Marines Take Risks With Deadly Trust-Building Game

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EMERY P. DALESIO | 09/11/09 05:06 PM | AP

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In an undated photo provided by the family of Lance Cpl. Patrick Malone, Malone is seen. North Carolina-based Cpl. Mathew Nelson has pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter after shooting Malone to death in a game intended to show the comrades trusted each other. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Malone Family)

RALEIGH, N.C. — Lance Cpl. Patrick Malone was relaxing on his bunk at an Iraqi combat base when a direct superior interrupted his late-night movie.

It was time for a game Marines sometimes play to build confidence in colleagues: Point a gun at a comrade and ask, "Do you trust me?"

Cpl. Mathew Nelson raised his weapon – and the 9 mm pistol went off, striking Malone in the head. The higher-ranking Marine rushed to the wounded man's side and tried to perform CPR, but Malone was mortally wounded.

The game, which has cropped up in barracks across Iraq and Afghanistan, is supposed to make a serviceman feel comfortable enough with a comrade that he would stare into the other Marine's gun barrel. But it violates the military's basic weapon-safety rules.

"I can't believe the Marines, these professional soldiers, are playing these games," said Damian Malone, father of the slain 21-year-old.

The younger Malone "was willing to put his life on the line every day, and when he came back to his unit he wasn't supposed to have to worry about his safety."

On Thursday, Nelson pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and seven counts of reckless endangerment for the shooting at Combat Outpost Viking in Anbar province just before midnight on March 9.

Nelson, 25, of Dearborn Heights, Mich., was sentenced Thursday to eight years in Camp Lejeune's brig, demoted to the lowest rank in the Marines and given a bad-conduct discharge.

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"From the beginning, my client has been eaten up with remorse," said Vaughan Taylor, a civilian lawyer who represented Nelson.

Taylor said the two Marines had finished the trust game, and Nelson turned away. His subordinate, from Ocala, Fla., called out to tell him he was going to attend to the unit's vehicles outside.

The corporal turned back, pulling the trigger on the weapon he didn't know was loaded, Taylor said.

The game typically begins when one service member partially inserts a bullet magazine into the handle of a pistol and pretends to pull back the gun's slide to make it appear that the weapon is ready to fire.

He then points the weapon at a fellow service member before either pulling the trigger or lowering the gun. Typically, even if he pulls the trigger the weapon will not discharge because a bullet is not in the chamber.

"When you give high-powered weapons to young men, once in a while bad things are going to happen," said Gary Solis, a retired Marine lieutenant colonel and attorney who teaches on the law of armed conflict at West Point and Georgetown.

"You have young men, bored, killing time with a gun. That's not a good mix," Solis said. "I don't think the Marines have any corner on this. I think it happens in the civilian community as well."

The Marine Corps Times reported this week that the game had similar deadly end in 2007, when a Kentucky Army National Guardsman shot and killed a fellow soldier.

The guardsman who fired the fatal shot later said he learned to play from other members of his unit while deployed to Iraq in 2006.

Damian Malone believes his son's unit hid the game from their superiors and claimed they were building trust within the team. But the practice amounts to a form of hazing that should be wiped out of the military, he said.

Patrick Malone joined the Marines in 2007 after a year at the University of South Florida and another year at a community college closer to home. He went to Iraq in October 2008 as an anti-tank missileman.

"I guess there's a little closure on this because you meet who this guy was and you see what happened," Damian Malone said after attending the court-martial with his wife and other family members. "Now we want to expose this game, wherever it is."

RALEIGH, N.C. — Lance Cpl. Patrick Malone was relaxing on his bunk at an Iraqi combat base when a direct superior interrupted his late-night movie. It was time for a game Marines sometimes play...
RALEIGH, N.C. — Lance Cpl. Patrick Malone was relaxing on his bunk at an Iraqi combat base when a direct superior interrupted his late-night movie. It was time for a game Marines sometimes play...
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Oops! Two less guards for the CIA's poppy fields in Afghanistan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 AM on 09/13/2009
- MyTurn2020 I'm a Fan of MyTurn2020 52 fans permalink
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Disturbing stories like this tragedy seem to be happening with too much frequency with our American soldiers. Recall what happened when soldiers got out of control in abu ghraib, not to mention the scores of internal acts of soldier-on-soldier violence like rape, hazing, and torture. Our troops are human beings first and while they're asked to carry out life threatening missions, there is a definite need for in-combat intervention and/or pre-combat support training.

