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Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 5:00:19 PM   
jlf1961


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Okay the UCMJ does not allow for anyone to plead guilty in a death penalty case. Fine.

Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan does not deny his lone involvement in the fort hood shootings.

However, the following sounds like fucking bullshit.

quote:

DALLAS (AP) — Hundreds of unarmed soldiers, some about to deploy to Afghanistan, were waiting inside a building for vaccines and routine checkups when a fellow soldier walked in with two handguns and enough ammunition to commit one of the worst mass shootings in American history.

Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan doesn't deny that he carried out the November 2009 attack at Fort Hood, Texas, which left 13 people dead and more than 30 others wounded. There are dozens of witnesses who saw it happen. Military law prohibits him from entering a guilty plea because authorities are seeking the death penalty. But if he is convicted and sentenced to death in a trial that starts Tuesday, there are likely years, if not decades, of appeals ahead.

He may never make it to the death chamber at all.

While the Hasan case is unusually complex, experts also say the military justice system is unaccustomed to dealing with death penalty cases and has struggled to avoid overturned sentences.
Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions




He claims to be a soldier of Allah, and while I do not class all Muslims as terrorists, or all terrorists as Muslims, while are they even bothering with a trial? And why call it a work place shooting?

He claims he is a soldier of Allah, he committed his crimes in a US Army uniform, therefore by his own words he was an enemy combatant in an American uniform, he should have been shot on site.

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 5:10:29 PM   
DaNewAgeViking


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

He claims to be a soldier of Allah, and while I do not class all Muslims as terrorists, or all terrorists as Muslims, while are they even bothering with a trial? And why call it a work place shooting?

He claims he is a soldier of Allah, he committed his crimes in a US Army uniform, therefore by his own words he was an enemy combatant in an American uniform, he should have been shot on site.

What you're saying is that he should have been shot down like a dog as an alternative to due legal process. I don't doubt he deserves to die, and from what I see this case ought to be pretty straightforward, but the real issue is do we want to live in a society where 'bad' people are arbitratily gunned down? Due process is there for a reason, and while it annoys blood-thirsty Radicals and hate-mongers to have to prove their case, that makes the need for a fair trial far, far more critical than the facts in evidence suggest. Stand Your Ground is bad enough; do we really want to descend into a lynch mob society?

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 5:40:39 PM   
BamaD


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DaNewAgeViking


quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

He claims to be a soldier of Allah, and while I do not class all Muslims as terrorists, or all terrorists as Muslims, while are they even bothering with a trial? And why call it a work place shooting?

He claims he is a soldier of Allah, he committed his crimes in a US Army uniform, therefore by his own words he was an enemy combatant in an American uniform, he should have been shot on site.

What you're saying is that he should have been shot down like a dog as an alternative to due legal process. I don't doubt he deserves to die, and from what I see this case ought to be pretty straightforward, but the real issue is do we want to live in a society where 'bad' people are arbitratily gunned down? Due process is there for a reason, and while it annoys blood-thirsty Radicals and hate-mongers to have to prove their case, that makes the need for a fair trial far, far more critical than the facts in evidence suggest. Stand Your Ground is bad enough; do we really want to descend into a lynch mob society?


Not a lynch mob, by his own works combat.

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 5:43:33 PM   
jlf1961


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DaNewAgeViking


quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

He claims to be a soldier of Allah, and while I do not class all Muslims as terrorists, or all terrorists as Muslims, while are they even bothering with a trial? And why call it a work place shooting?

He claims he is a soldier of Allah, he committed his crimes in a US Army uniform, therefore by his own words he was an enemy combatant in an American uniform, he should have been shot on site.

What you're saying is that he should have been shot down like a dog as an alternative to due legal process. I don't doubt he deserves to die, and from what I see this case ought to be pretty straightforward, but the real issue is do we want to live in a society where 'bad' people are arbitratily gunned down? Due process is there for a reason, and while it annoys blood-thirsty Radicals and hate-mongers to have to prove their case, that makes the need for a fair trial far, far more critical than the facts in evidence suggest. Stand Your Ground is bad enough; do we really want to descend into a lynch mob society?




By his own statement, he violated the Geneva Convention, he claims to be an enemy combatant and fired on troops in a uniform that he had no allegiance to.

I suggest you look into the German tactics during the battle of the bulge. Enemy combatants found wearing friendly uniforms are not due the protection of the Geneva convention.

