Steven Green Spared Death Penalty For Iraqi Rape, Murders

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BRETT BARROUQUERE | May 21, 2009 11:36 PM EST | AP

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US marshals take former 101st Airborne Division Pfc. Steven Dale Green of Midland, Texas, out the back of the court building after Green got life in prison Thursday May 21, 2009 in Paducah, Ky. Green who was convicted of raping and killing an Iraqi teen and murdering her family was spared the death penalty Thursday and will serve a life sentence after jurors couldn't agree unanimously on a punishment. (AP Photo/ Daniel R. Patmore)

PADUCAH, Ky. — An ex-soldier convicted of raping and killing an Iraqi teen and murdering her family was spared the death penalty Thursday after jurors couldn't agree on a punishment for the brutal crime.

Steven Dale Green, 24, of Midland, Texas, will instead serve a life sentence in a case that has drawn attention to the emotional and psychological strains on soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In March 2006, after an afternoon of card playing, sex talk and drinking Iraqi whiskey, Pfc. Green and three other soldiers went to the home of 14-year-old Abeer Qassim al-Janabi near Mahmoudiya, about 20 miles south of Baghdad. Green shot and killed the teen's mother, father and sister, then became the third soldier to rape the girl before shooting her in the face.

Federal jurors who convicted Green of rape and murder on May 7 told the judge they couldn't agree on the appropriate sentence after deliberating for more than 10 hours over two days. Their choices were a death sentence or life in prison without parole. Since they could not unanimously agree on either sentence, life in prison had to be the verdict.

"It's the better of two bad choices," said his father, John Green, who sighed as the verdict was read.

His son will be sentenced Sept. 4 by U.S. District Judge Thomas B. Russell.

Green's attorneys never denied his involvement in the attack, instead focusing on building a case that he didn't deserve the death penalty. Former Marines and other soldiers with whom Green served testified that he faced an unusually stressful combat tour in Iraq in a unit that suffered heavy casualties and didn't receive sufficient Army leadership while serving in Iraq's "Triangle of Death."

Jurors declined to comment as they were escorted out of the courthouse.

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According to the jury verdict forms they filled out, several said the stress Green was under from combat and other factors in his life was a mitigating factor toward him not being sentenced to death. Just as many said that the Army knowing he was having homicidal thoughts yet still returning him to the field also was a mitigator.

Some mitigators for several jurors also included his bad home life, not being tried in a military court like the rest of the defendants and that he was under the influence of superiors during the attack.

The issue of combat stress resulting from long and traumatic deployments came to the forefront again just as Green's trial was entering the sentencing phase in Kentucky. Thousands of miles away in Iraq, an Army sergeant on his third tour of duty allegedly entered a military mental health clinic on May 11 and opened fire on his comrades, killing five of them, including a doctor who helped soldiers deal with stress.

Green had been deployed for about six months when he attacked the family. During that time, however, enemy attacks killed two command sergeants, a lieutenant and a specialist in Green's unit over 12 days in December 2005. Jurors also were told that Green's unit was left alone to run a traffic checkpoint for several weeks without a break.

However, the defense also argued there was a lack of military leadership in the unit.

And the defense said Green was seen by Army mental health professionals who listened to him about his desire to kill Iraqi civilians after several fellow soldiers were killed. A nurse practitioner sent him back to his unit with a sleep aide after he showed no signs of planning to act on his thoughts, she testified.

The trial was held in western Kentucky because Green was a member of the 101st Airborne Division, based at Fort Campbell, Ky.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Marisa Ford said in a statement that prosecutors have "the utmost respect" for the jury's decision.

"This trial represents some of the most important principles of our Constitution and our democracy in action," Ford said. "The decision of how justice would be best served was left to the people."

One of Green's attorneys, Darren Wolff of Louisville, said his client twice offered to plead guilty, but the U.S. Justice Department refused amid international pressure for a conviction.

"Mr. Green will spend the rest of his life in jail and the events of March 12, 2006, have forever changed the lives of many," Wolff said. "It is a tragic case on so many levels."

His brother, Doug Green, 26, said the jury reached the appropriate decision.

