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2015-06-20 Home Front: WoT
Jury recommends no extra prison for Marine who killed Iraqi
[Rudaw] CAMP PENDLETON, Caliphornia, an impregnable bastion of the Democratic Party, -- A military jury ruled Thursday that a Marine sergeant twice convicted of murdering an Iraqi civilian get no additional prison time beyond the roughly seven years he has already served for the crime.

The decision came just a day after the same jury convicted Lawrence Hutchins III, 31, of unpremeditated murder in the 2006 killing in Hamdania, Iraq, and brought an overnight emotional swing for Hutchins and his family.

"Right now, I think they are ecstatic because he's going home," defense attorney Christopher Oprison said. "Him going home is all that matters. We got a sentence we can live with."

Oprison said Hutchins' 11-year-old daughter had "a tremendous impact" on jurors. Kylie Hutchins told them she lived seven years of "sheer terror" without her father around and said she wanted better for her two younger siblings.

"They don't deserve what I have. They deserve better, and they always will," she said.

The recommendation isn't the final word -- the trial's convening authority, Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie Jr., can accept or reduce the sentence in the coming weeks.

Under military law, unpremeditated murder is a lesser charge than premeditated murder.

The jurors also recommended Hutchins get a bad-conduct discharge, which is less serious than a dishonorable discharge, and that his rank be reduced to private.

Hutchins had appealed to the jurors to spare him earlier Thursday, saying that he had "ice in my veins" during the thick of war and that he now regrets what he did.

He spoke haltingly at times and wiped his arms over his eyes during a long, emotional account of his killing of a 52-year-old Iraqi policeman in 2006 in the village of Hamdania.

"If I could go back and do it all over again, I would not have done this," Hutchins told jurors one day after he was convicted a second time in one of the military's longest-running war-crime cases.

The lead prosecutor, Marine Maj. Adam Workman, told jurors the conviction was "not about questioning a Marine's decision in the heat of battle. ... This is about the wholesale abandonment of moral prowess."

"This is not about killing. This is about murder," Workman said.

Another Hutchins attorney, Marine Capt. E.J. Skoczenski acknowledged his client made a "terrible, terrible decision," but said "he's paid his debt to society, he's been rehabilitated, there's no need for any additional punishment."

Hutchins, of Plymouth, Massachusetts, thought he had already won his freedom after two military courts threw out his murder conviction in a 2007 trial because of legal errors, but the Navy was allowed to retry the case.
Posted by trailing wife 2015-06-20 00:00|| || Front Page|| [4 views ]  Top

#1 You treat your military like shit, you get shit for a military. Iraq was just Baltimore to the tune of 4 trillion $.
Posted by g(r)omgoru 2015-06-20 02:42||   2015-06-20 02:42|| Front Page Top

#2 It took them 8 *years* to finally try this and get a verdict? That smells political, no matter how you view it.
Posted by OldSpook 2015-06-20 14:51||   2015-06-20 14:51|| Front Page Top

#3 It's always political.
Posted by Pappy 2015-06-20 15:07||   2015-06-20 15:07|| Front Page Top

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