USs soldier guilty of killing Iraqi teen (Agencies) Updated: 2004-12-10 22:59
BAGHDAD, Iraq - A U.S. soldier pleaded guilty at his court-martial Friday to
killing a severely wounded 16-year-old Iraqi, the military said.
Staff Sgt. Johnny M. Horne Jr., 30, of Winston-Salem, N.C., was charged with
the Aug. 18 slaying in Baghdad's Sadr City, the scene of fierce clashes earlier
this year between coalition forces and Shiite rebels allied to firebrand
anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
Horne was expected to be sentenced Friday, the military said.
Horne, a member of Company C, 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry Regiment, Fort
Riley, Kan., also pleaded guilty to a charge of soliciting another soldier to
commit murder.
He is one of six Fort Riley soldiers charged with killings in recent
months ¡ª two for slayings in Kansas and four for deaths in Iraq.
"The convictions stemmed from Staff Sgt. Horne's murder of a severely
wounded Iraqi civilian in Baghdad's Sadr City district," a military statement
said.
Previous military court hearings have heard that several troops fired on
a group of Iraqi men placing homemade bombs along a road in Sadr City, an
impoverished Baghdad neighborhood.
Soldiers from the same battalion arrived on the scene to find a burning
truck and casualties around it.
According to accounts given by witnesses at previous hearings, the
soldiers, including Horne, tried to rescue an Iraqi casualty from inside the
truck. The victim had severe abdominal wounds and burns and was thought by
several of the witnesses to be beyond medical help.
The criminal investigator had said that the U.S. soldiers had decided
that "the best course of action was to put (the victim) out of his misery."
Another military hearing into a soldier charged with killing another
Iraqi in a separate August incident in Sadr City is expected to continue Friday.
Sgt. Michael P. Williams, 25, of Memphis, Tenn., faced the opening day of
an Article 32 hearing Thursday charged with premeditated murder, obstruction of
justice and making a false official statement.
Two witnesses gave evidence during the Article 32 hearing, which is the
military equivalent of a grand jury hearing.
Williams is charged in the same case along with Spc. Brent May, 22, of
Salem, Ohio, who faced a two-day hearing this week and is awaiting a ruling on
whether he will be court-martialed, receive a lesser penalty or be acquitted.
Six members of his unit, Company C, 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry
Regiment, from Fort Riley, testified in his case.
Earlier this week in Germany, a U.S. tank company commander accused of
killing a critically injured Iraqi driver for al-Sadr was ordered
court-martialed.
Capt. Rogelio Maynulet, 29, of Chicago, will be tried on charges of
assault with intent to commit murder and dereliction of duty, which carry a
maximum combined sentence of 20 1/2 years, said military spokesman Maj. Michael
Indovina.
During Maynulet's Article 32 hearing, witnesses testified that the driver had
been shot in the head when Maynulet saw him. A fellow officer said Maynulet told
him he then shot the man out of compassion.
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