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Soldier's Father: Army Was Warned Of Murder Plot

GENE JOHNSON   09/ 9/10 09:02 PM ET   AP

Afghanistan Kill Team

SEATTLE — The father of a U.S. soldier serving in Afghanistan says he tried nearly a half dozen times to pass an urgent message from his son to the Army: Troops in his unit had murdered an Afghan civilian, planned more killings and threatened him to keep quiet about it.

By the time officials arrested suspects months later, two more Afghans were dead.

And much to Christopher Winfield's horror, his son Adam was among the five Fort Lewis-based soldiers charged in the killings.

The elder Winfield told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview that his son did not kill the unarmed man and would never have been in the situation if the Army had investigated the warnings he says he passed along to Fort Lewis.

An Army spokeswoman at the base said she could not comment on whether they received such a tip or if so, whether it was acted on. Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said Thursday he had no information about the man's claim.

"That's disheartening to hear if that is indeed the case," he said. "If someone is trying to reach out, trying to notify us, trying to head off a potential problem, that's something we need to pay attention to and heed that warning."

The new details about Winfield's efforts to alert the Army and his son's pleas raised questions about the Army's handling of the case and its system for allowing soldiers to report misconduct by their colleagues.

The soldiers have been accused of conspiracy and premeditated murder in a case marked by grisly details.

The highest-ranking is Staff Sgt. Calvin Gibbs, who, along with Cpl. Jeremy Morlock, is accused of taking part in all three killings. Gibbs collected fingers and other body parts from Afghan corpses, slaughtered animals indiscriminately and hoarded illicitly obtained weapons he could drop near civilian bodies to make them appear to be combatants, according to charges filed by Army prosecutors and statements soldiers in the platoon made to investigators.

Pfc. Andrew Holmes is charged with murder in the first killing, and Spc. Michael Wagnon is charged in another. Both deny the charges.

Winfield is charged with murder in the final killing, and his attorney, Eric Montalvo, insists he was ordered to shoot after Gibbs hit the civilian with a grenade. Winfield deliberately shot high and missed, he said.

Gibbs has denied the charges. His attorney, Phillip Stackhouse, said his client maintains that the shootings were "appropriate engagements" and denies involvement in any conspiracy to kill civilians.

The soldiers, all assigned to the 5th Stryker Brigade, deployed in July 2009 and were stationed at a base in Kandahar Province.

The AP reviewed witness and defendant statements as well as documents filed with an Army magistrate for this report.

Gibbs, 25, of Billings, Mont., arrived in the unit late last year and soon began discussing how easy it would be to kill civilians, some in the platoon told Army investigators. He and Morlock, 22, planned "scenarios" in which they could carry out such killings, they said.

Morlock, of Wasilla, Alaska, gave investigators extensive statements describing the plot.

Morlock's lawyer did not immediately return calls and e-mails from the AP but previously told The Seattle Times that the statements were made under the influence of prescription drugs to treat traumatic brain injuries from explosions and should be suppressed as evidence.

In each of the killings, Morlock said, he and Gibbs planned and initiated the attack and enlisted one other soldier to participate.

The first indication for Christopher Winfield and his wife, Emma, that something was amiss came Jan. 15, the day of the first killing.

"I'm not sure what to do about something that happened out here but I need to be secretive about this," their son wrote them in a Facebook message. The couple gave the AP copies of the Facebook messages, Internet chats and their phone records.

Winfield, 22, of Cape Coral, Fla., didn't immediately provide more details, and over the next month he had little contact with his parents. They said they checked constantly to see if he was online.

On Feb. 14, he told his parents what happened in a lengthy Internet chat: Members of his unit on patrol had killed "some innocent guy about my age just farming." He said he did not witness the killing.

But, he wrote, those involved told him about it and urged him to "get one of my own."

He said that virtually everyone in the platoon was aware of what was going on, but no one seemed to object.

"If you talk to anyone on my behalf, I have proof that they are planning another one in the form of an AK-47 they want to drop on a guy."

He added that he didn't know whom to trust and feared for his safety if his comrades learned he was talking to authorities.

"Should I do the right thing and put myself in danger for it. Or just shut up and deal with it," he wrote his parents. "There are no more good men left here. It eats away at my conscience everyday."

In statements to investigators, at least three platoon members said Gibbs directly threatened Winfield. Morlock added that Gibbs devised "scenarios" for Winfield's death, one of which involved Gibbs dropping heavy weights on him as he was working out.

Gibbs accosted Winfield as he was on his way to speak with a chaplain and warned him to keep quiet, Montalvo said.