"I do think it gives him a chance to have some semblance of a life," he said. "We're grateful for that."

___

Associated Press Writer Kristin M. Hall contributed to this report.

PADUCAH, Ky. — An ex-soldier convicted of raping and killing an Iraqi teen and murdering her family was spared the death penalty Thursday after jurors couldn't agree on a punishment for the brut...
PADUCAH, Ky. — An ex-soldier convicted of raping and killing an Iraqi teen and murdering her family was spared the death penalty Thursday after jurors couldn't agree on a punishment for the brut...
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- Dolmance I'm a Fan of Dolmance 25 fans permalink

Imagine how this must look to the Iraqi people. Imagine how it must look to all Arabs and all Muslims. Oh, hell! Imagine how it looks to the whole world. This says, and rightly so, that Americans do not value the life of an Arab or Muslims child as important as the life of any other child.

Americans will die in Iraq because that jury of morally bankrupt imbeciles who didn't have the common sense and decency to execute this rapist and murderer of children.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 PM on 05/23/2009
- wilray I'm a Fan of wilray 72 fans permalink
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The movie that I mentioned in a previous post was entitled "End of The Spear." It is the true story of Steve Saint and his father Nate Saint, one of five murdered Christian missionaries. It is a powerful story of the power of forgiveness. There was controversy in the Christian community because Chad Allen, the actor who portrays Nate and the adult Steve, is openly gay. Steve Saint himself said that God indicated that Chad Allen was the proper choice. There is a similar movie surrounding the same incidences entitled "Beyond the Gates of Splendor." I am putting both of the movies on my viewing list.

http://www.nndb.com/people/641/000108317/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End_of_the_Spear
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beyond_the_Gates_of_Splendor
http://www.hollywoodjesus.com/movie/beyond_gates_splendor/notes.pdf

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 PM on 05/22/2009
- tfred I'm a Fan of tfred 5 fans permalink
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This Left leaning Liberal thinks the jerk got exactly what he deserves. He will serve the next 50 or 60 years rotting in a jail cell, that is if he isn't killed by a muslim. It will save the public a lot of money as there won't be the required very expensive appeals that come along with a death sentence. He will be spending 23 hours a day in his cell with just an hour out for exercise. But his brother is right, he will have a lot more of a life than the 14 year old child he raped and shot in the face.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:26 PM on 05/22/2009
- Dolmance I'm a Fan of Dolmance 25 fans permalink

You're wrong. He'll become institutionalized within five years, if he's not already from time spent in jail since his arrest. He'll hook up with a bunch of white supremacists who think murdering non Aryans is cool and he'll have a long, happy life impressing his idiot gang member friends and will amuse himself by tyrannizing other prisoners.

That jury had a responsibility to give him the worst punishment on the books. If that had only been life in prison, it would have been okay. But the worst punishment on the books is death, and this tells the Iraqi people that a rapist and murderer of Iraqi children isn't worthy of our worst punishment.

This will result in more American deaths. And I'm getting a migraine just thinking about it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 05/23/2009
- 1Troubles I'm a Fan of 1Troubles 2 fans permalink

put him in the same cell as Green, let's see which one survives

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:37 PM on 05/22/2009
- bestealth I'm a Fan of bestealth 7 fans permalink

Gotta love the defense, he had members of his platoon (or whatever ) killed while illegally invading another country and they had the gall to fight back so, by God, what'ya gonna do?
Rape a child.
Men....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:32 PM on 05/22/2009
- wilray I'm a Fan of wilray 72 fans permalink
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I read a story of a fellow who's father went on a mission to the Amazon. On the mission his father was murdered by an indigenous person. This happened when he was a boy, so he mostly grew up without a father. When he was old enough he went to the same place in the Amazon, and found the man who murdered his father. He forgave him. Not only did he forgive him, he befriended him. Not only that, he practically adopted him like a father and brought him to America. I know he is Christian; I think he may also be a minister. He wrote his story and I believe they made a movie about it - but the name escapes me.

I saw a video of a woman who survived The Rwandan genocide of the Hutus by the Tutsis. Almost her entire family was slaughtered. Yet she forgave the men who slaughtered them. I even saw her serve dinner to the very same men who slaughtered her family. When interviewed they asked her why did she forgive the men. She simply stated that she was a Christian.

