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Jeremy Morlock, U.S. Soldier, Sentenced To 24 Years In Prison After Pleading Guilty To Murders Of 3 Afghans

Jeremy Morlock

ROBIN HINDERY   03/23/11 10:34 PM ET   AP

JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — A U.S. soldier who pleaded guilty Wednesday to the murders of three Afghan civilians was sentenced to 24 years in prison after saying "the plan was to kill people" in a conspiracy with four fellow soldiers.

Military judge Lt. Col. Kwasi Hawks said he initially intended to sentence Spc. Jeremy Morlock to life in prison with possibility of parole but was bound by the plea deal.

Morlock, the first of five soldiers from the 5th Stryker Brigade to be court-martialed in the case, will receive 352 days off of his sentence for time served and could be eligible for parole in about seven years, said his lead attorney, Frank Spinner. He will be dishonorably discharged as part of his sentence.

The 22-year-old Morlock is a key figure in a war crimes probe that has raised some of the most serious criminal allegations to come from the war in Afghanistan. Army investigators accused him of taking a lead role in the killings of three unarmed Afghan men in Kandahar province in January, February and May 2010.

His sentencing Wednesday came hours after he pleaded guilty to three counts of murder, and one count each of conspiracy, obstructing justice and illegal drug use at his court martial at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, south of Seattle.

Under his plea deal, he has agreed to testify against his co-defendants.

Asked by the judge whether the plan was to shoot at people to scare them, or to shoot to kill, Morlock replied, "The plan was to kill people."

Speaking to reporters after the sentencing, Spinner read a statement prepared by Morlock in which the soldier apologized for the pain he had caused his victims' families and the people of Afghanistan and asked for forgiveness from his fellow soldiers.

Spinner speculated that "morale problems and discipline problems" in Morlock's brigade created an environment that contributed to the killings – an argument the defense presented in court through the testimony of sociologist and war crimes expert Stjepan Mestrovic.

Other witnesses, including Morlock's mother and his former hockey coach, talked about the devastating effect of his father's death in a boating accident in 2007. Morlock said he joined the Army hoping to follow in the footsteps of his father, a retired paratrooper.

But, ultimately, Morlock accepted that his actions were his and his alone, Spinner said.

Responding to criticism that 24 years was too light for three murders, Spinner pointed to Morlock's willingness to take responsibility for his actions and testify against his co-defendants.

"He realized coming into court today the 'why's' were not that important. He's taking responsibility," Spinner said.

The plea deal had been in place for nearly two months, so the sentence "wasn't really a surprise" to Morlock, Spinner told reporters.

Morlock told the judge that he and the other soldiers first began plotting to murder unarmed Afghans in late 2009, several weeks before the first killing took place. To make the killings appear justified, the soldiers planned to plant weapons near the bodies of the victims, he said.

Army prosecutor Capt. Andre Leblanc characterized the crimes as acts of "unspeakable cruelty" by "a few extraordinarily misguided men."

"We don't do this. This is not how we're trained. This is not the Army," Leblanc said during his closing statement Wednesday.

During questioning by the judge Wednesday, Morlock said he had second thoughts about the murder plot while home on leave in March 2010, after the first two killings took place.

"It was really hard to come back," he told Hawks, adding that he no longer wanted to "engage or be part of anything" like the killings that already had occurred.

Morlock said he didn't voice his doubts to his fellow soldiers, however, and he went on to participate in the third killing in May.

Morlock also admitted to smoking hashish while stationed in Afghanistan, though he said he was not under the influence of the drug at the time of the killings. In addition, he admitted to being one of six soldiers who assaulted a fellow platoon member after that man reported the drug use going on in the platoon.

Morlock, his voice shaking at times, told the judge has had a lot of time to reflect on his actions in Afghanistan and ask himself "how I could become so insensitive and how I lost my moral compass."

"I don't know if I will ever be able to answer those questions," he said, adding that he believes he "wasn't fully prepared for the reality of war as it was being fought in Afghanistan."

Earlier this week, the German news magazine Der Spiegel published three graphic photos showing Morlock and other soldiers posing with dead Afghans. One image features Morlock grinning as he lifts the head of a corpse by its hair.

After the January killing, platoon member Spc. Adam Winfield sent Facebook messages to his parents saying that his fellow soldiers had murdered a civilian and were planning to kill more. Winfield said his colleagues warned him not to tell anyone.

Winfield's father alerted a staff sergeant at Lewis-McChord but no action was taken until May, when a witness in a drug investigation in the unit reported the deaths.

Winfield is accused of participating in the final murder. He admitted in a videotaped interview that he took part and said he feared the others might kill him if he didn't.

Also charged in the murders are Pvt. 1st Class Andrew Holmes and Spc. Michael Wagnon II.

Seven other soldiers in the platoon were charged with lesser crimes, including assaulting the witness in the drug investigation, drug use, firing on unarmed farmers and stabbing a corpse.