His statement makes it clear he did not consider himself an American soldier, but the soldier of another army, so he was an enemy combatant in a friendly uniform. Clear, concise and by his own words. Under the Geneva Conventions he is not due a trial, or anything other than a firing squad.

Here it is in OFFICIAL Military documentation.

quote:

United States of America
The US Field Manual (1976) states: “It is especially forbidden to make improper use … of the national flag, or military insignia and uniform of the enemy.”
The manual adds:
In practice, it has been authorized to make use of national flags, insignia, and uniforms as a ruse. The foregoing rule (HR, art. 23, par. (f)) does not prohibit such employment, but does prohibit their improper use. It is certainly forbidden to employ them during combat, but their use at other times is not forbidden. [emphasis in original]
The manual also states:
Members of the armed forces of a party to the conflict and members of militias or volunteer corps forming part of such armed forces lose their right to be treated as prisoners of war whenever they deliberately conceal their status in order to pass behind the military lines of the enemy for the purpose of gathering military information or for the purpose of waging war by destruction of life or property. Putting on civilian clothes or the uniform of the enemy are examples of concealment of the status of a member of the armed forces.
United States of America
The US Air Force Pamphlet (1976) incorporates the content of Article 23(f) of the 1907 Hague Regulations and adds that the prohibited improper use of the enemy’s flags, military insignia, national markings and uniforms “involves use in actual attacks”.
The manual further specifies:
Members of the armed forces of a party to the conflict and members of militias or volunteer corps forming part of such armed forces lose their right to be treated as prisoners of war whenever they deliberately conceal their status in order to pass behind the military lines of the enemy for the purpose of gathering military information or for the purpose of waging war by destruction of life or property. Putting on civilian clothes or the uniform of the enemy are examples of concealment of the status of a member of the armed forces. Ground forces engaged in actual combat, in contrast to ground forces preparing for combat, are required to wear their own uniform or distinctive national insignia.

While combatant airmen are not absolutely required to wear a uniform or distinctive national insignia while flying in combat, improper use of the military insignia or uniform of the enemy is forbidden. Consequently, airmen should not wear the uniform or national insignia of the enemy while engaging in combat operations. Military aircraft, as entities of combat in aerial warfare, are also required to be marked with appropriate signs of their nationality and military character


< Message edited by jlf1961 -- 8/3/2013 5:51:56 PM >


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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 6:15:10 PM   
kdsub


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quote:

While the Hasan case is unusually complex


Complex!!! how...it is simple mass murder...no appeals needed

Butch

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 8:08:10 PM   
jlf1961


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Actually, the army is treating it like a workplace shooting, however the defendant has indicated by his own words it was more than that.

quote:

Major Hasan Explains Hasan sends writings to Fox News ahead of Fort Hood shooting trial Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwhhe84

On the eve of his military trial, accused Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan released seven pages of handwritten and typed documents to Fox News in which he appears to renounce his U.S. citizenship, abandons his military oath as a commissioned officer, and explains his relationship with radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki -- the first American targeted for death by the CIA.

Most of the documents also include the acronym "SoA," which is considered shorthand for "Soldier of Allah." Hasan's business card, also bearing "SoA," was found in his Texas apartment after the shooting.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwnuuyy



Thus, since he said that was his mindset at the time of the shooting, he is an enemy combatant and traitor. Since he was in a US uniform at the time of the shooting, he has no right to trial, and therefore should be shot.

A few of the German troops that were dropped behind American lines during the battle of the bulge wore not German uniforms that they should have been, but American uniforms, and were subsequently shot. Some of those men were actually American citizens who enlisted in the German army.

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 8:10:30 PM   
BamaD


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

Actually, the army is treating it like a workplace shooting, however the defendant has indicated by his own words it was more than that.

quote:

Major Hasan Explains Hasan sends writings to Fox News ahead of Fort Hood shooting trial Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwhhe84

On the eve of his military trial, accused Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan released seven pages of handwritten and typed documents to Fox News in which he appears to renounce his U.S. citizenship, abandons his military oath as a commissioned officer, and explains his relationship with radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki -- the first American targeted for death by the CIA.

Most of the documents also include the acronym "SoA," which is considered shorthand for "Soldier of Allah." Hasan's business card, also bearing "SoA," was found in his Texas apartment after the shooting.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwnuuyy



Thus, since he said that was his mindset at the time of the shooting, he is an enemy combatant and traitor. Since he was in a US uniform at the time of the shooting, he has no right to trial, and therefore should be shot.

