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Even more of the defense's case focused on the lack of military leadership in the unit and the Army's failure to recognize Green could act on homicidal thoughts of killing Iraqi civilians that he expressed after several fellow soldiers had been killed. Green was seen by Army mental health professionals, but a nurse practitioner sent him back to his unit with pills to help him sleep after he showed no signs of planning to act on those feelings, 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 sentencing decision. 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."
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