Many people talk the talk, but very few walk the walk.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:35 PM on 05/22/2009

I suppose this will be your chance to "walk the walk:" you can be his pen pal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:47 PM on 05/22/2009
- wilray I'm a Fan of wilray 72 fans permalink
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I am not a Christian.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 PM on 05/22/2009

With all do respect---perhaps you should read up on the history of Christianity and the crimes against humanity it is responsible for?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:48 PM on 05/22/2009
- wilray I'm a Fan of wilray 72 fans permalink
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I totally agree regarding the crimes of Christianity. But that's not the point that I was making. My latest in a litany of crimes committed by the Christian community or in the name of Christ is the crime of the Castrati. I had never heard of this until past week.

Matt 18:6 But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.

The way this is punctuated this would read as harming Christian children. However, given the punctuation problems of the original text, it could be Christians who harm children.

Either way it doesn't look good for Christians who were complicit in the mutilation of prepubescent boys. This practice was done solely to create "angelic" voices in adult males. Many thousands of boys were maimed and killed over several centuries, and the complicity went all the way up to the papacy.

http://www.essortment.com/all/castratihistory_rzna.htm

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:55 PM on 05/22/2009
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 131 fans permalink
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My God, the front page photo here on Hufpo... The guy looks like a young Glenn Beck!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:30 PM on 05/22/2009
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I guess I just don't understand why we have the death penalty if terrorists like this aren't executed. He and his collaborators should be handed over to the Iraqis.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 05/22/2009
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If someone came to the US from another country and committed a crime of this nature, they would stand trial in the US. This punk should have been turned over to the Iraqis to stand trial. It is indefensible that tax-payer dollars will be used to house and feed this guy for decades to come.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 05/22/2009
- 1Troubles I'm a Fan of 1Troubles 2 fans permalink

I agree completely
I get tired of poor childhood as an excuse for everything

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:34 PM on 05/22/2009
- v eyepete I'm a Fan of v eyepete 29 fans permalink

I am sorry. I can not go for any of this. I know that showing mercy is the positive side of things. I am sorry I can not be that holy. What this guy did brings shame on us all. This crime, if not in a far off place, would have happened KY at any given moment. This is a horror crime that tells of what is rotten with us and our culture. 3 other guys willingly went for the plan. Three men to one young girl. They killed helpless and innocent people for sexual gratification. What a horror. This is a horror crime not foreign to our shores. This is what is rotten with our culture of material gain, empty and lost family life, the 24/7 around the clock life with no respite from the grind. Making money and making the most is the only important thing. It breeds these sort of crimes and we exported that ugliness to other countries while heralding our saving of this nation. How utterly sad and embarrassing. Having him eaten in prison will be the only justice possible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:14 PM on 05/22/2009
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 236 fans permalink

This man reared somewhere in KY did not consider these innocent people, innocent children human because they did not "look" like him (them) .. but yet, they decided to use the horrific acts of r ape to demonstrate their power over a "child" ... the more I think about this the more disgusted I am !!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 05/22/2009

One of many thoughts which stay with me from days of reporting on this incident, which I cannot shake, although I wish that I could, is that the members of this family, on their last day on earth, in their last moments on earth, in their final glimpse of earth, saw the face of Steven Green. That just haunts me. Then there is the image of the family's two sons, returning from school, finding their home smoking, their parents, their sisters, inside, their brains and their blood all over the walls of the home they had shared, standing outside, holding hands, sobbing. That is an image is burned into me.
War is dehumanizing us as a species, individual by individual, hundreds of millions of times over; whatever this brutal and wholly unnecessary conflict has not achieved, it has accomplished that, to the detriment of the entire human race.
Gail McGowan Mellor's reporting on this trial has been exemplary throughout; that so many images from the commission of this unspeakable crime, rendered in such exacting detail from testimony in the courtroom, continue to haunt me and, I suspect, not a few others, demonstrates that writing, guided by the deep humanity of the writer, can shake us to our core, awakening compassion in the awareness of our common humanity. When we have lost that, we will have, finally, lost everything.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 05/22/2009
- RuffNReddy I'm a Fan of RuffNReddy 9 fans permalink
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That kid looks so smug in that photo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 05/22/2009
- synergie I'm a Fan of synergie 2 fans permalink