A few of the German troops that were dropped behind American lines during the battle of the bulge wore not German uniforms that they should have been, but American uniforms, and were subsequently shot. Some of those men were actually American citizens who enlisted in the German army.

They should be treating it like an act of terrorism .


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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 8:37:09 PM   
jlf1961


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quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD


quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

Actually, the army is treating it like a workplace shooting, however the defendant has indicated by his own words it was more than that.

quote:

Major Hasan Explains Hasan sends writings to Fox News ahead of Fort Hood shooting trial Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwhhe84

On the eve of his military trial, accused Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan released seven pages of handwritten and typed documents to Fox News in which he appears to renounce his U.S. citizenship, abandons his military oath as a commissioned officer, and explains his relationship with radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki -- the first American targeted for death by the CIA.

Most of the documents also include the acronym "SoA," which is considered shorthand for "Soldier of Allah." Hasan's business card, also bearing "SoA," was found in his Texas apartment after the shooting.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwnuuyy



Thus, since he said that was his mindset at the time of the shooting, he is an enemy combatant and traitor. Since he was in a US uniform at the time of the shooting, he has no right to trial, and therefore should be shot.

A few of the German troops that were dropped behind American lines during the battle of the bulge wore not German uniforms that they should have been, but American uniforms, and were subsequently shot. Some of those men were actually American citizens who enlisted in the German army.

They should be treating it like an act of terrorism .




I mean he is claiming that was what it was, so, it makes sense to treat him as one, which does give him the right to trial. I prefer they treat him as an enemy combatant in a friendly uniform, no trial, just a shooting, and unmarked grave... okay marked so the General Ferguson tradition could be applied.♦

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 8:42:11 PM   
MrBukani


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Good old Fort Hood.


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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 8:55:59 PM   
hlen5


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"General Ferguson tradition" being pissing on the grave?

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 9:06:33 PM   
jlf1961


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quote:

ORIGINAL: hlen5

"General Ferguson tradition" being pissing on the grave?


Uh, you from the tarheel state? I thought only people linked to that state knew that, and a whole freaking bunch of US soldiers.

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 9:07:54 PM   
BamaD


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961


quote:

ORIGINAL: BamaD


quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

Actually, the army is treating it like a workplace shooting, however the defendant has indicated by his own words it was more than that.

quote:

Major Hasan Explains Hasan sends writings to Fox News ahead of Fort Hood shooting trial Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwhhe84

On the eve of his military trial, accused Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan released seven pages of handwritten and typed documents to Fox News in which he appears to renounce his U.S. citizenship, abandons his military oath as a commissioned officer, and explains his relationship with radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki -- the first American targeted for death by the CIA.

Most of the documents also include the acronym "SoA," which is considered shorthand for "Soldier of Allah." Hasan's business card, also bearing "SoA," was found in his Texas apartment after the shooting.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwnuuyy



Thus, since he said that was his mindset at the time of the shooting, he is an enemy combatant and traitor. Since he was in a US uniform at the time of the shooting, he has no right to trial, and therefore should be shot.

A few of the German troops that were dropped behind American lines during the battle of the bulge wore not German uniforms that they should have been, but American uniforms, and were subsequently shot. Some of those men were actually American citizens who enlisted in the German army.

They should be treating it like an act of terrorism .




I mean he is claiming that was what it was, so, it makes sense to treat him as one, which does give him the right to trial. I prefer they treat him as an enemy combatant in a friendly uniform, no trial, just a shooting, and unmarked grave... okay marked so the General Ferguson tradition could be applied.♦

They poured lye into the casket of the murderer of one President.

< Message edited by BamaD -- 8/3/2013 9:08:48 PM >


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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 9:08:44 PM   
MrBukani


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I salute general Haig.
Hats down for the family.

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 9:40:54 PM   
Powergamz1


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The significant difference was that those German soldiers were in the pay of the German military at the time. Nidal was only in the pay of the US Army, and his uniform and ID were issued, not stolen or forged.