Soldiers serving in a combat theater typically would report crimes up the chain of command, to military investigators or chaplains, to members of the Defense Department inspector general's office, or even to another unit if their own commanders are involved.

One soldier, Pfc. Justin A. Stoner, who reported hashish smoking in the unit, said he was beaten by several platoon members. Gibbs and Morlock then paid him a visit, with Gibbs rolling out on the floor a set of severed fingers, he told investigators.

Morlock told him that "if I don't want to end up like that guy ... shut the hell up."

Winfield asked his parents to call an Army hot line because he didn't want anyone to overhear him using the phone.

His father, a Marine veteran, was shocked, and made five calls to military officials that day, his phone records show.

He said he left a message on a Defense Department hot line and called four numbers at Fort Lewis. He said he spoke with an on-duty sergeant and left a message at an Army Criminal Investigations Division office before reaching the base's command center.

In that call, an official told him that if his son wasn't willing to come forward while deployed, there was nothing the base could do, Winfield recalled in interviews with the AP and in a sworn statement to Army investigators.

The official suggested the soldier keep his head down until his deployment ended and investigators could look into his claims, he said.

The elder Winfield told AP he regrets not writing down the identities of those he spoke with. He said he did not give any of them Gibbs' name, but did identify his son. He said one of his son's sergeants had been involved in a civilian's murder and was planning more.

His son soon expressed concern about what would happen if Army officials stateside began making inquiries and asked his dad to back off. The elder Winfield said he complied.

A week later, the second killing occurred. On May 2, the third killing took place.

The killings eventually came to light when the soldier who had reported the drug use told investigators that Morlock "had three prior kills that none of which I believe were actually justified."

Preliminary hearings in the case are expected to begin this fall.

___

Associated Press writers Pauline Jelinek and Anne Gearan in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

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SEATTLE — The father of a U.S. soldier serving in Afghanistan says he tried nearly a half dozen times to pass an urgent message from his son to the Army: Troops in his unit had murdered an Afgha...
SEATTLE — The father of a U.S. soldier serving in Afghanistan says he tried nearly a half dozen times to pass an urgent message from his son to the Army: Troops in his unit had murdered an Afgha...
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
12:30 AM on 10/02/2010
I'm sadly not shocked. My reaction is that it's nothing new. the story doesn't cover how the marine vet dad replied to the guy who told him to advise his son to "keep his head down" and we'll look into it when he comes home...I can only imagine the rest of that conversation, and I hope it went exactly as I imagine it. That's one of the lamest things I've ever heard about the military, so many people just ignoring and looking t he other way. This is getting really desperately dehumanizing, as many of us knew it would. I wonder when it will stop.
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lcelidon
roaring mouth
05:21 AM on 09/13/2010
yep.......and Bin Laden is still hiding in a cave, while they abuse innocent pople....there are cowards and liars on both sides, if he had any compassion for regular people and some humanity, he would surrender to end this nightmare......On the flip side,war economy is booming..Ak's, M16's....and all the rest, arm them, make them think they are fighting for a "great" cause like democracy and/or religion and laugh you're way to the bank......Peace out.....I'm pissed.
12:32 AM on 09/13/2010
modern day war!!! Americans programmed... killing is fun!!! They wont be able to turn it off when they come home.
Best of luck America!!! Me-think's you have already crossed the Rubicon!! I weep for you children yet unborn.
11:07 AM on 09/12/2010
I feel bad for Winfield. He was caught between a rock and a hard place. If he would have told his higher ups he would be returning in a body bag because his "comrades" would have killed him for sure. I hope that the truth will prevail and the true murderers serve their time nd that this kid gets his freedom if he is truly innocent. This is just one of the many ugly faces of war.
07:38 PM on 10/01/2010
There is a facebook page for adam Winfield to show support and donate money for his attorney fees. It's I support Specialist Adam Winfield or you can jst type Adam Winfield into the search bar. Spread the word!!!
07:10 PM on 09/11/2010
COIN warfare is inner battle between dehumanized bestiality against helpless&defenseless as a message to omnipotent unseen one’s unseen tormentor vs. behaving ethically as raised. It's not easy choice after watching many platoon "brothers" one minute watching your back, the next minute flat on their backs with their intestines writhing out of their bellies. Imagine, you're one of few Americans alone amongst many-- most you see (they're insignificant) a few you don't see (Grim Reapers bringing unbearable pain&then finally merciful death). When seeing yours die but never theirs, the helpless looks so much like your tormenters that why not make them into message boards to the unseen? Afterall, the bravado of killing helpless gives courage and may, strangely enough, settle your stomach.

