps and looking for cheap housing. The service OUR government treating them like they are the enemy and the enemy can kill us by standers just like 911 and we do NOTHING but then we knew it was going to happen that is what happens we we sleep with the enemy and line our pockets with blood money. Civilians can earn tons of money going over ther to protect some stupid plant or oil rig or field but pay our troops keep them healty not a chance. Own up to and take accounatibility for a thing these great men and women do while the leaders are selling us out. Makes one proud and then we wonder why we are hated by the world unless they need some freshly printed money. This world is sad sad sad. Glad I am old. I am praying for the soldier and his family.
Quick statement of qualifications: Col., US Army (ret.), 26 years service.
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PTSD is a major problem and has been for a long time. The Army simply does not want to deal with it. They have no plan for any kind of psychiatric or psychological problems other then rapid separation from the service followed a hands-raides, "Not Our Problem" stance.
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Every soldier who returns from combat should have some kind of screening. I made sure to talk with every man in my commands (if humanly possible) following a return from deployment. And if I couldn't do it, I made sure that every Sergent had orders to do it. (Note: this is called "Leadership", and it is an officers primary duty.)
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A reminder: Paul Ryan (D, WI, Rep. VP Nominee) claimed that the VA needed to take 35% cuts in medical services, and 75% cuts in mental health services, as part of his widely praised (by conservatives) budgets in 2011 and 2012. (This is known in GOP circles as "Supporting the Troops".)
I'll wait to draw my conclusion about this after the movie comes out. Hollywood will tell us the truth!