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JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — A U.S. soldier who pleaded guilty Wednesday to the murders of three Afghan civilians was sentenced to 24 years in prison after saying "the plan was to kill peop...
JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — A U.S. soldier who pleaded guilty Wednesday to the murders of three Afghan civilians was sentenced to 24 years in prison after saying "the plan was to kill peop...
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01:36 AM on 04/06/2011
Its always easier to pass judgment from the outside looking in; "it was his upbringing, or it was the recruiters fault for following loose entrance standards for recruits". So on and so on. The war inside a person real or imagined can lead to devastating things externally. War in itself is brutal on the mind and the prospect of loosing someone close to you or your own life, wears on even the most mentally concrete. No war, just war,peace, are all social constructs we use to justify are private feelings on the topic, while 90% of the population has no concept of war other than through media sources such as this. Regardless of the circumstance and end result of these murders, these young men were failed somewhere down the line. Instead of appeasing our own feelings of what they deserve or who is at fault, we should focus more on how we can change for the better and prevent these type of atrocities in the future.
08:49 PM on 04/01/2011
Cpl. Morlock and his fellow "kill team" buddies are a disgrace to the United States Army. I hope he serves all 24 years.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Whistlejackett
Hey stop doing that
10:24 PM on 03/30/2011
So very sad for this young fellow. We as a people are also responsible, in that we have put him in a situation not knowing how he will function. Atrocities happen by all sides in all wars, and every one of us is responsible for what happens.

This is a cheap and disgusting way that we refuse to participate in the same battle as him. We stay at home and allow our taxes to be spent on a huge military budget, then take this young man's life from him, because he could not function as we wanted him to.
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Lizaxyz
Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale...
02:00 PM on 03/29/2011
That's the issue here - there was no "war". The soldiers were bored, so they decided to create some action for themselves.
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Zaida Adams
05:49 AM on 03/28/2011
What a mess war makes of things. I don't even remember what the war is being fought over. Justice? Oil? Or just to have a war? Who knows... but I wonder what God thinks about all this. It's like he's a neutralist just watching his kids play shooting games with their own brothers... Baffling... Wish Oprah ruled the world.
04:38 AM on 03/25/2011
He should be jailed for the rest of his life and his commanding officers should be thrown out of the military without benefits.
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Lizaxyz
Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale...
02:01 PM on 03/29/2011
X2!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gail Cerridwen
12:08 AM on 03/25/2011
I think it's good for us to see him in uniform cuz the US public has been conditioned more and more through these years to glorify those in uniform, which is, of course, part of the reflexive emotional mind of fascism. And yes, I fear we're heading there. The way we won't is by emotionally maturing as a nation, not seeing everything in simplistic black and white--for instance by understanding that outward uniforms have nothing to do w/ inner integrity/virtue/values? (It comes to mind: priest garbs also...)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ProfessorDuh
06:07 AM on 03/25/2011
We ARE there. Look at the actions of the GOP governors, and the American use of torture and permanent imprisonment with legal rights. We have ARRIVED at fasclsm.
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Lizaxyz
Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale...
02:06 PM on 03/29/2011
Good poinst - fanned!
10:34 PM on 03/24/2011
"how I could become so insensitive and how I lost my moral compass." he asked?
As if the army does any sensitivity training. They train you to kill, no?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
08:26 PM on 03/24/2011
We increasingly live in Orwell’s Oceania, not Huxley’s The World State. Osama bin Laden plays the role assumed by Emmanuel Goldstein in “1984.” Goldstein, in the novel, is the public face of terror. His evil machinations and clandestine acts of violence dominate the nightly news. Goldstein’s image appears each day on Oceania’s television screens as part of the nation’s “Two Minutes of Hate” daily ritual. And without the intervention of the state, Goldstein, like bin Laden, will kill you. All excesses are justified in the titanic fight against evil personified.
The psychological torture of Pvt. Bradley Manning—who has now been imprisoned for seven months without being convicted of any crime—mirrors the breaking of the dissident Winston Smith at the end of “1984.” Manning is being held as a “maximum custody detainee” in the brig at Marine Corps Base Quantico, in Virginia. He spends 23 of every 24 hours alone. He is denied exercise. He cannot have a pillow or sheets for his bed. Army doctors have been plying him with antidepressants. The cruder forms of torture of the Gestapo have been replaced with refined Orwellian techniques, largely developed by government psychologists, to turn dissidents like Manning into vegetables. We break souls as well as bodies. It is more effective. Now we can all be taken to Orwell’s dreaded Room 101 to become compliant and harmless
balance of great read
http://www.truth-out.org/2011-a-brave-new-dystopia66307+
FREE Bradley Manning now
Northwestgirl
loves the full moon and stars
06:54 PM on 03/24/2011
Actually I would like to know what kind of guy he was growing up in Alaska - friends ,family etc. Some soldiers help the Afghan people , he went so the other way for fun?
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PadriVeum
04:57 PM on 03/24/2011
yet the men at the top-who assemble military size kill teams get off with nothing...justice at its finest.
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ProfessorDuh
03:47 PM on 03/24/2011
Well, gee, where are all the warmongering right wingers to defend the great Bush "just-do-the-job missions" in Iraq and Afghanistan, whatever the H they're supposed to be after a decade of worthless, bloody, multi-trillion-dollar military occupation?
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sammyscout
Speak truth to [GOP] Ignorance
03:36 PM on 03/24/2011
Pictures of Morlock in Afghanistan....

Warning; Graphic Images

http://tinyurl.com/6zl42w9
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devildog21
"War is a Racket" -Smedley D. Butler MajGen USMC
03:04 PM on 03/24/2011
He definitely got off very easy. Now that he has been dishonorably discharged, it's time to STOP showing him in his uniform. The website for his defense fund should be told to pull that picture down immediately.
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02:57 PM on 03/24/2011
I hope the images of his victims haunt him for the rest of his useless life.