He really does. But the he got away with multiple premeditated murders and the rape of a child. I can't help wondering what kind of racist morons were on this jury.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 05/22/2009
- marco01 I'm a Fan of marco01 213 fans permalink
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He did not get away with it. He got life in prison.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:34 PM on 05/22/2009
- power1 I'm a Fan of power1 4 fans permalink

If we ever catch Osama Bin Laden, should he be executed?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 05/22/2009
- Annoula I'm a Fan of Annoula 13 fans permalink

And your point is?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 05/22/2009
- 11907281 I'm a Fan of 11907281 14 fans permalink
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You know what the point is, you refuse to acknowledge it because of it's ramifications.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:18 PM on 05/22/2009
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Nope.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 05/22/2009
- gladys46 I'm a Fan of gladys46 236 fans permalink

Didn't I hear GW say that he was not concerned about where OBL was !!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:21 PM on 05/22/2009
- Bouddicca I'm a Fan of Bouddicca 11 fans permalink
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Peanut...a­re we catching him on a street in Burlington Vermont or in a cave in Pakistan?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 PM on 05/22/2009
- Ennealogic I'm a Fan of Ennealogic 4 fans permalink
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OBL is not wanted for 9/11. He's not been to trial and proved guilty of anything, in fact, though he may well have run camps to train fighters. Remember OBL was our guy for a long time -- we propped up his troupe because we wanted USSR to fail in Afghanistan.

And no, even if he were guilty of something as obscene and horrific as what this soldier did, he should not be executed. I do not believe that is ever our right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 05/22/2009
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ObL was in a US military hospital just days before the WTC attacks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 PM on 05/22/2009
- chonus I'm a Fan of chonus 17 fans permalink
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So, is the "other side" now justified in torturing Americans or American soldiers in order to extract information?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 05/22/2009
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I'm absolutely against the death penalty... it doesn't matter how vile the person, or his actions. It's just wrong. People who support the death penalty are wrong. This whole concept of "closure" is wrong. Crimes like these should not simply have a line drawn under them, dispose of the criminal and move on.

Spending the rest of his life in a US prison is hardly "getting away with it". We don't have to execute him for justice to be served. He'll have plenty of time to consider his crime, and it won't be pleasant. We don't have to torture or kill him.

Justice to my mind is about repentance. Sending an unrepentant man to his death is a meaningless gesture. No different to slaughtering a cow for food. I doubt whether there are many men who serve 50 or 60 years in a maximum security prison who die without showing some remorse for their crimes.

That's what real justice means.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 PM on 05/22/2009
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Thank you special muppet for your post. Even those who have apparently lost their humanity, such as this individual, can often gain it back.
I would hope this person gets the support he needs to regain what he has lost. Then and only then will his punishment begin.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 05/22/2009
- jeplanet I'm a Fan of jeplanet 40 fans permalink
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I agree with your post completely.
It's not that I don't think he "deserves" to die. I just don't think it makes a horrible situation any better. It just produces even more victims. And the death penalty is clearly not a deterent of any caliber. Let him spend the next 50 years thinking about what he did. That's real punishment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 05/22/2009
- v eyepete I'm a Fan of v eyepete 29 fans permalink

And if he did this to your sister and parents and you found them burned and bloodied, good you be this understanding?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:16 PM on 05/22/2009
- synergie I'm a Fan of synergie 2 fans permalink

I'd much rather that he was sentenced to a hard labor camp, rather than some cushy prison. The perhaps he can do something productive rather than thinking about what he did wrong like the bad boy he is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 05/22/2009
- Dolmance I'm a Fan of Dolmance 25 fans permalink

It's easy to be against the death penalty when it's somebody else's kid who was raped and murdered. And it says something about an empathy deficit on the part of people who pontificate about Capital Punishment, no matter how sympathetic they might think they are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 PM on 05/23/2009
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