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The U.S. government is clearly signaling that murdering, raping, mutilating and assaulting are not nearly as serious as allegedly making available to the public documents that reveal embarrassing and/or criminal actions of senior government officials.
Last Wednesday, U.S. Army Specialist Corey Moore was sentenced at Fort Lewis, Washington, by a military judge for a mere to 60 days of "hard labor" and a bad-conduct discharge for mutilating the corpse of an Afghan civilian, assaulting Adam Winfield, a soldier in his unit who whistle blew on the murder and mutilation of Afghan civilians, and smoking hashish over a period of several months.
In contrast, the previous day, March 1, the U.S. Army filed 22 additional offenses, including "aiding the enemy" which is punishable by death, against alleged whistleblower Pfc. Bradley Manning. The first charges against Manning included leaking classified information, disobeying an order and general misconduct.
If found guilty, Manning could be sentenced to life imprisonment or death for exposing documents that show numerous criminal acts committed by officials of the U.S. government.
For mutilating a body and assaulting a fellow soldier, according to Army spokeswoman Major Kathleen Turner, Moore's "hard labor" sentence will be carried out in Moore's unit, not in a prison. Turner said that a supervisor from his unit will give him a list of tasks and chores to do each day to be performed under guard.
Manning is in his eighth months of pre-trial solitary confinement in a military prison and has been subjected to emotional and psychological torture, most recently being forced to remain nude for extend periods in his isolated cell.
Twelve soldiers, all members of the Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Division's Stryker brigade, based in southern Afghanistan's Kandahar region, are accused of the executions and mutilations of Afghan civilians.
Moore did not face charges of killing the person whose corpse he defiled by stabbing. None of the soldiers so far convicted were accused of murdering Afghan civilians.
The trial of Specialist Jeremy Morlock, who is the first to face murder charges in the deaths of the Afghan civilians, is facing three counts of murder. His trial was delayed on March 2.
Moore the Mutilator has "Potential" says his defense attorney
Incredibly in her closing argument, Moore's defense attorney, Captain Vanessa Mull, said Moore had "incredible potential," and asked the military judge to recognize that potential by allowing him to remain in the service.
The military judge rejected her request and sentenced Moore to "supervised chores" and a dishonorable discharge from the U.S. Army, but no prison time.
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The U.S. government is clearly signaling that murdering, raping, mutilating and assaulting are not nearly as serious as allegedly making available to the public documents that reveal embarrassing and/or criminal actions of senior government officials.
Last Wednesday, U.S. Army Specialist Corey Moore was sentenced at Fort Lewis, Washington, by a military judge for a mere to 60 days of "hard labor" and a bad-conduct discharge for mutilating the corpse of an Afghan civilian, assaulting Adam Winfield, a soldier in his unit who whistle blew on the murder and mutilation of Afghan civilians, and smoking hashish over a period of several months.
In contrast, the previous day, March 1, the U.S. Army filed 22 additional offenses, including "aiding the enemy" which is punishable by death, against alleged whistleblower Pfc. Bradley Manning. The first charges against Manning included leaking classified information, disobeying an order and general misconduct.
If found guilty, Manning could be sentenced to life imprisonment or death for exposing documents that show numerous criminal acts committed by officials of the U.S. government.
For mutilating a body and assaulting a fellow soldier, according to Army spokeswoman Major Kathleen Turner, Moore's "hard labor" sentence will be carried out in Moore's unit, not in a prison. Turner said that a supervisor from his unit will give him a list of tasks and chores to do each day to be performed under guard.
Manning is in his eighth months of pre-trial solitary confinement in a military prison and has been subjected to emotional and psychological torture, most recently being forced to remain nude for extend periods in his isolated cell.
Twelve soldiers, all members of the Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Division's Stryker brigade, based in southern Afghanistan's Kandahar region, are accused of the executions and mutilations of Afghan civilians.
Moore did not face charges of killing the person whose corpse he defiled by stabbing. None of the soldiers so far convicted were accused of murdering Afghan civilians.
The trial of Specialist Jeremy Morlock, who is the first to face murder charges in the deaths of the Afghan civilians, is facing three counts of murder. His trial was delayed on March 2.
Moore the Mutilator has "Potential" says his defense attorney
Incredibly in her closing argument, Moore's defense attorney, Captain Vanessa Mull, said Moore had "incredible potential," and asked the military judge to recognize that potential by allowing him to remain in the service.
The military judge rejected her request and sentenced Moore to "supervised chores" and a dishonorable discharge from the U.S. Army, but no prison time.
The U.S. government is clearly signaling that murdering, raping, mutilating and assaulting are not nearly as serious as allegedly making available to the public documents that reveal embarrassing and/or criminal actions of senior government officials.
Last Wednesday, U.S. Army Specialist Corey Moore was sentenced at Fort Lewis, Washington, by a military judge for a mere to 60 days of "hard labor" and a bad-conduct discharge for mutilating the corpse of an Afghan civilian, assaulting Adam Winfield, a soldier in his unit who whistle blew on the murder and mutilation of Afghan civilians, and smoking hashish over a period of several months.
In contrast, the previous day, March 1, the U.S. Army filed 22 additional offenses, including "aiding the enemy" which is punishable by death, against alleged whistleblower Pfc. Bradley Manning. The first charges against Manning included leaking classified information, disobeying an order and general misconduct.
If found guilty, Manning could be sentenced to life imprisonment or death for exposing documents that show numerous criminal acts committed by officials of the U.S. government.
For mutilating a body and assaulting a fellow soldier, according to Army spokeswoman Major Kathleen Turner, Moore's "hard labor" sentence will be carried out in Moore's unit, not in a prison. Turner said that a supervisor from his unit will give him a list of tasks and chores to do each day to be performed under guard.
Manning is in his eighth months of pre-trial solitary confinement in a military prison and has been subjected to emotional and psychological torture, most recently being forced to remain nude for extend periods in his isolated cell.
Twelve soldiers, all members of the Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Division's Stryker brigade, based in southern Afghanistan's Kandahar region, are accused of the executions and mutilations of Afghan civilians.
Moore did not face charges of killing the person whose corpse he defiled by stabbing. None of the soldiers so far convicted were accused of murdering Afghan civilians.
The trial of Specialist Jeremy Morlock, who is the first to face murder charges in the deaths of the Afghan civilians, is facing three counts of murder. His trial was delayed on March 2.
Moore the Mutilator has "Potential" says his defense attorney
Incredibly in her closing argument, Moore's defense attorney, Captain Vanessa Mull, said Moore had "incredible potential," and asked the military judge to recognize that potential by allowing him to remain in the service.
The military judge rejected her request and sentenced Moore to "supervised chores" and a dishonorable discharge from the U.S. Army, but no prison time.