You slimy "ain't my kid going to war" disconnected Americans who'd rather see someone else's kid spare you disgraceful defeat that soldier your nonchalantly sent there ‘s coming home a viscious animal for whom horrible killing is relaxing rather than disturbing. We're losing and losing vets are often crazed animals let loose to roam your streets. You deserve them for you let Bush-it send them intel blind, language deaf and culture dumb into the night. You put into their arms more weapons than their backs could carry. You made them so hate enemy’s men that why not kill their women&kids? Now they'll get you&your kids. You made'em killers!
05:29 AM on 09/11/2010
Until the soldier puts down his rifle and refuses to kill, these illegal wars will never end.

Despite overwhelming popular support to end the illegal wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, the powers that be refuse to honor the wishes of the people. The civilian government has demonstrated that the military runs this country (please don't argue with this); the illegal wars of aggression will not end until the soldiers realize they've been duped just as the opponents of "the mosque at ground zero" have been completely hoodwinked. The NY Oberver reports today that one of Park 51's major financial backers is, wait for it, CIA.

And even when the soldier lays down his rifle that will still not be enough. Every one of these sick sons of bitches who kill and profit from war, death and drugs, must be re-tuned or kept in prison. All the corporations that engage in the killing machine (which is every Wall Street traded firm) also need to be shut down immediately and permanently.

I know it sounds radical but it is the only way the world will ever recover and by world I mean the people of this world. I am reminded of the biblical passages on the destruction of the Earth and I realized that they are metaphors of when the world was a giant cesspool of violent bloodshed that not just the Lord wished for the destruction of man, but the people living here wished the same, as I do.
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DrBlunt
Telling it like it is....
04:52 AM on 09/11/2010
Just dandy!
02:26 PM on 09/10/2010
Am I the only one who suspects the army is court-marshalling Winfield as an attempt to discredit the allegations that they repeatedly ignored his attempts to warn them about the murders?
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03:15 PM on 09/11/2010
Nope, you are certainly not the only one that thinks that. I whole heartedly agree. This is now a HUGE case of CYA and the command is in full swing.

The father holds the key with his phone records and there will be a "log" of some sort detailing his call on the Army's end. The IG and CID should be all over this.

There is one thing about the IG that I was always weary of and that was they had the same patch on thier shoulder as the command....as do the soldier's defense attorneys.
03:57 PM on 09/12/2010
I hope Winfield's father is taking precautions to keep those phone records (and himself) safe.
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
12:38 AM on 10/02/2010
Yeah. That's what the army does best. I still like to think the marines have more integrity but that could be just nostalgic wishful thinking. the army gave us Lt. Calley and My Lai, where over a hundred people went on a rampage, but even then, two or three immediately tried to stop it, and then talked about it to people who took it seriously and pressed charges. Now--well, just look at us now. Aren't we just holding the moral high ground, and doesn't everybody all over the world just envy our position of strength, courage and justice? You bet.
01:32 PM on 09/10/2010
Pentagon spokesman reply's "All's fair in love and war you maggot!" Drop and give me 50!
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11:06 AM on 09/10/2010
Killing takes it's toll. I personally do not believe you can take another life without it affecting your own. War time, any time, period. This is the basic problem with armed conflict, what it does to a person's psyche. All those kids, somebody's sons and daughters, pointing a gun and squeezing a trigger to eradicate somebody else's sons or daughters. Sad.
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
12:39 AM on 10/02/2010
And t hey'll remember what they did, some day. then it gets tragic for them as well as for those they put through this. There are no winners, only losers.
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mjc
Avoid printing any..
10:31 AM on 09/10/2010
"There are no more good men left here..." Is this the real effect of our serial wars? The reaction of those at Fort Lewis only confirms Adam Winfield's conclusion. Lord have mercy.
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EXAbramsMasterGunner
Retired Armor/Cavalry Soldier
09:58 AM on 09/10/2010
Part 1
* First, regardless if this type of behavior has occurred in past conflicts or because this is war, it does not matter. These are criminal acts conducted by criminals wearing a uniform and who should be tried as such.
* These soldiers are a disgrace to all who wear the uniform and serve honorably.
* I want to clarify some of the comments that have been made –
- You usually must have a high school diploma or equivalent to enlist. A small number of non-high shool graduates are allowed to enlist every year.
- Army policy now allows you to enlist with tattoos as long as any on your hands and neck are tasteful and non-offensive.
- You will be required to document every infraction you have ever had. A couple of parking or speeding tickets are probably no big deal. More serious traffic offenses and misdemeanors can receive a moral waiver if you can convince someone that your life of crime is done. Felonies will probably not receive a waiver. Waivers have occurred and we have not been enlisting all crime-free civilians.

http://www.armydomain.com/info/usa/eligibility
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Salfana
Concerned citizen
03:00 PM on 09/10/2010
You just omitted this part on your plea for the army. "The father of a U.S. soldier serving in Afghanistan says he tried nearly a half dozen times to pass an urgent message from his son to the Army: Troops in his unit had murdered an Afghan civilian, planned more killings and threatened him to keep quiet about it. By the time officials arrested suspects Months later, two more Afghans were dead."