It seems there have been alot of news stories about combat soldiers returning home and attacking their spouses, children, lashing out in general---surely related to combat stress. Some things are stupid (like playing a game w/a loaded gun) and sometimes there are true mental health issues that cannot wait to be addressed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 AM on 09/13/2009
- FZliveson I'm a Fan of FZliveson 86 fans permalink
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The unspoken response from many a jar-head is:
"You can't handle the truth."

(Jarhead; definition: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_origin_of_the_term_'Jarhead'_for_Marines )

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 AM on 09/13/2009
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insanity

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 AM on 09/13/2009

War is stupid....­..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 PM on 09/12/2009
- duxguts I'm a Fan of duxguts 24 fans permalink
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Seems to me that some officers need to be busted over this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 PM on 09/12/2009
- dyldrix I'm a Fan of dyldrix 12 fans permalink

why would an officer not involved be busted for a stupid act by a subordinat­e...you act like the officers in charge encouraged this game or gave direct orders to play it

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 AM on 09/13/2009
- daedelus I'm a Fan of daedelus 36 fans permalink
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This "game" has been going on for at least three years. Are you suggesting that the officers in charge were oblivious to it? If not, and they knew about it, and let it continue, they share a large portion of the blame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 AM on 09/13/2009
- teepeeyoyo I'm a Fan of teepeeyoyo 8 fans permalink
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Help me out here. Why is it guns always seem to accidentally "go off" when they are pointed at someone, yet when they are properly holstered or not pointed at someone they hardly ever do?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 PM on 09/12/2009
- USA2Sense I'm a Fan of USA2Sense 6 fans permalink

Evidently they haven't learned - that life is NOT a video-game - that everyone doesn't get up and walk off - or that resetting the game doesn't bring people back to life.....

Life is not a game - d e a d - i s - d e a d !!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 PM on 09/12/2009
- OlongapoEd I'm a Fan of OlongapoEd 36 fans permalink

Every honest, sensible person *knows* that the command structure could, if it wanted to, institute policies to reduce, if not eliminate such behavior without personally overseeing every one of "the troops". Of course, the usual suspects don't want to acknowledge that and will throw out a lot of red herrings, rhetorical fallacies, etc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:34 PM on 09/12/2009
- teepeeyoyo I'm a Fan of teepeeyoyo 8 fans permalink
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I don't like to make assumptions, but having served 20+ years in the military, I can tell you there are policies and orders in place to combat this type of behavior. There will ALWAYS be a few who will go against policy. Example: The tacking on of "wings" or other insignia on the chest is unauthorized, but do you think it still happens? Absolutely it does. That in no way equates to this tragedy, but the point is, people know better but they still engage in unauthorized "hazing" or deadly activities because it was done in the past.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 PM on 09/12/2009

Absolutely and the reason it continues is because it is excepted and not dealt with they know how to deal with it they choose not to, because this is the way it is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 09/13/2009

Right on!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 09/13/2009
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Jarheads are jerks. Every last one of them. This has been true for 100 years or more.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 PM on 09/12/2009
- instarx I'm a Fan of instarx 21 fans permalink
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Tell that to my Marine father who received a Purple Heart and battlefield commendation for crawling along a ridgeline on Iwo Jima to lay communication line under direct enemy fire. You aren't speaking Japanese today because of him. How dare you call him a jerk.

You are pathetic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 PM on 09/12/2009
- samjung23 I'm a Fan of samjung23 10 fans permalink

I agree.

Don't bring up the "My father served..." blah blah. I've heard it all, it doesn't impress me.

We're talking about the mentality of these people, and how Americans treat them. The Marines are a cult.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 PM on 09/12/2009
- dyldrix I'm a Fan of dyldrix 12 fans permalink

a cult that has saved r butts time and again...th­ank you to all our military men and women for their service

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 09/12/2009
- ICorpsDoc I'm a Fan of ICorpsDoc 17 fans permalink

The Marines are indeed a cult. They see themselves as better than others. Better fighters. Harder fighters. They actually think they are the best.

