Iraq "Fragging" Trial To Open At Ft. Bragg
Staff Sgt. Alberto Martinez To Face Charges Of Murdering Two Senior Officers On Base
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US Army Staff Sgt. Alberto Martinez, silhouetted inside the car at left, arrives at the pre-trial investigation hearing at Camp Arifjan on Oct. 31, 2005, escorted by security officers. (AP)
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Numerous delays in the case against Staff Sgt. Alberto B. Martinez have frustrated the widows of Capt. Phillip Esposito and 1st Lt. Louis Allen, both killed when a mine detonated outside their room in 2005. The trial judge has pledged to hear testimony on holidays and weekends, but the case is still expected to run through the end of the year.
"I never imagined that it would take more than three years to bring him to trial," said Esposito's wife, Siobhan, who along with Allen's wife has attended every hearing. "My life irrevocably changed. In an instant, I became a single parent and had to balance raising our daughter on my own while seeking justice for Phillip's murder."
Martinez, 41, of Troy, New York, is accused of planting the anti-personnel mine that detonated on June 7, 2005, in a window just outside the officers' room at Saddam Hussein's Water Palace in Tikrit. The officers died the next day.
Killing a superior was known as "fragging" during the Vietnam War. At an earlier hearing in Kuwait, a witness testified Martinez had said twice that he disliked Esposito and was going to "frag" him.
Defense attorneys have said in court there is no evidence linking Martinez to the killings. They also have said he was charged because of his feud with Esposito, a by-the-book West Point graduate who took over a relaxed National Guard unit. Witnesses have testified the two clashed over the sergeant's performance as supply officer.
The Army reported hundreds of "fragging" incidents between 1969 and 1971, but only four soldiers have been court-martialed or charged with killing a fellow soldier since the Iraq war began in 2003.
It's a troubling case from a military perspective because it goes to the concept of good order and discipline. This is why the military is seeking the death penalty.
Greg Rinckey, Former Army lawyerCBS News correspondent Jim Krasula reports this is the first case of "fragging" in Iraq for the U.S. military. Martinez was reportedly unhappy after poor appraisals of his performance as a supply sergeant, adds Krasula.
Esposito, 30, of Suffern, New York, worked as an information technology manager in Manhattan and was Martinez's company commander. Allen, 34, of Milford, Pennsylvania, was a high school science teacher and the company operations officer. The Espositos had a young daughter, and the Allens had four young sons.
Prosecutors also charged Martinez with illegally giving government printers and copiers to an Iraqi, and illegally possessing a firearm, alcohol and explosives. Those charges won't be heard during this court martial.
Bringing Martinez to trial has been an arduous process, as defense attorneys spent countless hours trying to eliminate a possible death sentence. They won postponements, but failed to escape a capital trial.
The court martial is taking place at the sprawling North Carolina base because it's where the commander in charge of ground forces in Iraq at the time of the blast was based. The Army has set up a closed-circuit television feed at West Point in New York, but Allen and Esposito's widows are spending thousands to rent apartments and attend the trial in person.
Both women are expected to be among the first witnesses called by prosecutors.
"I can be in the courtroom and represent Lou," Barbara Allen said. "I can work to use this case to teach others what went wrong, and maybe prevent it from happening again. For me that is like finishing Lou's mission for him."
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- If all they have are people who state that they didn''t like each other, then how can they convict him.? Hear say is inadmissible in court. I hope they have better then that. In which case then a firing squad is more then enough.
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- "Staff Sgt. Alberto Martinez To Face Charges Of Murdering Two Senior Officers On Base"
Are superiors dead and the fingers pointing at this guy?
Than he''s guilty. - Reply to this comment
- It is also possible that the Tillman case was one such "fragging".
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Gee, all because he didn''t like them.
Reminds me of John Wesley Hardin, who killed one guy, for snoring too loudly.......zzzzzzzzz- Reply to this comment