So the failing of the army to act quickly goes upper into command and not only the horrible acts of one unit. This is the cover-up mentality of the army that in many cases turn a blind eye. If the upper command had reacted quickly react to the father many alerts this would not have gone that far. Instead, we get two more Afghans deaths, and some soldiers of that unit waring parts of their bodies on them.
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EXAbramsMasterGunner
Retired Armor/Cavalry Soldier
04:23 PM on 09/10/2010
Depending upon whom the father talked/contacted, then you are correct that those people involved from the bottom up are also negligent for not acting quickly and preventing any more murders. I also am not 'pleading' for the Army. When it's wrong, it's wrong. The covering up or protecting of an individual, institution, or organization is not confined to the military. This same covering up can be found in almost every organization. Unfortunately, the more power, money, stature, or rank and individual has, gives them the ability to bury the bad and expound upon the good. That is why it is so important that everyone stand up for what is right.
04:04 PM on 09/12/2010
I work with troubled/at risk teens, I can can tell you that recruiters here in S Fl grab up kids who are not HS grads, do not have average IQ scores, have mental illness and yes "distasteful" tats. In fact, recruiters pull strings to get them into the Army, despite whatever the "rules" may be.It's all about needing to meet outrageous "quots" for cannonfodder, IMO.
I imagine it may change some now that the "no jobs" economy so conveniently forces young people to look to the military as a way to earn a living (or a death).
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EXAbramsMasterGunner
Retired Armor/Cavalry Soldier
09:58 AM on 09/10/2010
Part 2
* Even though the SSG was the highest ranking soldier involved, a good Platoon Sergeant (E7) or First Sergeant (E8) always knows whats going on in the unit. Either they were not really paying attention to what is going on or were not trusted enough for them to come forward and talk to them. Leadership was definitely missing in this unit.
* This is not an issue of ‘left vs right’ – this is about criminals. Period. No matter what profession you go into, there are and will always be people who do horrendous things. These soldiers have no excuse; they were wrong and should never be allowed to be free again.
* For those who say you need college to get promoted, that is not completely correct. When you want to go to the senior NCO ranks (E7 through E9), it is very competitive and having college credits or a degree will help you. But there are many other criterias that must be met and this includes leadership time, staff time, earning additional skills, etc.
02:00 PM on 09/10/2010
btw...these men were caught in the act....how many other incidents are unheard of...God only knows
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
12:47 AM on 10/02/2010
I appreciate and value the insight of your experience. I hope my comment above didn't seem like it was disrespectful of the honorable people in all branches of the service, but only was meant to reflect on mine. When I went to Vietnam, we passed through staging battalion in Camp Pendleton, and while we were there we were required to take what seemed like a lengthy course (a couple of hours, probably, but it was intense) explaining to us so it could not be misunderstood...that if we went over the line--like these guys did, several times, each, it sounds like--then we were going to jail. Period, exclamation point, with certainty, just going to jail. And some people did, and some got away with things. But there were no excuses, everybody knew. I get the sense that there is an entirely different culture going on here that neither you nor I understand. I posted something about my idea that service was honorable no matter what the war, no matter what the generation...and some young guys, I imagine, tried to disillusion me by saying, basically..."naaah. they'er pretty much thugs". I didn't respond to that last line, but my thought was....how tragic for all of us, then.
09:49 AM on 09/10/2010
I would not be surprised if this is just the tip of the iceberg. War brings out the worse in people. With little enforcement and a lot of chaos, there are likely be a lot more army pyschos out there.
04:10 PM on 09/12/2010
These war damaged men and women will be returning home someday (if not killed over there). Already significantly increased rates of domestic abuse, murders, assaults, suicides and alcohol and drug abuse are being reported in those who have already returned.

How will we help them? What impact do you think they will have on society?
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AMizrachi
08:35 AM on 09/10/2010
I find it slightly ironic that Morlock is from Wasilla, Alaska.
12:24 PM on 09/10/2010
Or that PFC Stoner was smoking hash.
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
12:48 AM on 10/02/2010
I admit I liked both of those concepts myself.