Why do they feel this way?

They have earned the right to feel this way

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 AM on 09/14/2009

My husband is a Marine that fought in the first Gulf War, he is the most wonderful husband in the world as far as I am concerned, don't put everyone in your basket. Yes we have problem, yes it needs to be fixed, but not all are bad. We have spent a lot of time and energy trying to get someone to see the dangers and what is happening to our young men and women putting their lives on the line. My husband and the guys he went to war with would not have ever played these games, they took care of each other, he is amazed at how stupid and crazy these games have become. But, these troops today alot of them are out of control, but remember that they see this done by their superiors so they deem it ok. If you get caught like the young man who's weapon went off they say they don't condone it, but they do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 09/13/2009
- ICorpsDoc I'm a Fan of ICorpsDoc 17 fans permalink

These stupid games have been played in one form or another in every conflict. At least by a few anyway. It happened in WW2 WW1 Korea VNand Desert Storm.

Maybe your hubby did not see this much in his war because it only lasted 36 hours give or take.

If he had been a grunt. If he was in the combat arms if his war had gone on for years instead of hours he may have see a different war. The kind the kids are seeing in Iraq and AStan today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 09/14/2009
- OlongapoEd I'm a Fan of OlongapoEd 36 fans permalink

I have no doubt that this sort of thing will continue to happen because the command structure can't be "bothered" to prevent this sort of behavior.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 PM on 09/12/2009
- SinisterK9 I'm a Fan of SinisterK9 5 fans permalink
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How exactly can the CoC make sure every last Soldier, Sailor, Airman, and Marine on the battlefield obeys any and all rules at all times?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:12 PM on 09/12/2009
- instarx I'm a Fan of instarx 21 fans permalink
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The Commander? This is a failure of the Command Structure, not just of a Commander. Just as at Abu Graib, the non-coms and lower ranking officers should have put a stop to it - that is their job - to interact with the individual soldiers. THAT'S how the command structure puts a stop to it. It's the way the military is supposed to work. That this happened is exactly the fault of the commandrs who did not see to it that it was stopped.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 PM on 09/12/2009
- dyldrix I'm a Fan of dyldrix 12 fans permalink

what should command do...take away the MARINES Weapons?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 PM on 09/12/2009

You see this lack of discipline INSIDE the military. Now consider the lack of discipline combined with lack of accountability in the ranks of the contractors. The military-industrial complex has gone too far. Bring the troops home and let's remember that it's called the Department of "Defense." Going halfway around the world to bomb countries then rebuild them is hardly "defense."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 09/12/2009
- samjung23 I'm a Fan of samjung23 10 fans permalink

TRUE TRUE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 PM on 09/12/2009
- poochytown I'm a Fan of poochytown 19 fans permalink

One of my father's friends was a test pilot at Edwards Air Force Base; a totally sober straight arrow who did everything by the book. One day he accidentally fired a gun indoors during a party; shot the knob off the bedpost while showing a friend his new pistol; he thought it wasn't loaded.

Moral: the gun always has the upper hand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 PM on 09/12/2009
- SinisterK9 I'm a Fan of SinisterK9 5 fans permalink
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First rule of weapon safety both in and out of the military:

Treat every weapon as if it's loaded.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:13 PM on 09/12/2009

always

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 AM on 09/13/2009
- poochytown I'm a Fan of poochytown 19 fans permalink

Well, when you isolate a bunch of young guys and train 'em to do nothing buy obey orders, fight and depend on nobody but each other you're just asking for trouble, IMHO.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 09/12/2009
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great game for a bunch of sadists. ok folks, we brain wash our troops while we condemn our enemies brainwashing their fighters. oh yeah, we are on the side of the angels and democracry and are only there for altruisitic purposes, unlike the equally messed up young muslims who fight for god, country and their culture. yeah, i am a pacifist. no one can convince me that even the most noble soldier is not harmed by killing others. such a game like this only shows that we are desensitizing our soldiers and destabilizing them. why are there so many suicides and violent crimes among those service personnel who started off with such good intentions? unfortunately, it is easy for the leaders who have never experienced combat like bush and now obama to send troops to do our dirty work for us without the slightest concern for these good men and women who expose themselves to danger and death for no good reason.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 09/12/2009
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