He wasn't in combat, he was a nutjob doing what head cases in the military have done for quite a while, the more recent term for it is 'fragging'. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/%27fragging

His religious rantings now don't make a difference under the UCMJ.


quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

Actually, the army is treating it like a workplace shooting, however the defendant has indicated by his own words it was more than that.

quote:

Major Hasan Explains Hasan sends writings to Fox News ahead of Fort Hood shooting trial Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwhhe84

On the eve of his military trial, accused Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan released seven pages of handwritten and typed documents to Fox News in which he appears to renounce his U.S. citizenship, abandons his military oath as a commissioned officer, and explains his relationship with radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki -- the first American targeted for death by the CIA.

Most of the documents also include the acronym "SoA," which is considered shorthand for "Soldier of Allah." Hasan's business card, also bearing "SoA," was found in his Texas apartment after the shooting.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/08/01/hasan-sends-writings-ahead-fort-hood-shooting-trial/#ixzz2axwnuuyy



Thus, since he said that was his mindset at the time of the shooting, he is an enemy combatant and traitor. Since he was in a US uniform at the time of the shooting, he has no right to trial, and therefore should be shot.

A few of the German troops that were dropped behind American lines during the battle of the bulge wore not German uniforms that they should have been, but American uniforms, and were subsequently shot. Some of those men were actually American citizens who enlisted in the German army.



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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/3/2013 10:33:18 PM   
hlen5


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961


quote:

ORIGINAL: hlen5

"General Ferguson tradition" being pissing on the grave?


Uh, you from the tarheel state? I thought only people linked to that state knew that, and a whole freaking bunch of US soldiers.


Google is my friend.

ETA: And I am a veteran.

< Message edited by hlen5 -- 8/3/2013 10:34:36 PM >


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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/4/2013 10:45:29 AM   
Termyn8or


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quote:

he should have been shot on site.


If they had guns he would have been.

T^T

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/4/2013 10:50:29 AM   
angelikaJ


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There were failures in judgment over and over that allowed this to happen.

When Hasan was at Walter Reed, he was observed to be behaving in ways that suggested he was delusional.
As a psychiatrist he was rated as being terrible at it and reviews said he was often unprofessional.

The FBI had him on their radar because he sent numerous emails to Anwar al-Awlaki.

And now he gets to defend himself and will be questioning those he shot.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=208825134

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/4/2013 1:08:05 PM   
MasterCaneman


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Termyn8or

quote:

he should have been shot on site.


If they had guns he would have been.

T^T

And that's the real crime. When I was in, there were times it seemed the Army was afraid of us being armed anywhere but on the range. More than once, we went on exercises without not only ammo, but the bolts and carriers to our rifles, in case we brought our own with us. We had to road march 160+ miles on public highways, and we were warned about being robbed of our weapons. If we went to a major post (Carson, Lewis, etc.) they made us lock up our rifles in one of the supply trucks and stashed our ammo off-post in case the MPs went snooping.

UCMJ can't touch me now, but each of us had at least one magazine on our persons and there was an ammo can in the cab with more and a belt for the M-60 gunner. And at least half of my battery had snake pistols of some type hidden on their person (we had a major rattler problem on our training area). Our sergeants did this with the tacit permission of the CO. We weren't going to have our weapons taken from us, even if it meant courts-martial. The fact that they didn't issue weapons and ammo to trained soldiers is criminal in my mind.

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/4/2013 1:40:08 PM   
jlf1961


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May I point out that the MP's and civilian LEOs that responded to the incident call were armed. Since witnesses agree he was screaming jihadist remarks, he should have been dropped and bagged right there.

He was armed, he was firing on unarmed troops, so by my reading, the rules of engagement would have allowed for him to be shot as many times as the MP's had ammo.

Considering he killed US soldiers, for execution, I suggest firing squad using the gut shot technique, and leave him screaming till he dies from blood loss.

FYI, once a grunt, always a grunt.

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RE: Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions - 8/4/2013 1:46:56 PM   
hlen5


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jlf1961

May I point out that the MP's and civilian LEOs that responded to the incident call were armed. Since witnesses agree he was screaming jihadist remarks, he should have been dropped and bagged right there.

He was armed, he was firing on unarmed troops, so by my reading, the rules of engagement would have allowed for him to be shot as many times as the MP's had ammo.

Considering he killed US soldiers, for execution, I suggest firing squad using the gut shot technique, and leave him screaming till he dies from blood loss.

FYI, once a grunt, always a grunt.


I agree that he should've been taken out. I think the Atticus Finch method for rabid dogs would have been sufficient.


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